North King
blech
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End of Empires - Update Eight
The World Ablaze
c. Twenty-five years.
124 - 150 SR by the Seshweay Calendar
23 - 49 RM by the Satar Calendar
The World Ablaze
c. Twenty-five years.
124 - 150 SR by the Seshweay Calendar
23 - 49 RM by the Satar Calendar

All shall tremble; peace is lost,
For the River Sesh is crossed.
- proverb of the ancient world (possibly apocryphal)
The hall had two shadows: one by moonlight, and one by fire. For the city burned, and the night-orb shimmered through the smoke and ash, beams of silver playing over the blackened ruins. Soot blew softly in the northern wind, the fine dust driving in a mans face. The waters were rising, and embers hissed in the oncoming tide.
The scene is set again and again, with the performances uncounted. For civilization has long dwelled in this cradle, a fratricidal birthplace: the sheets are stained with blood. Wars have raged across desert and field, mountain and vale; the graves of the fallen litter the Earth as far as the eye can see. The firelight sets the entire world aglow; the fields are too salty for plants to take root; the king of this world is the vulture.
We have lived like this; we will die like this. And thus the world turns.
* * * * * * * * *
Of all the conflicts in the ancient world, the most morally charged is the war between the coalition and the Huut Empire. For there we see all the deepest and most prevalent divides in history: free versus unfree, the periphery versus the interior, the battle between emperor and many nations. It is more or less impossible to stop oneself from taking a side, even in writing a history of the conflict. Let us try regardless.
The eternal hatred between Farou and the Huut had finally swelled into a full-blown conflagration before this period, but it reached new levels of intensity with the entry of Krato into the war. The massive southern empire had only rarely involved itself north of the Kotthorns; now it went on a campaign that some would call only a landgrab, driven by two religious forces simultaneously.
The Farou were determined to free every slave in the Huut Empire, no matter what the cost, for now that they had been brought into the conflict unwillingly, they felt it necessary to see it through to the bitter end.
The Huut, for their part, were perhaps the least noble, but also the most straightforward of the parties involved; no religious piety or idealism was involved. For them, it was a simple war of survival, fought on so many fronts against so numerous a set of opponents that more or less any tactic was deemed fair game.
So it was that the Huut settled a separate, white peace with the Seshweay, retreating perhaps without their dignity, but with a considerable force that they were now able to bring to bear against the coalition. Simultaneously, they recruited a considerable number of war elephants clandestinely from the south, attempting to nullify the Kratoans advantage before it ever became a problem. Their navy, meanwhile, was to fight hit and run tactics, delaying the full application of Faron force.
But it was precisely this battle that took place first: the Battle of the Delta. The swift Faron fleet was easily able to catch the cumbersome and completely inexperienced Huut hulks and force them into battle. It was the most absurdly unbalanced of the war, of course, and no one expected the Huut to perform well. In fact, the mere achievement of sinking as many ships as they lost themselves was something that astounded their admirals; in the end, the five hundred or so Faron ships could maraud along the coastline unhindered.
In conjunction with this, the Faron land forces began to advance again, but it was Krato that the Huut focused on first, taking all their southern troops and meeting them in battle near Jahip. The Kratoan force was quite exhausted from their trek over the Kotthorns, of course, badly supplied, and with many of their elephants dead. But the Huut had their own host of problems: badly provisioned, the farmlands of their home country were largely overrun or threatened. They, too, were short of drinking water.
Thus, each army was more than a little desperate, but the Kratoans turned out to be a little more desperate than the Huut, and considerably luckier as well. The superior elephant force eventually began to tell, but what truly ended up destroying the Huut was the much greater professionalization of Kratos line; they were able to thrash the Huut militia on all fronts, and scored a devastating victory which had the southern Huut forces reeling in terror.
At the same time, the Huut returning from Neruss, even shorter on supplies than their brethren or, in fact, any of their enemies, made a forced march to attempt to catch the Faron behind the siege lines around the city of Salgaron. But the Faron northern force had dogged the trail of their Huut counterparts, and they were able to deploy enough troops to actually match the Huut in numbers more importantly, they, too, had the advantage in professionalization. Once again, the Huut were defeated.
It seemed as though the end was quite near for the ancient and ailing empire. The Bisrian army soon jumped into battle on the northwestern frontier, and there were even rumors (completely unsubstantiated, but causing some panic) that the Palmyrians were considering joining in as well. The coalition forces joined together and marched against the Delta itself, intending to sack the city of Hiuttu and finally end the tyrannical regime forever.
And against all odds, the coalition was defeated. Most attribute the Huut victory to sheer weight of numbers, and indeed there is little else to explain the event outside of sheer desperation to defend their homeland. In any case, they were able to make good use of this victory, pushing back Krato and Faron; in the case of Faron, Subal itself was besieged.
But despite the victory and apparent recovery of most of their land, the Huut nation was closer than ever to failing by the end of the period. The Faron had not tarried in freeing anyone who they saw enslaved in the nation, and given that most of the nation at some point or another had been under the control of Faron or Krato, this meant that most of the nations slaves had been set free, and it proved exceedingly hard to recapture them.
Moreover, the fleeing slaves had to go somewhere, and most of them ended up in Faron. Eager to join in the crusade to liberate their brethren, they provided a massive manpower pool for the Faron to draw upon. Simultaneously, the manpower of the Huut was severely drained, and most serious of all, the economy was devastated by the blow; most estimate that the empire lost somewhere between a third and a half of its income from the freeing of the slaves.
On top of this, persistent river flooding had troubled the Had, and most of the fighting had been on prime Huut agricultural land. Every day of battle was another day that the enemy would march over the crops, or forage for themselves.
One of the more interesting coincidences of the war was that the Bisrian invasion sufficiently distracted them that the Moti were able to launch a devastating surprise attack of their own on Bisria. The desert nation found its mountain defenses wholly inadequate, as the Moti had carefully scouted out the terrain, and were able to cut off isolated fortresses; indeed, in many places they occupied the forts and used them against the very forces that had been assigned to them. And with the resurgence of the Huut, the Bisrians were forced into a two front war that ended up losing them their capital, and eventually their nation.
But for all its bloodshed, this was not the worlds greatest war...
The rain was coming down swift and hard, lashing against the dry soil with a vengeance. The river was turning brown with mud, and the last few brave boatmen were turning back now, defeated by the current. It wasnt yet midday, but the waters had grown temperamental in the last few years, and this was not the first time the fisherman had to cut short their work.
Watching the scene from his riverboat, the Duke sighed. That the Weinan would flood, he could accept. That it would flood so fiercely, and choose to do so during his reign particularly aggravated him. Was he to be thwarted in histories by rainfall? Was his rule to be deemed a failure by the whims of the gods? It was a depressing thought.
Three fiefs had surrendered to him, but the pace of expansion was agonizingly slow. Liang still remained only one of many powers, unable to claw its way up the ladder, not even a rung or two. No traders came here, and even if they did, such a tiny realm would never be considered truly great, not against the Union of Ayase, nor the Trilui. Truly, that land which had once been the land of the God-Kings was all but gone, dissolved into meaningless, squabbling fiefs.
But where the Weinan Valley lingered in slow chaos and repeated dissolutions, the sun was rising over another nation just to the east.
Even winter seemed warmer under the sunrise of recent years, and the Avaimi found themselves under the highly competent rule of the advisor Boyrn, and the new Thorsrdyn, Vtaityn. Implementing a set of reforms, they restyled the nation into that of Evyn. The offices of government were completely overhauled, taxes reformed, a new alphabet instated, and perhaps most alarming to the Evyni neighbors, the army was reformed.
It was with this same new model of army that Vtaityn came crashing through the unsuspecting nation of the Prokym, cutting through the largely barbarian army with ease. The nation was quickly pacified, and the idols of this peoples creed were burned, for Vtaityn had also inherited a religious fervor unmatched by any other ruler in the north.
Alas, the Prokym had just signed an alliance with the Ritti, and that colonial nation was thus obliged to go to war. Meeting in the field of battle, the Evyni once again routed their foes, finding little difficulty until they ran into the walls of their opponents cities. It seemed that somewhere along the way, the Ritti had conquered the Rutto; now both nations, rapidly ascendant, battled each other for control of the north.
For their part, the Ritti had been far from idle during the time period. Their conquest of Rutto, of course, had brought new lands into their growing colonial empire, while the simultaneous peaceful expansion of the Adua colony would, it was hoped, bring in new riches as well. Somewhat confusingly, the ruling family converted to Maninism, as did the majority of their population, but at the same time, they signed a commercial treaty with the Union of Ayase, which would have some repercussions later on down the road...
As for the smaller nations of the north, they carried on largely as before. The Lor expanded somewhat as their singers and bards spread tales of their legendary warriors to the neighboring tribes, some of whom were impressed enough (and, more pragmatically, desired to be under the protection of a large and powerful nation) to join them. Acca expanded somewhat, as was their custom. However, their new and considerable minority who followed the creed of Seshweay Ancestor Worship were proving to be something of a hassle, which would certainly have an effect later on in the period.
Kedoy, for its part, had an uninspiring set of years. They expanded decisively past the Ederru frontiers, and looked poised to nab most of the rest of the island, but as they were still reticent to attack the Ederru (or vice versa, for that matter), political change was extremely slow to come to the island.
The great powers of the north, of course, were still Gallat and Ferman, and now the rivalry had turned considerably more bitter. Ferman had enlisted the help of the Union of Ayase, and each signed a series of trade deals. While initially they might have been subtle, in time it was obvious that they were colluding to reroute trade around Gallat, and destroy this religious rival to the Union and political rival to Ferman simultaneously.
Though there was a considerable spike in piracy on Ferman during this time, the policies were mostly effective; Gallat began to spiral downwards into what looked like an irrevocable recession. It was perhaps due to these economic hard times that the kingdom was finally overthrown by the zealous priests of the Faith, who turned the state into what was effectively a theocracy. Persecution and missionary efforts reached new heights with the change in regime.
One of the more important conversions was that of a Nahsjad tribe in the south. Though the Gallatenes had been eyeing the Tehabi for some time as potential converts, they failed to take into account that the Seshweay were also competing for influence there; moreover the Tehabi had risen to power mostly as a reaction against Maninism in the first place. However, they found willing converts in the Sira tribe, which was able to rise quickly. Indeed, with events elsewhere in the world, their rise, and Gallats recovery, seemed almost assured (see below).
As for Ferman, it toyed with its own new religion, that of Alta. Based off of the teachings of the prophet Borandi, its central focus is that of the ten children of God, who watch over the world; offerings are made to these, the so-called shepherds of men. It was not, in any case, the sort of faith that would get into violent conflict with Maninism yet. For now, there was relative peace...
But elsewhere, there were storms.
The tempest was swift over the water, crashing into the shores of the Spice Island with a demonic fury. Half a dozen merchantmen were dashed to pieces on the rocky coast; a few weeks later, goats would gaze idly at a massive hulk that had been pulled far, far inland of where it should be, and months later still, men would gaze upon the ruins of a village, almost indistinguishable from the mud of the seashore by now.
But the storm did not stop there; it bowled over the grasslands and forests, plowing into the hills. Their slopes were quite bare, as the trees had been cut away for the great merchant fleet years ago, and the rain sliced open the hillside like warm butter; the sand and rock coursed down in massive floods that buried many a pastoral village. The mudslides and rising waters proved the grave of many men that year... And so it would continue the next year. Another storm, another danger. The very gods themselves seemed to have turned against the Opulensi.
This was a resilient nation, however, and though the weather had turned foul the people rebuilt. Indeed, the increasing rains were a boon when they did not grow into floods; the Spice Isles were more and more healthy for crops, and the nation grew stronger. With more people, a strong military, and an increasing appetite for new markets, it was no wonder that the nation would look for opportunities to expand overseas.
In the peaceful sector, this meant little more than a concerted effort to expand the trade network eastwards. Of course, they had been attempting to do this since the beginning of time, but with the waters more favorable, and a bit of luck, they were actually able to do it now, and made contact with numerous nations to the East. Some of these, like Tars, were descendants of the people the Opulensi had themselves attacked and were quite hostile, but others would surely make viable trading partners especially the far off city-state of Leun. That is to say, if the Trilui did not get there first, for they, too, had recently charted the eastern waters...
Their first target was the sacred home of Indagahor, Dinyart. Though the island had hitherto been quite peaceful, the forced opening of its ports to the merchants of the Trilui had simultaneously closed it to those of the Opulensi. This was, of course, unacceptable, and so, naturally, the Spice Islanders attacked and crushed the island state with fairly little bloodshed. This raised the ire of some of the Trilui, of course, but it did not lead to open conflict.
What nearly did lead to open conflict was the planned Opulensi invasion of the Stad Men. Though this peninsular nation seemed to be a quiet backwater, it soon transpired that not only had the Opulensi intended to conquer it others had as well, and they got there first.
So it was that the Trehan fleet (reinforced by a Trilui squadron) were able to destroy the Stad Men nation in a series of concerted attacks that confused and eventually collapsed the enemy army. Within the span of only a couple of years, then, both the Opulensi and the Trehans had carved empires for themselves... and yet, despite the tension and ongoing rivalry, neither state ended up attacking the other one.