Partitions of Cuthland

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Partitions of Cuthland
Cuthland partition animation.gif
Animation showing the territorial evolution of Cuthland during the partitions
Events depicted:
1715Beginning of the War of the Cuthish Succession
1740First Partition, end of the War of the Cuthish Succession
1778Second Partition, end of the First Cutho-Mascyllary War
1800Third Partition, end of the Cuthish Revolutionary War
1825Fourth Partition, end of the Peninsular War

The Partitions of Cuthland were a series of territorial concessions imposed on the First Cuthish Empire and its successor states during the 18th and early 19th centuries. The partitions occurred in four stages, beginning with the First Partition following the War of the Cuthish Succession in 1740 and ending with the Fourth Partition following the Peninsular War in 1825. Cuthland's partitions contributed to an extended era of decline known as the Century of Horrors, resulting in the temporary loss of the nation's great power status and provoking a period of sociopolitical upheaval sparked by the Cuthish Revolution. The Alhstead Wars of the mid-19th century partially reversed the territorial losses inflicted by the partitions, ultimately serving as one of the primary causes of the Great War.

Some historians propose the inclusion of the Treaty of Lehpold, which ended the Great War and resulted in the cession of many Cuthish territories to neighboring states, as a fifth partition. This terminology has largely been promoted by Wilfred Drace of the University of Kingsham, whose 1997 article The Five Partitions of Cuthland brought the theory into mainstream academic discussion. However, Drace's thesis has proven controversial and is not widely accepted in the academic community.

History

First Partition

Second Partition

Third Partition

Fourth Partition

Aftermath

Impact

Perspectives

Fifth Partition