History of the Errikan Empire

From NSwiki, the NationStates encyclopedia.
Revision as of 00:24, 12 September 2007 by 68.7.100.14 (Talk)

Jump to: navigation, search

The Errikan Empire, the major power of northern Mucro, has a long history, tracing back to the earliest settlement of Errikan peoples in Mucro in the early middle ages and extending to the modern Empire.

Early History

Migration and Settlement

According to early Errikan records, our sole source for information on the subject, Errik was a Germanic warlord in the early Christian era. His father, the leader of his tribe, was betrayed and murdered by his friend, who then siezed power for himself. Errik, then a young boy, had to flee to avoid being slain as well, though, upon departing, he swore he would return to avenge his father and bring justice to his murderer. He arrived in the Roman Empire, and developed a taste for their civilization. This did not temper his desire for revenge, however, for when he was old enough he returned, gathered an army, and fought his father's murderer, killing him personally and siezing power back.

However, he was still smitten with civilization, and incorporated much of what he had learned into his dealings as tribal leader. His connections with the Roman Empire, which brought fourth technologies and mannerisms as well as classic stories and philosophies, also brought fourth Christianity. Influenced by a Roman retainer, Errik read a Latin translation of the Christian bible, with which he quickly found himself equally smitten as he had found himself with civilization. He Christianized his population (the sagas say peacefully, but some historical scholars argue otherwise) shortly thereafter.

At some point, the exact circumstances of which remain unclear, there began a great migration of Errik's people. Those who were Christianized, most of his tribe and a few families from surrounding tribes, left with Errik, who led this new migration to find his people's "promised land." There is great question as to how he organized the navy necessary to transport the people, but they left Europe via the North Sea, eventually, miraculously, arriving in Northern Mucro. Though there are no Errikan records of it, it is believed that, on their way into what would come to be the Errikan gulf, they stopped off on the isle of Multan, where, according to Multanese tradition, they destroyed the local civilization and carried off their wealth. This, real or fictional, would prove to be an important factor later in Errikan history. Shortly after that may event would have taken place, Errik and his people, who would come to be known as Errikans, landed on the eastern coast of the Errikan gulf, beginning their settlement of what would someday become Errikland.

Inland Expansion

Feudal Era

The Feudal War

789-899 AD

High Medieval Era

Gradual Social Revolution

The collapse of the Feudal System was due to many factors. Foremost among these was the dramatic rise in literacy, a result of the increasing importance of professional soldiers. As professional soldiery continually proved their worth against conscript armies, and as labor for conscription grew far less cheap, all remaining factions put more of their resources towards training professional soldiers. Most soldiers were given not only formation training and drills, but also basic literacy. As more and more people learned to read, more actually read the bible, rather than taking the word of clergymen, who, as a literate elite, had a vested interest in placing certain emphasis. The concept that all Errikans were equal in the eyes of God spat in the face of an inborn aristocratic system, and the general populace quickly grew dissatisfied with their circumstances as even those who remained illiterate (a solid portion of the population for many years) were introduced to this concept by those who were. Many just walked, leaving their fiefs and settling and cultivating new lands.

This migration was made possible by the rapid growth of technologies, encoraged by the rise in literacy and driven by a population rapidly regrowing to grow up to its pre-war/plague levels, which not only allowed cultivation of more local areas and (more importantly) expansion into further regions, but also allowed the former feudal lords to maintain their production with less available labor. Though some of this was the result of conscious research and testing on the part of established lords in their fiefs (often with the aid of agricultural texts from antiquity), most of it was the result of the experieces of newer farmers on the frontiers, whose trial-and-error development was often a life or death matter and whose newfound indepenence drove the expansion of Errikdom.

These changes in the fifty years following the true end of the Feudal War forever changed Errikan society and culture, and would, over time, have far-reaching effects.

Rising Kingdoms

A half century following the Feudal War, a new Errikan system became established. Feudal power would never rise again, but the factions that came out of the Feudal War to form early states; the war had demanded creation of the basis for these reforms, particularly military professionalism, and the aftermath provided a more dynamic economy and relatively independent and rapidly reproducing citizenry who, though now far less suitable for the mass levy armies, would form the proper basis for the more professional armies of the time. These people, relatively new to the advantages literacy offered them, would take great steps to maintain and expand these advantages not only for themselves but also for their families. The population also grew outwards more than ever before, as more land was cultivated and more resources were sought. Of course, this naturally led to greater conflict between the new and improved states.

Various history of warring kingdoms.

The Crusade

The stability brought about by this alliance allowed the Errikans, led by William of Fehrburg, to focus their forces on preparing for the crusade. Their total military forces from the outset were over 100,000, with the largest part coming from William's northern alliance and the next largest part coming from Frederick of Vahnville's south.

The Crusade went very well, with the Errikan forces and their Latin allies handily defeating several far larger Saracen forces and taking Jerusalem in late 1196. However, it was then that a dispute broke out between the Errikans and the Catholics: it was initially centered around the treatment of the Jews, whom the Errikans thought should be treated repectfully as God's chosen people and the Catholics thought should be slain as pagans, but soon moved on to a question of religious authority. The Catholics argued for the ultimate supremacy of the Pope, while the Errikans contended that all Christians were equal in the eyes of God, and the Pope had no more authority than the Errikans' own religious scholars. This ultimately led to the Errikan withdrawl from the Crusade, and ultimately the vast majority of the Errikans returned to their homeland shortly thereafter (bringing the majority of the remaining Jewish population with them so as to spare them from molestation at the hands of the other Crusaders).

That sudden end of the Errikan Crusade also resulted in a rapid cooling of Errikan-European relations, which in turn resulted in the end of the period of close trade and interaction with Europe and a lasting anti-Catholicism in Errikdom that lasted for many years.

Late Medieval, Early Modern Era

Slow Decline, Isolationism

The Crusade turned out to be the last great hurrah not only of united Errikanism for hundreds of years but also of the great powerful kingdoms. William and Frederick's alliance held together longer than one would have expected, probably due to increased sentiments of Errikan unity in the face of anti-Romanism, but it ultimately broke down into new wars in 1215. By that time, neither William's northern alliance nor Frederick's southern were as fully behind them as in the past, and no mass warfare on a large scale involved most of the Errikan peoples; instead, indecisive skirmishing over a couple years led to minor exchanges of territory and short-lived peace in the spring of 1218. Similar wars took place in 1220-23 and 1225-1226. The last case was different from the others, however, involving the Watter Campaign, with the large, if not decisive, battles of Rach and South Watter. It substantially weakened both William and Frederick's respective armies, and resulted in the Peace of South Watter, which would prove to be a lasting one. Not only did it take time for the respective powers to rebuild their military forces, but by this time both leaders were relatively old, and somewhat weary of campaigning. They spent their remaining years in power on domestic issues, investing in matters such as infastructure and the arts. Oddly enough, both men passed away on the same day in July of 1238.

The 1240s and '50s saw relative peace throughout most of the Errikan lands, though minor border skirmishes between minor states were common. Increasingly, the great alliances of the previous years grew much weaker, kingdoms more decentralized. This trend continued through the 1260s beyond, though the peace of prior decades broke down as the minor border skirmishes became more common and more intense, with the plentiful minor states often going to full scale war with one another.

Stuff from 1300-early 1800s

Rising National Identity

Ideological Foundations, Foreign Invasion

This

Political Stability, Economic Transformation, Social Upheaval

Formation of Alliance, Confederation

Some semblence of industrialization had been around in Errikland for centuries; the high era for kingdoms had seen vast forges that mass produced military equipment, which remained in use to one degree or another until the early 1800s. The late 1700s had seen some adaptation of industrialism for commercial and merchant purposes, and these extended and expanded in the early 1800s. However, Errikland remained a largely agrarian society, with most of the population being small farmers, Errikan cities and industries being dwarfed by the leading cities and industries of the major powers of the region.

However, this was to change in the nineteenth century. Increasing agricultural efficiency had been an ongoing process since the inland migration of Errikan peoples in the first centuries since their settlement. The industrial growth in the years following the Napoleonic Wars, however, disproportionately represented itself in this area, resulting in an unprecedented explosion in agricultural production. This production also made such production far less labor intense, allowing smaller farmers to cultivate more land and larger farmers to lay off most of their hands. Though a considerable portion of those who found themselves on the revieving ends of these layoffs, along with the surplus result of a high population growth rate, were able to move on to found their own farms, or otherwise join the societies of small towns that covered much of Errikland, a hisorically unprecedented amount of them flocked to the cities. The rising urban areas, which had been

Setting the Stage

The Civil War

Opening Moves

The Sweep, Foreign Intervention

Endgame

The Errikan Empire

From Absolutism to Constitutionalism

Errikland Rising, A Regional Power

Expansion Overseas, A Real Power