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Kayahallpa-Mutul relations

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Kaya-Mutli relations

Kayahallpa

Mutul
Diplomatic mission
Sapak Inka Embassy, K'alak MuulDivine Throne Embassy, Tupawasi
Envoy
Ambassador TBDAmbassador Xaltun Chel

History

Kayamuca Empire

Runakuna settlers were moved from Norumbia to Oxidentale by the Kayamuca Empire to improve the economy of the conquered territories and to better control the distant and oftentime rebellious Runakuna by uprooting them to another border region. Runakuna communities became common in the modern K'aksie and Kalsie, where they lived in agricultural settlements alongside the shores of the rivers and other waterways, while the surrounding hills where populated by Chibchas with whom they often intermingled. Despite the Kayamucan' tight control over all trades within its empire, border populations also exchanged with foreigners. In the case of the Oxidentalese part of the Empire, this included the tribes of the Rezeses Savannah.

In 1211, the Kayamuca Empire lost the Lamkaja valley to the Ilok'tab Dynasty which pushed the population further east to escape the dangers associated with the borderland. Already, autonomous leaders began to settle outside of the Kayamuca traditional border, within the Reze savannah.

With the fall of Gadu in 1314, the Kayamuca had lost their last remaining bastion in Oxidentale. The network of chieftains and warlords that had suceeded to the imperial administration continued to devolved into petty kingship. Tribes and clans who refused the dominion of the Mutul fled southward, through the Savannah.

The Migration

What followed was a century long migration on the southern piedmonts of the Central Mountains. This road went between the Mutul and the Ucayare Forest. In the late 14th century, the Kaya as they were beginning to be known as, were pushed away from the Yajawil of Kumakah, the old core of the K'iche kingdom. Drove further south, the Kayas finally reached the modern country of Kayahallpa 1365 and founded their new capital of Tupawasi in 1434, officially joining the High Antis' concert of states.

Crisis of the Brothers

Following Akutze travels accross the Makrian between 1511 and 1528, the establishment of the Mutulese Legation, and the intensification of trans-oceanic trades, some Mutuleses Great Companies involved in it began to rely less and less on the "Northern Makrian Road" and instead shifted their attention to the southern alternative.

Between 1530 and 1590, many Great Companies negociated with the Saka Inka the privilegied access to the portuary cities of the Kayan coast. But following the Kirishtan Revolt which left the Mutul with a de-facto complete control over the Makrian Ocean, Mutuleses Great Companies began to act less and less like competitors against each others and adopted practices that turned them into a Cartel of sort, limiting the influence of the Sapa Inka over them. In reaction the central government of the Inka began to revoke many grants and concessions made to the Compagnies, in effort to keep them under pressure and to limit their field of actions.

Unable to appeal or present their case to the Kayan institutions, the Mutuleses Great Companies complained to the K'uhul Ajaw directly. When diplomatic actions taken by the Divine Lord failed, Fleets were sent in 1608 to open the ports directly and reaffirm the old treaties. What followed was a disastrous war for the Sapa Inka, forced to abandon large sways of territories in its north, to sign a free trade agreement with the Mutul, and grant an open access to ships engraved with the Glyph-Emblem of the Divine Kingdom to all Kayan ports.

In the following decade, the loss of prestige and revenues provoked by the war led to a shift in power from the central authorities to local potentates who were left in charge of both the production and redistribution of resources following the traditional market-less system of the Antis regions, but who were also capable in the absence of central control to trade directly with the Mutuleses. Aristocratic clans without any ties to the Sapa Inka and his dynasty could now amass lands and troops, constituting their own little domain financed by the profits of the Trans-Makrian trade. In addition, a swathe of infectious diseases novel to most Kayans had spread when the first Mutuleses ships arrived, weakening the Sapa Inka's power base from the outset.

A second war lasting from 1619 to 1623 between the Mutul and Kayahallpa further dismembered the latter. The Sapa Inka now only had authority over its core familial holdings, while the rest of the empire was divided among many local rulers and chieftains who became their own petty kings. The symbol of this dislocation of the imperial authority was Chuliruchu, the hub city of Central Kayahallpa, becoming an independent protectorate of the Mutul no longer bound to the Sapa Inka's authority.

As compensation for their territorial and economic loss, the Sapa Inka was recognized as an equal to the Mutul's Divine Lord by the Divine Throne, a fellow aspect of Chaakh (Chak Wijakocha), and thus another god on earth. The political and diplomatic concessions made to the Sapa Inka only further highlighted the economic tutelage under which the Great Companies had placed the country.

The Dark Centuries

The era that followed the Brother Crisis is commonly referred to as the Dark Centuries in Kayan literature. It's a period of extreme political fragmentation, and many parts of modern Kayahallpa have either been directly integrated into the Mutul, especially in the north, or been placed under tutelage either as protectorates or allies. The Mutuleses introduce in the region the culture of the sugarcane and citrus. The formation of large domain dedicated to the culture of these and other cash crops made the wealth of the Kayan landlords, while also ensuring their dependency on their Mutuleses buyers who controlled the prices through their de-facto monopsony over Kayahallpa. But the main export of the Kayahallpa at the time was its mineral wealth : salt, copper, silver, gold, platinium and iron were exchanged to the Mutuleses for Ochraneses goods such as silk and spices.

On a cultural level, the period was mostly the golden age of the multicultural and pro-Mutuleses landowning and scholarly classes. Economically and politically dependent on their foreign protectors, they also begun a process of assimilating the Mutulese culture, including its scripts and its religion. Their children were often sent to the Mutul to receive an upper-education while also serving as hostages in the early days of the Mutulese presence. When they returned they were rarely fully won to the Divine Kingdom's cause, but were always full of Mutuleses ideas, concepts, and culture. This prolonged and deep contact between the two civilization led to the emergence of an original syncretism in all aspect of society. This syncretism had deep consequences on the development on the post-resurgence Kayahallpa.

The Resurgence

Sapa Inka Tupaq Churan would ascend to the Kayan throne after claiming the throne from his brother on September 26, 1774, and died March 11, 1829. He is by and large remembered for reinvigorating the remnants of the Musuq Kayamucha from a small, impoverished kingdom to a vast empire stretching from southern Mutul to the modern border of Zacapican, a period known in Kayan historigraphy as the National Resurgence. He is to this day considered the greatest Sapa Inka of all time and has shrines dedicated to his legacy across all of Kayahallpa as his descendants have used his image to enhance their own cult of personality.

Tupaq Churan's first campaign of conquest did not come before the 1799 incursion and annexation of the small Apa kingdom. He had taken care to prepare his armies for lengthy, large-scale military excursions and timed his attacks carefully with the current situation in mind, such as exploting ongoing civil wars in various smaller chiefdoms and unrest in the Mutul to score quick, decisive victories, avoiding drawn-out conflict. Looting for substinence was to be avoided in areas Tupaq Churan intended to keep hold to, with provisions managed by the military engineering of new or restored supply depots. Local leadership structures were largely kept intact as long as unconditional surrender was given, which became increasingly common as his armies continued to conquer yet more territory. Divide and rule tactics were employed to keep local rulers from assembling military alliances that could threaten his empire.

By 1818, Tupaq Churan's expansionistic foreign policy had been noticed by the political leadership in the Mutul as he began to attack Mutuleses protectorates. After a fleet dispatched to the port of Chuliruchu to force a peace treaty was sunk by a cyclone, the Kayans laid siege to the city for two years. Tupaq Churan's siege and subsequent closing off of the harbor, the base of operations in Kayahallpa for the ships of the Grand Companies, would spark a full-on conflict between Kayahallpa and the Mutulese.

War of 1818

The Mutul sent troops to support its protectorates against Tupaq Churan and re-open Chuliruchu to trade, but greatly underestimated both the Sapa Inka abilities and the effects of the industralisation on Kayahallpa' war capacities. Grossly outmatched and un-supported by their Navy (the Vespanian Fleet couldn't be sent to help both because of the distances involved and the looming threat of Tsurushima), the Mutulese military knew a serie of defeat leading to the occupation by Tupaq Churan of not only all of Mutuleses protectorates, but also of the entirety of the Sihom Bassin, of the Charred Coast, and of the province of Nahatnoh. All of these territories had been directly administered by the Divine Kingdom for the better part of the past century and not merely vassal states or protectorates. Even worse, while Nahatnoh had little in the way of population or ressources, it opened the way to a potential assault on Mamkab the historical seat of the Ilok'tab Dynasty.

Tupaq Churan' total victory, going far beyond the goals he had set, solidified his regime and officialized Kayahallpa status as one of the major continental players in Oxidentale, alongside Sante Reze or Zacapican. On the Mutulese side, this defeat was quickly followed by another disaster: the Second War for Kahei. Both defeat cemented in the Mutulese' mind the feeling of powerlessness and gave the certitude that their system was truly outdated and no longer fit for the modern world. However, because of their exile, the prestige of the K'uhul Ajaw remained intact, contrary to that of the ruling oligarchy. This would have important consequences during the following Sajal War.

War of 1845

Belfro-Mutuleses War

Modern days