First Soravian Civil War

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First Narozalic Civil War
Part of the Euclean Spring and Liberalism in Euclea
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Clockwise from top:
Zalyk Mordorna at the Battle of Ovdapol; a Western volunteer army made of Norodyn peasantry in Patovatra; civilians being marched out of Samistopol before the city's siege; Norodyn Tsarists ambush a Yaratan outpost near Lake Nimgan
DateApril 4 1857 – 13 July 1861
Location
Resulted inWestern Zalyk/Yaratan victory:
Parties to the civil conflict

Tsarist front:
 Narozalica

Republican front:
 Narozalica

Lead figures
Number
Imperial Narozalic Army: 1,832,774 (peak)
Tuulen Kansen Army: 95,716 (peak)
Narozalic Republican Army: 691,882 (peak)
Mordorna: 660,310 (peak)
Volunteer armies: 200,000–300,000
Casualties
918,546 killed, missing or wounded
710,927 killed, missing or wounded
Total casualties: 2,500,000–3,000,000
Total displaced: c. 1,500,000 (incl. civilians)

The First Narozalic Civil War (Narodyn: Первая норозалыкская гражданская война; Pervaya Norozalykskaya grazhdanskaya voyna) was a civil war fought throughout Narozalica between 1857 and 1861 between the Yaratans and the Zalyks, largely concentrated in the West - who advocated for large government reforms, and the Tsarist Narodyns in the East, who advocated for the status quo. One of the most defining conflicts in modern Euclean history, the civil war began largely as a result of the Narozalic defeat in the War of the Triple Alliance. The Zalyks and Yaratans of the Mornorda armies were dissatisfied at the continual Norodyn leadership, many of whom had no experience with cavalry-based armies. War broke out on April 4 when the Mornorda seceded from the army, led by Norodyn-Zalyk General Vasiliy Chaykev and attacked a garrison in Ulan Khol.

The country was divided by Lake Nimgan and most of the initial fighting would take place in that area. Beginning in 1859, the Zalyks and Yaratans began to advance further into Tsarist controlled territory, with their advances culminating in 1860 and 1861 with the Battle of Patovatra that saw the capital taken and the Siege of Samistopol which officially ended the war on July 10. The states were still de facto at war until July 13, when the Treaty of Ulan Khol was signed, calling the Narozalic Empire defunct and ordering the Tsar's exile to their once allies of Gaullica. Chaykev was sworn in as President the same day and adopted hardline anti-Gaullican policies to try and secure Narozalica's position on the Euclean stage. He adopted hardline nationalist and industrialist policies and his 43-year tenure saw the complete rejuvenation of Narozalic society that had dwindled under the monarchy. His policies are defined nowadays as Chaykev nationalism or Narozalic Revivalism.

Background

The Narozalic Monarchy

The Nurukovich dynasty after 1750 was largely characterised by series of greedy, brutal and ineffective rulers. The Narozalic Empire entered one of its largely dormancy periods in history following the conquest of Minerva in 1790, and the monarchy did little to make any moves that would improve the country's situation as it slowly began falling behind the emerging powers of eastern Euclea. The Narodyn peasantry throughout the empire, although largely concentrated in the empire's two largest cities - Patovatra and Samistopol - were becoming increasingly revolutionary as the monarchy lagrely ignoring the problems that the two cities were facing. This unrest cultimated in the Samistopol Revolt of 1797, largely inspired by the successes of the Etrurian Revolution and the formation of the First Etrurian Republic, but triggered by Ivan V's succession and his immediate plans to lavishly spend on an extension to the palace he was residing in. Ivan V cracked down hard on the revolts and the military disbanded them quickly with many people being killed and many more being injured and wounded.

Ivan V in 1820
Ivan VI in 1850

The peasantry's situation would continue to worsen as the Industrial Revolution spread throughout eastern Euclea, but Ivan V's reluctancy to implement reforms meant the technology of the Industrial Revolution did not reach Narozalica until much later. The employment created by the Industrial Revolution never came to fruition in Ivan V's reign, and so the peasant's population continued to expand and the unemployment rates continued to rise. Homelessness became a large problem in Samistopol in particular, but the military would often kick people off the streets if they saw them. Begging and busking was outlawed in 1823 throughout the empire, which put immense pressure on the homeless to either migrate or find a job within the city's borders. In a stroke of bad luck, the harvest of 1823 was extremely poor due to a large dip in temperatures and reduction in sunlight hours throughout the year, leading to the Famine of 1823 and increasing the unrest between the peasantry as many watched their friends and family die in the famine. As many as 300,000 people died as a direct result. In Altko Nurukovich's (Ivan V's half brother) Accounts of a Lost City, he writes:

It was a ghost town - something of nightmares. Wearied bodies limped down streets littered with corpses thin enough to be mistaken for skeletons. An air of dread lay about the city - as if something inhumane and immoral was happening as I roamed the streets. The realities of the world had made their mark on Samistopol and I could never see the city in the same light again.

— Altko Nurukovich, Accounts of a Lost City, 1825

Conditions would not approve when Ivan VI succeeded to the throne in 1829, and he largely continued the brutal policies of his father. As unrest broiled, the peasantry were at breaking point. With liberalism taking hold throughout Euclea, the peasantry of Samistopol stormed the Nuruk Palace in 1848, and almost succeeded in breaching the palace gates. The storming led Ivan VI to seclude himself within in palace for the rest of the year, and he was not seen outside the palace until he made a public address in the February of 1849 explaining his absence. Ivan promised "great riches" and "the progression of all mankind" in his 1849 address, but scarcely acted on it between the speech and his reforms - which were the opposite of what he promised.

Reforms of Ivan VI

Ivan VI's reforms were anything but, and they changed largely irrelevant and arbitrary things while ignoring or brushing aside the main problems that the empire had been facing for the past 60 years. The country's economy was in one of the worst recessions it had seen in years and the lack of farmers as well as the situations faced let many to resort to subsistence farming to help themselves and their family survived, only amplifying the hunger problem the country was facing. Ivan's reformed outlawed subsistence farming entirely in favour of a better system that would provide for both the farmer and the peasant. In the first year of the implementation of this new system, both farmers and urban peasants were starving as the food the farmers grew was simply not enough to sustain the growing urban population of the empire. Farmer's began resorting to hiding their food in the floorboards or under hay bales to avoid having to send it all away (a farmer had to provide a certain amount of food before they could keep some for themselves). This pushed the poverty imbalance back towards the urban centres, and the unrest broiled once again. Fearing a threat to his reign, Ivan VI attempted to unify the nation under a single cause when he declared war on Werania in support of Gaullica in 1852 and entered the War of the Triple Alliance.

War of the Triple Alliance

Eastern Euclean emergence

Geography and chronology

Warfare

Peace with the Triple Alliance

Southern Front (1857–1859)

Northern Front (1857–1860)

Njich-Orikh Line (1860)

Patovatra and Samistopol (1860–1861)

Central Euclea

Aftermath

Narozalic Republic

Casualties