Colonial Army (Themiclesia)
Colonial Army | |
---|---|
Active | 752 | –1798
Country | Themiclesia |
Part of | Secretary of State for Appropriations (to 1622) Secretary of State for Maritime Affairs (1622–1798) |
Nickname(s) | Provincials |
Mascot(s) | Owl |
Anniversaries | 16th day of 2nd month (lunisolar) |
Engagements | See list
|
The Colonial Army (阜人, pju’-njing) was a group of several standing armies that Themiclesia maintained during the middle ages to the late 18th century to protect and enlarge her colonial possessions. While the Colonial Army no longer exist as such, parts of them have evolved into the Camian Army, the Camian Navy, the Themiclesian Marine Corps, the Themiclesian Customs Service, and several other organizations. The term "Port Corps" was coined by the Tyrannians in the 17th century and bears very little relation to their native name; while common in scholarship, it is losing favour to the term "Colonial Army" as a functionally superior translation.
Name
The Port Corps' name in Shinasthana is 阜人 (pju’-njing), which means "plateau people". This refers to the Port Corps' habit of defending a settlement by digging a trench around the settlement and then elevating the area within with the excavated soil. The name "Port Corps" was coined by Tyrannian general John Barrower, who engaged with them at the port of what today is New Erus City. This name is actually contradictory of the Port Corps' original function, which was expressly to guard inland settlements, rather than ports.
Since the mid-20th century, the term "Colonial Army" was proposed as more appropriate for this organization. While some scholars believe that these forces were too disparate to share a single title, Themiclesian administrative law nevertheless regarded them as fundamentally part of the same organization, the Department of Ports and Passes (關津令, kwran-tsjin-mlings), and there are radical similarities between the divergent parts of the same organization.
History
Early history
Themiclesia's colonial activities of, both a military and civilian character, occasioned the creation of the Colonial Army. Having established trading outposts along the coast and interior of Columbia during the 6th and 7th century, it was necessary to defend them against hostile groups. At this time, Themiclesia had no standing army. Since there were no Themiclesian settlers in the area, raising a militia for its defence was out of the question. The home militia was not sent to defend these outposts because militiamen generally expected to contribute service for only one month a year, and local gentry required them to work on fields at other times. Rather than stationing a large and expensive militia along the trade routes, the Department of Passes ordered the construction of a series of fortifications that would permit a smaller number of soldiers to defend (or at least maintain a defensible position in) an expansive area.
During the restored Meng dynasty, the Department of Passes maintained full control over these fortifications as part of its jurisdiction over trade routes and their control and taxation. Surviving records do not clarify who the earliest soldiers stationed in these fortifications were, but it is likely they were earliest professional soldiers to be fielded by Themiclesia. The fortifications were logistically grouped into the East, West, and South Divisions, though there is no relationship with the division as a modern military formation. Each Division was paired with a circuit of the Navy for periodic refurbishments in men and supplies.
Around the 11th century, there were about 40 fortifications continental Columbia and the southern part of Nukkumaa. At the same time, Themiclesia's colonial activities also commenced in Portcullia and the northern coast of Meridia. Until the defeat of the Battle of Portcullia in 1323, the Department of Passes had four under-secretaries, which suggests that the Colonial Army was divided into four parts. At this point, the maintenance of trade routes had transmuted from a financial matter to a military one; however, matters relating to the Colonial Army were still read by the Secretary of State for Appropriations. In 1543, the Council of Correspondence created a new position over Maritime Affairs (海部尚書, hme’-be’-djang’-st’ja), who managed the country's navy and overseas activities. Temporarily, this office was jointly held with that of the Minister of the Left and Foreign Secretary (左僕射客曹海曹尚書), but since the 1600s Maritime Affairs has generally been a separate portfolio. While some authors translate this title as Navy Secretary in view of the fact that Themiclesia's naval fleets were under its responsibility, this is misleading, as the portfolio included civilian and financial affairs abroad.
18th century & Maverican Campaign
The 17th century had little in store for the Port Corps, but the following one was to stretch them to their limits and develop new roles in them. In 1680, the Gramuchi Empire of Maverica suddenly collapsed under Ostlandic rebellion. Themiclesia had, around 1600, concluded a treaty with the Gramuchi Empire to have condominium over what is today Maverica north of the Arantzean Mountains; however, the Gramuchi Empire exploited the Ostlandic settlers, prompting them to appeal for assistance from Themiclesia. Rather than going against treaty and outright supporting the Ostlandic rebels, Themiclesia committed to not helping the Gramuchi Empire in exchange for sovereignty over the part of Maverica north of Arantzean. Hailed as a diplomatic victory and bloodless conquest, amidst defeat left, right, and centre in Columbia, Themiclesia attempted to and was frustrated by establishing a form of government over the new territories. The locals being a creole society between Ostlandians and Gramuchans, customs prevented Themiclesia from using its normal, civil government over them. In a "remarkable example of parallel thinking", eight of seventeen camps of the Port Corps were sent to take control of the major towns in the area. The Port Corps seemed especially appropriate for this task as it resembled their canonical one of enforcing order in the Columbian wilderness two centuries ago.
Far from being a relaxation of tension as the Ostlandic colonists hoped, the Port Corps were ordered to collect an assortment of taxes and to enforce an alien regimen of laws that deeply disturbed the Ostlandic settlers. Though the Themiclesian court may have intended, eventually, to install civil government in the region, such plans were not announced locally. The precise cause for Themiclesia's reticence in restoring civil rule has been debated; one theory states that, due to the lack of acknowledged gentry (who were entitled to a range of privileges) in the region and the use of military force, tax collection was far simpler and more efficient. Such a view gains credence when considered together with the fact that the Port Corps was controlled, ultimately, by the Secretary of State for Appropriations.
Whatever the plans of the government, the Director of Markets, via the Port Corps he controlled, governed northern Maverica uninterrupted for 70 years. The refusal to translate the Penal Code and Administrative Orders, two fundamental Themiclesian legal codices into Ostlandic, had in the mean time created a class of Ostlandic and Gramuchan individuals literate in Shinasthana to voice local concerns. When petitions fell on deaf ears, local pamphlets began to circulate a combination of true and likely conjured actions by the Port Corps that led to much public outrage. In 1757, this triggered a co-ordinated revolt with Ostlandians and Gramnucans in coalition, whereas the two had previously been in a state of tension. Through a variety of "low and evil devices", as described by Maverican historian R. G. Schlutz, such as holding civilians hostage in a walled city to hold the rebels outside at bay, while re-inforcements arrived, the Port Corps made alarming headway. When the rebels sought to seek the assistance of the Tyrannians, the South Sea Fleet immediately blockaded all port cities on the coastline; the Marine Corps also participated in this campaign by physically taking the port cities to prevent any egress. In 1759, the revolt was suppressed.
Before, however, the Themiclesian government was able to exact any veneance on the rebels, Paulus Gulstork, a Ostlandic-Gramuchan arrived at the capital city to find the war highly unpopular in Themiclesia. Through shrewd negotiations and information on the Prime Minister's opponents of the sanguine reality and the underhanded tactics employed by the Port Corps, the Themiclesian court's own friction came to a head in 1760. The Prime Minister was forced to resign to take responsibility for the "awful atrocity" of the war. When Gulstork further displayed the remains of who he claimed were "innocent children caught in the crossfire or deliberately killed to terrorize the locals", the court decided to execute the entire family of the resigned premier, whose inhumane acts were thought to have attracted divine punishment in the form of the drought. The Secretary of State for Appropriations (who actually directed the entire campaign) resigned and disapperaed from public life. The next prime minister further remitted 25 years of land tax from Maverica and guaranteed local government, by which the Port Corps lost its primary function.
Ranks
Prior to their merger with the Marines, the Port Corps possessed their own rank structure, which still reflected their use as a colonial force earlier in history.
Shinasthana | Translation | Typical duty | Notes | |
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Original | Transliteration | |||
阜正 | pju’-tjings | Fort Principal | General responsibility in fortification | |
阜典事 | pju’-tin'-srjes | Master of the Fort | Civil duties | |
阜長吏 | pju’-drjang-les | Master of the Fort | Supervision of armoury | |
阜人率 | pju’-njin-srjus | Commander of the Fort Troops | Senior commander of troops | |
僉領阜人 | k'liam-mljang-pju’-njin | Associate Commander | Deputy of above | |
阜人卒帥 | pju’-njin-s'lut-shwrjis | Fort Soldier Captain | Command of a 120-man unit | |
阜人隊長 | pju’-njin-tuih-drjang | Fort Squad Leader | Command of the 30-man unit | |
阜長卒 | pju’-drjang-s'lut | Able Fort Soldier | Soldier with more than 6 years' experience | |
阜卒 | pju’-s'lut | Fort Soldier | Ordinary soldier |