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===Emendatic Wars===
===Emendatic Wars===


===Eastern Renaissance===
The Emendatic Wars were the end of the idea of a potentially united [[Alban Emendatic Church|Emendatic]] World, but the Lushyodorstag remained divided on religious and, de-facto, ethnic lines. As tensions dwindled in the aftermath of the wars, the [[Gerzaïd Dynasty]], rather than potentially rekindled the flames of a Emendatic insurrection, promulgated numerous {{wp|Edict of Toleration}} guaranteeing the protection of all Christian institutions in their country. While the structures of the [[Docetic Church]] and of the [[Alban Emendatic Church|Emendatic Monasteries]] had already been fully developed, the Lushyod Court reformed the system so that all that was would be required to open a school on Royal Lands was a doctorate. This reform ensured the creation of a strong, heterodox, theologic tradition. Diverging interpretations and canons became so common from school to school that Lushyod Copists began to write down each book of the Bible independently, allowing for "modular" construction of Bibles.


While there was an explosion of Single-generation Sects as historians call them, the religious tolerance of the Gerzaïds also strengthened the [[Docetic Church|Docetic]] and the [[Alban Emendatic Church|Alban Emendatic]] Churches ideologically, with many scholars and theologians free to express their ideas and publish their commentaries of the holy texts. But to subdue the problem of the permanent confusion on which texts are canons, and which should not be taken into account, the Docetic and Alban Churches met in 1405 with the patronage of King [[Lazar V]], in an oecumenical council in [[Pyrovegy]]. This first inter-faith council successfully produced the first {{wp|Oecumenical Bible}}, known as the [[Bible of Pyrovegy]], that was quickly adopted by both churches and spread all around Lake Kulpanitsa.


[[category:Drevstran]]
[[category:Drevstran]]
[[category:Former countries]]
[[category:Former countries]]

Revision as of 09:33, 29 May 2020

Kingdom of the Lushs
Lushyodorstag
823 - 1913
Flag of Lushyod Kingdom
Flag
of Lushyod Kingdom
Coat of arms
Historical Lushyodor Kingdom in dark green, the Medenzag in green, and territorial expansions after the Ikonkivoyra in light green
Historical Lushyodor Kingdom in dark green, the Medenzag in green, and territorial expansions after the Ikonkivoyra in light green
Religion
Docetic Christianism
Emendatic Christianism
GovernmentMonarchy
Lushyodor Korran 
• 820 - 840
Garza III
• 1881–1913 (last)
Ansmar II
History 
• Baptism of Gerza III
823
1913
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Lushyod Chiefdom
Drevstran

The Lushyodorstag or Kingdom of the Lushs was one of the two Finno-Ungaric languages Lush kingdoms that came from the partition of king Gerza I retinues. It was historically centered around the mountaineous region known as the Furodommark, even if with time it came to encompass all of modern southeastern Drevstran. While originally less wealthy than its eastern counterpart, and often considered to be a backwater, impoverished, region, The Lushyodorstag slowly emerged as one of the most important states in Eastern Belisaria following the Ikonkivoyra. It was notably one of the centers of the Eastern Renaissance (sometime nicknamed the "Alban Renaissance"), and one of the first state in the world to follow a policy of religious tolerance, with the first Edict of toleration published in 1259.

During the 13th and 14th centuries, the Lushyodorstag was known as the "Land of All the Heresies", being in its majority of Docetic confession, but also with important Emendatic and Orthodox Iconoclast communities. It was also considered to be a country of pirates and raiders, it's easily defensible borders, central position in Eastern Belisaria, poor natural ressources, and exclusion from both the Fabrian and Orthodox worlds that bordered it making it a privilegied origin for raiders, pirates, and mercenaries.

In 1690, Farza IV, king of the Lushyodors, inherited both the Principality of Yugstran and the Duchy of the Drev. But since these titles were part of [X] who refused to a see a foreign heretic in charge of these principalities, the Lushyodorstag began a long war to press their monarch's claim. Farza successfuly became the new Prince of Yugstran and Duke of the Drev after he defeated [X] armies in battle and converted to Orthodox Christianity, ending the war and uniting all three titles in a personal union known as the Triple Crown. The Lushyodorstag would continue as a constituent principality of what became known as Drevstran, until the beginning of the Drevstranese Civil War in 1913.

History

Ikonkivoyra

When its neighbor, the Kingdom of the Drev, began to implode because of internal turmoils and religious tensions, the Lushyodors took the opportunity to occupy bordering regions which had always been sources of contentions between the two states. They notably occupied the narrow pass known as the "Drev Gate" in 1023, but would lose it a decade later to the armies of the Sevromark. The two states would face regularly in the Sevro-Lush Wars, where the Lushyods would prove unable to push into the territories of the Sevromark, but where the newly created Iconoclast kingdom would also be unable, or unwilling, to follow through with its victory and contest the control of the Medenzag from their ennemies, as they were more concerned with the Duchy of Yugstran. The last of these conflicts ended in 1156 with the signature of a Treaty that fixed the border between the two states and forced the Lushyods to pay a small tribute to its neighbor. This peace would prove to be longlasting, and Lushyods mercenaries would serve in the Sevromark millitary during its last military campaigns and desesperate defense against the Neo-Bayarids.

Gothic Wars

Death of Euric at the Battle of Kyvorat

Despite the Lushyod colonisation of the Medenzag, the control of this rich and fertile region would be permanently contested by the Kingdom of Azdraï. Following the peace treaty between the Lushyodorstag and the Sevromark and sensing the weakness of its southern neighbor, King Theodoric II invaded the Medenzag and the Mren Valley. Thourough the following century of conflicts, the Goths ended up taking over most of the north of the river valley, and even twice reached the Furodomark.

It's only with the end of the Ikonkivoyra that the Lushyods began to restructurate their military and their society, with the help of Iconoclasts generals and scholars who fled the Neo-Bayarids to find protection in the Lushyodorstag. Saul I, at the head of this reformed military, launched a devastating invasion that took the entirety of the Mren Valley from the Goths in 1293. A second campaign in 1294 culminated with the conquest of the Gothic capital, and three others between 1295 and 1298 finished all resistance in the Highlands. The collapse of the Azdraï state was complete in 1297, with the death of Euric in battle.

Emendatic Wars

Eastern Renaissance

The Emendatic Wars were the end of the idea of a potentially united Emendatic World, but the Lushyodorstag remained divided on religious and, de-facto, ethnic lines. As tensions dwindled in the aftermath of the wars, the Gerzaïd Dynasty, rather than potentially rekindled the flames of a Emendatic insurrection, promulgated numerous Edict of Toleration guaranteeing the protection of all Christian institutions in their country. While the structures of the Docetic Church and of the Emendatic Monasteries had already been fully developed, the Lushyod Court reformed the system so that all that was would be required to open a school on Royal Lands was a doctorate. This reform ensured the creation of a strong, heterodox, theologic tradition. Diverging interpretations and canons became so common from school to school that Lushyod Copists began to write down each book of the Bible independently, allowing for "modular" construction of Bibles.

While there was an explosion of Single-generation Sects as historians call them, the religious tolerance of the Gerzaïds also strengthened the Docetic and the Alban Emendatic Churches ideologically, with many scholars and theologians free to express their ideas and publish their commentaries of the holy texts. But to subdue the problem of the permanent confusion on which texts are canons, and which should not be taken into account, the Docetic and Alban Churches met in 1405 with the patronage of King Lazar V, in an oecumenical council in Pyrovegy. This first inter-faith council successfully produced the first Oecumenical Bible, known as the Bible of Pyrovegy, that was quickly adopted by both churches and spread all around Lake Kulpanitsa.