Baean Civil War

Revision as of 15:43, 28 May 2020 by Glitter (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Baean Civil War
Korean War Montage 2.png
(clockwise from top)
  • Western United Gukdong Front tank patrol the Sangdan Plateau
  • A Senrian fighter patrols the International Zone
  • The First Seonggol Division seizes Eunyeon
  • The landings at Ogbei
  • Refugees flee from the Siege of Ogbei
Date12 December 1934 (1934-12-12) – 1 January 1937 (1937-01-01) (2 years and 21 days)
Peace treaties
Location
Result

Seonggol victory

  • Restoration of Seonggol Absolutism
  • Loss of power and estates of the Gukdongs
  • Unification of Baekjeong into one state)
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders

The Baean Civil War was a civil war between Seonggol (with support from the western Gukdongs) and the Western Gukdong United Front (supported initially by Gaullica and Xiaodong). The war began on December 12th, 1934 with a peasant uprising in the city of colonial capital city of Ogbei.

As the Great War drew to a close, Xiaoan and Gaullican forces largely abandoned the region. Fearing an uprising of the commons, the pro-Gaullican Gukdongs around the Bay of Bashurat cracked down on their holdings, sparking major protests. Following the brutal massacre of the rebelling commoners in Ogbei, protests around the country turned increasingly violent. Without their Gaullican overlords and drained of treasure from dues during the Great War, the Bashurat Gukdongs were unable to break all the rebellions.

The rebellions began to coalesce into one movement with the Congress of Jinju. A united peasant movement was declared, embracing elements of socialism and liberalism. The Congress also called for a restoration of the Seonggol to power, long viewed by the commons as the divine representative of the people sidelined by power hungry corrupt nobles. The peasants took over several major cities, but failed to seize the key cities of Gyeoljeong and old Ansan.

Background

Collapse of the Gaullican Sangte

Righteous Revolutions

Following the Second Sakata Incident, Xiaodong and Gaullica were poised for war with Estmere and Gaullica. General Jules Boucher, Commandant of the Gaullican forces stationed in Sangte, ordered a General Mobilization of both Gaullican and local Colonial forces.

Under the 1894 Treaty System, Gukdongs which received funding from the Gaullican Crown were obligated to raise their own troops to support the war effort. By law these soldiers were to be trained, equipped, and paid by the Gukdong they owed fealty to. The General Mobilization at the end of 1926 was the first time that all Gukdongs had been ordered to provide troops. Many of the north and eastern Gukdongs had seen their populations diminish following the 1924 Drought and Famine. The 1894 Treaty made no provisions for changes in population and thus these Gukdongs were burdened with a disproportionate recruitment quota. At the same time, unemployment and the famine had ruined the economy of Sangte as a whole. No Gukdong had the means to equip, pay, and deploy their quota of troops, let alone to other nations.

Prelude to War

Combatants

Seonggol

Western Gukdong United Front

Course of War

Ogbei Uprising

Central Mountain Offensive

Autumn Offensive

First Palgan Campaign

Siege of Ogbei

Second Palgan

Fall of Eunyeon

Characteristics

Aftermath