War of the Cuthish Succession
War of the Cuthish Succession | |||||||
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Part of the Century of Horrors and Partitions of Cuthland | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Eustria Gotia Herrshausen Holnia |
Adwinia Aldia Norden Shwesia (1719–1738) Dulebia (1721–1740) | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Edwin II Charles of Birchau Henry of Marlrode Frederick Augustus II Alexander Emanuel of Clevens Charles Maximilian II Albert William I Louis of Dahlenbad Frederick Charles I Victor Leopold I Eugene of Erftsburg |
Albert John I Albert John II Maximilian of Reitersburg-Furth George Charles I Leopold of Warthburg Ernest of Loevendal Kristian IV William IX Peter II |
The War of the Cuthish Succession was a major 18th-century Berean conflict between the First Cuthish Empire and the Berean states of Adwinia, Aldia, Norden, and Dulebia, among other Mascyllary states. Triggered by the death of Edmund VII of Cuthland in 1715, the war is considered to be a pivotal moment in Cuthish history and that of Berea as a whole. As fighting took place across the entirety of the Cuthish colonial empire and spanned multiple continents, many historians cite the War of the Cuthish Succession as the first truly global conflict in history. Conflict over Cuthland's colonies triggered the adjacent King George's War in Alvinia in 1718, as well as minor trade clashes in southern Pamira.
Since the end of the 15th century, the Cuthish Empire had been the undisputed hegemon in the Telemerian Peninsula, and was one of two global superpowers along with Lavaria. Both nations had colonized vast swaths of territory across multiple continents, and controlled the majority of global trade. Cuthland also possessed a vast continental empire which stretched from the Karsk Sea to modern-day Mascylla. The size and power of the Cuthish Empire at its height brought about a period of stability and prosperity known as the Pax Cuthica. Edmund VII, head of the House of Loxstedt-Hoeveden and Emperor of Cuthland, was consequently one of the most powerful individuals in the world at the dawn of the 18th century, wielding the power of one of the largest empires in history.
Edmund fell gravely ill during the winter of 1714-1715, and unexpectedly signed a proclamation legitimizing Edwin of Whitford, a royal bastard and the king's eldest son, as his successor. While Cuthish succession law specifically prevented illegitimate children from assuming the throne, Edwin's supporters argued that his father's proclamation made the existing law inapplicable. Edwin assumed the Cuthish throne upon the king's death on 16 March, prompting Edmund VIII, Edmund VII's eldest legitimate child, to claim the throne for himself. Attempts by Peter II of Dulebia and George Charles I of Aldia to divide the empire in 1715 were rejected by the Cuthish, as Edmund's respective legitimate and illegitimate heirs were relatives of the Alhstead Loxstedt-Hoevedens and X which in either outcome would have shifted the Berean balance of powers. Edmund VIII solicited support for his claim from Cuthland's neighboring states, who agreed to intervene on the condition that Edmund cede territories in both continental and colonial Cuthland upon his assumption of the throne in order to challenge the Loxstedt-Hoeveden power, called the Grand Alliance.
WIP
This resulted in the 1738 Treaty of Habernau and 1740 Treaty of Nyhavn. Edwin II was ultimately confirmed as Cuthish Emperor and the Cuthish Empire remained largely intact, but it ceded territories in western and southern Mascylla, Norden and northern Dulebia. Lavaria replaced Cuthland as the dominant maritime, commercial and colonial power of Berea. The war resulted in the first major shift in the Berean balance of power in the modern era, but left disputes and broader political issues that contributed to the larger war unresolved and in stalemate. Cuthland saw its hegemonic status in Telmeria come to an end as Dulebia, Norden, and the Mascyllary states all emerged as great powers, and its household was financially exhausted from the war permanently. The war also marked the beginning of the Century of Horrors, a 115-year long period of decline, war, and internal upheaval in Cuthland such as the Cuthish Revolution and Cuthish Revolutionary War, that lasted until the Alhstead Revolution restored the Cuthish Empire in 1830.