Luttenried Crusade: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 33: Line 33:
*[[Agostinia]]<br>
*[[Agostinia]]<br>
*[[South Oceanica]]
*[[South Oceanica]]
| combatant3  = Mujahideen Forces
| combatant3  = United-Islands Mujahideen Front
*[[Alor]]<br>
*[[Alor]]<br>
*[[Damar]]<br>
*[[Damar]]<br>

Revision as of 10:38, 15 January 2023

The Luttenried Crusade
Luttenried Crusades The Fall.jpg
Luttenried Order Knights furiously defend Werdheri Castle to the bitter end against Mujahideen forces, 1528.
DateNovember 8th, 1510 - Summer of 1531
Location
Islands/Landmasses/Waters between the Musgorocian and Palmyrian Oceans.
Status Limited Ceasefire.
Territorial
changes
Luttenried conquers and retains twenty-percent of the landmass it took at the height of the war.
Belligerents

The Empire of Common TerritoriesCommon Territories

Musgorocian Coalition

United-Islands Mujahideen Front

Commanders and leaders
The Empire of Common Territories/Holy Dukedom of LuttenriedCommanders
Unknown Unknown
Units involved

Holy Dukedom of LuttenriedLuttenried Order Knights
Holy Dukedom of Luttenried Pilgrim Crusaders

The Empire of Common TerritoriesImperial Luttenried Fleet
Unknown. Unknown.
Strength
The Empire of Common Territories/Holy Dukedom of LuttenriedCrusader/Imperial
Unknown Between 20,000 and 40,000 at the start of the war. Up to 120,000 at their height. Between 100 and 500 ships throughout the war.
Casualties and losses
The Empire of Common Territories/Holy Dukedom of LuttenriedCrusader/Imperial
  • Holy Dukedom of LuttenriedHoly Crusader Order of Luttenried
    • Luttenried Ground Forces (Order Knights and Vassal troops): 20,000 - 40,000 foot soldiers killed in action, missing in action, or dying/wounded from other causes related to the war.
    • Luttenried Naval Forces: Up to 10,000 or more sailors and marines. 10 Caravel sunk or captured, 7 Carrack sunk or captured, and up to 60 Privateer sunk or captured.
    The Empire of Common Territories Common Territories
    • Imperial Navy Forces: 6,000 sailors and 5,000 marines killed in action, missing in action, or dying/wounded from other causes related to the war. 11 Caravel sunk or captured, 15 Carrack sunk or captured, 8 Frigate sunk or captured, and up to 200 Privateer sunk or captured.
Unknown. Between 20,000 and 60,000 total killed in action, missing in action, or dying/wounded from other causes related to the war. Up to 200 ships lost or captured.
  Killed In Action. Although coopertive, Mujahideen Warlords and the Musgorocian Coalition dinstinctly remained neutral concerning the other party and were thus documented as different belligerents in the conflict.
Timeline map of the Crusade up until Luttenried's territorial height.

The "Luttenried Crusade(s)" (or "Luttenried War(s)") were a series of religious conflicts (Crusades) and imperialist military campaigns initiated by Holy Duke Theudemar of the Luttenried Crusader State/Holy Dukedom of Luttenried and Pontifical Diet for Wilhelmshaven; The Empire of Common Territories, their overlord, financially and militarily supported Luttenried throughout the war. Luttenried's key set of objectives throughout the Crusade was the capture of territory near its continent, convert or remove all heritics/blasphemers from the land, and incorporate that land into the Luttenried Crusader State. Materialist as much as they were religious, Luttenried believed that if their religious goals of spreading the faith and destroying its enemies through force were achieved so too would their materialist desires, such as more resources and a more prestigious title within the Empire, would naturally follow suit. The Empire, although hesitant at first, threw the full force of its Luttenried stationed forces behind the Luttenried Order's Crusade - a victory for Luttenried was a victory for the Empire after all. Imperial goals throughout the entirety of the conflict were aimed at establishing control over more islands for which to increase its presence in using Luttenried as a colonial overlord and building up more naval forces within the region. Both the Kirche der Königlich and Pontifical Diet for Wilhelmshaven were in steadfast agreement that Crusades in the Kali Yuga were necessary for spreading the faith along with defeating the enemies of the Kingdom of Heaven.

Calls for volunteers among the faithful throughout the Empire and Luttenried varied depending on the location. Many within the Empire, although enthustiastic, were more focused on fighting the pagans at home located in the southern Mainland. Although few in comparison to volunteer numbers in the Mainland, thousands still arrived during the Crusade to take up arms or provide assistance however they knew how. Luttens, however, had to be turned away, often by force, because too many of the men desired to go to war; having too many men join the Crusade would risk causing several consequences the Order simply wished to preemptively avoid. Since a large swath of the male population already served within the Luttenried Order as knights (all males were members of the Order in some regard), those that didn't serve as knights were technically part of home defense forces that were not expected to serve in actual combat unless the continent was directly attacked. Being turned away did not stop some volunteers from using numerous methods to join regardless of the Order's denial for their service. A "Pilgrim Crusade" was illegally formed and took part in several battles during the Crusade until they were wiped out at the Battle of Nadenberg in 1520.

November 8th, 1510 is the recorded date used by historians to mark the beginning of the Crusade. It marks the day that a combined Luttenried and Imperial naval force launched their initial naval assault against major Bourgougia islands northeast of Luttenried. The following week, a second combined Luttenried and Imperial force sailed north, targeting the island of Vaotua and surrounding Spanish islands. In what would become the "Eastern Theater" lead by Olaf Rafael Luttenried, the Holy Duke's first son and heir, the "Eastern Campaign'" enjoyed an initial victory on the closest island to Luttenried now known as the Helfried Barondom. Caught off guard, the Bourgougians were not remotely prepared for the two dozen major warships and over twenty-five thousand soldiers that attacked their island. This would be the final "sweet victory" the Crusaders would enjoy against the Bourgougia, however. The second island attacked by the Crusaders, now the Othmar Barondom, is the largest island within the island chain under modern Luttenried control; the three Baronys are now overseen by the Holy Marquess of Klingewalde, a revived Barony House promoted after the Bourgougian Blitz. Initial attacks by General Adelbert Abraham Reier (leading the other half of the Eastern Campaign's over forty thousand soldiers) proved to be successful, but unlike Helfried, Othmar possessed a much larger garrison and quickly received reinforcements once news of the outbreak of war reached nearby islands. Evenly matched at times, and well motivated, the Bourgougia forces would prove to be a difficult opponent for the Crusaders and Imperials. So much so that hopes of taking the entire island chain by 1515 were dashed by the Battle of Wollau.

Meanwhile, in the "Western Theater" overseen by Günther Von Grimmelshausen's "Western Campaign," success-after-success became the norm for the first three years of the Crusade. Numbering somewhere in the forty thousand soldiers just like the Eastern Campaign, the Western Campaign blitzed through the northern islands. Vaotua, Grimmelshausen's first target, swiftly fell after a crushing victory over the more primitive natives during the Battle of Bosruck. Spanish islands surrounding Vaotua fell just as quickly due to the colonial administration's instability and their lightly garrisoned militias unprepared for serious combat. The Western Campaign finally met serious resistance after arriving to the muslim island nations located northwest of Luttenried in 1513. Prior to attacking the muslim states to the northwest, Grimmelshausen split his forces evenly between himself and General Elmar André Brose once the Western Campaign took over South Oceanica. While General Brose would lead the "2nd Western Army" against the island nations of Damar and Alor, Grimmelshausen himself would continue to lead the Western Campaign and the "1st Western Army" against Luttenried's closest major muslim neighbor, the nation of Sunda. Overconfident due to their three years of back-to-back successes, both armies were almost taken aback by the well organized and fiercely motivated muslim forces they now faced. The muslim island nations, hearing of Luttenried's Crusade against other islands near them, had began preparing after hearing stories of their initial assaults in 1511. Eastern nations within the chain of islands were sure Luttenried and the Imperials would reach their shores before too long, thus pleading the more western islands to send reinforcements before that could happen. Western nations doubted the Crusader's will to push further west than they already have, thus they largely choose to wait and see how the conflict would develop. After the invasions of Damar and Sunda in 1513, it was as if the muslim faith within the region had exploded with anger. Anger so deeply concentrated, the many pirate forces located throughout the region all joined the newly formed "United-Islands Mujahideen Front" instead of continuing their pirate operations. UIMF, made up of Mujahideen forces within each nation alongside their actual military forces, would launch their own Jihad aimed at liberating all muslim islands from Luttenried. Their long term goal however was to wipe out the Holy Duchy (and the Empire by extension) from Kali Yuga entirely. Creation and involvement of the UIMF would become the Western Campaign's first major escalation point similar to the Eastern Campaign's Battle of Wollau. From that point onward, Crusaders faced patriotic and similarly zealot Jihadi forces that only grew stronger year after year.

Historical Context

Eastern Campaign

Olaf Luttenried's Army

General Adelbert Abraham Reier's Army

Western Campaign

Günther Von Grimmelshausen's 1st Western Army

General Elmar André Brose's 2nd Western Army

Aftermath and Legacy