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The Lein campaign into Jichei of the 33rd year of [[Tairazun Sora berAthain ne-i-Lein|Sora]], also known as the '''Vengeance War''' (Itrani: Krita Garusaimi), was the largest campaign ever launched by [[Tairazun Sora berAthain ne-i-Lein|Emperor Sora]], and one of the largest launched during the [[Lein Dynasty]].  
The Lein campaign into Jichei of the 33rd year of [[Tairazun Sora berAthain ne-i-Lein|Sora]], also known as the '''Vengeance War''' (Itrani: Krita Garusaimi), was the largest campaign ever launched by [[Tairazun Sora berAthain ne-i-Lein|Emperor Sora]], and one of the largest launched during the [[Lein Dynasty]]. It would also lead to the bloodiest war in the history of the Lein, though the contest was highly unequal: while around 53,000 Lein soldiers died, two-thirds from disease rather than war, it is estimated that around 4 to 5 million Jichei died during the war and the subsequent reprisal operations.


==Background and causes==
==Background and causes==


Wars in the northwest against the "barbarian states" were nothing new to any Tranon dynasty; indeed, for nearly a hundred years, large tracts of the Tranon lands actually fell under the sway of these invaders. The so-called barbarian states, representing several distinct cultures from the Tranon peoples like the [[Prazanon]], [[Midinon]] and [[Farudei]], had for hundreds of years been the enemies of successive emperors in the southern Trandimir; never before, however, had the Tranon successfully beaten these peoples on their homeground.  
The Jichei kingdom was the most northerly, richest, and most powerful of the great array of northwestern kingdoms which Sora's army had mostly managed to destroy over two decades and several great campaigns; it would also have been one of those extinct kingdoms if Sora had had his way. During preparations for a campaign against them in Sora 23, however, the Meidorien River unexpectedly flooded its banks, devastating thousands of [[kir|kirnon]] of prime farmland and displacing hundreds of thousands of people; because of this the campaign was shelved to deal with the disaster, and by the time the Empire had recovered Sora had also gained a more sober assessment of the formidably fortified cities in the Jichei kingdom. For these factors he instead declared a campaign in the northeast and sent envoys to the Jichei; and in the 10th month of Sora 26 a treaty was sealed, fixing the Jichei-Lein border and promising lasting peace.


This record was to be ended by the Lein Dynasty under Emperor Sora, whose armies launched no less than four major campaigns over 22 years and, with both overwhelming numbers and inspired leadership, successfully conquered or destroyed many of the northwestern cities and kingdoms. By the 25th year of Sora's reign, with the destruction of several small kingdoms that still held out against his army, the Imperial borders stretched far into the northwestern homeland and bordered on the Jichei Kingdom.  
Events over the next years would overturn the peace, however. In Sora 28 the King of the Jichei was deposed in a coup, and the subsequent struggle between his four sons and corresponding factions eventually led to the crowning, seven months later, of King Kupiri. Aged 22, he was well known to be a dissolute and weak ruler, quick to anger but often vacillating on state issues, and completely under the control of a group of court ministres. When, in autumn the following year, the [[Suin Areya|Empress Areya]] passed away and the Lein Empire declared a one-year period of national mourning, the Jichei ministers were quick to take advantage of this period to attempt extending their control over the Lein border, aiming specifically for the port of Nasubar about fiften [[iri|irinon]] south of the border.  
 
The Jichei had been one of the most northerly of the northwestern kingdoms, as well as the richest and the most powerful; while it had in earlier times provided much support for the kingdoms, it had thus far wisely chosen not to intervene directly in the wars against the Lein. For this Sora had long considered making peace with them, unenthusiastic about risking the many fortified cities, and fearful of overloading his already stretched supply lines (which were indeed broken for months in Sora 23, when the Meidorien flooded its banks).  In Sora 26, several delegations from both sides led to a meeting where a treaty, fixing the borders of the two nations and promising peace, was attested to and sealed.  


[[Category:Military of the Lein Dynasty]]
[[Category:Military of the Lein Dynasty]]
[[Category:Wars of the Lein Dynasty]]
[[Category:Wars of the Lein Dynasty]]

Revision as of 02:26, 5 October 2006

The Lein campaign into Jichei of the 33rd year of Sora, also known as the Vengeance War (Itrani: Krita Garusaimi), was the largest campaign ever launched by Emperor Sora, and one of the largest launched during the Lein Dynasty. It would also lead to the bloodiest war in the history of the Lein, though the contest was highly unequal: while around 53,000 Lein soldiers died, two-thirds from disease rather than war, it is estimated that around 4 to 5 million Jichei died during the war and the subsequent reprisal operations.

Background and causes

The Jichei kingdom was the most northerly, richest, and most powerful of the great array of northwestern kingdoms which Sora's army had mostly managed to destroy over two decades and several great campaigns; it would also have been one of those extinct kingdoms if Sora had had his way. During preparations for a campaign against them in Sora 23, however, the Meidorien River unexpectedly flooded its banks, devastating thousands of kirnon of prime farmland and displacing hundreds of thousands of people; because of this the campaign was shelved to deal with the disaster, and by the time the Empire had recovered Sora had also gained a more sober assessment of the formidably fortified cities in the Jichei kingdom. For these factors he instead declared a campaign in the northeast and sent envoys to the Jichei; and in the 10th month of Sora 26 a treaty was sealed, fixing the Jichei-Lein border and promising lasting peace.

Events over the next years would overturn the peace, however. In Sora 28 the King of the Jichei was deposed in a coup, and the subsequent struggle between his four sons and corresponding factions eventually led to the crowning, seven months later, of King Kupiri. Aged 22, he was well known to be a dissolute and weak ruler, quick to anger but often vacillating on state issues, and completely under the control of a group of court ministres. When, in autumn the following year, the Empress Areya passed away and the Lein Empire declared a one-year period of national mourning, the Jichei ministers were quick to take advantage of this period to attempt extending their control over the Lein border, aiming specifically for the port of Nasubar about fiften irinon south of the border.