Alternate History Vivat Stilicho!

ATP

Well-known member
Giving the Popes (or any other Patriarchate for that matter) too much temporal power is something the Emperors should be concerned about in the long term, certainly. With the Roman state having preserved its continuity from the WRE days, there's already the example of Saint Ambrose - not even a Pope - excommunicating Theodosius the Great and actually getting said Emperor to bend that church and state will doubtless be thinking about when there's friction between the two. (Granted, that particular dispute wasn't about investiture, but still. In fact Theodosius' crime, letting barb troops massacre thousands of Roman citizens, would probably have seemed a much scarier context to stand up to him in than a dispute over ecclesiastical authority.)

As far as the ambitions of the lesser federates go, this chapter is showing some of it starting to leak forth in the form of some of the Germanic ones snapping up Lutici/Wendish territory the instant the chance presented itself. Considering that the east is a natural direction for the Teutons in general to want to expand (dat Ostsiedlung, also westward & southward expansion is a no-go as long as the HRE stands for obvious reasons), and that the Emperors are trying to turn the Slavs in that direction into Christian allies rather than destroy them & hand their land off to the Germans - well, it's not a spoiler to deduce that these mutually exclusive goals are probably going to end up at loggerheads at some point.

Ultimately, you can think of kingdoms like Poland as kinda like the Slavic equivalent to Ghana and ones like Lombardy as the Teutonic equivalents to Stilichian Africa. Except they don't have the Sahara to keep them apart and no real history of longstanding friendship (probably quite the contrary), which doesn't bode well for their future interactions.

@stevep The western Gangetic plain's definitely still majority Hindu/Buddhist at this point, the Alid conquest is still relatively fresh. They're definitely working on converting the locals to the new religion though, and aren't going to be going about that business nearly as carefully or gently as the Indo-Romans are.

Anything & everything else, as always, are spoiler material. Especially stuff to do with future developments in Russia, all I can say at this time is that any 'anti-Normanist' controversy ITL will be taking a rather different tack compared to OTL ;)

Yes,germans could not conqest slavic tribes as long as HRE exist.
Good for slavic tribes - mote kingdoms would be made there.HRE emperors are not only good christians,but also smart - stronger german kings would eventually rebel.

Africa - if they are going for Chad lake,they would not only meet sao city-states there

But also could meet Kanem empire,which was not muslim yet/in OTL they started about 900AD and become muslims 200 years later - you could made them earlier,and save both them and sao from muslims.
For a price,of course.

And,Berbers could go to Carribean islands and Brasil,too - phoenicians and greeks almost for sure knew about them.
Emperor could not cosplain,if Stillithians go and made peaceful contact with some pagans,right?

And China decide to commit suicide by its own army.Poor bastards.

Well,Japan and maybe Korea would become independent,just like Tibet.
Muslims would invade,but indo-romans should hold,

Normans - they could not take Kiev,if HRE would be there.And locals would not seek help against Chazars from them,if they have legions.
Which could led to Vikings helping chazars and becoming odin worshipping jews ;)
 
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shangrila

Well-known member
Not just the now treaty limited Africans might turn to the seas to expand. The Visigoths are completely cut off from any possible expansion unless they sail down Africa or across the Atlantic. The Visigoths, Galicia, and Aquitaine are in the odd position of being Federates that only exist to guard against each other instead of an external border. Better than them not balancing each other, but a waste of resources, especially if assimilation proceeds. Too bad sailing tech is still so shit.

Speaking of which, does it violate the treaty with Ghana for Africa to set up colonies south of Ghana by sea?
 

ATP

Well-known member
Not just the now treaty limited Africans might turn to the seas to expand. The Visigoths are completely cut off from any possible expansion unless they sail down Africa or across the Atlantic. The Visigoths, Galicia, and Aquitaine are in the odd position of being Federates that only exist to guard against each other instead of an external border. Better than them not balancing each other, but a waste of resources, especially if assimilation proceeds. Too bad sailing tech is still so shit.

Speaking of which, does it violate the treaty with Ghana for Africa to set up colonies south of Ghana by sea?
Technology was not that bad,and remember,that you have sea currents on Atlantic which deliver shipd from Canaries to Carribean,and from Carribean to Azores.

Both phoenicians and Carthage probably knew it,and greeks was probably aware of that,too.
Columbus sailed as if he knew where Carribeans were after all.

And Visigoths - yes,sailing is only option for them now.Especially,that America existence in known.
Or maybe try to circle Africa and go to India that way.

They schould remember abaout phoenicians hired by pharaoh Necho who did it in 600 BC.
 
756-760: Clearing the Three Paths

Circle of Willis

Well-known member
While the Roman army returned victorious from the campaign against the Lutici, the Khazars spent 756 subjugating their new Oghuz neighbors. The Oghuz Turks were more fractious and spread over a larger territory than the Kimeks who had previously been defeated by Simon-Sartäç, which meant that the Khagan could not simply defeat one horde to bring them to heel but several; on the other hand, he could also engage in a bit of divide et impera by negotiating with individual Oghuz khans & tribes who were more amenable to joining the Khazar-led new order than their neighbors. They might have been more than a little confused by the array of conflicting religious symbols which Simon-Sartäç wore and rode under, but what they couldn't possibly misunderstand was the offer made in their own language to settle scores with & profit off of their local rivals in exchange for bowing their necks before the strongest nomadic horde on the steppe that day.

In this manner Simon-Sartäç did gradually subvert and incorporate the Oghuz tribes, extending Khazar power deeper still into Central Asia as far as the lake of Ysyk-Köl[1] and the Tian Shan mountain range which abutted China's northwestern flank. That left just the Karluks, still reeling from the successful Uyghur uprising against their tyrannical rule and abandoned by the Later Han who had grown decidedly lazy and complacent, as the only remaining major Turkic people to still not recognize the Khagan in Atil as their suzerain (and not one also covered by Chinese protection, unlike the newly ascendant Uyghurs, although such protection seemed increasingly worthless if what Simon-Sartäç had heard of Emperor Chongzong's foreign policy was any indicator). As word of the Karluks' weakness reached him through scouts and Silk Road merchants, Simon-Sartäç resolved to finish them off before calling it a day and returning west – the Uyghurs could wait until Chinese weakness had become more apparent still.

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Mural of Oghuz chiefs coming to Atil to prostrate themselves before Simon-Sartäç Khagan

Further trouble manifested on the northern Chinese border this year, east of where the Karluks and Uyghurs lay. The Mohe tribes, who had last involved themselves in the Sino-Korean-Yamato wars of the sixth & seventh centuries but had since been kept dormant by the threat of overwhelming Chinese martial might and the steady unification of Korea under the Silla by way of marriage (and attrition wearing down the royal families of Baekje & Goguryeo), began to stir once more as the Later Han's grip on military affairs slackened and their watch grew increasing lax. In 756 one of their tribal chiefs, a man named Wugunai who hailed from and led the Wanyan clan, unified many of the Mohe peoples under his standard and not only renounced the customary tribute payment to Luoyang, but began to harass both Korea and China's Liaoning & Liaoxi provinces. Emperor Chongzong and his court responded by sending a modest (by Chinese standards) suppression force of 30,000, expecting this (coupled with allied reinforcements from Silla) would be sufficient to tame the Mohe before their heads could get any bigger.

Wugunai proceeded to surprise his enemies by first launching a pre-emptive attack into northern Korea which scattered the Silla reinforcements as they were still assembling beneath Mount Changbai[2], then ambushing and destroying the Chinese division at the Battle of Gungnae (one of Goguryeo's ancient capitals) before they had even become aware that their awaited Korean reinforcements were no more. Another army (now numbering 50,000 strong and including survivors of the first host) was hurriedly dispatched but then rushed headlong into another trap and was routed in the summer, Wugunai's successes having attracted the support of Khitan adventurers. Finally, a third army of 90,000 men was assembled out of reinforcements pulled from the other frontiers and the remnants of the first two armies, but would have been defeated at the Battle of Linjiang were it not for the bravery and quick thinking of Ma Gui, a captain of Sinicized Tegreg background who led his fellow Turkic heavy horsemen to break through Wugunai's encirclement. After this victory Chongzong reached an agreement with Wugunai, acquiring peace and tribute from him once more but failing to press the advantage and break up the nascent Mohe state, which disappointed Ma Gui and his fellow soldiers.

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Wugunai, the first high chief of the Mohe known to have contended with China and survived, establishing a future for his people between Silla and the Later Han

On the other side of the Atlantic, for years now European diseases had come to inevitably and increasingly ravage the indigenous populations neighboring Annún's growing settlements due to a complete lack of natural immunity, despite the efforts of the Annúnites to treat those of their neighbors. Even worse, the disease had spread to those Wildermen's own Wilderman neighbors – and the Three Fires Confederacy, previously interested in the metal offerings of the newcomers, now blamed them for bringing pestilence & death to their people as well, horrors which they further transmitted onto their trading partners among the Wildermen to the south. The greatly aged King Eluédh personally headed a diplomatic mission to reassure the tribes at their great meeting place on 'Turtle Island'[11] (Bry.: Isle de Méginach).

Alas, the aggrieved and despairing Wildermen were in no mood to negotiate: there the old king was seized and executed by order of the great chiefs and elders of the Ogibwé, Éttaué and the Pottuétomé, most of whom had lost at least one friend or relative to the fevers and other diseases brought on by the New World Britons. As the Three Fires used the opportunity to declare war on the newcomers and march to drive them into the sea, it fell to Eluédh's heir Guerdhérn (Wel.: 'Gwertheyrn') to rally his people and those eastern Anicinébe tribes which maintained a bitter traditional rivalry with the western-based Three Fires tribes. The first real war in northern Aloysiana, greater than any skirmish previously fought between the Wildermen and Irish or Annúnites (or between the Irish and the British of the New World for that matter), was now imminent.

In 757, Emperor Leo and Pope John completed their stone bridge over the Danube where once Trajan's own bridge had been: it would appropriately be named the 'Brothers' Bridge' (Dacian: Podul Fraților) and serve to firmly link Dacia to the rest of the Holy Roman Empire for as long as it stood. The Augustus also steadily continued the process of rebuilding his eastern legions – both the Danubian army battered in the war with the Khazars and the Antiochene one mauled by the Muslims – and of repairing Dacia's infrastructure, in addition to building new fortified settlements around the castles and churches increasingly dotting that long-abandoned region. Atop all these efforts, Rome also continued to pump funds into its missionary efforts abroad in Sclavinia; more resources for the missionaries to build more ornate churches and sway the Slavic villages they visited into converting with. No doubt Leo III remained wary of the Khazars ambushing the empire again, even as he still harbored hope of recovering Syria & Palestine from the Muslims at some point.

Speaking of said Khazars, Simon-Sartäç rode further east still this year, to strike the iron of the Karluks while it was still hot and dented from the losing battle with the Uyghurs. At first he just launched a few raids to test for a Chinese response, but when none came, he attacked in full: as expected, he crushed the weakened and fractured Karluks in a matter of months, compelling Kobyak Khagan's successor Kubasar to bow down before him and reducing that particular three-tribe Turkic confederacy into another Khazar vassal, akin to the Kimeks and the more fractured Oghuz. Kubasar (now merely a Khan) did implore the Khagan of the Khazars to also strike at the Uyghurs and bring them back under Karluk rule, but Simon-Sartäç was still wary of the seemingly still impressive power of the Later Han and declined, as he had no interest in antagonizing them as the Northern Turks once did when his primary rivals instead lay to the west & south. In any case, with these victories he had managed to mostly reassemble the aforementioned Northern Tegreg Khaganate's territories under Khazar rulership.

Simon-Sartäç now returned to Atil, hoping to parlay his battlefield victories into a political and spiritual one by accelerating his syncretic policies, and indeed he oversaw a joint celebration featuring Tengriist shamans and Buddhist abbots shortly after he reached his capital. As of 757, his sages had made great progress in laying down a common foundation for the unity of Buddhism and Tengriism: the Tengriist gods were reinterpreted as devas in the framework of Buddhist cosmology, divine beings who nevertheless still needed to attain full enlightenment by following the path of the great Buddha. Benevolent spirits were recast as bodhisattvas, kindly divinities who were already on the right path and hoped to instruct mortals in doing much the same, while the malevolent ones were to now be perceived as demons – in particular Erlik, the Turkic god of death and the underworld who commands evil spirits that torment humanity, was considered one & the same as the demonic god Mara who tried to tempt Buddha himself. Tengriism's preexisting belief in the reincarnation of the soul also meshed well with Buddhist beliefs about the cycle of reincarnation. Now, Simon-Sartäç wondered, if only it were as easy to bring Judaism together with the others…

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Simon-Sartäç, garbed in heavenly blue, stands surrounded by concubines (and a child by one of them) and servants drawn from the various Turkic peoples he has managed to unite beneath his banner

Elsewhere, the Three Fires Confederacy marched against Annún. Now these Wildermen of the western Great Lakes might have been a bit more structured than their eastern rivals who had fallen in line behind the newcomers or else tried to stay out of everyone's way, but they still weren't exactly at a Roman or even European barbarian level of social organization: no singular chief could command his entire clan or tribe to fight with him as a Germanic king could, some tribes were too badly mauled by the onset of European diseases to make any meaningful contribution to the fight, and in any case the war-host which spilled forth from the western side of the Great Lakes was essentially a large undisciplined mob – multiple fractious warbands, armed with weapons of flint and wood, answering to their own chiefs rather than any central commander. At best the warchiefs chose one among their number to represent their people (one for the Ogibwé, Éttaué and Pottuétomé each) in discussions with one another, but these were not commanding generals who could order the other warchiefs around and any strategy they came up with was non-binding.

Still, undisciplined and weakened by pestilence though they might be, this was still the largest host amassed by the Three Fires tribes to date at about 1,500 strong. As far as they were concerned this was more than enough to destroy any enemy army beneath their ferocity and sheer weight of numbers, and had they only been facing the eastern Anicinébe or Uendage alone, they would have been right. Alas they were facing the Britons after the latter had had some decades to settle in and crown a new leader in Guerdhérn, who wielded two key advantages over them despite managing to scrounge up less than half their number between his own settled warriors and auxiliaries from allied Wilderman tribes: first, of course, he had access to horses, metal weapons and armor, but secondly his own army – at least its British component – was much more tightly organized and disciplined.

Now the Three Fires Wildermen advanced in a haphazard manner, warbands often breaking off from the main body of their army to pillage the growing farms of the Britons and those locals who remained their allies. After assembling his host of 400 (including about 80 Britons, a dozen of whom were mounted knights) Guerdhérn moved to exploit such sloppiness by assailing these individual warbands before they could regroup with the main army, defeating them in detail and striving to kill as many hostile Anicinébe as possible, not only to avenge his father but also to ensure there'd be fewer survivors who could bring news of his tactics to their chiefs. After such annihilation befell two Anicinébe warbands, one of sixty men and the other of a hundred & three, the rest got the message and stuck together as they drew closer to Cité-Réial.

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Anicinébe warriors attacking an Annúnite farmstead

Once his scouts determined that the Wildermen were now moving as a singular massive host, still several times the size of his own army, Guerdhérn took his chance to force a major engagement. West of the Vérgeda Lakes[3], as they'd translated their allies' name ('Ka-wa-tha') for this collection of small bodies of water, the Britons and their allies made their stand against the oncoming Three Fires army. Once the enemy chiefs were done having a laugh at the meager size of their foe's ranks, they loosed their arrows and then immediately launched into a furious charge, intending to roll over the Annúnites. Guerdhérn surprised them on account of not only failing to quail before and flee from their might, or even just standing still and holding ranks, but by launching a counter-charge.

The British king and his horsemen led the way, formed up into an armored wedge with lances bristling outward at the unarmored Wildermen trying to swarm them. These thirteen riders smashed through the front ranks (such as they were) of the Three Fires war-host, scattering the indigenes who had never faced horses nor iron-armored warriors in combat before, and felling multiple chiefs who got in their way before the latter could rally their now-wavering troops, while the infantry too was following close behind to mop up whatever scattered resistance remained. The Battle of the Vérgeda Lakes rapidly degenerated into a one-sided massacre and rout as the Three Fires tribesmen collapsed in disarray; for the first time Europeans and Wildermen had fought a real battle on the soil of mainland Aloysiana, and not for the first time, the former's heavy cavalry had won them the day – indeed there would be larger battles still where similarly few knights would turn worse tides in favor of the Europeans.

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Tabletop reenactment of the Battle of the Vérgeda Lakes. For all their numbers, no doubt the Wildermen have been saddled with severe debuffs in the face of the British knights charging at them

Come 758, Emperor Leo was sufficiently convinced that peace had returned to the Slavic frontier and that his missionaries' efforts were continuing unimpeded that he redeployed his heir from the front to the innards of the Holy Roman Empire. Theodosius Caesar was accordingly appointed urban prefect (or, in Greek, 'eparch') of Constantinople this year, a role in which he would accrue valuable administrative experience in service under his father-in-law Gabriel Rhangabe (who naturally occupied the seat of the Praetorian Prefect of the Orient). In general the Caesar would find himself alternating between high civil and military offices, mostly (though not always) in the East, so long as his father lived, thereby solidifying another tradition of the Blood of Saint Jude – where the incumbent Augustus wasn't, his heir surely would be, once mature: for example, if he was ruling the Occident from Trévere then the Caesar could most probably be found administering affairs in Constantinople, and if he was campaigning on the eastern frontier then the Caesar could be found holding the fort in Trévere or Ravenna instead.

East of Rome, Simon-Sartäç Khagan took a different tack in trying to promote his syncretic vision among the Steppe Jews. He placed the weight of his imperial patronage behind those Jewish teachers and sages who were most agreeable to the aforementioned vision, primarily those of a more mystical bent: in particular the Merkabah mystical tradition, the ones who placed great emphasis on Ezekiel's visions of the Chariot of God and who were proponents of introspective meditation as a route through which to spiritually ascend to the heavenly palaces. This search for and practice of heavenly ascent was thought to be more compatible with Buddhist meditative practices, and the Khagan also took great pains to emphasize Buddhism's lack of acknowledgment of any specific gods in order to present it as less of a rival religion and more of a lifestyle compatible with Judaism. The emphasis on mysticism also brought with it a reappraisal of the Jewish afterlife: the Khagan encouraged among the Steppe Jews an understanding of the afterlife and general cosmology as being further divided into Heaven or Shamayim where God dwells and Gehinnom as a place of fiery punishment equivalent to the Christian Hell or Buddhist Naraka, and Sheol (formerly just the morally neutral dwelling of all who have died) as merely a place attached to the Earth where the deceased's immortal souls pass through before reincarnating/transmigrating to a new body (gilgul, likened to the Buddhist idea of Samsara) – a fairly new understanding advanced by some Talmudic scholars, but by no means a majority view among the Jewish population.

Of course, there was opposition to this emphasis on mysticism and union with heathen faiths which Simon-Sartäç was pushing. But those sages who opposed the regime's syncretic tendencies soon found themselves increasingly bereft of funding and protection, even if Simon-Sartäç didn't quite go to the length of actively persecuting or expelling them as the Romans did, while their rivals benefited from more of those things and increasingly exclusive control of the grand synagogues built at Atil and Tana. Whatever happened with Simon-Sartäç's ambitious syncretic project, his meddling with Steppe Judaism would lend to it a stronger mystical tradition and a more ambivalent relationship with the Torah & Talmud (whose restrictions on Merkabah meditations he sought to relax) compared to Judaism elsewhere, and though the more famous discipline of Kabbalah was still centuries away its first seeds had begun to germinate on the steppe thanks to his influence.

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A Jewish scholar in Simon-Sartäç's employ tries to persuade one of his compatriots to support the Khagan's religious policies

To the southeast, the book was closing at long last on the Hunas. Buddhatala, the last Huna Mahārājadhirāja of any ability and renown, was by this time long dead, and the Bengal-centered realm left to the Hunas had only declined further under his less competent son Chastana and grandson Mirahvara; the latter of whom had only managed to retain the throne following the death of his father in an army mutiny six years prior by securing an alliance with another Indian general named Dharmachandra. In this year the Indian general Dharmachandra, who Mirahvara had ironically wedded to his sister Yajnavati in a bid to firmly lock down his loyalty, launched a palace coup in Gauda after first issuing a false alarm about a Muslim-backed conspiracy to get his men past the city's defenses peaceably. Few were willing to fight for the Huna dynasty of Toramana and Akhshunwar now, resulting in their massacre and replacement by the now-ascendant Chandra dynasty of Bengal which nevertheless carried their blood thanks to Yajnavati.

Thus did the monsoon season of 758 mark the final demise of the Hunas who had once overthrown the Guptas and Sassanids to become masters of all the lands between the Euphrates and the Bay of Bengal, and later still nearly came to subjugate the whole of the Indian subcontinent: theirs would chiefly be told as a tale of wasted opportunities, repeatedly soaring to glorious heights only to squander their fortune away amid chronic and severe infighting, which lasted as late as the fatal Islamic invasion that left them a crippled 'walking-dead' empire lingering for a few more decades in eastern India before finally going out with a whimper. Still, Buddhist Indians had some cause for fond remembrance, as the Hunas at least preserved and extended their religion's dominion for about three centuries. Hindus, meanwhile, universally reviled their legacy as that of vicious, barbaric conquerors who toppled the great Gupta dynasty and then failed to fill the void they'd just created, setting up centuries of bloodshed and foreign invasions further afflicting a weakened and fragmented northern India.

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Dharmachandra leading a military exercise under the eyes of Mirahvara, who suspects nothing of his greatest general & brother-in-law

Back in Aloysiana, the onset of the bitter northern winter had kept both Guerdhérn and the reeling Three Fires Confederacy from launching any major actions against one another until late April. At most, both sides were only able to launch raids against the other, a method of warfare to which the Wildermen were better suited than large-scale pitched battles. Still, the instant the snow had become manageable, the Annúnites took their chance to go on the offensive; in this they were aided by some innovations introduced by their own Wilderman allies, chiefly snowshoes of a rounded and long-tailed design which they adopted from the Uendage. With or without their horses, the metal equipment and engineering knowhow of the New World Britons gave them a formidable edge over the Three Fires Confederacy, which was unable to halt their advance across the eastern side of the Great Lakes[4].

Guerdhérn concentrated his attacks on the Éttaué, the Confederate component whose lands lay closest to his own and who had previously been the most positively disposed of the Three Fires tribes toward the Britons. The Éttaué, for their part, were unable to reverse the tide and struggled to acquire reinforcements both from their own ranks – as Annún's army won additional victories and built up momentum, more and more clans decided to just sue for peace and become vassals of the – and those of their neighbors, who were shocked at their crushing defeat the year before and uncertain of how to respond to the seemingly unstoppable Britons. By the end of this year, most of the Éttaué had already yielded to Guerdhérn, who busied himself with rounding up hostages from their leading families and preparing to cross over Annún's new westernmost straits[5]; this time not with a peaceful party of diplomats and priests as his father had done, but with an army.

In 759 Bãdalaréu, the Dominus Rex of Africa, died peacefully in his sleep. He was smoothly succeeded by his son Gostãdénu ('Constantine'), who sought to carry on his father's policies with the additional twist of striving to consolidate & colonize those lands already discovered & claimed by African forces rather than continue seeking new horizons, or potentially lock himself into a collision course with the Ghanaians. This meant not only a stronger push to lock down and settle the places where Bãdalaréu's surveyors had already determined human settlement was actually viable, such as Gégetté, but also founding the first permanent African outpost (admittedly a meager start, at a watchtower and enough shacks for a party of twelve) on the northernmost of the Ésulas Benedéddés, which they dubbed 'Bordu-Santu' or the 'Holy Harbor'[6]. As well Gostãdénu intensified missionary efforts in the Canaries with the endgoal of bringing the islands not only into Christ's embrace but also beneath his suzerainty, with the Patriarchate of Carthage dispatching a large mission of forty priests and deacons who would entrench themselves at the village of Telde on the largest of these islands.

While the Berber indigenes of the islands, who were increasingly simply referred to as 'Guanches' (Afr.: 'Guãgge') after their own name for the people of the largest Canary island ('guanachinet'), increasingly came under the cultural and religious influence of their distant Moorish kindred, the heightened contact did cut both ways and allow said Moors to pick up some influences from them as well. African missionaries, merchants and adventurers brought back to the mainland a habit of musical whistling, inspired by the whistled language used by some of the Guanches, and a stick-fencing martial art called banod (Afr.: bãud), which they had observed the Guanches practicing in ritual combat. The former was not of much practical use when the Roman army already had instruments and banners for signaling purposes in combat, but the latter would soon catch on with young Moorish boys of all social classes.

From Africa this new sport spread to the neighboring Visigoths who called it juego del palo (the 'game of the stick') in Espanesco, and from them it would spread to the rest of the Holy Roman Empire as well. Gothic interest in overseas exploration was also piqued for the first time by reports of African forays in that direction bearing fruit – the Balthings now increasingly looked to the sea for glory & opportunities to expand over the next decades & centuries, as well. As sparring with wooden weapons was already common practice for the sons & wards of knights, in time the stick-fighting habits first picked up by the Moors would be incorporated into the training regimens of young pages and squires all over Europe, though the specific practice of banod (using longer sticks than would become standard elsewhere) remained largely exclusive to Africa.

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Guanche warriors wielding fighting sticks, with which they'll demonstrate banod to their mainland African cousins

Off in the east, Simon-Sartäç was momentarily distracted from religious affairs by his new Karluk vassals launching renewed attacks against the Uyghurs, who threatened to call in the support of their new Chinese overlords. Now as far as the Khazar Khagan knew, the Later Han didn't seem to care in the slightest when he subjugated the Karluks a few years prior, so perhaps they would also be too lazy and complacent to mind when he allowed Kubasar Khan to settle some grudges with the Uyghurs on their periphery either. He and the Karluks were both rudely disabused of that notion when Ma Gui rode in to shore up the northwestern front with 5,000 heavy horsemen: while they themselves could not have possibly stopped the Khazars, these men's presence seemed to signal to the nomads that the Dragon Throne was preparing to chastise the Karluks & Khazars both, and at this time the decay spilling forth from Luoyang was not yet apparent to the Khagan in Atil.

This affair was another step toward that realization though, as Ma Gui's move had been a bluff: in the capital feuding between court cliques had escalated to the point that following months of insults and shadowy maneuvering, the Director of the Imperial Chancellery was assassinated in broad daylight by a 40-strong gang employed by the Director of the Palace Secretariat, who had come to believe that the former's influence at court was too strong for him to be eliminated in any subtler fashion. Naturally this debacle was so high-profile as to demand Emperor Chongzong actually attend to his duties for once, resulting in him executing the men responsible and firing their associates – only to then retreat to his harem and delegate to the Director of the Imperial Secretariat, a relatively young and extremely ambitious eunuch named Zhang Ai, the duty of replacing them. As it so happened, Zhang Ai had set his rivals up to destroy one another and now seized the opportunity to stack the upper echelons of both the Chancellery & Palace Secretariat with his trusted allies, thereby tilting the internal balance of power in China toward the eunuchs and consolidating his clique's power over the Three Departments & Six Ministries. Amid all this excitement, Simon-Sartäç was able to get away just by sending some tribute to Luoyang as a peace offering.

In the far west, before King Guerdhérn could carry his attack onto their heartland, the Three Fires Council sued for peace. The British king agreed to negotiate, and imposed strident terms: he demanded justice for his martyred father, hostages from the leading clans of the Confederacy's tribes, and an annual tribute to be paid in furs. Furthermore, the Éttaué living on the eastern side of the Great Lakes were required to swear allegiance to Guerdhérn as vassals, although they do not seem to have understood what this entailed: as far as the Wildermen were concerned, being unfamiliar with European concepts of fealty & suzerainty, they were still a part of the Three Fires Confederacy and their only obligation to Guerdhérn was a tribute of furs (offered so he didn't kill them). To these the Three Fires tribes agreed so as to avoid being destroyed by the vengeful Britons (or worse, their even more vengeful Wilderman auxiliaries, many of whom came from tribes bearing a traditional rivalry with the Three Fires), and though Guerdhérn had been looking forward to executing his father's killers himself, he was shocked and appalled when the responsible chiefs and elders publicly committed suicide instead, which technically fulfilled his condition but greatly offended his Christian sensibilities.

The second of Annún determined that he should intensify efforts to evangelize the Good News among the Wildermen, both in the hope that if they became fellow Pelagians they'd be less inclined to attack his people and that if they did come to blows then at least no Wilderman would kill themselves before him in defeat. The long-term effect, which he probably did not intend, was a degree of syncretism between the Pelagian Christianity brought by the Britons and the 'Way of the Heart' or Midewiwin practiced by the Anicinébe, to the point that the former would become clearly distinct from the Pelagianism still practiced by the 'Remnant' faction back in their motherland. In short, what Simon-Sartäç hoped to accomplish on purpose, Guerdhérn had set in motion by accident.

Come 760, the Romans celebrated some developments of importance both within and without the formal boundaries of their empire. Firstly, Theodosius Caesar and his wife Theophano welcomed into the world their son, who was christened Constantine in keeping with the Aloysian tradition of alternating between Western and Eastern imperial names for their heirs. Secondly, the Christianization of Poland received a major boost in this year as Bożena, the wife of the Polish ruler Włodzisław, herself was baptized into the faith. She strongly pushed her husband to follow in her footsteps: Włodzisław himself would not do so until he was on his deathbed, but he did prove to be the most pro-Christian monarch Poland had up to this point, in large part because he saw the potential in Christianization to serve as a wonderful tool for the centralization of the Lechitic tribes into a true kingdom and the Roman clergy as educated administrators.

SQ8Eadp.jpg

Bożena, celebrated by Christians for being a driving influence behind the process of Poland's conversion (and formation into a proper kingdom) being accelerated in the late eighth century
Consequently, Włodzisław wrote (with Bożena's encouragement) to Leo of his willingness to accept additional missionaries and to have Svatopluk of Velehrad, the Apostle of the Slavs sent to Poland, be installed as the land's first Bishop so as to more effectively steward over the growing Christian flock there. For his seat, no less than Gniezno (Lat.: Gnesna, formerly simply Vicus Polani to Roman chroniclers) would do: not only was it supposedly founded by Włodzisław's ancestor Lech but it was a cult center for the traditional Slavonic religion, which made the prospect of turning it into Poland's first Christian bastion all the more attractive, and Włodzisław also aspired to build a proper Roman-style castle and royal capital atop the site – why, there were even seven hills on which to build the first proper Polish capital, just like Rome itself. Of course the Augustus was perfectly happy to fulfill this request and to send Włodzisław & Svatopluk everything that they asked for, resulting in the construction of a church (for now having to co-exist alongside existing pagan shrines & holy sites nearby), fortifications and a more elaborate palace than had previously existed among the Poles in Gniezno over the coming years[7].

To further quicken and solidify the Polish transition to Christianity, also at his wife's suggestion Włodzisław sent his six-year-old son and heir Bożydar to the Emperor's court, that he might be brought up in the heart of Christendom and be baptized in the new faith. Leo happily took the boy under his wing with plans to have him join Theodosius Caesar, who moved around a good deal more even as the Augustus himself mostly remained at Trévere, after his twelfth birthday. Furthermore the Emperor agreed that Bożydar may marry his slightly younger granddaughter Scantilla in the future, a match which would mark the first direct link between the Aloysians and the 'Lechowicz' dynasty of Poland, but only after he had converted to Christianity of his own volition. In deepening ties between the Holy Roman Empire and Poland to this degree, Leo hoped to massively accelerate the process of Poland's Christianization and crystallization into a strong kingdom, as befitting of the oldest and most powerful of the Empire's non-federate Slavic allies – and all the better to control the ambitions of his own Teutonic vassals, in particular the Lombards who had skirmished with the Lechitic tribes comprising the southwesternmost wing of Włodzisław's realm such as the Silensi (Polish: 'Ślężanie') and Golensizi (Pol.: 'Golęszycy') almost as often as they squabbled with the Lutici.

Poland was not the only emergent Slavic state to hold the attention of Leo III in 760. The Augustus also had his eye on the Antae tribes east of the Polani; especially the Polianians, Drevlians and Severians who would form his intended front-line against Khazaria on the eastern steppes. In this same year the twin Greco-Gothic priests Valens and Vitalian, having managed to become counselors to the high chiefs Stanislav of the Polianians and Volodar of the Drevlians respectively, persuaded their respective allies that it would be wise to more closely link their tribes by way of a marriage between their children. Thus would Stanislav's young son Mstislav be wedded to Volodar's equally young daughter Veleslava, with any offspring produced by this union sure to be educated by the easternmost of the Apostles to the Slavs, while their warriors pledged to stand as a united front against Khazar raids in the future. While this development pleased Leo, it also greatly alarmed Simon-Sartäç Khagan, and most probably made a full-on Khazar assault on the budding Slavic kingdoms around the Dnieper inevitable.

9SfhlAV.jpg

Marriage of Mstislav of the Polianians to Veleslava of the Drevlians, which served to hopefully bind the Antae of the Dnieper's middle length together against common enemies such as Khazaria and make it easier for the Romans to Christianize them as well

Speaking of Simon-Sartäç, it was in 760 that he believed he had pushed his syncretic reforms as far & as hard as possible without throwing his realm into civil war, and thus decided it was time to wrap things up so that he might instead prepare to contest Rome's growing sphere of influence over the East Slavs. The Khazars now could be said to be adherents of the 'Three Paths': not an actual syncretic religion in and of itself, but rather referring to Judaism, Buddhism and Tengriism as practiced under Khazar auspices on the Pontic Steppe. In theory, all those walking the Three Paths had a common goal: finding enlightenment and escaping the flawed, decaying world – Samsara to the Buddhists, Yer to the Tengriists, and Eres and Sheol both to the Jews. By way of asceticism, healthy living and intense meditation, one can dissolve the chains binding them to the material world (Nirvana) and ascend to live a truly free life without end in Heaven (Tengri/Shamayim).

That was just about where the similarities and agreements ended. In practice the Three Paths could not, and probably could never, come to an understanding on fundamental questions of cosmology and religious truth, such as the number of gods in existence (or indeed whether there are any true gods at all) or even what the paradisaical post-enlightenment afterlife actually entailed. Simon-Sartäç had strove mightily to impress upon the Steppe Jews that at least some Buddhist practices could be adopted, such as meditation to calm their inner self and to draw closer to God, without also embracing the aspects considered problematic such as offering sacrifices to anything resembling another deity; in this regard he also sought to lead by example. Furthermore he had encouraged, as much as humanly possible, mystically-inclined strains of thought among the sages which would push concepts aligned with Buddhism (truly the mediator between the Three Paths) such as reincarnation supported by the revised cosmological framework of Sheol; karma (translated to Hebrew as middah k'neged middah, 'measure for measure'); the drawing of an equivalence between the Jewish Messiah & the concept of Maitreya Buddha; and the identification of the Buddha & bodhisattvas as prophetic figures, as well as that of Tengriist deities with Jewish angels (most notably Koyash, the Turco-Mongol solar god and eldest son of Tengri, was reframed as Ak-Koyash – 'White/Luminous Koyash' – and identified with the Archangel Michael, protector of Israel).

That, however, was as far as Simon-Sartäç had dared push Judaic syncretism with the other two Paths for fear of fully incurring the wrath of his mother and rebellion among her people, leaving it the least integrated of the three steppe faiths. Certainly the Jews still living in the confines of the Holy Roman Empire did not think highly of even these limited steps toward syncretism, and not merely to allay the suspicion of their overlords, but because it seemed to them that Simon-Sartäç was polluting the faith with foreign influences like one of the worse kings of Israel & Judah and straying dangerously close (at best) to undermining the First Commandment. Buddhism and Tengriism had been easier to mesh together, with Tengriist formulas and ceremonies working their way into Buddhism as practiced by the Khazars and vice-versa, and Tengriist deities being reinterpreted as devas, bodhisattvas or demonic asuras in the Buddhist cosmological framework. Still even these two Paths remained distinct from one another, and ultimately besides theoretically having the same endgoal and a varying number of shared practices, Simon-Sartäç had to content himself with the other main unifying factor among the Three Paths of the Steppes being their support for the Khazars against the Holy Roman Empire and Dar al-Islam.

====================================================================================

[1] Issyk-Kul.

[2] Paektu Mountain.

[3] Kawartha Lakes.

[4] The Ontario Peninsula.

[5] The Detroit & St. Clair rivers.

[6] Porto Santo.

[7] Historically, Gniezno seems to have already been settled to some extent as of the eighth century, but it took until 940 for it to actually become the Polish capital.
 

ATP

Well-known member
Great chapter,thanks!
So,both Khazars and WRE get new vassals,and probably would fight each other again....unless China manage to fuck itself so much,then Khazars decide to invade them.
But even if that not happen,China would still fall,unless some miracle save them.
After that - independent Japan,Korea,Tibet,Manchu and maybe more.
Till Another emperor unite China,of course.

Muslims would invade Belisarius dynasty then,but they probably woud hold.

Africa - maybe Visigots would discover Crribean,not Berbers,but somebody would do that.
And Berbers would certainly go circle Africa,and try to get spices from India.
Hard to achieve without guns and caravels ,which gave victory to Portugal in OTL.

In Poland Gniezno was sriously searched before 1966,but all they discovered was remnants of small schrine which was destroyed before Poland get christianed.
And,since our commies try very hard to find proofs that we were ardent pagans,we knew for good that it was only schrine ever built on our territory.
So,when we certainly have some gods,we do not even knew anytching about them except names and their dominions.
We could try recreate it from folk tales gathered in 19th century,but since those tales was gathered among christians who do not worschipped pagan gods at least from 1200AD,in is unclear how reliable it would be.

But it mean,that you could take their names and made polish pagan gods whatever suit you !
 

PsihoKekec

Swashbuckling Accountant
Simon-Sartäc was wise to wait until Later Han rule degenerates even further, on homefront though, the three paths can be held together while there is a strong wise leader who can balance the opposite currents, but as soon Khazars get a less capable leader it will blow into their faces like surströmming claymore.

I reckon the Ma Gui will be the one to finally kick over the rotten edifice of the Later Han and usher the new interesting times, either during the reign of Chongzong successor or already in his time.

Looks like history will be kinder to guanches in TTL.


where the incumbent Augustus wasn't, his heir surely would be, once mature

That is rather solid policy, giving the heir responsibilities to prepare himself for eventually becoming the ruler and allowing better response to any plots.
 

shangrila

Well-known member
Arguably, simply producing an adult heir is already pretty close to the best policy, though it's pretty hard to actually make that policy without polygamy, which is impossible in Christian Europe.

France became an united kingdom while Italy and Germany fell apart mostly because the House of Capet had the extraordinary ability to pass power from father to adult son almost continuously for centuries. You don't see any brilliant hero kings like Otto I, Barbarossa, or Frederick II, but you don't need those if you have adult sons of even middling competence.

And hey, maybe Ma Gui will be the Stilicho of China. Dynastic change via political maneuver or coup is not completely unknown in China, it's not always ROTK style "a realm long united must divide".
 

stevep

Well-known member
Ultimately Simon-Sartäc's bid will fail as I can't see Judaism as an Abrahmic faith ever accepting equality with other religions. Its taken until the late 20thC in the modern world and massive amounts of death and destruction to achieve such ideas from elements of Christianity and Judaism and how long that would stick I don't know. Otherwise however as long as he and his successors can ride that tiger they stands a chance of maintaining a strong state and holding off the empire, at least in the western steppes. The latter with always be an aggressive threat but I suspect its unlikely to be able to hold major gains in the region for prolonged periods. Also its primary enemy is the Caliphate.

Sad to see the Huna go but they were cursed with perpetual ill-fortune and its opened up much of northern India to Islamic rule earlier than OTL. Also, coupled with the decline of China its made the Indo-Greek state vulnerable and that must be living on borrowed time. Even if it continues to consistently produce very skilled leaders its far too exposed to Islamic attack.

Things are looking better for the Pelagic state in exile with that big win. They have the chance to build a larger and more powerful state that could resist the 'Irish' settlements on the coast and possibly even if the latter gets direct imperial support.

I agree with PK that I think Ma Gui will have a significant role in the ending of the Later Han dynasty.
 

ATP

Well-known member
Ultimately Simon-Sartäc's bid will fail as I can't see Judaism as an Abrahmic faith ever accepting equality with other religions. Its taken until the late 20thC in the modern world and massive amounts of death and destruction to achieve such ideas from elements of Christianity and Judaism and how long that would stick I don't know. Otherwise however as long as he and his successors can ride that tiger they stands a chance of maintaining a strong state and holding off the empire, at least in the western steppes. The latter with always be an aggressive threat but I suspect its unlikely to be able to hold major gains in the region for prolonged periods. Also its primary enemy is the Caliphate.

Sad to see the Huna go but they were cursed with perpetual ill-fortune and its opened up much of northern India to Islamic rule earlier than OTL. Also, coupled with the decline of China its made the Indo-Greek state vulnerable and that must be living on borrowed time. Even if it continues to consistently produce very skilled leaders its far too exposed to Islamic attack.

Things are looking better for the Pelagic state in exile with that big win. They have the chance to build a larger and more powerful state that could resist the 'Irish' settlements on the coast and possibly even if the latter gets direct imperial support.

I agree with PK that I think Ma Gui will have a significant role in the ending of the Later Han dynasty.
Sigh.Religions do not have such thing like equality.Even for pagans,you could not worship both Wotan and Jupiter as major god.
What romans did was taking local gods as versions of their pantheon.
It is not equality,but submission.

But,you are right about pelagians and Ma Gui.Indo greeks - they have their mountains,and potential alliance with hindu and buddhist rulers.They should survive.
 

stevep

Well-known member
Sigh.Religions do not have such thing like equality.Even for pagans,you could not worship both Wotan and Jupiter as major god.
What romans did was taking local gods as versions of their pantheon.
It is not equality,but submission.

But,you are right about pelagians and Ma Gui.Indo greeks - they have their mountains,and potential alliance with hindu and buddhist rulers.They should survive.

You would be lucky to know both those two with their different regions but the classical world generally respected differing religious beliefs and deities. The Romans incorporated local gods and frequently sought to equal them to their own pantheon but didn't totally suppress them and with many religious cults of great influence or history, such as the Egyptian pantheon welcomed them, albeit reluctantly at times into western Europe. The most famous examples of this were worship of eastern cults like a dominant Sun gods and Mithas.

The Pelegians are likely to survive for quite a while if they can establish a substantial population base and bring them largely up to European technology levels but the future of the Indo-Greeks looks grim. Their a minority in their own empire and can't seek to inforce their faith without things falling apart, which will make them unpopular in the empire. Furthermore the rump of the Huna's and the reviving Hindu state are bitter rivals while their Chinese patron is visibly declining.
 

ATP

Well-known member
You would be lucky to know both those two with their different regions but the classical world generally respected differing religious beliefs and deities. The Romans incorporated local gods and frequently sought to equal them to their own pantheon but didn't totally suppress them and with many religious cults of great influence or history, such as the Egyptian pantheon welcomed them, albeit reluctantly at times into western Europe. The most famous examples of this were worship of eastern cults like a dominant Sun gods and Mithas.

The Pelegians are likely to survive for quite a while if they can establish a substantial population base and bring them largely up to European technology levels but the future of the Indo-Greeks looks grim. Their a minority in their own empire and can't seek to inforce their faith without things falling apart, which will make them unpopular in the empire. Furthermore the rump of the Huna's and the reviving Hindu state are bitter rivals while their Chinese patron is visibly declining.
As long as romans were strong,they replaced other gods with theirs keepings local names.Eastern cults started,when they were falling.

Pelagians - yes and no.They would create state or states there,but question is,would their religion still count as pelagians,or ebven christian heresy?

Indo-Greeks would be fine.As long as muslims are strong,rump hunas and hindu would support them.
 
761-765: Storm on the Steppe, Part I

Circle of Willis

Well-known member
761 saw the Romans and Khazars both gearing up for conflict over the former's growing influence among the East Slavs, a process which they would both invest some years into. Pope John visited his allies among the Dacian bishops, and this Papal procession served not merely as an opportunity for old friends to reminisce and jointly celebrate Mass but also for him to disburse funds and Italian engineers for the construction of new fortifications and the improvement of existing ones. Of course, the Pope also took his chance to assert the Roman See's jurisdiction over Dacia, which made not only political but also geographic sense with the preservation of Papal authority over the Diocese of Illyricum[1]. Though this endeavor must have ruffled feathers and once more brought up fears throughout the rest of the Ionian communion of the Papacy growing over-mighty compared to the other Heptarchs, Leo III saw no reason not to support his brother in this instance, and pushed back against talk of creating a separate eighth Patriarchate for the Slavic nations in the vein of how Carthage had been elevated to Patriarchal status (and also prior, failed efforts to create a Patriarchate of Trévere to cover the Germanic kingdoms).

In any case, the Augustus' real preparations for the conflict he deemed inevitable had little to do with the drawing of ecclesiastical boundaries. Leo relieved Theodosius Caesar of his office as Eparch of Constantinople so that the latter could take command of the rebuilt Danubian army instead, overseeing its intensified drills and establishing closer relationships with the federate kingdoms in the area (namely the various South Slavs and the Gepids) as well as Dacia's newly-minted lords themselves. Through Theodosius as well as his own letters, Leo's strategy to counter an expected Khazar offensive began to manifest years in advance: despite his assurances to the Polianians and Drevlians that he absolutely had their back, the cunning Emperor must have known that there was no realistic way (what with the lack of roads in the region and rivers like the Dnieper flowing toward the Roman world, not back upward in the direction of the Antae) Rome could project enough force that far into the Pontic Steppe to stop a Khazar assault from immediately flattening them, so instead he hoped to bait Simon-Sartäç into getting bogged down in Dacia and crippled by Roman counterattacks there before moving up to liberate the Antaic nations.

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Soldiers of the Danubian army, marshaling and training for renewed conflict with the Khazars under the watch of the Caesar Theodosius: a Dacian nobleman ('Optimas Dacorum') and African skirmisher of Libyco-Vandalic extraction (or poetically, a 'Son of Stilicho') stand in the foreground with a mounted Serbian palace-auxiliary of the Thessalonican legions in the back

Simon-Sartäç's own preparations centered around not only an uptick in raids against the East Slavic territories to soften them up ahead of the real fight, but also more generally the massing of warriors and stockpiling of resources east of the Dnieper, including an increase in salt purchases from as far as India & Tibet to better preserve their food supplies. In another unexpected break with Khazar tradition, the Khagan also began to build a fleet at Cherson, perhaps intending an amphibious assault on Rome's Thraco-Dacian coastline or even Constantinople itself – though the suggestion of the latter served merely to amuse Leo, who believed it would be suicidal of the Khazars (not exactly known as a great seafaring people) to attempt such a thing on the fortifications which had withstood Attila the Hun and Heshana of the Tegregs. Finally, mindful of their shared Caucasian frontline, Simon-Sartäç also leaned on his vassals in that region (chiefly the Caucasian Alans) to remain in line, and also dispatched spies to try to incite an uprising among the Abasgian tribes against Rome's own Georgian vassal.

With Theodosius removed to the Danube, Leo himself began to alternate his residence between Trévere and Constantinople. The Emperor recognized the Hashemite Caliphate as the greater of his enemies, and hoped to ensure that any fighting with the Khazars would be done so quickly that the Muslims wouldn't have any time to intervene, as they'd done in the last years of his father's reign to disastrous consequences. Besides standing ready to lead the Antiochene army against the forces of Islam at a moment's notice and working on plans to bring over reinforcements from Italy in an equally quick manner while also coordinating with the Africans, for now Leo sought to keep the Muslims at bay with diplomacy, sending envoys to and on occasion even personally meeting the Caliph Hashim on friendly grounds to negotiate issues such as commerce, the truce between their empires and the appointment of new Patriarchs of Alexandria and Babylon.

For the time being, Hashim agreed not to interfere with patriarchal appointments (although he did begin upping the jizya tax on Ionians in his realm) nor to hinder Christian pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land in any way. The two great emperors of west and east also exchanged gifts to improve relations during this fleeting time of peace, with Leo famously sending Hashim bricks of Pontic tea, Constantinopolitan jewelry and silk brocades, swords of high quality forged in Gothic Toledo and woollen cloaks from as far as England; while Hashim returned the favor by way of an ivory chess set, a Meccan medical balm, Persian silks & perfumes, pet elephants and even a water clock, invented by the wise men he had gathered in his increasingly grandiose House of Wisdom. The Holy Roman Emperor also had the audacity to bring up the possibility of a Roman-Muslim alliance against Khazaria: unfortunately for him (and very fortunately for the Khagan) such a thing, which would have constituted a major diplomatic revolution, never came to pass on account of his counterpart still considering Antioch a much greater prize than anything the Muslims could possibly conquer from the Khazars.

q9gJGTi.jpg

The Arab delegation presents their master's most unique gift, a clock, to Emperor Leo III in Constantinople

Come 762, while Roman preparations for the fight against the Khazars continued, Africa's new king Gostãdénu took the step of building the first colonies in the Canary Islands, hearkening back to the legacy of the Punic colonists among his ancestors. Missionaries, merchants and explorers had lived among the Guanches in their villages before, but this would mark the first occasion on which the Africans went & founded entirely new towns in the Ésulas Ganarés – and no mere outposts at that, as existed on Bordu-Santu in the north, but real walled villages of their own where they intended to live permanently and in significant numbers. A party of interested clerics, traders, fishermen, surveyors and soldiers built the town of Nou Ébbone[2] ('New Hippo') on the uninhabited northeasternmost point of Brubéléa[3], northeasternmost of the Canaries, and another smaller party founded Santa Gradzéa ('Holy Grace')[4] on the island of Gradzéussa[5] directly opposite from them: not only were these the first Roman colonies in the 'Isles of the Dogs', but some future historians even consider the first Roman colonies in the Atlantic overall.

In both cases the town founders – a composite of all of the African kingdom's constituent ethnic groups, though the priests tended to be Sons of Dido from the coast and the military leaders tended to be Sons of Stilicho from the eastern mountains even as the majority of the settlers were Sons of Masinissa from the tribe of the Baquates[6] – brought their families with them, so as to establish a lasting generational presence where the Stilichians' solar chi-rho first flew over Canarian soil. Now Gradzéussa turned out to be a desert island, so aside from the beautiful beaches and control over the nearby waterways, there was no reason for Santa Gradzéa to attract newcomers from the mainland and to grow to any significant extent. However Nou Ébbone's settlers built on existing friendships with the local Guanches to establish lucrative contracts for the exploitation of the lichen found on these islands, from which they could make a valuable purplish dye called orchil, encouraging increased business and settlement on the Canaries in due time.

yozK4mH.jpg

Part of Nou Ébbone as seen from one of the Guanches' old cave-strongholds

In the east, the newly risen Chandra dynasty of Bengal had finished restoring order within its own borders and now began to look abroad. King Dharmachandra hoped to recover lands lost by the Hunas to the Alids, but he was keenly aware that his newly-seized kingdom was still very far off from being able to contend with the forces of Islam alone and that he would need allies in order to have any chance at success in a future confrontation. To that end, the Later Salankayanas presented an obvious choice for a partnership: in spite of the lengthy historical animosity between Hindus and Buddhists, exacerbated by the Hunas' favoritism toward the latter and oppression of the former, the Muslims had made it abundantly clear that they threatened the Dharmic religions as a whole. Furthermore, thanks to the marriage of Strategius and Srimahadevi, Dharmachandra was aware that a Indo-Roman/Salankayana alliance already existed and hoped to bring Kophen into his web of allies so as to ring the Alid dominion with foes on three sides.

The threat of being encircled by hostile pagan powers (and a rival People of the Book) was something which kept the Alids up at night, and they strove to weaken and keep apart their regional rivals as much as possible ahead of the next war sure to set al-Hind ablaze. Muzaffar ibn al-Arab, the oldest of the Alid leaders (though not the most senior in their line of descent from Ali ibn Abd al-Rahman), began to raid the Indo-Roman lands more intensely while his kinsmen Abu-Bakr and Bahir ibn Nizam, grandsons of his uncle Abduljalil, respectively pressured the Chandras and slackened attacks on the Salankayanas in a shifting of their collective resources. Hashim might have been wary of approving ghazw attacks on a known Chinese vassal, had he not already been informed by first-hand witnesses among the Radhanite merchants trekking along the Silk Road of the tumult in Luoyang 's streets a few years before. The Caliph deduced that if the Chinese were having their equivalents to viziers getting murdered in the open, they can't possibly be all that stable or capable of reinforcing their front-line protectorates.

Over in China itself, Zhang Ai not only tightened his grip on the government but also began to look to other means of increasing his own wealth and esteem, even though he already had plenty of both. The ambitious and greedy eunuch consequently turned his gaze onto the Buddhists of the Middle Kingdom, who had been allowed to amass great riches and build lavish monasteries over centuries of donations and tolerant Later Han leadership. Zhang was aware that his personal envy was not a good enough reason to go about seizing the Buddhists' treasures for himself, for he was not the Emperor, but that didn't mean he couldn't do just that under a different, more reasonable pretext. That pretext was one which the Confucian scholars were all too happy to provide: they had long held the opinion that Buddhism was eroding the traditional social order of China by encouraging people to abandon their families to become monks and cease working in favor of exploiting the generosity of others, and that in amassing treasures and building lavishly decorated monasteries the Buddhist monks weren't practicing what they preached.

A2vOiaw.jpg

Zhang Ai, the latest Chinese eunuch-minister to follow in the less than hallowed footsteps of the original Han dynasty's Ten Attendants, here seen receiving a gift from a favor-seeker

Exercising his hefty influence over governmental affairs, Zhang pushed the aged and ailing Chongzong to begin tightening the screws on Buddhism in China, for the good of the state & people and certainly not for his own gain of course. The numbers of Buddhist monks were reduced with the expulsion of monks from a disreputable background, such as ex-convicts, in the name of purging Chinese Buddhism of corruption; however, also caught up in this purge were the children of noblemen who had run away from home rather than acquire their parents' written permission to become Buddhist monks and nuns. Another regulation declaring that Buddhists would be held to their own ascetic standards, making it unlawful for monks & nuns to own personal wealth and luxuries, was also passed in this year: they had the choice of either having their property and goods confiscated (and added to Zhang's collection instead) or to leave their monastery and resume lay life. Finally, Buddhist monasteries were also forbidden from engaging in profitable activities such as pawnbroking (Chi.: jifupu), which Zhang sought to monopolize under his allies and proxies. Only Chongzong being enamored with a Buddhist concubine, Lady Shen, prevented Zhang and his Confucian allies from going any further for the time being.

The first intra-European colonial competition in the Atlantic flared up in 763, as the Visigoths plotted to plant their own stake in the Fortunate Isles. Their king Recaredo II had for some time prepared ships, supplies and volunteers for a journey to Bordu Santu, which the Goths called Porto Santo, and felt his expedition was finally ready to contest the Africans' claim there in this year. The knight Teodomiro ('Theudemir') de Gádiz led the Visigoth warriors & laborers from Espal[7], which would serve as the launching point for many more Gothic expeditions to the west & south in future centuries, to the northern edge of Bordu Santu and built their own outpost on a hill there. Aware of the likelihood of angry Moors attacking them upon discovering their presence, the Goths had not only brought twenty soldiers to garrison their new outpost, but also hastily erected a stockade around their tents & watch-tower.

Gostãdénu was infuriated at this Gothic intrusion into what he believed to be his rightful sphere of influence, and accordingly responded not only by writing angry letters to Toledo and sending reinforcements to his own Bordu Santu outpost but also making appeals to both the Emperor and the Patriarch of Carthage to award the Fortunate Isles in their entirety to Africa. He had little luck with either, however: not only was Leo already Recaredo's father-in-law but he was busy preparing for conflict with the Khazars and did not seem to think much of the colonial spats far to the west, issuing only a general appeal for calm and a warning to Gostãdénu that he should probably be more concerned about the possibility of an Islamic incursion into Libya while the Romans' attention was concentrated up north. Patriarch Tobéa ('Tobias') was more sympathetic, but backed away from condemning the Visigoths' muscling in on Bordu Santu after learning that the Goths were prepared to appeal to Pope John (and perhaps even to argue that Hispania should be taken away from Carthage's jurisdiction and placed back under Rome's at the next church council, whenever one should be held) if he tried to frustrate their ambitions.

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A pair of Visigoth warriors on Porto Santo, taking a break from building the palisade around their new outpost

On that note, Leo also took some time and resources to prepare defenses on his southeastern front with the Caliphate, even as he carried on cordial official talks with Hashim. In the spring of this year the Emperor personally visited Kufa to break bread with his rival, and issued an invitation for the Caliph to do the same in Constantinople which the latter took up in the late summer & early fall months. However for all their apparent friendliness, neither man was so naïve as to trust the other any further than they could throw him, hence Leo's investment in the Antiochene legions and extensive consultation with the eastern federates to construct a defensive strategy. Aside from helping the Ghassanids further fortify their new homes – Leo was too cautious an operator to sign off on an audacious proposal of theirs to instead use the Upper Mesopotamian fortresses as a forward-base from which to drive straight on down to Kufa, reasoning that a man as meticulous as Hashim the Wise would have anticipated such a maneuver and prepare appropriate countermeasures to cut off & destroy the Christian spearhead – the Emperor opted to have the Armenians reserve most of their strength to help guard the southern border and deter a Muslim attack, offering only limited support to their Georgian neighbors who were expected to take the brunt of any Khazar offensive. Instead additional Anatolian legions would be raised to fill the gap in the north.

Hashim was keenly aware of both Leo Germanicus' reputation for cunning and these developments right over his border, which served to reduce his interest in going after Antioch in the short term. The other factor behind his decision to avoid hostilities with the Romans was the network of enemies tightening around the Alids' dominion in the north of Al-Hind, which increasingly aroused even his concern all the way in Kufa. While little love was lost between the senior Hashemite branch and their junior Alid cousins, who had little use for the intellectual (they would say eggheaded and out-of-touch) doctrines of 'Ilm Islam and Hashim's generally conflict-averse foreign policy outside of cases where he was sure he could win, the Caliph had learned a hard lesson that he could not simply leave other Muslims to die for his own political benefit (indeed, that doing so was likely to engender even worse backlash that'd neutralize any gain from removing his first batch of rivals) from the follies of his grandfather, who had nearly fatally undermined the Banu Hashim's legitimacy by doing just that. He pledged to militarily support the Alids to the maximal extent in any conflict, for any attack on them would be treated as an attack on Dar al-Islam as a whole, and devised plans for massive pre-emptive attacks on the Indo-Romans, Chandras and Salankayanas – only the fact that the Later Han were not yet in a state of civil war kept the Muslims from enacting this strategy anytime soon.

The sword was not the only means by which Islam would spread under the rule of Hashim al-Hakim, of course. Now for many years, Islamic merchants traveling either from Indian ports such as Debal or Chinese ones like Guangzhou had passed through the seas around Nusantara[8], buying up the various exotic spices which these islands had become most famous for so that they might sell such cargo at extremely high prices elsewhere. But it was in 763 that the first recorded Muslim colony was established in that land, in the form of a permanent quarter for Arab merchants in the port city of Lambri[9] on the very tip of the island of Sumatra, under the authority of both the Srivijayan Mahārāja and Lambri's own local vassal-king. From this humble beginning the youngest of the Abrahamic faiths would also be the first to spread across the islands of Nusantara; and while its growth among the Hindus, Buddhists and traditional animists who populated this part of the world would be slow indeed, with even the first kingdom to embrace the teachings of Muhammad still centuries away, Hashim was content to allow the faith to spread on its own pace so far from Arabia. With more immediate concerns like the Romans and the rival Indian powers to contend with, it was not as if he was in a position to try to rush things that far from home anyway.

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Muslim merchants sailing in the waters around Lambri with the help of a local Sumatran crewman

As diplomacy had failed, the Africans moved to lock themselves into a collision course with face Visigoth neighbors and prepared to face them head-on from 764 onward. Gostãdénu commissioned not only reinforcements for the existing Moorish outpost established on Bordu Santu by his father Bedãdéu, but also the resources to establish a second outpost on that particular island. Furthermore the Dominus Rex sent another expedition to claim the nearby larger island of Linna[10], the 'Isle of Wood', and to establish a similarly fortified outpost there. This latter island was covered in dense forest, hence the name which the Moors gave to it, which would have to be cleared to make way for any real human settlement: furthermore the mild, pleasant climate first recorded by the Popularis rebel Quintus Sertorius and heavy seasonal rains later in the year seemed as though it would make agriculture easy and productive there, once the aforementioned woodland had been cleared of course. Alas, the Africans did not yet have access to the sort of crops with which they could establish truly lucrative businesses on this most 'fortunate' of islands.

Not to be outdone, Recaredo commissioned additional expeditions to both Bordu Santu and Linna, the latter of which he and his people called 'Madera' in their own tongue. Bordu Santu/Porto Santo seemed to have little to offer besides a strategic position, but Linna/Madera was reported as having real economic potential in Toledo just as it had been in Gardàgénu[11], so naturally the Gothic king diverted more effort in the latter's direction: he couldn't beat the Moors to actually planting his standard on the island, so he decided to go for the next-best option and beat them to founding the first real town there. While neither side engaged in overt hostilities with one another over these far-western islands just yet, violent conflict seemed increasingly inevitable as both the Goths and the Moors increasingly directed scouts to survey the other's campsites and outposts for weaknesses. The Africans also leaned on their preexisting friendships with the Guanches to poison the latter against the Visigoths, ensuring they would find at best a cool welcome when they dared try to pry the Canaries from the African sphere of influence.

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A 'Son of Massinissa' from the tribe of the Baquates, patrolling around Nou Ébbone and keeping an eye out for any Gothic landing in the Canaries which might threaten the budding African colonies there

On the other side of the world far from the Roman world's first colonial squabble in the Atlantic, Emperor Chongzong passed away in this year. The decadent old Emperor was found to have died as he lived: in bed with his choice of concubines from the previous night, having imbibed far too much alcohol for his own good to wash down a sumptuous supper. He was duly succeeded by his longtime heir Hao Rengui, the Prince of Han and his eldest son by his favorite wife Empress Bian, who immediately had to fend off a challenge from both Hao Yong, Prince of Qin (Chongzong's eldest son overall, born to his first wife Empress Xiang) and Hao Zhou, Prince of Wei (their younger brother, born of the concubine Lady Zhu). A two-week bout of violence between partisans of the squabbling triad which left over 10,000 dead around Luoyang, dubbed the 'Tumult of the Three Principalities' by Chinese historians, was brought to an end by the intervention of both Zhang Ai and Ma Gui on the side of Hao Rengui (the former because Rengui's men had gained the advantage and he wished to enter the younger man's good graces, the latter because he genuinely believed Rengui to be the lawful heir), who was then finally able to be formally coronated while his rival half-brothers moldered in undignified graves.

History will record the new Huangdi as Emperor Huizong, the 'Beautiful Ancestor' of the Later Han, on account of the good looks which he inherited from his bewitching mother. Unfortunately for the Middle Kingdom, this handsome countenance was more or less the new Emperor's only positive quality. As both Zhang Ai and Ma Gui would find, he was certainly less of a sot than his father, but also an extremely vain, vindictive and self-absorbed man with a cruel streak, one so arrogant that he would spurn good advice if he wasn't persuaded that he had come up with it himself simply so that he would not have to admit the advice-giver was a wiser man than himself. Even vassals as distant as Strategius, now King of the Indo-Romans following his own father Hippostratus' death, took home a bad impression of their new overlord – in Strategius' case, upon performing the kowtow before Huizong the latter did not allow him to rise from his prostrate stance for almost half an hour, such that in the safety of Kophen he complained that the new Emperor was surely Narcissus reborn.

Huizong's first decrees – which Zhang Ai was able to push him into issuing through shameless sycophancy – centered around the purge of his father's household, chiefly the numerous half-siblings and cousins (and their mothers) who he viewed as a threat in the same vein as Hao Yong and Hao Zhou. However, a few relatives among the imperial clan made it onto a short list of individuals to be spared, personally composed by the eunuch minister himself: Zhang successfully pleaded for mercy in these cases not out of compassion's sake, but so that he would have a few backup princelings – all carefully selected for their pliant character and a preexisting friendly disposition toward China's supreme chancellor – in his pocket in case Huizong (whose ill qualities were readily apparent to him) proved uncontrollable in the future. His rival Lady Shen and her brood were not among these lucky ones, naturally.

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Contemporary portrait of Emperor Huizong of Later Han, described by those who beheld him as a handsome statue brought to life with a mustache 'like the wings of an eagle'. Unfortunately, his good looks were about the only thing about him they could praise

On the other other side of the world, the Britons of Annún continued to consolidate their hold on the lands they'd just defended from the Three Fires. King Guerdhérn understood from his war with that rival confederacy that one of the Annún's vulnerabilities was in having their people spread out in isolated farmsteads (and their Wilderman allies were even more spread out) which would be difficult to reinforce against or rescue from hostile marauders, so he embarked on two major projects to try to fix that issue. The first was to dig a network of roads, more extensive than any which had ever existed on Aloysiana before (admittedly a bar so low that it was nearly subterranean). While these dirt paths and occasional corduroy roads were no rival for the famous paved roads of the Roman world, they were still a massive improvement over the prior utter lack of infrastructure and helped greatly in connecting the various British farms & villages.

The second was to encourage the friendly Wildermen who'd managed to survive past the recent plagues & war, particularly ones who had undergone baptism, to come live & farm alongside the Britons. This served to more strongly integrate said friendly Wildermen into the new order of the Britons, boost the population of Annún's towns (and thus the manpower available to the 'Pilgrim Kings') and make the defense of said towns easier since now fewer resources would have to be squandered on protecting Wilderman allies outside their stockades or rounding them up and bringing them into the village as refugees during a crisis. Combined with heightened missionary efforts which inadvertantly led to the syncretism of the Pilgrims' Pelagianism with the Midewiwin rituals practiced by the natives, this decision of Guerdhérn's would also set in motion the mixing of the two populations to a much greater extent than what the Irish had done on Tír na Beannachtaí, such that centuries from now their descendants would be recognized by said Irish and other Europeans as the first mixed or 'mongrel' race of the New World: the Méhés, as their own British cousins from back home would call them in Brydany, after the Latin mixtus.

765 brought with it the long-awaited outbreak of a second round of hostilities between the Holy Roman Empire and the Khazar Khaganate, around a quarter of a century after their first war. At stake were the Khazars' conquests in eastern Dacia and the Tauric Chersonese, and the Romans' ability to exert influence as far as the Antic lands directly neighboring the core of Khazaria. Simon-Sartäç Khagan, who viewed the possibility of a Christian East Slavic kingdom so close to Atil as both a major roadblock in the way of the profitable slave trade and a serious threat to the core of his dominion, made the first move by launching a massive onslaught against the tribes of the Severians, Polianians and Drevlians early in the summer, after both the bitter steppe winter and the heavy spring rains & mud had cleared. As loosely knit as they were, and situated so far from Rome, the East Slavs could not withstand this assault despite all their warnings & preparations: many of the Severian villages & chiefs capitulated, after which they had to pay tribute and their men were further conscripted into the Khazar armies, and Bozidar of Silistra gave himself up to the Khazars to protect those among this people who he had converted, resulting in him becoming the second 'Apostle to the Slavs' to find a martyr's death abroad.

The Polianians and Drevlians meanwhile scrambled to mount a united defense, which was swept away by the Khagan's overwhelming hordes at the Battle of the Dnieper[12]. Valens of Doros, the 'Apostle to the Slavs' who had been assigned to preach among the Polianians, was captured in that disastrous engagement, having failed to persuade the kŭnędzĭ Stanislav to not abandon their strong defensive position on a high hill in favor of pursuing a Khazar feigned retreat. Stanislav had promptly perished when Simon-Sartäç closed the jaws of the trap around him, while Valens was himself crucified on the very same hill he had wanted to stick to, becoming the third among the fifteen Apostles to die – said hill has since been recorded as the 'Martyr's Hill'[13] by Christian cartographers in his honor. Stanislav's son Mstislav abandoned Kyiv, which was then burned down by the Khazars and its remaining populace massacred or enslaved, to join his in-laws among the Drevlians at their own stronghold of Iskorosten[14]. But the Drevlians too had sustained no small loss at the Dnieper; a few weeks later Simon-Sartäç had also successfully stormed that leading town of theirs while Mstislav, his wife Veleslava and brother-in-law Svetozar, and Valens' twin Vitalian had run off to the Buzhane, with the Khazars in pursuit.

The Buzhanians, like the Severians, mostly capitulated before the power of Khazaria than fight. Their chief Ostromir would have handed the refugees over to Simon-Sartäç in order to save his own skin had it not been for his own son Svyatogor, who had been baptized as Daniel, betraying the plot. Thus Ostromir was left empty-handed to face the lethal wrath of Simon-Sartäç, while the refugees (now including Svyatogor-Daniel and his retinue) finally made it into Roman Dacia shortly before winter set in. They found that Theodosius Caesar was already on the move, having launched a pre-planned invasion of the former province of Scythia Minor in response to the Khazars' devastation of the Antae tribes and defeated the Khazar forces in that region at the Battle of Carsium[15], and was pushing toward the banks of the Tyras[16]. What remained of the faithful Polianians, Drevlians and Buzhanians thus added their strength to the Romans' southern army, which was already comprised of the Danubian legions, the South Slavic federates and additional reinforcements from Burgundy, Bavaria & the Italian provinces.

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Mstislav of the Polianians defends himself against a Khazar pursuer on the long road to Roman territory, while one of his retainers retreats to a distance from where he can safely use his bow

Emperor Leo, who was watching the Muslim border from Constantinople, was confident in the strategy he had prepared to bait the Khazars into fighting in Dacia and rejected the terms which his counterpart proposed: an acknowledgment of the lands around the Dnieper's course as wholly part of the Khazar sphere of influence, in exchange for the return of Scythia Minor and a one-off payment of tribute. The Augustus calculated that he could have it all if he held out until total victory was achieved – the Christianization of all Slavs, a border on the Tyras, and perhaps even the recovery of the Chersonese – and that while the war needed to be wrapped up quickly, lest Hashim get an opening to invade (as had happened to his father), Simon-Sartäç must be feeling the same way about Muslim pressure on Khazarian Caucasia & Khorasan. In that regard he seemed to have read his rival accurately, as the Khagan really would spend the winter marshaling his hordes on the far side of the Tyras with plans to cross in warmer weather and also assembling a secondary force in Cherson: Leo was content to let him come into Dacia, where the Caesar Theodosius prepared to meet him while Włodzisław of the Poles and Ludislav of the Volhynians were crossing the Carpathians to add their warriors to the Romans' northern army.

Meanwhile over in the New World, unexpected visitors made their way to Annún in 765: envoys from a people living beyond the Three Fires Confederacy, whom they called 'Míssissépené'[17] after the friendly Anicinébe's term for their homeland (Misi-ziibi, the 'Great River', which was translated into Brydany as Míssissépe[18]). They claimed that their lands had been devastated by a plague brought by the western Anicinébe of the Three Fires, that they had braved many dangers to come this far, and that they sought a cure from and friendly relations with the mighty strangers who had come and shattered the fearsome power of their northern oppressors. Now Guerdhérn was not sure what medicine he could possibly supply these Míssissépené with that could treat all which ailed them, nor was he even aware that the plagues troubling them had actually originated with him and his people (and if he did know of germ theory he certainly wouldn't have told them that), but he saw no reason not to pursue ties of friendship and commerce with this new nation from beyond the Great Lakes, especially since they seemed to have a common enemy in the Three Fires Confederacy.

The Míssissépené astonished the Britons with what they had to offer: copper jewelry, most of which depicted eagles and other birds of prey, as well as painted pottery tempered with the crushed shells of mollusks gathered from the riverbanks of their homeland – technology which may have been as far from the Roman standard as their roads were compared to real Roman roads, but was still well beyond what the more primitive Anicinébe and other northern Wildermen had to offer – as well as a healthy surplus of crops. But their belief that they had finally run into a worthy trading partner was, in large part, mistaken. The Míssissépené had heard tales of how men riding atop strange beasts and garbed in coats of a metal stronger than copper had crushed the warriors of the Three Fires, though the latter had many times their number, and were eager to uncover the Britons' secrets for their own use.

The emissaries had lied about their origins – the Three Fires tribes had banded together to better defend themselves against the aggression of the more organized and technologically advanced Míssissépené, not the other way around – and those who they sent as merchants were in truth also spies, with orders to observe the unsuspecting Britons' iron foundries and barter for or even steal their horses whenever possible. The knowledge which these Míssissépené would accumulate over the following decades of espionage would serve to make their particular hometown, Dakaruniku[19] – 'Grand Mound' – into the seat of a great empire, one of the first true ones among the Wildermen, and certainly also one which would rise to become a terror to Annún and many other nations of Wildermen and even Europeans alike far in the future.

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The Míssissépené envoys, freshly returned from Cité-Réial, report of their success in establishing friendly ties with the New World Britons, presenting the gifts the latter had given them as proof...and also informing their elders in Dakaruniku that Guerdhérn's court suspects nothing of them

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[1] Historically Illyricum (actually spanning most of the Roman Balkans) had been placed under Papal authority until 740, when our Leo III transferred it to the Patriarchate of Constantinople as part of the iconoclastic controversy.

[2] Órzola.

[3] Pluvialia – Pliny's name for Lanzarote.

[4] Caleta de Sebo.

[5] La Graciosa.

[6] The Barghawata tribe of Berbers.

[7] Hispalis – Seville.

[8] A term referring to both Indonesia & Malaysia put together.

[9] Banda Aceh.

[10] Madeira.

[11] Carthago/Cartagenna – Carthage.

[12] Around modern Kaniv.

[13] Taras Hill.

[14] Korosten.

[15] Hârșova.

[16] The Dniester River.

[17] The Middle Mississippian culture, which is beginning to come into its own as of the late 8th century.

[18] The Mississippi River.

[19] Cahokia. The very name 'Cahokia' isn't actually Middle Mississippian – those languages have been lost to us entirely – but instead belonged to an Algonquian tribe which lived in the vicinity of the city's ruins when it was discovered by Europeans. Instead, I've constructed this name for the city from Arikara (deriving 'Dakaru-' from takarux, the Arikara word for 'big') and Caddo ('-niku' being derived from 'iniku', the Caddo word for 'mound' which is also treated as synonymous for 'church') on account of those two being part of the Caddoan language group, among the only surviving Mississippian-descendant languages today alongside possibly Natchez.

@Circle of Willis I'm assuming this is the longest TL in Sietch history ? Who currently holds the all-time record ?
Beats me, but I doubt it. I think there's at least one long-running TL that's older than mine - the War of 1988 one in the Post-1900 section - though that appears to be on hiatus for now.

What I do know for certain, is that this update also marks the 2nd anniversary of Vivat Stilicho! My thanks to everyone who's stuck with me to this point :D At the current pace I expect we'll have reached the end of the 8th century well before the end of this year, maybe even by the end of summer, and the end of the 9th probably by this same time next year.
 

ATP

Well-known member
China is slowly falling,and Indo-romans,hindu and hunas are makig alliance.
Good,in future war muslims would not get much against such alliance,and romans and khazars would not get much from their war,too.

Canaries - ancient really do not think,that it was Fortuna islands.That would be Carribeans - not only phoenicians knew about them,but greeks,too.

And corsairs,who offered Sertorius mentioned by you deliver him there with his supporters.
Pity,that he do not agreed.

Cahokia as local empire - why not?
But,certainly not first in America.Mayan,Toltek and other city-states arleady existed.

P.S Kiev captured by Khazars - so,vikings could re-capture it,and made their state there,like in OTL.
Good for them,i feared that they could raid only poor irish,becouse everybody else would be too strong.
 

stevep

Well-known member
Well the Khazar's seem to be falling into the emperor's trap but has he poked the Africans too much that he could see civil war in the west? Also what will the forces of Islam do? Continue attacking neighbours in India and related areas or decide at some point that the Romans are embroiled into enough wars that further gains can be made at their expense?

The Han dynasty is in its death throbs with the current emperor probably being the last on any significance and given his behavior he might not last long. Although if so will he be removed by the eunuch or the warlord and how much chaos will follow?

In N America it sounds like the exiles may have made a mistake in trusting their new 'friends' as they are going to be a formidable threat to them and a barrier to the further expansion that they need to try and build up a resource base when the Ionian church finally starts to threaten them in future centuries.

I fear the Indo-Roman state's day's are numbered. A triple alliance with the other powers threatened by Islam will be difficult with the hostility between Hindus and Buddhists and with the Han collapsing their not only losing their protective overlord but there could well be new threats or at least disorder on their northern borders.
 

ATP

Well-known member
Well the Khazar's seem to be falling into the emperor's trap but has he poked the Africans too much that he could see civil war in the west? Also what will the forces of Islam do? Continue attacking neighbours in India and related areas or decide at some point that the Romans are embroiled into enough wars that further gains can be made at their expense?

The Han dynasty is in its death throbs with the current emperor probably being the last on any significance and given his behavior he might not last long. Although if so will he be removed by the eunuch or the warlord and how much chaos will follow?

In N America it sounds like the exiles may have made a mistake in trusting their new 'friends' as they are going to be a formidable threat to them and a barrier to the further expansion that they need to try and build up a resource base when the Ionian church finally starts to threaten them in future centuries.

I fear the Indo-Roman state's day's are numbered. A triple alliance with the other powers threatened by Islam will be difficult with the hostility between Hindus and Buddhists and with the Han collapsing their not only losing their protective overlord but there could well be new threats or at least disorder on their northern borders.
Mostly agree,with one exception - indo-romans survived in their mountains worst enemies.
So,they would survive as thorn in muslim side.
 
766-770: Storm on the Steppe, Part II

Circle of Willis

Well-known member
Once the weather made large-scale campaigning possible again in 766, Simon-Sartäç did cross the Tyras from his base at long-ruined Olbia[1] challenge the Romans on Dacian soil, as Leo III had anticipated. The Khagan's horde overcame the first attempt by Theodosius Caesar's army to stop them on the banks of that river at the Battle of Tyras[2], surging around forward elements of the Roman host and forcing them to withdraw from the city ruins in order to avoid being encircled, before spilling southward across the former province of Moesia Inferior and the lands of the 'Free Dacians' who had managed to avoid being conquered even by Trajan. Theodosius, for his part, stuck to the plan of slowly withdrawing toward the newly-built Carpathian fortresses and the Danube so as to draw the Khazars onto more favorable ground for engagement.

Lighter elements of the Roman army fought delaying actions at Aegyssus[3], Troesmis[4] and on the Lower Hierasus[5], each serving not only to slow and whittle down the advancing Khazars' ranks but also to give Simon-Sartäç the impression that the Romans were losing badly and could be pursued with ease. Theodosius began to fight for real with the Battle of Pons Vetus[6], where he trapped the Khazar vanguard in the abandoned village by that name beneath & between two mountains before thoroughly mauling them. The Caesar then pushed out eastward in pursuit of said vanguard's remnants, colliding with and overcoming the Khagan himself in the great Battle of Jidava in late summer of 766. Unable to maneuver and effectively deploy his larger army of 40,000 in the hilly woodland which comprised the battlefield, Simon-Sartäç had to admit defeat and fall back after the Romans' crossbowmen and other missile troops used their terrain advantage to gain the upper hand over his own archers and a number of failed cavalry charges floundered against the disciplined legionary lines.

Theodosius did not let up now that he'd gotten his counteroffensive going, inflicting another stinging defeat on the Khazars (this time, their rearguard) in a major pass leading out of the Sub-Carpathians[7]: the Khazars had the stronger defensive position this time, but their defense was fatally compromised by local Dacian scouts in the Caesar's service, who revealed hidden mountain passes through which their compatriots could sneak through and assail the invaders from behind or above while chivalric and legionary wedges were punching into the latter's front ranks. As if that were not bad enough for the Khazar Khagan, his southern offensive aimed at Thrace had stalled at Axiopolis[8] and the northern Roman army had swung into action under the overall command of the now-much older and promoted Pannonian Dux Trèany, bearing down the Hierasus and moving parallel to Theodosius' own host in a bid to cut off the Khazars' retreat. No doubt the Romans would give thanks to God for these victories in the later winter of 766: as to Simon-Sartäç, it must have seemed as though his fortunes had undergone a dramatic reversal since the previous year, where the Khazars had rolled over all who dared stand in their way with ease.

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A Greek legionary of the army of Theodosius Caesar. Note his lamellar armor, popular among Eastern Roman troops thanks to their heightened contact with the Sclaveni and steppe nomads, helping to visually distinguish them from Northern and Southern Roman legionaries. Combined with his classic ridge helm, it marks him as part of the eighth century's 'transitional' legionaries

The only front where Khazar forces experienced even limited success this year was in the Caucasus, where they launched a three-pronged summertime assault on the Georgian kingdom under the direction of Simon-Sartäç's second son Zebulun Tarkhan. Fortunately for the Khazars, King Giorgi the Glorious had died of old age by this time and his son Guaram was not his equal in ability. The Georgians barely managed to hold back the Khazars' central thrust out of Alania and through the Roki Pass at the Battle of Krtskhinvali[9], thereby keeping them from immediately rolling up to Tbilisi from the north; but they also lost significant ground in the west, where Zebulun personally commanded a major effort to link up with rebelling Abasgian tribes and compel the surrender of Tskhoumi, and in the east where another Khazar column moved through the former Caucasian-Albanian lands to sack Partav. Only the timely arrival of Roman reinforcements from out of Pontus under the command of Leontios Triphyllios prevented Zebulun from crushing Georgia in a single year, checking his western offensive at Ochamchire (formerly the Greek town of Gyesos) and his eastern one in the hills of western Arran[10].

Caliph Hashim observed these goings-on with amusement and interest. He did not immediately intervene in this Second Roman-Khazar War so soon after it had begun, content to let the rival empires bleed each other some more and to see whether they'd truly badly maul one another or if they'd make peace before things got that bad before he stepped in. Instead, the Caliph sought to finalize preparations for war with the triple alliance comprised of the Later Salankayanas, Indo-Romans and Chandras, with the aim of pushing all three powers away from their present borders and winning some additional buffer space with them (especially the Indo-Romans, who continued to pose a grave risk to Al-Hind's connection to the rest of the Caliphate). Merchants from Luoyang had relayed to him news of the bloody Tumult of the Three Principalities and the unpopularity of the new Chinese Emperor Huizong, further convincing the old Caliph that the Later Han were unlikely to intervene against the Muslims when they made their move – at least, not strongly enough that they could stop the full power of Islam when it was unleashed against the far eastern pagans & Christians.

Speaking of Huizong, in this year Zhang Ai persuaded him to unleash a more rigorous persecution of China's Buddhist population than had previously been done in the last years of Chongzong's reign, now that the Buddhists had been shorn of their most influential protector in Lady Shen. The same arguments which had justified the earlier crackdown were brought up again to justify this one: Buddhism was a foreign faith undermining the pillars of traditional Chinese society, and the monks and nuns were still corrupt and failed to live up to their own teachings besides. What differed was that Zhang also appealed to his Emperor's vanity, positing that it was not right that some Buddhist monasteries should outshine the splendor of the Son of Heaven's own palaces, and that consequently the temples themselves were sacked for the first time and their valuable artwork confiscated for the state. Naturally, the chief eunuch skimmed from this flow of treasures bound for the imperial coffers and immediately set about decorating his own mansions with those which he chose to steal – so much so that he had to work to prevent the prideful and headstrong Emperor from climbing any tower within sight of them, lest the sight of his own palaces cause the Huangdi a narcissistic injury with fatal consequences for himself.

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The interior of Zhang Ai's palatial mansion by the upper Huai River, decorated with rugs and other art seized from Buddhist monasteries. The eunuch-minister had an entire separate, much humbler manor built nearby which he would pretend was his actual residence whenever Emperor Huizong demanded to visit & feast at his expense

767 brought in a surprise for the Romans, as the Khazar army amassed in the Tauric Chersonese finally left Cherson to make its move. Led by Simon-Sartäç's eldest son and heir Isaac Tarkhan, named as such after his grandfather, these Khazars did not mount an overly ambitious, suicidal assault on Constantinople in the vein of Heshana Qaghan (which was what Emperor Leo had anticipated) but instead sailed for the Scytho-Moesian coast, landing behind the Romans' southern defensive line at Callatis[11]. From there Isaac swung north to break up the aforementioned defensive line in the Second Battle of Axiopolis and the Battle of Tomis, clearing a path for the Khazar hordes to push southward: rather than get distracted by the prospect of pillaging Thrace once more though, the senior Khazar prince maintained focus and pushed up north to link up with his beleaguered father.

Now by the time his heir had entered play, Simon-Sartäç had narrowly managed to beat back Theodosius' offensive at the First Battle of Libida[12], though he had come off the worse of the two in their exchange: so much so that it was doubtful whether he could survive the follow-up onslaught under Trèany from the north. Isaac arrived just in time to reinforce his old man's bloodied and ragged ranks however, and together the Khazar father-and-son duo managed to also repel the second Roman attack on the same battlefield. Despite having lost their chance to score an early and crushing victory, certainly messing up the Emperor's timetable for the war's course in the process, nevertheless Theodosius and Trèany were far from finished themselves: they fell back behind the Carpathian mountain passes to properly consolidate their armies & receive reinforcements from over the Brothers' Bridge, leaving them in an excellent position to resist the Khazars' own summer offensive when the latter gave chase.

The Romans met the Khazars in battle for the last time this year near Cumidava[13], one of the larger fortress-towns (re)established by the Dacians under the Holy Roman Empire's guidance. The melee observable from the town's fortified church was a furious one, compelling Vitalian and even Cumidava's prince-bishop (another of Pope John's highborn friends) Philip of Capua (Dacian: 'Filip') to wade into the fight in support of the Caesar: setting an example for future 'fighting bishops' defending their flocks from wolves on the front-line of Christendom, Bishop Philip wore his mitre over a skullcap (which would be surpassed in future centuries once great helms became popular, whereupon later prince-bishops would have theirs forged to resemble the ecclesiastical mitre instead) and wielded a mace (as a crushing weapon, it was less likely to literally spill blood than a sword or spear). Here the combined Roman army prevailed over its Khazar counterpart, pushing Simon-Sartäç and Isaac back toward the coast while Leo himself had decided to get involved in a bid to end the war more quickly.

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Bishop Philip administering the last rites to a dying Vlach auxiliary, a local who would almost certainly have attended his church during peacetime, after the Battle of Cumidava

In the Caucasus, Zebulun Tarkhan concentrated his forces on the west and east of Georgia rather than attempt another drive straight southward from Alania into Tbilisi, having correctly judged that the Romano-Georgian forces would have undertaken defensive preparations to stop any such attack in its tracks. In his efforts to wear the foe down he was more successful in Abasgia, where the Khazars captured the fortified villages of Mokvi and Akarmara[14], allowing them to threaten the heart of old Lazica. The Romans and their allies rallied however, with Dux Tryphillios enlisting the support of the highland Svan tribes (so-called 'Sanni' or 'Chani' by the Greeks & Romans) previously alienated by King Guaram's attempt to increase the tribute they owed him by convincing him to relax such taxes and plying their chiefs with gifts. Svan warriors familiar with the terrain proved instrumental to Roman victories in the Kodori Gorge and the Second Battle of Mokvi, halting Zebulun's western offensive entirely and leaving some 3,000 Khazars besieged in Akarmara by the end of 767.

Perhaps Leo need not have worried about the speed at which he was progressing toward his goals in this war however, because his neighbor Hashim decided that this year would be the one in which he'd strike a blow against the rival powers encircling the Caliphate's extension into India. News from China that Huizong's persecution of Buddhists and raising of taxes to finance personal vanity projects, starting with the expansion of the Later Han's imperial palace in Luoyang, had kicked off rioting in several Chinese cities was the last bit of information the Caliph needed to hear before going ahead with his strategy. Confident that the Chinese either wouldn't intervene at all or would not be able to intervene strongly enough to stop him, and that with the Romans and Khazars at each other's throats he didn't have to worry about any invasion from the west or north either, Hashim authorized his Alid relatives to begin their major attacks on the Indo-Romans and pagan Indians, dispatching his generalissimo Mansur al-Din (who had longed for a good war for some time and languished in the decades of peace brought by his master's rule) and his eldest, most favored son Hasan (who was expected to study the art of war under al-Din's wing) to support them with a large army.

The eldest of the Alids, Muzaffar ibn al-Arab, led the two-pronged attack on the Indo-Romans out of Aror and Multan. He got the drop on their king Strategius, defeating Indo-Roman forces in the Battle of Alexandria-in-Arachosia and sacking that town. The Arabs called it 'Scandar' after Iskandar, the translation of Alexander's name into Arabic and Persian, and at the urging of Mansur al-Din Muzaffar also took the trouble of building a permanent fortress nearby to better lock down this region for Dar al-Islam, which he called Bost but which was popularly referred to as 'Lashkar Gah' – 'army barracks' – by his soldiers and those of Hashim. Indo-Roman resistance was fiercer (indeed, on the part of the Indians themselves, it was practically fanatical) on the other side of the Caucasus Indicus, and the Muslims' advance gradually stalled in the face of their determined defense until Strategius himself threw them back entirely at the Battle of Peucela[15], after which he sent an appeal for help to Luoyang.

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A Turkic ghulam prepares to finish off a wounded Sogdian of Strategius' army following hard fighting in the mountains of Paropamisus

The brothers Bakr and Bahir ibn Nizam meanwhile were responsible for the attacks on the Chandras and Later Salankayanas. In this regard Bakr was the luckier of the pair, as his Buddhist opponents were still in the middle of rebuilding and reordering their long-decayed kingdom when he came knocking with an army. The Muslims smashed through these Bengalis' still-incomplete defenses early on, routed the Chandra host at the Battle of Karnasuvarna[16] and nearly rolled up the kingdom entirely had it not been for the dramatic Battle of Gauda, where King Dharmachandra – aware that his smaller army had no chance against that of Bakr ibn Nizam – broke some of the Ganges' dams to drown himself and the Muslim vanguard, while also making it impossible for Bakr to continue onward to his capital for some time. Bahir meanwhile found the Later Salankayanas better prepared to fight the armies of Islam, and his early advances were soon cut off and reversed by the aging but still formidable Samrat Mahadeva at the Battle of Dhar.

768 saw the Romans continuing to press their hard-won advantages against the Khazars. The war's early stage may not have played out exactly as Leo was counting on, but he believed he had sufficient reserves and the Khazars had been sufficiently battered that he could still eke out a major victory, a belief which the events of this year seemed to vindicate. Leo's own army, formed by stripping the Danubian forts of their remaining garrisons in favor of a total offensive and gathering additional reinforcements from Carantania, Croatia and the more westerly Germanic federates (as well as a newly raised Jewish militia from Thessalonica), pulverized Simon-Sartäç's rearguard in the Battle of Argamum[17], clearing the way for him to march further north to cut off the Khazar retreat. Meanwhile his son also mounted a counteroffensive which built off the momentum from the previous year's triumph at Cumidava to expel the Khagan from the Sub-Carpathians.

By the time the two major Roman armies had converged upon their Khazar enemy at Dinogetia[18], it was apparent to Simon-Sartäç that the situation had not developed at all to his advantage and that he would be best served by pulling out of Dacia entirely. In order to avoid being annihilated, the Khagan resolved to bloody the Romans enough in a major pitched battle that they wouldn't be able to pursue him when he fell back over the Tyras. Faced with over 50,000 Roman and allied troops, the Khagan concentrated the bulk of his own 30,000 warriors against the smaller southern army under Emperor Leo, driving them back into the ruins of Dinogetia before Theodosius' ranks broke through the screen of elite cavalry and Alan-Cherkess skirmishers assigned to hold them off. Princes Mstislav of the Polianians and Svetozar of the Drevlians seized the moment to launch a bold charge directly at the Khagan's position, hoping to cut down this chief oppressor of their peoples; but the young Antae lords' assault was foiled by the intervention of the latter's elite bodyguards and Isaac Tarkhan, who slew Svetozar with an armor-piercing arrow and compelled Mstislav to fall back after a mutual exchange of blows and injuries in close combat.

Although Simon-Sartäç had managed to avoid the fate of his father, the Khazars were unable to withstand the pressure of Theodosius' army and the rallying forces of Leo, such that they ended up having to leave the Romans in possession of the battlefield. Nonetheless they had fought hard enough, and inflicted sufficiently heavy losses and disorder on the Roman ranks, to achieve his strategic goal: buying enough breathing room to pull back over the Tyras with a bloodied army which, nevertheless, could still actually be called an army. By the time Theodosius had crossed the Porata[19] and was rapidly closing in on the rearward-most elements of the Khazar horde, the Khagan had already gotten most of his men over the Tyras and sued for peace, hoping the Romans would be more amenable to his terms from before by now.

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Leo III, protected by his 'comitatenses fideles' (paladin bodyguards), moving to rally his flagging troops at the Battle of Dinogetia

As for the Romans' far-eastern kindred, the Islamic threat only continued to surge against the Indo-Romans this year. From Bost and Scandar the Muslims advanced northward and westward, with Hasan ibn Hashim capturing Alexandria-in-Ariana (thereafter named Heart, after his Persian mother's name for that city) while Mansur al-Din and Muzaffar of the Alids undertook the much more difficult task of carving a bloody path towards Kophen. Slowly but surely grinding their way past innumerable mountain ambushes and hit-and-run raids on their extending supply lines by Paropamisadae auxiliaries in Strategius' service, and overcoming the forts built to obstruct the road to the Indo-Roman capital by past Belisarian kings at increasing cost, the Muslims finally managed to reach and begin investing Kophen by mid-768 even as Strategius himself pushed the eastern wing of their army back down the length of the Indus.

Fortunately for the Indo-Romans, while the good fortune which had kept them afloat for many years was clearly beginning to wane, it had not run dry just yet. Strategius' entreaty for help to Luoyang had been heard and after managing to repress mounting domestic discontent at his administration, Emperor Huizong agreed to dispatch Ma Gui with an army to support him against the Muslims earlier in the year, if only to demonstrate that unlike his lazy and complacent father, he wasn't about to tolerate the insult to Chinese prestige represented by an attack on one of his tributaries. Ma's army numbered 15,000 horsemen, the best he could assemble in terms of a mobile strike force capable of actually reaching Kophen before it fell, but together with Strategius' own army returning from the other side of the Caucasus Indicus they proved sufficient to drive Mansur al-Din back from the Indo-Roman capital shortly before winter put an end to the fighting for the remainder of the year. Ma Gui's son Ma Hui also distinguished himself in the fighting, and by running down old Muzaffar in a skirmish during the Arabs' retreat from Kophen.

Huizong had erred in sending the capable and loyal (even if said loyalty might have grown increasingly strained over the past few years of tyranny) Ma Gui away, however. While his best general was away fighting at the far western end of the Middle Kingdom's sphere of influence, the Emperor had taken advantage of the restoration of order at home to go on a sightseeing tour around the Huai river valley, and despite his best efforts Zhang Ai was unable to prevent his overlord from climbing to the top of a tower near one of his more lavish countryside palaces on a whim, ostensibly so that he might get a better look at the stars at night. Realizing at once that his top minister had been skimming from the treasury and beautifying his own residences to outshine that of the Son of Heaven himself, the irate Huizong demanded Zhang's presence at a 'cordial conference regarding certain affairs of state'.

Aware that there was no way he would be leaving that 'meeting' alive, Zhang decided that the time had come to put into motion the contingency plan he'd readied for this precise occasion. Feigning illness at first and agreeing to meet the Emperor on the next morning to stall for time, he directed the guards – who had been receiving generous salaries more frequently than usual thanks to him, not Huizong, and whose captain had borne the insult of having his stallion confiscated by Huizong for being finer than any previously found in the imperial stables – to assassinate Huizong, which they did by stabbing him (and his chief wife Empress Xin, who shared his bed that evening) thirty times. The public explanation was that the Emperor and Empress had died in their sleep, which was technically true, and as Huizong's erratic and temperamental ways had made him no shortage of enemies over only four tumultous years, few cared to mourn or look too deeply into his 'tragic' and unexpected passing. The imperial couple's sons were also quietly disposed of, because Zhang Ai feared that they would be just as uncontrollable as their father and also seek redress for his suspicious death if they grew older, but their infant daughter Princess Huaiyang was carefully kept alive for another of the eunuch's schemes.

One of the Hao kinsmen spared in the purge at the beginning of Huizong's reign, his cousin (son of his uncle, Chongzong's ninth half-brother the Prince of Qi, who did not survive that same purge) Duke Hao Zhihong, would be installed atop the Dragon Throne instead. Princess Huaiyang was also immediately betrothed to his eldest son Hao Mao, the newly minted Prince of Han, for the purpose of legitimacy and denying her hand to anyone who might challenge the Later Han. Ominously remembered under the simpler posthumous name Xiaojing ('filial and meek') rather than any temple name which would indicate he was worthy of veneration, the new Emperor was in many ways Zhang's ideal puppet: a spoiled brat who had grown into a decadent man, an extreme alcoholic as lazy and lustful as his grandfather but lacking even Chongzong's very limited virtues, possessed of a sadistic streak but also quite cowardly unlike his uncle – and, most importantly, completely content to let Zhang run China while he luxuriated in his opulent palaces. An earthquake hit Shaanxi on the very day of his coronation: decidedly poor foreshadowing for the reign of the worst Later Han monarch, even in the eyes of those who didn't immediately assume it signaled a loss of the Mandate of Heaven on the dynasty's part.

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Once more the eunuch-chancellor Zhang Ai had come out on top and asserted himself as the most powerful figure in the Chinese imperial court, to the detriment of the Later Han and really everyone not named 'Zhang Ai'

With the Khazars' main army having pulled back over the Tyras, 769 became a year mostly spent on limited back-and-forth skirmishes around the great river. Negotiations between Leo and Simon-Sartäç were unproductive, as the latter was still unwilling to allow the formation of a Christian Slavic principality right on his western border and also sought a buffer zone on the Tyras' right (western) bank, both demands which the Augustus saw no need to concede on. However the Romans had to dig numerous roads and establish outposts across wild northern Dacia to logistically support their forces that far away, which further delayed any great offensive on their part, while the Khazars enjoyed more of a 'home ground' advantage on the old Sarmatic plains closer to the core of their dominion. An actual attempt to cross the Tyras in force was bloodily repelled by the quick Khazar response under Isaac Tarkhan, resulting in the Polish king Włodzisław being badly injured. Fighting in the Caucasus was similarly inconclusive, although at least the Romano-Georgian forces were able to negotiate a Khazar withdrawal from besieged Akarmara in the fall.

While Włodzisław recovered, Theodosius Caesar came up with a risky strategy (aided in part by his ward, Włodzisław's young heir Bożydar) to amass the most mobile Roman units – all cavalry, both heavy knights and lighter auxiliaries from Africa and the Slavic kingdoms – on Polish soil over the Carpathian mountains over the winter & spring months. Supported by the aforementioned Poles and further enlisting the cooperation of the Volhynians who had not been spared the Khazar slaver's lash in the past, this strike force would circumvent both the Pripyat Marshes and the Khazar defenses on the Tyras entirely to storm straight towards Kyiv. Hopefully, the presence of a not-insignificant elite army on the Dnieper and its forceful restoration of Mstislav's rightful domain, combined with the threat of Leo himself leading the Roman infantry from the south, would be enough to change Simon-Sartäç's mind.

To the south, the now-old Caliph lamented his recent strategic decisions. It seemed to him that he had erred in going after the triple alliance surrounding the Alids, the results now proving that his wily western rival had successfully bluffed with the defenses around Antioch & Mesopotamia and by keeping the Armenians out of the Second Roman-Khazar War. Furthermore, that the Chinese managed to send reinforcements to the Indo-Romans after all – even if it was too late to avert any territorial losses on the part of the latter whatsoever, as they had done last time – demonstrated that he had miscalculated the resolve of the Chinese and their ability to protect their tributaries. Nevertheless accepting this recent turn of fortunes as a sign from Allah to remain humble and to never consider himself the wisest man to ever live (no matter what his courtiers might say), Hashim committed to ending the war quickly and with as much in the way of territorial gains as he could.

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Hashim al-Hakim leading his court in prayer, no doubt lamenting his recent mistakes but also thanking God for the lesson in humility and for (so far) sparing him crippling consequences for it

While adopting a defensive posture in Bactria and northwestern India to preserve gains like Scandar & Bost against the counter-attacks of Strategius & Ma Gui, the Muslims concentrated on building new gains in eastern & southern India as much as they could before their Caliph sued for peace. In something of a reversal from the earlier course of the war, here it was Bakr ibn Nizam who found himself on the backfoot against renewed Chandra offensives in the east – fueled by equal parts vindictiveness and desperation – which saw Dharmachandra's successor Harshachandra put an end to Islam's first brief grasp on the coast of the Bay of Bengal, although he managed to preserve his gains further inland to the west. Bahir ibn Nizam, meanwhile, finally managed to achieve a breakthrough against the Later Salankayanas, seizing and securing bridgeheads on the southern bank of the River Rewa[20] and threatening to cut Gujarat off from the rest of that southern Indian empire at Bharukaccha.

The Romans put Theodosius' strategy into practice once the weather had cleared in the first half of 770. While Leo mounted a diversionary attack on the Tyras to keep Simon-Sartäç and Isaac pinned down, the Caesar led his amassed cavalry on a daring ride towards the ruins of Kyiv with Włodzisław, Bożydar and Mstislav in his company, maneuvering through friendly Polish and Volhynian territory as quickly as he was able on horseback in spite of the lack of roads to burst out well behind the Khazars' main lines. This northernmost division swept onward to the Dnieper against scattered and ineffective resistance, rapidly receiving homage from one astonished but relieved Antic village after another and freeing slaves as they progressed, while the Khagan frantically detached his son from the core Khazar army to respond.

The rival princes met at the Battle of the Irpin River, a tributary of the Dnieper directly west of Kyiv, both with about 5,000 horsemen at their back. In the brief but intense clash which followed, Isaac Tarkhan managed to fatally gut the barely-healed Włodzisław, but was driven into retreat under the onslaught of the furious Bożydar and Mstislav returning for a second round: his soldiers soon followed, leaving the Romans victorious and in control of Kyiv where Mstislav was reinstalled in his burnt-out hall and Vitalian once more raised the cross where his brother once preached. Between this latest defeat and Zebulun Tarkhan's offensives in the Caucasus having completely stalled following a final southward attack from Alania which was driven back at the Battle of Gori, Simon-Sartäç sued for peace again, this time more earnestly seeking an accomodation with the Romans before Leo could get a major attack on the Tauric Chersonese going.

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The victorious Mstislav of the Polianians stands where his home used to be with his wife, Veleslava of the Drevlians, following the Battle of the Irpin River. The Antae prince may have failed to fully avenge his father by eradicating Simon-Sartäç and his brood, but at least he got his realm back – now he just had to rebuild it

With a border on the Tyras and the liberation of the Antae lands now assured, Leo himself was also willing to reach a peace settlement at this point, having reached basically all of his goals for the war (though not as quickly as he had originally thought). By the terms of the Peace of Argamum the Romans added to their Dacian march what territories they didn't already hold south of the Tyras, affixing the two empires' western boundary on that river, and in probably the greatest blow to Simon-Sartäç they also secured the formation of the first Antae state on the latter's northwestern border. His in-laws having died over the course of the war, Mstislav was the default choice to lead the Polianians and Drevlians both, and Svyatogor-Daniel of the slightly less devastated Buzhanians also pledged allegiance to him as the first 'Grand Prince' (Old East Slavic: Velikyi Kŭnęzĭ) – these people called themselves Rusichi, but the Romans referred to their grand principality by the Latin exonym Ruthenia. The Khazars were left with some meager gains in Abasgia, slightly less meager gains in Caucasian Albania, and profits from those East Slavic slaves they had managed to sell before their defeat.

Thus the Second Roman-Khazar War had progressed & ended in much the same way as the First: Khazar aggression and early successes, turned back by Roman swords and lances once the latter really got in the game. At least Simon-Sartäç had survived to control the inevitable outpouring of unrest, unlike his father. For Leo, Taurica could wait – he was getting old, so perhaps his son should have the glory of recovering that peninsula (and the lost Georgian territories) for Rome instead. In the meantime, he finally had the time to refocus on mediating the escalating colonial conflict between the Goths and Africans, which by now verged on open bloodshed; and as for Theodosius, though originally nicknamed 'Sclavenicus' for suppressing pagan rebellion among the Wends, his deeds in this conflict made him out as a benevolent patron & protector of the Sclaveni instead (as long as they were Christian, anyway). If the Khazars had any sense, the Emperor believed they would return the above lands voluntarily and resume the alliance against the Muslims, since these wars had reinforced his impression that they were very much the third wheel among western Eurasia's three greats – clearly unable to defeat either the Holy Roman Empire or Dar al-Islam by themselves, but quite able to tilt the balance of power in one of those two's favor and profit at the expense of whichever empire they had sided against at the time.

Though the Romans had certainly gained quite a bit from this latest victory – the rest of the Dacian gold mines, and valuable buffer space & allies who would help them against not just the Khazars but also other nomadic enemies threatening them from the steppe in the distant future – it was undeniably the Slavic nations who were the greatest benefactors of the Peace of Argamum. While Włodzisław had been baptised (and then given the last rites) on his deathbed, he was technically a Christian for only the last few hours of his life, so it would be his son Bożydar who would be generally acknowledged as the first Christian ruler of Poland: accordingly he was the first Polish monarch titled a Rex in official Roman correspondence, the first to title himself król (Pol.: 'king'), the first to marry a Roman imperial princess (Leo's granddaughter Scantilla wedded him on the same day that he had the population of Gniezno baptized by Bishop Svatopluk, soon after returning there, as promised), and indeed 770 would go down in history as the true founding year of the Polish nation.

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Baptism of Poland's first king Bożydar, soon to be followed by the population of Gniezno, by Bishop Svatopluk while his imperial fiancée Scantilla bears witness and prays for the continuation of the Roman-Polish alliance

As for Mstislav, he and his wife Veleslava also submitted to baptism in this year to definitively secure Roman aid in rebuilding their capital & kingdom, with Vitalian being installed as the first Bishop of Kyiv and erecting a shrine to honor the memory of his twin Valens on the Martyr's Hill. While the Peace of Argamum required the Ruthenians to refrain from actually fighting alongside the Holy Roman Empire against Khazaria so long as the latter refrained from raiding his people again, Mstislav cynically figured that they'd breach that condition (and free him up to march with Rome) in no time. Come what may, the 'Baptism of Ruthenia' following on the heels of the 'Baptism of Poland' solidified these two kingdoms as among the greater Christian Slavic kingdoms (though romantic history aside, they both technically still had more years yet to go before fully Christianizing & completing the transition from tribal federations to more cohesive feudal kingdoms), lacking formal federate contracts but certainly allied to Rome even as they would periodically clash with one another (for example, over Volhynia, whose ruler Ludislav declined to do as Svyatogor-Daniel did and immediately recognize Mstislav as his suzerain), and their Lechowicz and Rusovich rulers as close associates of the Aloysians.

The Muslims were also racing toward as favorable a peace settlement as they could gain with their enemies, especially as Hashim now had cause to worry about his western and northern borders once more. His son and top general ably contained the advances of Ma Gui and Strategius in 'Arokhaj', as they called what the Romans (Indo- and otherwise) described as Arachosia, and Muzaffar's grandson Ya'qub ibn Amr clashed with Ma Hui thrice in a bid to avenge his grandsire: both princes proved to be equally martially gifted however, and thus failed to kill one another – Ya'qub 'merely' managed to remove some of Ma Hui's fingers, and the latter retaliated by relieving the Alid prince of one of his eyes. When the Muslims went on the attack, they managed to get as far as Bamiyan grinding to a halt before the Indo-Roman and Chinese defense, which then began to slowly roll them back out of the mountains. As a Salankayana counterattack pushed Islamic forces away from Bharukachha and the Chandras seemed to find their footing in the east, Hashim decided to consolidate the conquests he had amassed so far rather than continue pushing his luck and sued for peace. When Strategius refused to negotiate until he'd taken back all his lost territories, the Caliph decided to go over his head and send emissaries to the court of his overlord instead.

Said overlord was too busy with personal affairs to bother negotiating with the rival empire far to his southwest. While Zhang Ai received the Islamic delegation & conducted peace talks in the name of the Huangdi, Xiaojing had come to greatly desire one Lady Si, the young and beautiful wife of an honest and hardworking mandarin named Liu Dun, and insisted that he had to have her at any cost. This upright official could not be bribed into giving up his spouse, not even for one night, so in one of the rare cases where he insisted upon his chancellor to do something rather than the other way around, the infuriated and lust-maddened Emperor leaned on Zhang to fabricate charges of treason with which to arrange Liu's execution. Lady Si herself attempted to flee into the countryside with their toddler son Liu Dan, but was arrested and assured that she did not have to worry about herself or her child sharing her husband's fate – so long as she would allow herself to be inducted into the imperial harem and submit to the Emperor's advances. Unfortunately for the new Emperor his new concubine was not, in fact, nearly as besotted with him as he was with her and instead (as might be expected from an aggrieved widow absolutely seething at the injustice done to her and her family) immediately began plotting the demise of the Later Han, a task in which she was sure to find no shortage of willing collaborators over the coming years.

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Damaged painting of Emperor Xiaojing humoring Lady Si's request to look at some flowers in the palace gardens. This Emperor could not possibly care less about such things, and his concubine is doubtless wondering which of these flowers she could use to poison him

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[1] Parutyne.

[2] Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi.

[3] Tulcea.

[4] Turcoaia.

[5] The Siret River.

[6] Câineni.

[7] In the vicinity of modern Focșani.

[8] Cernavodă.

[9] Tskhinvali.

[10] Around modern Ganja, Azerbaijan.

[11] Mangalia.

[12] Slava Cercheză.

[13] Râșnov.

[14] Tkvarcheli.

[15] Old Pushkalavati, northeast of Peshawar.

[16] Berhampore, West Bengal.

[17] Jurilovca.

[18] Near Galați.

[19] The Prut River.

[20] The Narmada River.
 

shangrila

Well-known member
Not sure how long the Khazars can hold on. Nomad confederations live and die on their prestige. Losing 2 wars in a row should have tribes breaking off nonstop. They definitely need to win a war, and with the Slavs and Romans now allied, that means taking on Islam again, but now without the Roman alliance.

And I'm assuming Zhang Ai is about to sell Strategius and Ma Gui out. Which might rather fatally lead to Ma Gui and his army showing up back at Luoyang rather angry and Zhang Ai needing to explain not just 1 but 2 dead emperors.
 

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