The Watchurian Empire survived for surprisingly long, as Kayin was very determined to keep it alive at all cost; even as actual central control gradually deteriorated, the local military commanders remained commited enough; Arabs defended the Levant from Akkadians and the Berbers protected Iberia from the Germanics, while the main Watchurian army ruthlessly crushed all Agade Dag rebellions in Greece and Anatolia, rooting out the local temple organisations and crushing many traditional local institutions as well. While Kayin was the last in the line of capable Watchurian rulers, his heirs after 506 AD being more concerned with harems, poetry and philosophy than with matters of state, regional generals such as the Berber Tarek and the Greek Euandrios nonetheless rose to prominence and managed to not only defend but even expand the empire in the early 6th century AD. Tarek conquered northern Iberia and even parts of southern Gaul, temporarily ceasing the Germanic raids, while Euandrios’ achievements, other than the conquest of southern Thrace, are best described elsewhere. Nonetheless, the fact of imperial decay remained, and was sped up by new events in the 520s and 530s AD. Firstly, European peace was once again disrupted by new arrivals from the steppe, the Mongolic Khasars, who settled on the Pannonian Plain like the Tartars before them, and from there raided into Germany and the Balkans; though never quite as numerous or as powerful as the Tartars, they still caused a fair amount of trouble. The northern, Scandinavian Germanics – namely, the Nord-Frisians, the Vikings and the Danes – increasingly took up raiding again, attacking both the Celtic polities of the British Isles and the Germanic ones in Gaul, and sometimes reaching even into Iberia. The failure of the overstretched Watchurians to successfully counter most Khasar or Scandic raids revealed the growing military weakness of the empire, as well as worsened the social tensions. Meanwhile, the Krakatoa eruption and the following volcanic winter overstrained the economy, leading to widespread famines and rebellions; combined with the disturbances caused by raiders, this both prompted and allowed further popular migrations, in particular those of the Slavs, the Bulgars and the Magyars (the latter being a migratory Ugric people with Turkic influences that recently arrived into the Pontic Steppe). In the Middle East, population pressures combined with other factors caused a grand burst of violent Arabic migrations, hurting both Watchur and its enemies. Former vassals reasserted their independence, and Agade Dag cults emerged from the underground in the Balkans. In spite of last-moment efforts to save the Watchurian Empire, rebellions, governor defections and barbarian invasions had torn apart the empire by 560 AD. It would be nigh-impossible to describe in any reasonable detail all of the chaos that raged all over the Mediterranean during the collapse and after it, but it would probably suffice to say that this was, indeed, a dark age. Many great cities (such as Watchur, Kratopolis and Arganthinopolis) were utterly ravaged, and with the destruction of their great libraries much was lost. Still, the Ashaist monastic organisations helped save a fair amount of classical culture and knowledge, as had Agade Dag temple organisations which often became scientific centres as well as spiritual ones.
The surviving “islands of civilisation” (sometimes figurative, and sometimes literal), combined with other religious developments and the gradual revival of Mediterranean commerce, and ofcourse with simple good warlording allowed for a comparatively quick revival of civilisation. Towards 700 AD, a new map of Europe and the Mediterranean took shape.
In the British Isles, Hibernia was a patchwork of feudal states, though gradually the institution of high kingship combined with Tigranist religious influence allowed a somewhat greater degree of unity in the face of Nord-Frisian and Viking raids. The Picts – driven from their eastern and northern coastlands and islands by the Nord-Frisians – had developed similarily, reconciling with the Caerixians, the successors of the Arecomicians. In the face of Germanic invasions which had only been repulsed with great difficulty and over a long period of time, Tureno’s neo-Tigranist ideas had been picked up again by other regional leaders claiming discent from Suessus, and eventually King Belimar of Caerix had managed to reestablish the Arecomician monarchy along neo-Tigranist lines, after defeating both the particularily unruly vassals and the Frisian invaders. To avoid the feudal strife of old, Belimar’s heirs worked to centralise the realm, creating a proto-bureaucracy and a proper standing army, and also working to strengthen the coastal trading cities in order to both restore the trade with the continent and counterbalance the remaining strong feudals. Diplomatically and culturally, hegemony over the British Isles was asserted, and counter-raids were launched into Frisia and Scandinavia, though with limited success only.
Raiding and commerce – and the following accumulation of wealth – was combined with the export of the Frisian political traditions to allow the rise of early Scandinavian states. The Nord-Frisians ruled much of the North Sea shore of the Scandinavian Peninsula itself, with a grand capital in the city of Bjorgvin; this state was probably the most civilised, with an established code of laws and a literary tradition. Along the northern shores of the Vik [8], the feudal realm of Vikland arose, sometimes coming under Nord-Frisian or Danish reign, but eventually reasserting its independence. In the Baltic Sea, in Uppland, the Vendel Kingdom emerged; it was quite extensive, though not particularily centralised, and prospered from trade with Slavs and Latgallians. The peninsula of Jutland and nearby islands saw the realm of Danelaw arise; it was likewise quite wealthy from trade with the continent, and though its North Sea ambitions had been thwarted by defeats at the hands of Caerixians and Nord-Frisians, the Danes found consolation in conquering assorted Baltic coastlands, establishing forward trade outposts/forts. In the meantime, a general cultural renaissance was spearheaded by the Nord-Frisians, as the old Germanic religion took upon more organised forms.
The mainland Germanics remained in control of northern Iberia, most of Gaul (apart from a southeastern slice), Frisia and western Germania. Under diverse local and neighbouring cultural influences, increasingly different Germanic cultures and states emerged. Much of northern Iberia was dominated by a fairly Tartessianised, neo-Tigranist Teutonic Empire, which had strong trading relations with Caerix and developed an early absolute monarchy (at least in theory; in practice, feudals remained prominent and often strove to take over); to its east, the smaller and much more barbaric pagan feudal kingdom of Brukterland successfully defended its independence from various attackers, successfully using its mountainous terrain. In the Garumna and Rhodanus valleys and nearby regions, the highly decentralised and tribal Burgundsrich was formed under King Gundobad; its general barbaricity was counterbalanced by the eventual revival of urban civilisation thanks to trade and by the Ashaist and Agade Dag presences. In northwestern Gaul, a peculiar syncretic Germano-Celtic culture emerged and eventually allowed the rise of Ligania, another neo-Tigranist state (less similar to Caerix and Teutonica, and closer in social and political organisation to Hibernia and Pictavia). Lastly, in the northeast of Gaul and the west of Germania, Scandic influences prevailed and allowed the rise of feudal, gradually urbanising kingdoms of the Sund-Frisians and the Thuringians in the west and the Goths, the Saxons and the Langobards in the east. Germanic tribes naturally advanced further as well, but usually were either repulsed or heavily assimilated by other groups.
Somewhat miraculously, Ligurians actually survived the Dark Age, and furthermore did so in a very good shape, all things considered. Even though Genova was sacked by Germanic raiders and many other gains were lost, the Ligurians had successfully retreated into the Alps and were rallied by Priest-King Cycnus to counter-attack the weakened Germanic, Athanoi and other tribes, establishing hegemony over northern Italy. Even though Liguria was weakened by subsequent feudal strife and ethnic rebellions, eventually devolving into a feudal confederacy under the often nominal reign of the Priest-King in Belesova [9], the survival of the Ligurian culture and Belenism was for now assured.
Much of the non-Germanic parts of Spain were ruled by an Ashaist Berber kingdom, the Tarekid Amsurate, based in Malaka. The Amsurate was a strongly theocratic but at the same time feudal state, under major Watchurian influences as well as Tartessian ones. A strong ally of the Eminence, the Amsurate saw an Ashaist cultural and religious flowering, and also acted as the vanguard of Mediterranean civilisation, halting Germanic expansion southwards. Outside of Iberia it also controlled several Mediterranean islands and Mauretania, although Numidia was ruled by a different Ashaist Berber dynasty based in Ulasis. The Numidians were generally less fanatical and more civilised, with greater freedoms possessed by the trading cities and even a tolerated, though limited, Agade Dag presence. Back in Iberia, the northeastern areas, hemmed in between warlike Germanic and Berber kingdoms, saw a rather weak Arganthine revival, around the recovering city of Arganthinopolis. To the Eminence’s dismay, this Arganthine Demarchy (in truth, more of an enlightened oligarchy) was a well-fortified bastion of the Tartessian variation of Agade Dag. Arganthinopolis once more emerged as a major scientific and cultural centre, and parts of southeastern Gaul were reclaimed for the Demarchy, though its survival thus far was only allowed by extremely adroit diplomacy and manipulation.
Western, central and southern Italy was firmly in Ashaist hands, as was Arecome, which became a theocratic state led by the Eminence. The Ashaist Greek and Iberian cities of southernmost Italy swore allegiance to the Eminence as well. The Latins – reinvigorated by Ashaism and joined by the culturally-related Etruscans – established the comparatively centralised Kingdom of Capua in the south and a series of disunited, but prosperous city-states in the north. Italy flourished now, as the ravages of the Dark Age (comparatively light in the peninsula at any rate thanks to the remnants of the Watchuran fleet) receded, and the trade routes picked up again. Eastern Italy, however, fell under thrall of Agade Dag, as had the Hellenistic city-states on the opposite shores of the Adriatic Sea; the influence of the temple organisations combined with the fear of Ashaist ankhades caused the more southerly of those city-states to form a league under the clear hegemony of the island-city-state of Corcyra, which by 700 AD became a notable power in its own right, securing cities in Cyrene, Crete, Rhodos, Cyprus, southern Anatolia and the Levantine coast.
Eastern Europe was greatly changed by the migrations, as new states began to arise there as well. The tribal kingdom of Latgallia generally retreated northwards somewhat, where it had to fight off constant Scandic raids, often making common cause with local Finno-Ugrian tribes, now also increasingly driven to the north by the flourishing Slavic peoples. Said Slavs now dominated a vast stretch from the Elbe to the edges of the Pontic Steppe and from the Baltic Sea to the Danube and the Southern Carpathians. The Slavs were bound together by a fairly loose and ill-defined, but still well-developed religion, Slavutianism, which arose under the influence of Essentialist Vessel Paramatmanistic missionaries.While little actual state-formation occured, riverine trade flourished and lots of cities appeared, preparing the ground for eventual proto-states. The Slavic tribes of the north and the east also busied themselves with repulsing Germanic and Turkic raids respectively; in the steppe, the various new Turkish tribes now predominated after chasing out the Bulgars.
South of the Carpathians, Odrysa emerged as an important centre yet again. The Dark Age migrations ended up turning the northern Balkans into a mess of Thracian, Bulgar and Magyar tribes and principalities; gradually these intermixed somewhat, like occurred previously, and as trade picked up between the tribes so did the cities, Odrysa first among them. Under the Magyar prince Jeno of Odrysa, a curious syncretic culture emerged, combining Agade Dag with Thracian and other traditions; as elsewhere, the temple network of Agade Dag and the trade network of pro-Agade Dag merchants served as a primary centralising force, and Jeno used it to create the Kingdom of Odrysa, coming to unite the northeastern Balkans. In the west, weaker and religiously-conflicted Thracian principalities emerged around Daesita, Singidun and Skupi. Beyond that, several Ashaist feudal post-Hessonian kingdoms lied, each claiming descent from the Hessonian Empire. Greece Proper and most Aegean islands was ruled with a strong hand from Delphi; its rulers had a credible claim of descent from the Hessonian bloodline, but the Delphian Empire’s military might was somewhat discredited after a major naval defeat at Corcyran hands and the subsequent loss of Crete. Western Anatolia was ruled from Miletos; the Miletean Theocracy was now on the ascendant, having conquered Racadonia and Macedonia as well as several Aegean islands from the weakened Delphians; it was fairly decentralised, but nonetheless quite stable and capable of major military efforts. Descendants of General Euandrios ruled in Paphlagonia (by now greatly Hessonified); actual Ashaist influences there were somewhat limited, though the rulers remained formally Ashaist for diplomatic reasons. Paphlagonia had a fair amount of military might, but most of it went into an ongoing life-or-death struggle with the Agade Dag states elsewhere in Anatolia. Lastly, an oligarchic mercantile Hessonian city-state coalition existed in the former Bulgary Coast of the Black Sea, though it was for obvious reasons not much of a contender, being more interested in commerce.
Lastly, southern Anatolia, Karung and the Levant were for the most part overran by Arabs, though that is obviously a different story.
Speaking of different stories, the rise of the Saharan trade routes and the occasional migrations of particularily insane and desperate Mediterranean groups through the entire Sahara had caused the emergence of West African civilisations. Towards 700 AD, two particularily prominent civilisations emerged: the Mande Empire based on the great trade centre of Jenne-jeno and the syncretistic tribal confederacy of Jalion, which combined the monotheistic (and supposedly Mediterranean-inspired) worship of Heke with animism. The Jalio River [10] saw great flourishing of riverine commerce, while trans-Saharan trade routes too remained very profitable throughout it all.
Middle East and Central Asia:
The Middle East, too, saw great wars and migrations in these days, though as the 5th century AD began things looked somewhat more hopeful, at least for the Akkadians. While the hated Nashtid Nubia floundered on the brink of collapse, the heirs of Dag’Uru Ibruum ruled over a reinvigorated realm in its renaissance. The wounds of the land were healed, and agriculture was revived, while a new wave of missionary efforts in Europe and Central Asia commenced. A major obstacle to both military and religious expansion arose in the shape of the Nubian-Hessonian alliance, which thwarted a 425 AD invasion of Nubian Karung, but apart from that Dag’Uru Mesanepada (r. 413-434 AD) was very successful in his military undertakings, reconquering parts of southeastern Anatolia, crushing the uppity Ashaist Arab kingdom of Hejaz and crippling the militaristic Saganu kingdom. Meanwhile, as Agade Dag grew in strength in Central Asia, a mighty ally for Akkad arose in Central Asia; seeing the utility of the Agade Dag temple organisation for binding the trading cities closer together, a powerful Toba warlord named Liveda accepted the Agade Dag faith and so received the support of the temples and the merchants in unifying Central Asia; this, combined with his armies, ensured his victory. The Hunnish tribes between the Akkadian and Toban Empires were either conquered or converted as well, over time, though some of them gave very fierce resistance.
However, while the Akkadians warred in the east, the geopolitical situation changed significantly in the west. The Watchurian Empire arose in northern Nubia, introduced military reforms and reasserted the alliance with Hessonia. Soon, the might of two great armies fell upon the Akkadian possessions in the Levant, initiating the First Levantine War in 434 AD. While the Akkadians – reinforced by Hunnish tribes and a Toban expeditionary corps – did fare well enough at the start, launching a major counteroffensive into Karung itself and reversing most early gains of the invaders, by 438 AD the tables were turned back; the naval supremacy of the allies and the mobilisation of Ashaist Arabic and Libyan tribes doomed the Agade Dag forces in Karung, crushing them utterly in the Battle of Avaris, while Hessonians overran Syria and incited a Phoenicean rebellion. In the end, the Levant was partitioned between the allies, and the war died down, the Akkadians brooding and preparing their revenge.
The Second Levantine War – also known as the Hessonian Civil War – came soon enough and unfolded as already described in the previous section. While the Agade Dag rebellions and the initial Akkadian advance put the Hessonians on the brink of collapse, the Watchurian power was gravely underestimated and Shebitku used that to conquer the northern Levant and halt the Akkadian advance. The reinforcements from their Central Asian allies proved insufficient, and in the end the Akkadians had to retreat to Mesopotamia once again.
The continued defeats caused social and religious tensions to once more pick up in the increasingly stagnant Akkadian Empire, and so the later 5th century AD saw it plagued by a new series of civil wars, combined with an abortive social and religious revolution led by the heretical, egalitarian preacher Magan. The Maganite Wars (473-480 AD) saw him and his followers briefly take power in some regions and attempt to establish a state-less society. In the end, ofcourse, the rebels were crushed, and a very heavy reaction set in as the empire tried to heal its wounds. That proved to be very difficult, as the state was too weak to prevent major Arabic migrations and at the same time was menaced by the Watchurian Empire, which had by then ascended to a position unprecedented greatness and power. When later in the 480s AD a new civil war (this time over the more mundane matters of succession) began, the Ek’Annu and many of the more patriotically-minded nobles had had enough. A coup d’etat was launched in 488 AD and the Toban Emperor Kohamdug (r. 477-504 AD), already the more powerful of the Agade Dag monarchs, was granted the title of Dag’Uru, creating an Agade Dag super-state to counterbalance the Ashaist one. What resistance to Kohamdug’s takeover could be mounted was swept aside easily enough, and the energetic ruler set about organizing the Pure Akkadian Empire. Power was consolidated in Nippur, but the bureaucracy was reorganised along the Toban lines, and the empire was divided into larger provinces rather than smaller regions tied to local cities. Arabic migrations were countered with Toban colonisation of the depopulated parts of Mesopotamia, and agricultural revival was stimulated. Also, the military was reorganised and modernised, allowing the conquest of the rebellion-ridden Saganu region and a new invasion of the Levant; the latter was eventually repulsed by local Arabic generals, but barely, and Kohamdug’s son Birsdag had launched a more succesful second invasion in 512 AD, using the rapidly-detiriorating cohesion and military coordination of the Watchurian state to conquer the Levant and from there advance deep into Karung, and even Nubia itself. Great damage was done to the Watchurian cities and the Ashaist holy sites, though the old capital itself was well-fortified and held out long enough.
While the Watchurian central government was unable to deal with the Akkadian incursions, the empire still did manage to turn its deterioration into warlordism into a temporary advantage. Just as Tarek combated Germanics in Iberia and Gaul while preparing the ground for his personal empire that bore only nominal allegiance to Arecomos, another such great general was granted command over the Watchurian forces in Anatolia. Fresh from his triumph over the Thracians, General Euandrios asserted power over all of Anatolia, raising new levies and constructing a powerful fleet. In 515 AD he struck; while his subordinates advanced int the northern Levant and Mesopotamia, Euandrios himself led a large force to relieve Watchur, and after succeeding in that cut off the Akkadian supply and retreat routes, forcing Birsdag to try and fight his way out. The Dag’Uru lost of much of his army along the way, but managed to escape into the Levant and beyond, evading pursuit. Euandrios then swiftly took over the Levant, and appointed provisional military governors loyal only to himself in Karung and the Levant, while also influencing the rise of puppet monarchies in the post-Saganu Caucasian kingdoms of Colchis and Arran. From there he went to Mesopotamia; the Akkadians managed to fight him to a bloody standstill in the 518 AD Battle of Ashur, but he subsequently regrouped and invaded again, sweeping his weakened foes aside and causing immense damage to the Toban colonies. In the end, the Ek’Annu had to pay a huge ransom for Nippur to be spared from retribution and for Euandrios to retreat. Dag’Uru Birsdag had to put down major rebellions after this Third Levantine War, just as the Central Asian part of his empire came under the attack of the Kara-Khasars (distant relatives of those Khasars that were about to invade Europe). The Kara-Khasars were defeated near Samarkand in 524 AD, but not before northern Central Asia was lost to them. Meanwhile, Euandrios asserted his informal empire; he seemed to have been planning a bid for ultimate power in the Watchuran Empire, but was assassinated by political opponents before it happened; still, Euandrids retained effective power over Anatolia for quite a while, indeed surviving in Paphlagonia to 700 AD. They would have probably remained much more powerful if not for the Krakatoa eruption in 535 AD which, as already detailed, caused a volcanic winter and so pushed the already-overstrained civilisations of the Mediterranean and the Middle East into chaos and the Dark Age.
536 AD saw both Watchurian and Akkadian Empires plagued by peasant revolts, warlordism and barbarian invasions. While in Europe it were for most part the Germanics, in the Middle East barbarians attacked from numerous traditional directions. Libyans once more invaded Karung, a new outburst of Arabic migrations flooded all of the Fertile Crescent, Turks attacked from over the Caucasus and Kara-Khasars, by now intermixed with newly-arrived tribes, advanced further into Central Asia and India. Still, while Kara-Khasars, Turks and Libyans launched devastating long-range raids, it were the Arabs that in their sheer numbers had the most significant impact. Numbers were not the only reason; Arabs also were strongly connected to the previous Nubian-Akkadian religious power-games, being quite bitterly divided between Ashaists and the followers of Agade Dag as of the 6th century AD. Indeed, the immediate cause of the Arabic Flood was religious strife; the volcanic winter had not merely intensified the inter-tribal struggles over resources, but was also taken as an important portent in an already-troubled time. Bitter religious wars ensued, but in the end, under the leadership of Rais Khalid of Mecca, the traditional Ashaists prevailed over both heretical, millenialist Ashaist strains and the followers of Agade Dag, expelling them all from Arabia. Rais Khalid then worked to assert his own supreme power over most of Arabia, expelling many of previously-allied tribes as well after another civil war and leaving only the allies. The Khalidid Raisdom of Mecca likewise rode out the storms of the Dark Age, holding out to 700 AD, though by then the central authority had greatly weakened and all that remained was a loose tribal confederacy, though a one with clear monarchic leadership and partial urbanisation in appropriate regions. Meanwhile, the other Arabs rampaged all over the Fertile Crescent, attacking or upholding local religions, sweeping aside the military governorates in Karung, the Levant and southern Anatolia and the ramshackle Akkadian Empire, carving out short-lived empires and launching brutal, drawn-out campaigns of religious warfare with both local factions and other Arabs.
While traditional Ashaism triumphed in Arabia itself, elsewhere in the Fertile Crescent it was eventually crushed. While Ashaist Arabic states did exist in Anatolia and the Levant as of the early 7th century AD, they did not survive the next phase of religious wars. By 670 AD, the heretical Harbic Ashaists (presumed by some to have been influenced by Annihilation Tendency Paramatmanism) had carved out a heavily theocratic empire in northern Nubia, Karung and the Levant, under the brutal and somewhat decadent leadership of King Murr. Even as all that occurred, the Agade Dag Arabs had already triumphed in Mesopotamia and the Iranic regions, and in 667 AD the title of Dag’Uru was taken by an Arabic warlord named Abdalat. Abadalat rebuilt the Akkadian Empire with the support of the Agade Dag temples, though he did partially antagonise these by establishing his capital at the more secure location of Ecbatana rather than in the religious centre of Nippur. Nonetheless, he quite successfully reasserted power in the traditional Akkadian regions and southern Central Asia, and subsequently took advantage of the Harbic civil wars that followed Murr’s death in 679 AD. Agade Dag Arabic vassal states were established in south-eastern Anatolia (Najjaria) and the Levant (Ghatafania), and the Ashaist kingdom of Arran was conquered directly. Arabia itself was successfully protected from incursions by the Khalidids, however, and the Ashaist kingdom of Colchis in the western Caucasus held out, as did some Ashaist Hessonian states. A somewhat more reasonable (but still largely insane) Harbic kingdom was reestablished in Karung anyway. The yet-unconquered parts of Central Asia had remained a battlefield as well; as the rise of the Turks to predominance in the western steppe that occurred over the 7th century AD displaced the northern Kara-Khasars, they were forced to focus on former Sogdiana, eventually creating a Tengrist empire based in Samarkand (the Kara-Khasari Empire). It was opposed by a pro-Akkadian Toba state in the west, the Kingdom of Nisa. The situation remained very much unstable, especially as the beginnings of a Turkish urban civilisation began to emerge in the north.