Chezian Wars of Independence (1806-23): Difference between revisions

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===Beatavic===
===Beatavic===
''See: [[Beatavic War of Independence]]''
''See: [[Beatavic War of Independence]]''
Beatavician seperatist ideology surfaced in the mid 1700's during a time period in the Constantioan Empire where inflation and elevated costs of warfare were commonplace with talks of Beatavician independence underway with the justification that the Constantioan Empire was a failed state, however these talks were quickly shut down as the situation in the empire improved. Talks of an independent Beatavic would not resurface until the early 1800's due to the [[1806 Purac massacre]]. With an enraged populace, many Beatavicians were recruited to small, often undertrained militias.


===Icandia===
===Icandia===

Revision as of 04:06, 18 June 2023

Great Nortuan War
Navarino.jpg
Κωνσταντίνος Βολανάκης - Το κάψιμο της τουρκικής φρεγάτας.jpg
Siège de l'Acropoles.jpg
Battle of Durenstein.jpg
DateMarch 5th, 1806 - November 4th, 1823 (17 years, 7 months, 4 weeks and 2 days)
Location
Western and Central Nortua
Belligerents

Constantio Empire

Revolution Forces

The Chezian Wars of Independence, also known as the Great Nortuan War, were a series of conflicts across West and Central Nortua that lasted from 1806 until 1823 in various stages, fought between the Constantio Empire under Isidoros and a fluctuating array of Nortuan coalitions. The wars were marked by multiple revolutions and secessions from many territories of the Constantio Empire. The war began when imperial forces in Acdia massacred a crowd of demonstrators who were protesting a new tax on imperial subjects. News of the violent crackdown spread quickly across the empire thanks to fast-spreading communication like underground newspapers and the semaphore telegraph, and Isidoros ordered the military to clamp down on uprisings. Initially, most rebellions were sporadic and low-level clashes between crudely-constructed militias and local imperial forces, but by 1811 more professionally trained rebel armies were in open and widescale battles against the Constantioans, with regional governors also siding with the revolutionaries. The various rebellions did not always fight under a unified alliance, which prolonged the conflicts across the continent, but their intensity led to critical strains on the empire which left them spread thin and unable to operate as effectively as they had prior to the insurrections.

Fighting ended in 1823 with a peace negotiation in Coplesti, Artaska. Roughly three years later, Isidoros declared the dissolving of the empire on April 8th, 1827 with the Armistace of Gurikans. Upon the dissolution of the empire, Isidoros took his own life, passing the still united but fragile alliance of Constantio to his nephew, King Adonis Kalliadis. The period in between the end of the empire to the establishment of the Republic, the Council of Administrators were fraught with corruption and infighting as either establishment base attempted to sway the opinions of King Kalliadis.

Background

Wars

Syraranto

See: Syraranto War of Independence (1811-1818)

Vuswistan

See: Vuswistan Revolutionary War (1817-21)

Beatavic

See: Beatavic War of Independence

Beatavician seperatist ideology surfaced in the mid 1700's during a time period in the Constantioan Empire where inflation and elevated costs of warfare were commonplace with talks of Beatavician independence underway with the justification that the Constantioan Empire was a failed state, however these talks were quickly shut down as the situation in the empire improved. Talks of an independent Beatavic would not resurface until the early 1800's due to the 1806 Purac massacre. With an enraged populace, many Beatavicians were recruited to small, often undertrained militias.

Icandia

See: Icadanian Secession (1822)

Besmenia

See: Besmenian War of Independence (1815-1821)

Utobania

See: Utobanian War of Independence (1812-16)

Zoygaria

See: Constantio-Zoyiv Wars


Aftermath