War of Grythshead Independence: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Richard, 1st Viscount Marroc|Sir Richard Marroc]]<br>
[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Richard, 1st Viscount Marroc|Sir Richard Marroc]]<br>
[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Loric, 1st Earl of Hasledown|Loric of Hasledown]]<br>
[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Loric, 1st Earl of Hasledown|Loric of Hasledown]]<br>
[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Malcolm, 1st Viscount Hawksy|Sir Malcolm Lockhart]]
[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Malcolm, 1st Viscount Hawksy|Sir Malcolm Lockhart]]<br>
[[File:Grythshead Arms.png|12px]] [[Elwyn of Chick]] {{executed}}
| commander2  = [[File:Ramubad.png|25px]] '''[[Sultan Mehmet III of Ramubad|Mehmet III]]''' †<br>
| commander2  = [[File:Ramubad.png|25px]] '''[[Sultan Mehmet III of Ramubad|Mehmet III]]''' †<br>
[[File:Ramubad.png|25px]] '''[[Sultan Mehmet IV of Ramubad|Mehmet IV]]'''<br>
[[File:Ramubad.png|25px]] '''[[Sultan Mehmet IV of Ramubad|Mehmet IV]]'''<br>
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}}
}}
The '''War of Grythshead Independence''' was a war fought in 1301 between the Prodavan [[Sultanate of Ramubad]] and Vionnan rebels from the region of [[Kingdom of Grythshead|Grythshead]] under the leadership of Lord [[King Duncan of Grythshead|Duncan of Kamoine]]. The war lasted from the [[Siege of Chick]] in May 1299 until late summer 1301 when the [[Battle of Grythshead (1301)|Battle of Grythshead]] and the subsequent [[Diktat of Kamoine]] established Grythsheader independence. Grythsheader victory marked a turn in the fortunes of the Andyist and Christian kindgoms of southern Vionna and the muslim Prodavan incursions into the region, which had been continuous since the 10th century, were decisively ended and remained unattempted for three centuries.
The '''War of Grythshead Independence''' was a war fought in 1301 between the Prodavan [[Sultanate of Ramubad]] and Vionnan rebels from the region of [[Kingdom of Grythshead|Grythshead]] under the leadership of Lord [[King Duncan of Grythshead|Duncan of Kamoine]]. The war lasted from the [[Siege of Chick]] in May 1299 until late summer 1301 when the [[Battle of Grythshead (1301)|Battle of Grythshead]] and the subsequent [[Diktat of Kamoine]] established Grythsheader independence. Grythsheader victory marked a turn in the fortunes of the Andyist and Christian kindgoms of southern Vionna and the muslim Prodavan incursions into the region, which had been continuous since the 10th century, were decisively ended and remained unattempted for three centuries.
==Background==
==Chick, 1299==
==Allenick and Vinford, 1300==
==Grythshead, 1301==
==Aftermath==

Revision as of 19:24, 26 June 2022

War of Grythshead Independence
DateMay 1299 - Summer 1301
Location
Kingdom of Grythshead
Result

Grythsheader Victory
Diktat of Kamoine

  • Kingdom of Grythshead granted independence from Ramubad
  • Duncan of Kamoine crowned King of Grythshead
  • End of Ramubadic expansion in southern Vionna
Belligerents
Grythshead Arms.png Grythshead Ramubad.png Ramubad
Commanders and leaders

Grythshead Arms.png Duncan of Kamoine
Grythshead Arms.png Sir Frederic Seydon
Grythshead Arms.png Sir Richard Marroc
Grythshead Arms.png Loric of Hasledown
Grythshead Arms.png Sir Malcolm Lockhart

Grythshead Arms.png Elwyn of Chick  Executed

Ramubad.png Mehmet III
Ramubad.png Mehmet IV

Ramubad.png Abdul Emin Pasha

The War of Grythshead Independence was a war fought in 1301 between the Prodavan Sultanate of Ramubad and Vionnan rebels from the region of Grythshead under the leadership of Lord Duncan of Kamoine. The war lasted from the Siege of Chick in May 1299 until late summer 1301 when the Battle of Grythshead and the subsequent Diktat of Kamoine established Grythsheader independence. Grythsheader victory marked a turn in the fortunes of the Andyist and Christian kindgoms of southern Vionna and the muslim Prodavan incursions into the region, which had been continuous since the 10th century, were decisively ended and remained unattempted for three centuries.

Background

Chick, 1299

Allenick and Vinford, 1300

Grythshead, 1301

Aftermath