Coastal Crusade

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Coastal Crusade
Part of the Hesperidesian Crusades
Imperial SoldiersCC.jpg
Imperial Army marches into Ravetta province
Date12th and 13th Century
Location
Western Hesperidesia
Result Imperial rule confirmed in area
Territorial
changes
Western coastal areas become provinces of the Empire of Exponent
Belligerents
File:KingdomofBasilea.png Kingdom of Basilea
File:KingdomofRavetta.jpeg Kingdom of Ravetta
File:KingdomofAlbandaea.png Kingdom of Albandaea
 Empire of Exponent

The Coastal Crusade was a military campaign in western Heseperidesia that eliminated the Latin Kingdoms of Hesperidesia and secured the Empire of Exponent's position as hegemon on the continent.

Background

While the Hesperidesian Crusades were initially meant by Maximinus I as a holy mission to defend Christianity against the savage natives and protect the Exponential borders, the vision of a unified land started taking shape as their successes mounted: a unified Hesperidesia.

Upon defeating the savage Tribal King of Asberam with the Northern Crusade, the next target could only be the Latin Kingdoms of Hesperidesia – whose resistance to the Imperial Rule dated back to the Schism of Paradisia in the third century AD, being only tolerated thanks to the common faith they shared in Christ.

The war officially began in 1164, after Pope Simeon II excommunicated the King of Basilea, Etheldred IV for his unchristian marriage to a tribal woman and his refusal of repudiating her.

As a consequence of the excommunication, the Latin Kingdoms of Basilea, Ravetta and Albandaea – that thrived by co-existing with the native tribes – made common cause and leveraged a hefty tax on the “worldly possessions of the Church”, as written in the edict cosigned by the three Kingdoms.

For this heinous act against the Church, thus against God, the Pope called for a Crusade and the Empire of Exponent promptly answered.

Campaign

Aftermath

Legacy

Morrosetta and Costa de Ouro

Albandaean merchants and seafarers had established ports and trading posts in the area of modern-day Morroseta and Costa de Ouro during the eleventh centry. With the collapse of the Kingdom of Albandaea in 1172, many leading Albandaean families became refugeees, fleeing to ports in the area with their possessions and establishing new kingdoms.

Lisander