Republic of Pania: Difference between revisions
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* {{wp|Venetian language|Barancan}}<br> | * {{wp|Venetian language|Barancan}}<br> | ||
* {{wp|Italian language|Panian}}<br> | * {{wp|Italian language|Panian}}<br> | ||
* {{wp|Gothic language|Welbarian}}<br> | |||
* {{wp|Greek language|Erytherian}} | * {{wp|Greek language|Erytherian}} | ||
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Maritime Republic of Pania | |||||||||||
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385–1462 | |||||||||||
Motto: Clemens Deus, dona nobis pacem ac felicitatem "Merciful God, grant us peace and prosperity" | |||||||||||
Capital | Pania | ||||||||||
Common languages | |||||||||||
Government | Parliamentary oligarchic merchant republic | ||||||||||
Consul | |||||||||||
• 385-401 (first) | Marcus Tiberius | ||||||||||
• 1458-1462 (last) | Bartolomeo di Cassini | ||||||||||
Legislature | Great Council of Pania | ||||||||||
Council of Families | |||||||||||
Senate | |||||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages – Early modern period | ||||||||||
• Established | 385 | ||||||||||
• Siege of Pania | 385 | ||||||||||
• Treaty of Cambra | 462 | ||||||||||
• Battle of San-Umberto | 891 | ||||||||||
• Sack of Mageiros | 1032 | ||||||||||
• Treaty of Bosala | 1462 | ||||||||||
Currency | Panian ducat | ||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Today part of | Erytheria Lavaria |
The Maritime Republic of Pania (Panian Repubblica marittima di Pania, Lavarian República marítima de Paniá), was an independent state and a maritime republic that existed in southern Lavaria between 385 CE and 1462 CE. At the peak of its power, the republic incorported several cities on the northern coast of the Endotheric sea, several islands of the Erytherian island chain, the island of Saint Hubert of the Lilacs, and several colonies in northern Caphtora, as well as numerous smaller trading ports and colonies scattered around the Endotheric sea. The republic was centered around the city of Pania: located in a valley under the Pania rocks, the strategic location of the city made it the most important commercial and military centre of the Cambran empire. The republic grew into the dominant naval power during the High Middle Ages in the Endotheric sea, and controlled most of the trade between Berea and Eastern Pamira. The city preserved a lot of the governing traditions of the Cambran empire and even used Cambran as the main language for most of its early existence.
Following the fall of Cambra in 381 CE, several generals and part of the Cambran elite, led by Magister Militum Marcus Tiberius, seeked refuge in the city Pania, the main military port of the Cambran empire located in the southern tip of the Lavish peninsula. The city was besieged twice by the Welbarian forces of Alarich, in 383 and 384, both times unsuccessfully. In 385, the Kingdom of the Welbarians was established on the ruins of the Cambran empire and proclaimed itself the successor of Cambra. The leaders of Pania refused to accept Alarich as their king, and in the same year the Welbarian fleet was sunk in the Battle of Cambra, the city itself was besieged for 2 months and King Alarich was killed. The Welbarians accepted Panian sovereignity. In 460, another unsuccessul siege of Pania was attempted by King Ulrich II, during which most of his forces were killed or captured. In 462, the Welbarians signed the treaty of Cambra, accepting the sovereignity of Cambra and granting them exclusive rights on trade on Welbarian soil. With the deterioration of the Kingdom of Welbarians in the 8th-11th centuries, Pania used its power and influence to gain control over some of the Welbarian coastal forts and ports. With the rise of several other maritime republics, most notably Armala, Pania secured its dominance with a mixture of diplomacy and strength. The republic won the Battle of San-Umberto against the combined force of the Republics of Armala, Mesana and Saloma. In the following century, Pamia signed several treaties with the Kingdom of Erytherians, culminating with the Treaty of Mageiros, when the republic gained exclusive trading rights with the kingdom and gained new colonies and trading outposts on the Erytherian islands. In the 11th century, the Republic reached the peak of its power, controlling most of the maritime trade in the Endotheric sea.
With the unification of Lavaria and the rise of the newly-formed kingdom as a naval power, Pania slowly lost its significance. After the strategic defeat of the !Pamiran empire in the Battle of Carana against the unified Lavish forces, and the opening of the trade route via the Viridian and Appiric seas, Pania rapidly lost its influence on the naval trade and its wealth. In 1447, Pania was forced to sieze most of its colonies to the Lavish Kingdom, and less than two decades later, in 1462, after the siege of Pania, the republic lost its independence and was incorporated into the Lavish Kingdom. Pania remains a city in the Kingdom of Lavaria until today.
Name
The city is located on the southern tip of the Lavarian peninsula, and on the Cambran lowlands. This region was always known for its rich soils and harvests, and served as the breadbasket of the Cambran empire throughout its history. Pania was the centre of the region, and because of that the importance of food production found its place in the name of the city. The name Pania derives from the Cambran word for Bread land, clearly showing the importance of the city in the supply chain of the empire. The city preserved its name following the fall of Cambra in 381 CE, and the name itself was not modified throughout the centuries.
The form of government, closely identical to the one present in Ancient Erytheria, has led to the classification of the state as a Republic. Some historians insist on the usage of the termin "Maritime republic" in regards to both Pania and several other Medieval city-states on the Lavarian peninsula. In the same time, the republic itself used different descriptions in its official documents. In the earliest known scripts from Pania, the state iself is still described as the Cambran empire or Imperial city of the Cambran empire up until late 5th century CE, despite the actual empire collapsing in 381-390. In a script found in Pania and dating from the early 5th century, the state is already classified as an independent city. This description will be used by both Panians and foreign chroniclers. During the High Middle Ages, in some Berean chronicles Pania is described as an empire, and even occasionally despotate. In Panian chronicles of the era, it is still being named an independent city. The name republic was given to the state only in the 19th century by Lavarian historians and scholars.
History
First historical records of the city date as far as 500 BCE. At that time Pania served as a small trade outpost of the Erytherian city-states, and, due to its strategical location, soon became the capital of the Erytherian colonies in Lavaria. The city had a small military fleet and a garrison of local militia, relying on the League of Mageiros for protection. During the War for the Endotheric sea, the city was besieged by the Cambran legions, and surrendered to the Cambrans within one month, in the summer of 381 CE.
For the next 7 centuries, the city was an important port of the Cambran empire. Due to its strategic location and proximity to the imperial capital, Pania became the hum of the Cambran military fleet, and most of the warships were constructed in the city. It soon grew into a regional capital, its strategic location made it vital for the Cambrans to construct defensive walls around the city to protect it in case of peasant revolts or during civil wars. Records suggest that prior to the Triumvirate of Cambra in the 3rd century, Pania was the third largest city in the empire.
When the Triumvirate of Cambra, unofficially known as the Northern Cambran Empire, was invaded by Welbarians in the second half of the 4th century, thousands of Cambrans sought refuge in the southern cities of the empire, before all in the capital itself. However, when it became clear that the city did not stand a chance, the senators of Cambra, backed up by the Magister Militum (Cam. Magister of the military) Marcus Tiberius and several of his loyal centurions, fled the city with most of its garrison and the last Cambran legion, and entered Pania. In 381, this let to the fall of Cambra, as the city was left mostly unprotected. The Cambran elite settled in Pania and declared it the new capital of the Cambran empire.
Early period (4th-6th century)
The city soon remained the last bastion of Cambran power in Lavaria. The Northern Cambran Empire was completely conquered by the Welbarians, led by King Alarich. The two other Triumvirates, Erytherian and Appiran, declared they do not recognise Pania as the successor of the Northern Cambran Empire. The Erytherian Triumvirate declared itself the sole successor of the Cambran empire. Its emperor led an unsuccessful campaign against Alarich, but failed and was forced to give up the city of Mudros to the barbarians. The Triumvirate of Appira, which at the time fought with barbarian tribes in both Caphtora and Pamira, recognised Alarich as the new emperor of Cambra in an attempt to gain his support, which, however was declined. Alarich only promised the Appiran Cambrans he will not attack them, allowing them to move troops to the southern portions of the country.
After dealing with both Western Cambra and the Appiric empire, Alarich decided to capture Pania, the last province in Lavaria that did not recognise his power. In 383, he attacked the small Panian possessions in southern Lavaria, and after one month of fighting reached the city itself. The first siege of Pania was a disaster for the Welbarians: Alarich attempted a naval invasion from the east, however, lost most of his fleet in the Battle of Cape Panio, together with his most elite troops. The early winter of 383 forced Alarich to retreat from Pania.
Welbarian wars of the 4th-5th centuries
The Welbarians returned in late spring 384 for a second attempt to breach the defences of the city. The Panians managed to prepare heavier defence and constructed a number of defence weapons, mostly consisting of ballistae and catapults. The Panian fleet remained uncontested at sea, and managed to both defend the supply of provision into the city and to harass the forces of Alarich from the sea. The siege continued for three months, until the forces of Alarich were caught by a plague. Alarich was forced to abandon the siege once again and returned to Cambra. The next year, Alarich was coronated by the Cambran nobles as the Emperor of all Cambrans, but was not recognised by Pania, which still viewed itself as the only successor of the Northern Cambran empire.
In 396, Alarich once again declared war on the city, leading his armies towards the city. The Welbarian army was destroyed in the Battle of Aliria, and the Panian forces soon marched on Cambra. The land force led by Tiberius, who was declared Emperor of Cambra the previous year, suffered from a major defeat from the combined Welbarian and Aldenic forces in the outskirts of Cambra, and was forced to retreat beyond the river Aliria. The Panian fleet, however, reached the city and destroyed everything that remained of the Welbarian fleet. The city was bombarded for nearly a month, when the forces of Tiberius crossed Aliria and once again reached Cambra, this time besieging the city and driving back the Aldenic forces of Alarich stationed outside the city limit. During the following siege a disease broke in the city, claiming the life of most of its inhabitants, including Alarich himself. After the death of their king, the Welbarians started negotiating with Tiberius. Knowing that the city would soon get reinforcements and that his own forces are not in condition to continue the siege, Tiberius agreed to lift the siege in exchange of recognition of Pania as an independent state by the Welbarians.
After the death of Tiberius in 401, Pania was left in a power vacuum. The only son of Tiberius was killed in 402, most probably by the centurions of Tiberius, and the throne of the empire was claimed by several generals, the state itself was left in a crisis for the next 15 years. In 418, members of the Senate assassinated Emperor Horatio, one of the former officers in the legion of Tiberius. The senators then declared that the state was no longer ruled by emperors, but by the senate itself, which had only minor role in the Cambran empire. From this moment Pania stopped associating itself with the former Cambran empire: senators declared that they successfully ended an era of tyranny, and blamed the former emperors in the fall of the empire.
In 460, King Ulrich II of the Welbarians once again declared war on the city, the official reason behind the conflict was that Panian merchants were constantly violating the laws of the kingdom. Ulrich suffered from a strategic defeat on sea, and once again the Welbarian fleet was destroyed. Pania managed to ally with the Western Cambran Empire, the latter besieged the city of Mudros, forcing Ulrich to fight on two fronts. The Panians sent a secret delegation to Cambra, offering Ulrich a peace treaty and alliance in exchange of continuing the war against the Cambrans in Mudros, seizing the port of Baranca to the Panians, and giving their merchants exclusive rights on Welbarian soil. Ulrich was forced to agree as otherwise he risked to lose Cambra to Pania. The same year, 460, Pania declared war on Western Cambra. Its fleet attacked the Cambrans near Mudros, helping Ulrich to lay down the siege and drive the Cambrans back. The Panian fleet then raided the island of Persana and sacked the port of Saraclivion. The Cambran fleet was once again defeated in 461. In the peace treaty of 462, Western Cambra seized the island of Persana to Pania.
Pano-Vinedian war
In 582, Pania declared a war on the Kingdom of Vinedum: the last remnant of the Southern Cambran Empire after its fall in the previous century The Panian fleet besieged the city of Bacala and even bombarded the capital of the kingdom, the city of Vinedum. Vinedians suffered from several strategic defeats at sea, their trading fleet suffered from constant Panian raids. The kingdom asked for peace in 585, Pania was granted exclusive trade rights and Panian troops were allowed to enter the city of Bacala to protect Panian merchants and buildings.
Rise (7th-9th century)
Peak of power (10th-13th century)
Deterioration (14th century)
Fall (15th century)
The Republic of Pania rapidly started to lose its wealth in the Late Middle Ages. Decline in maritime trade of spices, numerous famines throughout the first decade of the 15th century, and the rising power of the unified Lavarian Kingdom all challenged the dominance of Pania of the Endotheric trade routes. In 1428, Lavaria defeated the TBA Khanate in the Battle of Hasenta, and gained exclusive rights to create a trade route throught the Appiric sea to Eastern Pamira. This route was far more efficient than the previous Caphtoran route used by Panian merchants. The rapid decrease of trade flow through Erytheria caused a struggle in Pania to sustain both its maritime fleet and most of its colonies. In 1433, a contract was signed with Lavaria when Pania handed 3/4 of its military ships and the island of San Umberto to Lavaria.
Tensions continued to rise between the two states: Pania supported the Dux County in the War of 1436-1437. This gave the Lavarian Kingdom a reason to declare war on Pania in 1438. The Lavarian navy raided Panian trade routes and destroyed what remained of the Panian fleet in the Battle of Pavio, while the Lavarian army besieged the city of Baranca. Left without a fleet, Pania was forced to sign a treaty with Lavaria: the city of Baranca, the last possession of the republic outside the Panian peninsula was handed over to Lavaria, the republic itself was banned to operate a military fleet bigger than 6 war galleys, and was forced to hand half of its trade fleet to the Lavarian Kingdom. Pania remained independent for the next two decades. In 1462, the Lavarian king declared the Unification of Lavaria, and put ultimatum to Consul Bartolomeo di Cassini to declare the Republic part of the kingdom and abdicate. Di Cassini followed the orders, dissolved the Council of Nobles and the Panian senate and abdicated, the gates of the city were open to the Lavarian king. The Republic was incorporated into the Lavarian Kingdom as the Duchy of Pania and Mauricio, one of the sons of King Cícero I, was declared Duke of Pania.