das
Regeneration In Process
Chapter Seventy Five.
The Western Caliphate endured the fiery year of 1005. It struggled on through 1006, as Byzantine and Lombard armies slugged in Egypt and Andalusia (meaning all of Iberia). Al-Iksandriyah eventually fell to the Byzantines, but they only controlled the coastal region of Egypt - the other regions were under the control of Goptans, now led by Patriarch Peter Ithakos, a fierce follower of Ambrosius, but somewhat more subtle. The Lombards controlled Catalonia, but further advance inland proved to be impossible, and the Lombards seized the various Mediterranean islands instead, and raided the North African coastline. And the Viking piracy began to intensify, making contact with the western colonies virtually impossible.
And finally, the Berber raiders did something they never did before - having taken the city of Agadir in the center of the Moroccan coast, they did not simply pillage it and go back home, but instead claimed it in the name of their ruler, Mahmud Shabbid. The Berbers realized the Caliphate was going to fall, and decided to name themselves a heir to at least some of their lands.
The Western Caliphate survived into the year of 1007... but not beyond it. In the colonies, local governors became de facto independant rulers. Peasant risings threw the Caliphate out of the northern half of Morocco (OOC: note that "Morocco" includes OTL Rio de Oro as well); Berbers seized the south half. The Caliph disappeared one day, simply disappeared. The Caliphate has fallen, but, ofcourse, it was not the end of Islam, not even in North Africa, as the Lombards and the Byzantines were exhausted. The Lombards held on to Catalonia and the Caliphal Mediterranean islands, the Byzantines seized Egypt (though they still needed to fight the EGYPTIANS - well, the Goptan elements amongst the Egyptians, anyway).
The Western Caliphate endured the fiery year of 1005. It struggled on through 1006, as Byzantine and Lombard armies slugged in Egypt and Andalusia (meaning all of Iberia). Al-Iksandriyah eventually fell to the Byzantines, but they only controlled the coastal region of Egypt - the other regions were under the control of Goptans, now led by Patriarch Peter Ithakos, a fierce follower of Ambrosius, but somewhat more subtle. The Lombards controlled Catalonia, but further advance inland proved to be impossible, and the Lombards seized the various Mediterranean islands instead, and raided the North African coastline. And the Viking piracy began to intensify, making contact with the western colonies virtually impossible.
And finally, the Berber raiders did something they never did before - having taken the city of Agadir in the center of the Moroccan coast, they did not simply pillage it and go back home, but instead claimed it in the name of their ruler, Mahmud Shabbid. The Berbers realized the Caliphate was going to fall, and decided to name themselves a heir to at least some of their lands.
The Western Caliphate survived into the year of 1007... but not beyond it. In the colonies, local governors became de facto independant rulers. Peasant risings threw the Caliphate out of the northern half of Morocco (OOC: note that "Morocco" includes OTL Rio de Oro as well); Berbers seized the south half. The Caliph disappeared one day, simply disappeared. The Caliphate has fallen, but, ofcourse, it was not the end of Islam, not even in North Africa, as the Lombards and the Byzantines were exhausted. The Lombards held on to Catalonia and the Caliphal Mediterranean islands, the Byzantines seized Egypt (though they still needed to fight the EGYPTIANS - well, the Goptan elements amongst the Egyptians, anyway).