Hayop Tapa Wars
Hayop Tapa Wars | |||||||||
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Part of Age of Pearls | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Tahamaja Empire | Bayarid Empire |
The Hayop Tapa were a series of conflicts from 873 CE to 982 CE, between the Bayarid Empire and the Tahamaja Empire, centering territorial claimancy in the Southern Ochran territories that bordered the Ozeros Sea. Five wars took place on both sea and land, and forty five years of warfare. It is the crisis and conflict of the Hayop Tapa wars that provoked the development of gunpowder as a tool of conflict by the side of the Tahamaja, resulting in this war involving the first gunfire conflict within recorded history. The wars culminated in the ten year Tahun Siyam peace, and signified the last significant conflict between the two empires.
The First Hayop Tapa centered on mutually demanded claims over the territories of the Kingdom of Lusoña, as the Asing Mesa Declaration by the Tahamaja in 843 CE coincided with the Bayarid Conquest following the election of Great Khan Khaduur in 856 CE. The two empires saw this as an entanglement of their spheres of influence, serving as the predominant maritime and terrestrial empires in conflict with one another. This conflict primarily took place on the Aranas Peninsula and its surrounding waters. This conflict only lasted three years, and saw the retreat of the Tahamaja from these Southern Ochrani holdings.
The Second Hayop Tapa war began in 896 CE, with the Bayarid Empire attempting to utilize its Southern Ozerosi holdings and ports to develop naval capacities, with the interest in expanding across the Sea into continental Malaio holdings. This mobilization was short lived, and resulted in a near immediate expulsion of Bayarid forces from maritime Ozerosi territories by 898 CE. This conflict would inspire the Tahamaja to further develop its Malaio based holdings.
The most prolonged conflict in this series of wars began in 910 CE, with the area of conflict maintaining a relatively unchanging frontier in the division of coastal and terrestrial holdings between the Tahamaja and Bayarid armies respectively. This conflict, lasting a fourth of a decade, would see the largest loss of resources and manpower between both nations.
The development of gunpowder allowed for the Tahamaja to more effectively maintain and expand from its coastal territories, resulting in provocations that would preclude the Fourth Hayop Tapa war in 953 CE, coincidentally taking advantage of an internal succession dispute for the Bayarid Khanate. This resulted in a rather sweeping campaign in the seizure of South Ochrani territories into the Tahamaja.
The final mass mobilization of troops would occur following the Dueling Kurultai, where Great Khan Aynur came to power and attempted to wrestle back control of its coastal territories against a newly elected Pelautama, who had been intended to claim their next capital to be in the former coastal heartland port of Kali Kembar. In 970 CE, another intense campaign would be fought over the southeastern coasts of Ochran in what is contemporarily the territory of Bebas Ketiga. This conflict finalized with a Bayarid reclamation of Kali Kembar and its surrounding territories, but a failure to push Tahamajan coastal domination over surrounding provinces.This would lead into the mutual signage of the Tahun Siyam treaty, which was seen as an experimental effort to identify if mutual governance was a compatible and functional way to function within these territories.
Background and Origin
First Hayop Tapa War 873-876 CE
Second Hayop Tapa War 896-898 CE
Third Hayop Tapa War 910-935 CE
Fourth Hayop Tapa War 953-957 CE
Fifth Hayop Tapa War 970-981 CE
Tahun Siyam Treaty
Feast of Pearls
Aftermath