The Queen has raised an embargo on New England
Joanna Zahay (@JoannaZahay1)
19 January 2087 | Gênes, Gênes
Queen Adela has struck with a fury at those who have dared to betray her trust as she responses to the shattering of the Ousamane Palace Treaty between Gênes and New England as she has ordered an embargo on all New English products, and ordered the immediate deportation of New English expats. The Treaty of Ousamane Palace was completed in 2085 and over saw the marriage deal between King William's son, then Crown Prince Alexander and one of the Queen's great-granddaughters, Marguerite de Condé.
The Queen was shock to discover that Princess Victoria of Galicia, the real estate mogul and apparent political master had organized a royal coup of power, making her daughter, Victoria of New England as the new heir apparent. Informats also reported that a the new Crown Princess will marry Prince Alexander, all done without any notice to the Queen. The ascendant path of the House of Sherman over the House of Julie at the expense of the House of Valois been seen as a personal insult by the Spider of Excalibur, Victoria of Galicia.
Queen Adela was very hurt upon these discoveries and even had her portrait of her and King William, of which her portraits of her and other world leaders she has met with great pride, publicly burned in front of her Court. This was followed by several orders, placing an embargo on New English products, freezing all New English assets in Gênes and ordering the immediate deportation of all New English citizens in the kingdom and its dominions. These deportations orders are made with the fact that they, those being deported, may not take their assets with them, which are to be confiscated.
The fury has not been solely directed at the New English either, but at the Spider of Excalibur's family, in the form that she can best get her hands on, in her sister, Jeannette of Galicia. Jeanette of Galicia was the Queen's granddaughter-in-law, second wife of the Petit Dauphin. Key word being was. In the days following this betrayal orchestrated by Jeannette's older sister, the Queen over saw the dissolving of her marriage to her son, done so with the eager blessing of the Patriarch on the grounds that the Petit Dauphin's marriage to her was done before his conversion to the true faith.
The former would be queen has been dismissed from Court, stripped of Gênoise titles and allowances, separated from her children and escorted out of the country to nearby Beliany and has been banished from the country for the next eighteen years. All contact between Jeannette and her children has been banned. It has not yet been discussed if the Petit Dauphin will remarry for a third time. The embargo is set to be put in place at Her Majesty's pleasure, thought it is unsure what would ever convince her in the near future.