War of The Thousand Flowers
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War of The Thousand Flowers Meikakuna Michi Campaign | |||||||||
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(Most of the force are from Drussel, Rafusie and Dragonica Legium's armies) | ||||||||
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The War of The Thousand Flowers (Nihongo: 千の花戦争, Liedish: Krieg der Tausend Blumen), also known as Meikakuna Michi Campaign (Nihongo: 明確な道運動, Liedish: Klarer-Weg-Kampagne), was a military conflict between the Nihonjin Expedition Army and the Thousand Flowers Coalition. When the Nihonjin first occupied the village of Masaqui, the nine kingdoms on Liedtsch Island (modern-day Jūmin-ryōiki Island) formed the Thousand Flowers Coalition, temporarily ending the rivalry between the kingdoms to focus on the Nihonjin threats. The Nihonjin combined arms approach and significantly more modern technologies, alongside the Kingdom of Leiden's help in intel and information, the Nihonjin began the war with the newly established coalition.
The Nihonjin began militarizing the Kingdom of Leiden when it became a puppet of the Nihonjin after a series of debt-ridden treaties. The Nihonjin sent over futuristic weapons to fortify Nihonjin territories, compared to the magical properties and medieval weapons of the natives of Liedtsch Island. Both sides took heavy measures against each other's moves to assert influence. The Nihonjin began executing the first phase of the Meikakuna Michi Campaign after news broke out of the Coalition mobilization.
The war was the result of the Nihonjin policies of expansions for Project Shinkei and Operation Zenshō to expand its influence politically and militarily to secure territories for military usage, scientific research, and a planned observation site dedicated to the social changes of Sparkalia. In November of 1544, Leiden went under military occupation by the Nihonjin forces shortly after the monarch of Leiden signed a treaty that gave the Nihonjin full control over the kingdom; many historians cite this event as the beginning of the war. Months after the occupation, the Nihonjin and Coalition started to skirmish in small, localized engagements, so-called "incidents".
Shortly after a raid launched by the Rafusian Civil Army on the Nihonjin forces on the outskirt of Leiden, the Nihonjin forces undertook rapid dominace operations and maneuver warfare against the coalition forces. The Nihonjin forces scored major victories in the first few months of the war, capturing Drussel in March of 1545 and pushing back a coalition-led offensive in July of the same year. In November 1545, the Nihonjin forces launched a large-scale winter offensive, reaching deep within the island's center. During the same time, the Seige of Poppyville against the Kingdom of Algunia began, Mount Hardeen was captured by the Nihonjin forces, and the Strategic Hamlet Operation started.
The Strategic Hamlet Operation greatly combated the loyalist insurgencies by pacifying the occupied territories and reducing the influence of the enemies among the defenseless population. The Nihonjin forces would continue a series of offensive operations throughout 1546. The year saw the side-switching of Derzekai and its Gran Derzekai Army, the fall of Poppyville, the beginning of air dominace and airborne forces deployment from the Nihonjin Air Force, and the start of a series of Nihonjin forces' infiltrations in the East side of the island.
By December 1546, the Coalition was severely weakened. The only leading force still able to fight was the Dragonica Imperial Army and the low morale armies of Libe, Nazura, and Dodokai. By February 1547, Libe and Nazura surrendered to the Nihonjin forces, the commander of the Coalition, Walter Gerstg, was killed, and the Nihonjin Expeditionary Navy began a naval blockade of Dragonica Legium. Emperor Balasar Fenkenkabradon was forced to surrender when the Nihonjin navy began bombarding Dragonica Legium port cities and when the Nihonjin began using hybrid weapons.
The war ended with an overwhelming victory for the Nihonjin forces, its allies, and puppets. The victory was marked by a full-scale military occupation of Liedtsch Island and the signing of the Treaty of The Ten Kingdoms. After the treaty was signed, the Shinkei Declaration was released. The Shinkei Declaration formed the modern Organization of Shinkei and the Federation of Ten Kingdoms.
The war was one of the few military conflicts fought on Jūmin-ryōiki Island during the Era of Blemish, the other two being the 1575 Rafusian coup and the ongoing military occupation of Dragonica Legium.
Background
Before the arrival of the Nihonjin, the ten kingdoms on the Jūmin-ryōiki Island were in constant conflicts over lands and power, but everything came to a halt when the Kingdom of Leiden, one of the two human kingdoms on the island, came under the control of the Nihonjin forces. A coalition between the Empire of Dragonica Legium, the Kingdom of Rafusie, and the Holy Order of Drussel was formed to counterbalance the upcoming power of the Nihonjin. Despite the Coalition, the Nihonjin forces militarized the Kingdom of Leiden with advanced weaponry, as well as delivering troops of the Nihonjin Expeditionary Army onto the island.
The Coalition was then expanded to the five other kingdoms before the Grand Kingdom of Derzekai officially joined to proclaim the Thousand Flowers Coalition. The Coalition was the only time that the nine kingdoms were able to set their rivalry aside to face a much stronger force. In November 1544, the Kingdom of Leiden officially became a colony of the Nihonjin forces after the Treaty of Vonderburg. Leiden, unable to repay their debt from all of their weapons and modern equipment purchases, was forced to lease more land, expand the colony of Masaqui and give the Nihonjin forces full control of the kingdom's military.
The sudden treaty caused a massive outcry from native Leidish and other natives in other kingdoms, prompting the Thousand Flowers Coalition to mobilize their armies near the border of Leiden to prevent the Nihonjin from advancing further into the island. The mobilization of the Coalition's armies angered the Nihonjin forces and was also opposed by the Grand Kingdom of Derzekai. In response, the Nihonjin began fortifying and militarizing Leiden with futuristic weapons at their disposal. The Kingdom of Leiden's military then went through multiple chains of command before the Leiden Royal Army's General of the Army was replaced by marshal Hayao Kinugasa of the Nihonjin Expeditionary Army.
As soon as Hayao was put in charge of the LRA, he ordered a full mobilization on the borders of Leiden, with around 23,000 personnel from the Nihonjin Expedition Army and 59,000 troops from Leiden Royal Army spreading across the border. The Nihonjin Expeditionary Air Force and Navy were also mobilized. The Air Force was given direct orders from General Takashi Ri to oversee the operation of air dominance over the island. Meanwhile, the Navy was given directions by Admiral Kazuyoshi Tanaka, a Nihonjin veteran back in the homeworld.
The mobilization was organized into a bigger campaign, codenamed as "Clear Road Campaign" (Meikakuna Michi Campaign), and began operation when a small group of Dragonican soldiers attacked a small western command of the Leiden Royal Army, sparking the "Rosettia Incident". The Rosettia Incident was followed by other countless small skirmishes, often won by the Nihonjin-supplied Liedish forces.
The war officially started on the 11 of January 1545, when a platoon of the Rafusian Civil Army, led by officer Gorwin Nerineiros, launched an offensive in one of Nihonjin's main battle commands, resulting in the Battle of Koania. Despite having the larger manpower, the platoon was decimated by the firepower of the Nihonjin forces, in the process, killing the first major military official of the Coalition. The Coalition leaders were shocked at the death of Gorwin, resulting in the official declaration of war against the Nihonjin forces and Leiden.