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*August 5-
 
*August 5-
 
**Whilst these events were ongoing in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, Laurasian forces continued to make gains in the Colonial Territories. The same period of time, however, also witnessed a daring Spamalkan expedition to the Great Tesmanian Cloud, which for a short time alarmed Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council. Following the conquest of St. Eustatius at the end of April 1795, Admiral Sir Soesthenes Lancasataria and the Earl of Cumbria pursued a series of offensives to expel the Spamalkans from the other Antilles. On May 7, 1795, after the failure of a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Bonaire and Philippsburg, Cumbria assaulted Tobago, which served as a major Spamalkan spice production outpost and transport outlet in the Spice Colonies. The Siege of Tobago lasted for four days, ultimately ending in Laurasian victory on May 11. Following the conquest of Tobago, Laurasian units stormed Bermuda, Bahia, Barbados, and Anguilla (May 15-24, 1795); on May 28, Cumbria destroyed a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of Montserrat, securing more than €5.5 trillion dataries worth of goods. Although a subsequent Laurasian assault upon Neuva Esparta (June 3-5, 1795), failed with a counteroffensive launched by Spamalkan Admiral Zubiaur, and Laurasian forces were driven from Saba (June 10, 1795), Cumbria nevertheless continued the successful harassment of Spamalkan commercial lanes across the Colonial Territories. On June 13, 1795, however, after storming St. Martin, Cumbria suffered serious injuries in a combustive explosion on his flagship, the ''IMS Readdrant''.
 
**Whilst these events were ongoing in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, Laurasian forces continued to make gains in the Colonial Territories. The same period of time, however, also witnessed a daring Spamalkan expedition to the Great Tesmanian Cloud, which for a short time alarmed Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council. Following the conquest of St. Eustatius at the end of April 1795, Admiral Sir Soesthenes Lancasataria and the Earl of Cumbria pursued a series of offensives to expel the Spamalkans from the other Antilles. On May 7, 1795, after the failure of a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Bonaire and Philippsburg, Cumbria assaulted Tobago, which served as a major Spamalkan spice production outpost and transport outlet in the Spice Colonies. The Siege of Tobago lasted for four days, ultimately ending in Laurasian victory on May 11. Following the conquest of Tobago, Laurasian units stormed Bermuda, Bahia, Barbados, and Anguilla (May 15-24, 1795); on May 28, Cumbria destroyed a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of Montserrat, securing more than €5.5 trillion dataries worth of goods. Although a subsequent Laurasian assault upon Neuva Esparta (June 3-5, 1795), failed with a counteroffensive launched by Spamalkan Admiral Zubiaur, and Laurasian forces were driven from Saba (June 10, 1795), Cumbria nevertheless continued the successful harassment of Spamalkan commercial lanes across the Colonial Territories. On June 13, 1795, however, after storming St. Martin, Cumbria suffered serious injuries in a combustive explosion on his flagship, the ''IMS Readdrant''.
**As a result of these injuries, he was forced to step down from his command, beginning his journey back to the Laurasian Empire on June 18. Admiral Lancasataria took over command, but on June 23, 1795, was informed by the Imperial General Headquarters of his reassignment to duty in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Empress Aurelia, who was now engaged in all of the associated preparations with the Third Partition of Dejanica, desired a trusted military commander to ensure that there would be no outbreaks of dissent in the Barrier Regions or in Lithuania. He was now to be replaced by perhaps the most famous naval commander of the Empire: Fleet Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius. Dracius had returned to Laurasia Prime in December 1794, having overseen the withdrawal of Laurasian units and naval garrisons from the Colonial Territories. He had become Superintendent of the Imperial Naval Academy of Laura, and was considering retirement from active military service. Empress Aurelia, however, relied upon him as the commander with the most experience in fighting the Spamalkans. He accepted his commission willingly and without qualm. Departing from Belkadan on June 28, 1795, he arrived at Recife four days and immediately took command of a series of offensives against Marigot, Brades, and Ft. de Spamalka (June 29-July 7, 1795), by which all of these strongholds were subdued.
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**As a result of these injuries, he was forced to step down from his command, beginning his journey back to the Laurasian Empire on June 18. Admiral Lancasataria took over command, but on June 23, 1795, was informed by the Imperial General Headquarters of his reassignment to duty in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Empress Aurelia, who was now engaged in all of the associated preparations with the Third Partition of Dejanica, desired a trusted military commander to ensure that there would be no outbreaks of dissent in the Barrier Regions or in Lithuania. He was now to be replaced by perhaps the most famous naval commander of the Empire: Fleet Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius. Dracius had returned to Laurasia Prime in December 1794, having overseen the withdrawal of Laurasian units and naval garrisons from the Colonial Territories. He had become Superintendent of the Imperial Naval Academy of Laura, and was considering retirement from active military service. Empress Aurelia, however, relied upon him as the commander with the most experience in fighting the Spamalkans. He accepted his commission willingly and without qualm. Departing from Belkadan on June 28, 1795, he arrived at Recife four days later and immediately took command of a series of offensives against Marigot, Brades, and Ft. de Spamalka (June 29-July 7, 1795), by which all of these strongholds were subdued.
 
**On July 10, Santo Domingo surrendered to Laurasian forces once again, and on July 15, Dracius ruined Admiral Zubiaur in the Battle of Sao Juan. By this point, however, the Emperor of Spamalka had been throwing his resources into a daring expeditionary raid against the Laurasian Empire itself, to demonstrate that Empress Aurelia's dominions were not beyond range of retribution. On June 8, 1795, the Emperor of Spamalka granted his approval to a proposed expedition by the Spamalkan Naval Command geared against the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Marquess of Santa Cruz was aware of the need for Spamalkan reinforcements in the Colombiana and in Durthia; he was also aware of the danger that existed to Naparia and Milania, in the form of the Haxonian Confederacy. Therefore, considering the Empire's focus on so many fronts, and the need to maintain garrisons throughout its territories, he proposed for only a raiding expedition, as a intended "revenge" against the Imperial Laurasian Government. The intended goal of this expedition was to seize strongholds in the Southern Ochanian Provinces; to raid to the Trans-Angelina Transit Route; and to capture prisoners, ships, and goods before retreating. On July 9, 1795, the Emperor designated General Carlos de Amesquita (1737-98), a veteran of the Durthian Revolt and War of Portugallian Succession, as the commander of the expedition. Admiral de Zubiaur was reassigned to the expedition on July 19, and by July 26, a Spamalkan force of nearly four hundred warships, 800,000 troops, and a support force of Marines and transports had been prepared at Port Louis in Spamalkan Navarre. Amesquita departed from Port Louis on July 28, 1795, and proceeded rapidly with his force across the Galactic Void.
 
**On July 10, Santo Domingo surrendered to Laurasian forces once again, and on July 15, Dracius ruined Admiral Zubiaur in the Battle of Sao Juan. By this point, however, the Emperor of Spamalka had been throwing his resources into a daring expeditionary raid against the Laurasian Empire itself, to demonstrate that Empress Aurelia's dominions were not beyond range of retribution. On June 8, 1795, the Emperor of Spamalka granted his approval to a proposed expedition by the Spamalkan Naval Command geared against the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Marquess of Santa Cruz was aware of the need for Spamalkan reinforcements in the Colombiana and in Durthia; he was also aware of the danger that existed to Naparia and Milania, in the form of the Haxonian Confederacy. Therefore, considering the Empire's focus on so many fronts, and the need to maintain garrisons throughout its territories, he proposed for only a raiding expedition, as a intended "revenge" against the Imperial Laurasian Government. The intended goal of this expedition was to seize strongholds in the Southern Ochanian Provinces; to raid to the Trans-Angelina Transit Route; and to capture prisoners, ships, and goods before retreating. On July 9, 1795, the Emperor designated General Carlos de Amesquita (1737-98), a veteran of the Durthian Revolt and War of Portugallian Succession, as the commander of the expedition. Admiral de Zubiaur was reassigned to the expedition on July 19, and by July 26, a Spamalkan force of nearly four hundred warships, 800,000 troops, and a support force of Marines and transports had been prepared at Port Louis in Spamalkan Navarre. Amesquita departed from Port Louis on July 28, 1795, and proceeded rapidly with his force across the Galactic Void.
 
**Along the way, they captured a number of Laurasian commerce vessels in transit from the Caladarian Galaxy to the Haxonian Confederacy. On August 5, 1795, Ameqsuita reached the outskirts of Kars. The star system, which had a garrison of less than 20,000 troops, was quickly overwhelmed. During the next eight days, Spamalkan units seized Eruzrum, Shamkhal, Ardahan, Poti, Karbada, Duros, and Akhaltsikhe, killing nearly twenty million civilians; exterminating most of the Laurasian garrisons in those star systems; inflicting severe damage on their shipyards and facilities; and impounding more than €136.7 trillion dataries worth of goods and services. Lieutenant-General Sir Honorius Gudovia, who had established his command headquarters on Anapa, now moved to intercept the Spamalkan force. General de Amesquita and Admiral Zubiaur proved to be too elusive, and they launched expeditions against Sitovo, Turakan, and Navarino (August 24-29, 1795), inflicting further damage and harrying the garrisons before beginning their retreat back to the Great Amulak Spiral. By September 6, 1795, all star systems which had been seized or plundered by the Spamalkans were back in Laurasian hands, but the expedition had demonstrated the apparent vulnerability of the Empire's territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Empress Aurelia, who was then on progress, ordered for a thorough investigation of the readiness of all garrisons in the Caucasian Colonies; commanded General Gudovia to impose regular patrols in the Galactic Void; and diverted units from the still-occupied Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the Lower Danube Military Highway. She soon realized, however, that Amesquita's expedition had little impact on the war overall.
 
**Along the way, they captured a number of Laurasian commerce vessels in transit from the Caladarian Galaxy to the Haxonian Confederacy. On August 5, 1795, Ameqsuita reached the outskirts of Kars. The star system, which had a garrison of less than 20,000 troops, was quickly overwhelmed. During the next eight days, Spamalkan units seized Eruzrum, Shamkhal, Ardahan, Poti, Karbada, Duros, and Akhaltsikhe, killing nearly twenty million civilians; exterminating most of the Laurasian garrisons in those star systems; inflicting severe damage on their shipyards and facilities; and impounding more than €136.7 trillion dataries worth of goods and services. Lieutenant-General Sir Honorius Gudovia, who had established his command headquarters on Anapa, now moved to intercept the Spamalkan force. General de Amesquita and Admiral Zubiaur proved to be too elusive, and they launched expeditions against Sitovo, Turakan, and Navarino (August 24-29, 1795), inflicting further damage and harrying the garrisons before beginning their retreat back to the Great Amulak Spiral. By September 6, 1795, all star systems which had been seized or plundered by the Spamalkans were back in Laurasian hands, but the expedition had demonstrated the apparent vulnerability of the Empire's territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Empress Aurelia, who was then on progress, ordered for a thorough investigation of the readiness of all garrisons in the Caucasian Colonies; commanded General Gudovia to impose regular patrols in the Galactic Void; and diverted units from the still-occupied Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the Lower Danube Military Highway. She soon realized, however, that Amesquita's expedition had little impact on the war overall.

Revision as of 20:36, 15 January 2020

This covers the last fifteen years of the eighteenth century.

The Eighteenth Century, (1701-1800, Part V)

The 18th Century (1785-1800)

1785

  • January 1-
    • 1785, the 85th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire in an official state of peace with its neighbors in the Great Amulak Spiral. Having concluded the Treaty of Topacia with its wary Marasharite neighbors, the Empire was in the process of absorbing the territories which had once composed the Haynsian Despotate. On February 2, 1784, shortly after the ratification of the Treaty of Topacia, Empress Aurelia had issued the final instruments of annexation, and had received a final oath of allegiance from all of the officers and personnel of the former Haynsian government and military forces. She then entrusted Major-General Surovius, who had continued to gain acclaim from the Empire's subjects for his exploits in the Galactic Void and in the Angelina Spiral, with responsibility for maintaining Laurasian jurisdiction in the Haynsia. Establishing his command headquarters on Haynes, Surovius proved instrumental in ensuring that no outbursts of rebellion erupted against the authorities of the Imperial Laurasian Government. The Empress and the Privy Council, moreover, focused on administrative arrangements for the Haynsian Territories. By the decrees of February 7 and September 2, 1784, the territories once belonging to the former Haynsian Despotate had been organized into the Haynsian, Chalaan, and Tivranite Governorates, with 69 provinces and 207 districts. The Brigoff Stellar Nebula and Perekop, which had previously been under the authority of the Bucharanian Governorate, became part of the Chalaan Governorate. The provisions of the Statute of Regional and Provincial Administration would be gradually extended to the Haynsian Governorates during the next three years. It was mandated that positions in the civil service of the three Governorates were to be filled by native Haynsian nobles, though the top posts would be reserved to Laurasian officials. In addition, the decree of February 16, 1784, granted to all Haynsian mirzas (heads of noble families) the status of Laurasian nobles.
    • Aurelia, however, still pursued the same policy of redistribution of noble estates and properties to the imperial nobility as had been pursued in the Scottrian Governorates; 65% of Haynsian noble property would fall into Laurasian hands by 1790. The Empress did, however, temporarily exempt the mizras and their households from Laurasian taxes, for a period of three years. She also reiterated her edicts relating to religious toleration. The Haynsian bazus and their acolytes were guaranteed in all of their rights and privileges, and utilized by the imperial administration. On the whole, therefore, Aurelia pursued a more generous policy towards the Haynsian elites than that used towards the Scottrians, hoping to discourage any future Marasharite hopes of fomenting discord in those territories against Laurasian authority. As per the terms of the Treaty of Topacia, the Imperial Government did not establish new Laurasian colonies in Haynsian territory, but encouraged extensive immigration and development of the colonies already established, such as those at Gezlev, Rostov, and Sevastapol (which had been discovered and colonized by a Laurasian commercial convoy in 1782, shortly before the formal annexation of the Despotate). Between 1783 and 1789, the population of Caladarian Galaxy natives in the former territories of the Haynsian Despotate would rise from 40 to 75 billion.
    • One setback, however, had occurred. On July 11, 1784, the former Haynsian Despot Bahavair II Karany attempted to escape from imprisonment. With the assistance of a sympathetic Donnian guards officer, he was able to obtain an unmarked transport, and made it as far as the Galactic Void before imperial authorities became alerted to his escape. In September 1784, the Empress dispatched a expeditionary force to Thronton, Uma, and the Trans-Angelina Transit Route to seek out and recapture the Despot. They were eventually able to corner him at the outpost of Balari, but Bahavair II, rather than give himself up to the hated Laurasians, rigged an explosion on his transport (November 1, 1784). The transport was destroyed and the former Despot was killed. Empress Aurelia was outraged when she learned what had happened to Bahavair, but eventually came to the realization that his death secured, rather than undermined, the Empire's position in the Haynsia. Thus, it was seen as a blessing in disguise. And indeed, in spite of this incident, Laurasian efforts at absorbing the Despotate had continued to proceed smoothly.
    • As regards to the Durthian Rebellion, the Durthian rebels were in a dire predicament. On July 17, 1784, Parma had instigated a major siege of Antwerp, one of the largest strongholds in the Southern Duchies. Spamalkan forces constructed encirclement barriers around Antwerp and mined the outskirts of the star system, before severing the star system's supply routes. The garrison of Antwerp, however, managed to subsist off the star system's resources, and they constructed countermines near Antwerp's Entry, foiling Spamalkan attempts to progress further into the star system. In spite of this, the Spamalkans maintained a vice-like grip on the outskirts of Antwerp, ushering in a siege which was destined to continue for more than a year. Amerongen capitulated to Parma on December 29, 1784; the Spamalkan forces had, at the opening of 1785, reconquered most of Flanders and Brabant. In her New Year's proclamation, the Empress expressed her deep sympathy for the aims of the United Durthian States, and offered further regrets at the assassination of Stadholder-Prince William of Orange. She declared to her subjects that they must be willing to "take all efforts in order to maintain this Empire's security and to prevent the overreaching aims of tyrants."
  • January 21-
    • On January 21, 1785, yet another conspiracy to assassinate Empress Aurelia came to a halt. This time, the chief culprit was Dr. Willanius Parrius (1741-85), who had been born on Tudoria (February 2, 1741), the son of Sir Athanasius Parrius (1695-1766), who was one of the star system's most prominent landowners. Parrius obtained his education at St. Verne's School and then the University of Tudoria, graduating cum laude in 1763 with a B.A. in general administration. He subsequently entered the household of the Earl of Aeoleon, rising to become his Chief Secretary. When Aeoleon died in March 1770, Parrius resumed his education at the University of Laurasia Prime, obtaining his PhD in Management in 1774. He then entered the service of the Imperial Chancellory, rising to the rank of Assessor and serving on the Empress's personal staff. Parrius, known for his hard work ethic and his intelligence, came to the notice of Lord Treasurer Burghley, who had known the young man's father. In 1775, he transferred Parrius to the Administrative Service of the Imperial Intelligence Agency. Shortly afterwards, Chancellor Walsingis entrusted him with a spying mission to Franconia, which he undertook from January to July 1776. Parrius gathered much intelligence for the Imperial Government concerning Queen Mariana, the Holy Spamalkan Government, and anti-Laurasian elements in Franconia. In 1779, however, Parrius suddenly left for the Amulak Spiral without permission, reaching Parri and sending a communique to Burghley, begging pardon for his flight. Burghley was unaware of the man's motives, and forgave his conduct. In fact, Parrius had become a Traditionalist and was now in contact with Queen Mariana's spies.
    • In 1780, he returned to the Empire and became involved in a brawl that almost cost him his life. In 1782, he obtained permission to travel to Franconia again, becoming a double agent for the Imperial Laurasian and Holy Spamalkan Governments. He considered the Empress's assassination, and recommended pardon for certain fugitives from imperial justice, such as the Earl of Almastead (who had remained in exile in Vendragia since the failure of the Malarian Rebellion twelve years earlier). He then encountered Lysimachus Pagentia (1746-1812) and Sir Thomasius Morgania, two of the ex-Queen's agents, and was exposed to pamphlets and communiques attacking Empress Aurelia. In 1784, Parrius again returned to the Empire, and was rewarded by the Empress with a substantial financial annuity and a seat on the Municipal Council of Christiania. He had by now completely formulated his plots of conspiracy, and by the end of December 1784, had resolved upon assassinating Aurelia. During the early hours of January 21, Parrius hid in the gardens of the Quencilvanian Palace (to which the Imperial Court had returned from Venasia Prime on January 9) and, armed with a blaster, determined to assassinate the Empress while she was taking her morning walk in the gardens. When Aurelia appeared, however, Parrius was "so daunted with the presence of Her Majesty, in which he saw the image of the late Emperor, that he could not execute that which he had contrived." Within seconds, Valedictorian Guards penned Parrius to the ground and placed him in chains, carrying him from Aurelia's presence.
    • The Empress was shocked that this man, who had declared his absolute loyalty to her and to the Imperial State numerous times in the past, had now stooped to assassinate her and install the "demented witch" (Scottrian Queen Mariana) upon the Laurasian throne. She therefore demanded an extensive investigation into Parrius's background, his activities in the Amulak Spiral during his trips there, and his motives. On January 23, Parrius was incarcerated at the Fortress of Baureux on the Empress's orders. There, Chancellor Walsingis, Procurator-General Bromelius, and Lord Treasurer Burghley, as well as several other Privy Councilors, conducted an extensive interrogation of the prisoner. Parrius, who carried himself with relative decorum and calm, declared that the "Lord Almitis had called to him to save the Laurasian Dominions from disaster" and that his actions towards the Empress were actually meant to spare her from "destruction". When Walsingis questioned him further on that point, Parrius stated that he sought to save the Empress's soul from "total annihilation in the after-life." He revealed information about his contacts, and how he had been influenced by supporters of the imprisoned ex-Scottrian Queen such as Sir Morgania, but declared that his sole concern was for the welfare and security of the Empire. Whilst the interrogation was ongoing, government agents seized all of Parrius's papers, personal items, and electronics. On his personal computer, they found dozens of communiques and transmissions between Parrius and the Queen's agents in Franconia, evidence which fully exposed his intention to assassinate the Empress and his sympathy for the aims of the "Scottrian Party", as Walsingis had dubbed Mariana's agents and supporters in the Amulak Spiral and within the Empire itself. The Empress, when informed by the Chancellor of the interviews, and shown all of the material seized by government agents, announced that there would be no mercy for Parrius, and that he would be smitten by the Lord Almitis for his sins and his betrayal of her.
    • The whole incident, in itself, had provoked outrage among Aurelia's loyal subjects, and many at the Imperial Court were now clamoring for more severe measures to be taken against dissidents and supporters of the Scottrian Queen. On February 5, 1785, a coterie of nobles, led by the Earls of Hannah and Reoyania, submitted a petition to the Empress, urging for the penalty for traitors to be worsened and for Queen Mariana to be brought to justice. Empress Aurelia, still unwilling to raise her hand against Mariana (who, although not a reigning sovereign, was a cousin), rejected both requests out of hand. However, on February 12, after the interrogation of Parrius had been concluded by Walsingis, Burghley, and their colleagues, and the Ministry of Justice Bureau of Investigation (BI) had examined all of the materials seized at his residence, the Empress bypassed normal judicial processes (as were within her rights as Autocrat) and imposed a imperial writ of attainder upon Parrius, sentencing him to the full penalties of a traitor's death.
    • Parrius was executed at the Private Grounds of the Fortress of Baureux on February 22, 1785. On the orders of the Empress, he was excommunicated by the Holy Synod, with his remains being dumped into the Pit of Traitors. All of his properties and bank accounts were confiscated; his immediate family members and associates were fined and forbidden to set foot on Laurasia Prime or appear at the Imperial Court again; and a sentence of condemnation was pronounced against any who expressed sympathy for his aims. The Empress also tightened penalties against nonconformists, and on February 27, granted Walsingis the authority to override lower judicial authorities and to arrest, torture, and confine individuals without prior authorization. Aurelia was reluctant, however, to change anything else. She remained impervious (at least in the eyes of her subjects) to the danger of her isolated position and the threat of further assassination attempts. On March 2, she told a delegation from the colony of Kherson in the Northern Reaches (which was rapidly becoming a major imperial shipyard and spaceport) that "They [Mariana's supporters] are seeking to take my life, but it troubles me not. He who is on high has defended me until this hour, and will keep me still, for in Him I do trust." She refused to modify her lifestyle, nor would she allow herself to be be restricted by greater security measures advocated by Walsingis, Burghley, and others among her advisers. She showed herself in public as often as before, and would only permit her guards to carry ceremonial weapons. She would not listen to Leicesterius's suggestion that foreign clerics or those with any sympathy for Mariana be barred from the Imperial Court. The Privy Council therefore remained anxious about her safety, but were impressed by her courage.
  • March 28-
    • By late March 1785, many throughout the Laurasian Empire had become more concerned about the ongoing Durthian Rebellion. Parma's blockade of Antwerp wreaked economic and social havoc upon a star system still reeling from its devastation by Spamalkan forces nine years earlier. Reports constantly leaked out from Antwerp to the rest of extra-galactic civilization about the sufferings of the world's inhabitants and the intolerable strain they had to endure because of the pressures of war. Parma had forbidden any humanitarian organizations from providing assistance to the injured and the other beleaguered inhabitants of Antwerp, and he had ordered for harsh measures to be taken against any convoys that attempted to resupply, or conduct business with, the star system's defense forces. The Duke had also made further advances against Durthian forces elsewhere, preventing the States-General from launching counteroffensives into Brabant and Flanders. Reimerswaal (January 15-17); Limbourg (January 22); Zierich (January 27); Zuiderzee (February 2-11); Zurich (February 15-21); and Alkmaar (February 28-March 15) had been besieged and conquered by Spamalkan task forces under Don Alexandro Spinola (1740-93), Parma's second-in-command.
    • The States-General had still not designated a successor Stadholder, although the late Prince of Orange's son and successor, Philip William, was aggressively pushing himself forward as a potential candidate. Many on the States-General, however, supported the idea of offering the Durthian Crown to a foreign sovereign. The Grand Pensioner of the States, Jan van Ultersdoot (1718-91), had been engaged in parleys with many Durthian nobles and magnates since September 1784, on the possibility of inviting the rule of a "benevolent and beneficent" foreign sovereign over the States. By March 1785, this had evolved into a firm determination to obtain foreign protectorship and assistance. On March 9, the States-General passed a motion declaring that it intended to look after the "security of these states" and that in order to do so, a foreign monarch would be requested to assume the Durthian Crown. Five days later, it made the first of several offers to both King Hensios III of Franconia and Empress Aurelia I of Laurasia.
    • King Hensios, engaged in war with the persistent Huguenot League once again, would from the first reject all Durthian offers. Aurelia, on her part, who had already received a protectorship offer a decade earlier, during the early stages of the Durthian Rebellion, evaded responding to this offer. The Empress, however, was growing increasingly alarmed by Philicus's campaigns. The Holy Spamalkan Emperor had instigated a major reorganization of his naval forces in late 1784, and using the resources of his recently-acquired Portugallian realms, was determined to expand upon what was already the largest navy of any of the Amulak Spiral powers. If he succeeded in his aims, Philicus would command military resources matching those of his Laurasian compatriots. Aurelia, who prided herself on the fact that the Laurasian Empire possessed the largest military forces of any power in extra-galactic civilization (with the Marasharites and Spamalkans both tied for second, the Pruthians third, and the Franconians fourth), considered this a threat. Therefore, the Empress submitted the matter to the Privy Council.
    • Beginning on March 28, 1785, and continuing for the next six months, the Council vigorously debated the Durthian Question. Two factions quickly formed on the Council. One, led by the Earl of Leicesterius and Lord Treasurer Burghley (who found themselves allied to the same cause), supported accepting the protectorship offer and intervening directly into the Durthian Rebellion. The other, led by Chancellor Walsingis and Lord Husadarania, favored suppressing conspiracies against the Empress's life and engaging in a further expansion of military resources before any intervention. They wanted for the Empress to reject the offer and to act in a cautious but friendly manner towards the Durthians. Aurelia favored the aims of the latter faction (generally), but was also becoming aware of the need for more direct involvement. On March 30, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued its first refusal of the Durthian offer, declaring that "Her Majesty is willing to provide all comfort and friendship to the Durthian Duchies, but cannot involve herself in seizure of a crown which does not belong to her by hereditary right." This was a hypocritical stance, for the Empress had effectively seized the Scottrian and Haynsian Crowns through her annexation of their territories. She had added the titles of "Empress of the Angelina Spiral", "Lady Despot of Haynsia", and "Queen of Scottria" to her official royal style just three months earlier. But for the time being, this was the stance maintained.
  • April 5-
    • By April 1785, Queen Mariana was fully in despair at her condition. The execution of Dr. Willanius Parrius, and the penalties inflicted thereafter in response to his attempted assassination plot against the Empress, had intensified the public outcry against Mariana and her supporters. Throughout February and March 1785, many prominent nobles, magnates, and officials throughout the Empire had been displaying their dismay at the fact that the ex-Queen of Scottria continued to reside in relative comfort. Mariana herself continued to deny that she had any connection to conspiracies against the Empress's life and throne, and she asserted that her misery was one at her condition of imprisonment, not at any anger of being deprived of authority as a reigning sovereign. In a letter to her cousin (March 27, 1785), the day before the Council's first session about the Durthian Rebellion, Mariana declared that "Alas! Was there ever a sight so detestable and impious before the Lords and man, as for there to be the predicament of a woman who has done no wrong, and who has sought no harm against Your Majesty!" Privately, however, Mariana had decided to bequeath her claim to the Imperial Laurasian Crown to Emperor Philicus of Spamalka. Aurelia, who was sympathetic (to an extent) towards her cousin, nevertheless now responded to the demands made for increasing the security net around her cousin. Therefore, on April 5, 1785, she formally appointed Sir Amnystas Pauletius, formerly Ambassador to the Serene Kingdom of Franconia (1776-84), Governor-General of Haynsia (from January 3, 1785), and Justiciar of the Laurasia Prime Governorate (from 1783), as the new guardian of Queen Mariana. He therefore replaced the aged Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sir Rudomentus Sadielius, who was now in declining health (Sadielius was finally raised to the nobility as 1st Baron Sadielius of Tempura on April 17 at the age of 78).
    • Fifty-three years old at the time of his appointment (he had been born on January 11, 1732), Pauletius was a staunch disciplinarian notorious for his extreme Reformist beliefs. When Mariana learned of his appointment, she protested vehemently against it, not only because he was of "no higher quality than a knight" but also because he would be less tolerant than most of her cultural and religious beliefs. Aurelia had chosen Pauletius because he was "towards Almitis religious, towards us most faithful, by calling honorable, and by birth most noble." His integrity and his unflinching loyalty to his sovereign had been demonstrated during his service as Ambassador to Franconia and recently as Governor-General on Haynsia, and she could rely on him not to be moved by the Scottrian Queen's wiles or her charm. He would prove to be a diligent and strict custodian, never relaxing his vigilance nor swerving from his duty, and remained maddeningly impervious to Mariana's attempts to win him over. Pauletius arrived at Tuvarian Fortress on April 10, 1785, and wasted no time in imposing new "rigors and alterations" into the household. Mariana quickly realized that her life was going to be much more difficult, and that she would be virtually isolated. Pauletius scrutinized all of her correspondence: nothing got past him, and communiques from her friends abroad began to pile up on Walsingis's desk. Pauletius would permit Mariana no visitors, and strengthened the guard at the Fortress. Her servants were forbidden to take walks on the Fortress grounds, and when she went out she was accompanied by soldiers carrying firearms, who prevented any "unauthorized persons" from approaching her. Nor was she allowed to distribute donatives to the local population, a rule which she detested. Pauletius's security measures were tougher than any Mariana had faced before, but he had no solution to the risk posed by Mariana's personal bath-servants. Unless if he had them strip-searched, which was unthinkable to a man of his sensibilities, he could not be sure that they were not smuggling out messages. All he could do was place a close watch on them.
  • June 4-August 25-
    • On June 4, 1785, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court officially departed from Laurasia Prime to commence the official progress of 1785. In May 1785, the Empress had announced her intention to progress to the Eastern Barsar Regions and the Northern Run Districts. She was now embarked on a journey to a region of much prominence and importance in the Caladarian Galaxy, and one which possessed a long history. The various Kimanian Dynasties, extending from the 3rd millennium BH to the ninth century AH, had established their base of power here; it had seen the rule of the Arachosian Empire, Sennacherid Empire, Arachaso-Kalbachan Empire, Lacian Despotate, Dasian Empire (in the form of the Illkhanids), Timurid Empire, Huntite Khanate, the barbarian kingdoms of Jarjanica, Rudorita, Halegothica, the Alexandrians, Devianiani, and Melorkia, and then the restored Celestial Dynasty of Kimania, before the region's subjugation by Antigonus I in 1506. The Empress's visit was therefore intended to impress the fact of her authority, and of her Empire's reach, in this region nearly sixty thousand light years away from Laurasia Prime. The Empress proceeded across the Kimanian Run through the Laurasia Prime Purse Region and into the Eastern Core Worlds.
    • She paid visits to Manil, Arias, the Station of Dosch, Chandlier, Meaganian, Tommy, Zutagia, Zennethia, the Prelone Asteroid Belt, Anusia, Kukilovo, and Murphy (June 4-11). The Empress then progressed rapidly through Brittany, Drennan, Sanegeta, Nathaniel, and Chapelle, reaching Roastafaria Minor by June 19. Two days later, Aurelia reached the outskirts of Narra, one of the most important mining colonies in the Empire. There, she received a gift of rare Narian galite; toured the world's extensive Ore Refineries; and was entertained by the CEO of Christophsis Ores, Sir Gallus Trebonian (1741-1810). Aurelia remained at Narra for four days before departing on June 25. She visited Gilestis, Bookman, Rolle, Orion IV, Dorothea, Lange, Leseur, Nanking, and four military strongholds in the Orion Cluster (June 26-July 5, 1785), before reaching Christopher on July 7.
    • This crystalline world, known for the beauty and simplicity of its landscape, and the wondrous construction of its cities, which were carved from glittering gems, thralled the Empress and the Imperial Court during their visit. Aurelia resided at the Ice Palace of Christopher and toured the Christopherian Asteroid Belts, from which derived much of the Empire's chanlon, quadrillium, refium, neranium, and crystallium. The asteroids had been plotted mathematically over a thousand years earlier, and the shape of their formations impressed the Empress. The Court departed from Christopher on July 14, with the Christopherian Council of Magnates giving the Empress a gift of ores worth nearly €5 trillion dataries. From Christopher, the Empress proceeded to Cox, Banks, and Henderson (July 15-19). Henderson, which had many of the Empire's leading scientific and mathematical research institutions, witnessed the Court being entertained through a series of debates and geometrical performances staged by the world's leading academics.
    • From Henderson, the Empress visited, through July 25, Constipex (famed for its vast spice ranges), Millard (home to one of the Empire's largest spacedocking facilities), Filorean, Newman Victoria (a renowned resort colony), and Nikki Lowell (site of many famous battles in galactic history). Then on July 27, the Imperial Court, bypassing Gardiner (still in shambles from Pugachevia's ravages a decade earlier), reached Kimanis Mooria. Kimanis Mooria, which had been one of the chief Throne Worlds for the Kimanian Zhou and Han Dynasties, and long a gateway to Kimania itself, impressed the Empress with its network of equatorial roadways, its massive spaceport and observation satellites, and its Xilleium Hypergate, the largest such gate outside of the Core Worlds. The Court stayed on Kimanis Mooria for two days before proceeding to the jewel of worlds, Kimania itself. The magnates and inhabitants of Kimania greeted the Empress with much ceremony (July 30, 1785). Kimanian Princes Zhou Enlai (1722-96) and Chou Furmasi (1740-1817) presented a exotic Han Dynasty vase to Her Majesty; the world's Security Force staged a Dragon Parade for the Imperial Court's benefit; and a massive display of fireworks, colorful banners, and acrobatics was staged at the Forbidden Palace. Kimania was the most populous world in the Barsar Regions, with a population of over 200 billion.
    • The world's large cities, such as Shanghai, Kongria, and Peking, were as extensive and well-laid as any on Laurasia Prime, and each had as its masterpiece a massive Tomb to the Archs, a traditional Kimanian burial tomb. The Empress resided at the Forbidden Palace, which had been constructed by Shogun Whu (r. 140-87 BH) in the late 2nd century BH and had been home to generations of Kimanian monarchs. During the next six days, the Imperial Court was entertained by Kimanian Maidens, Pantomime performers, banzatte (Kimanian dancers), and "players" of Kimanian martial arts. The Empress dined on Kimanian cuisine, including shushi-fo, Murxing pork, and rare Horthu tea. She toured the Qianlong Gardens; the Great Gateway of Peking; the Towers of Hax-so; the Grand Canal; the Temple of Heaven; the Summer Palace; and the Imperial Archives of Kimania (which had been reconstituted as an official archive of the Empire by Lysimachus I in 1535). Finally, on August 5, 1785, the Imperial Court departed from Kimania. Leo's Redoubt, Drea, Duana, Abshire, and Strongstine were toured by the Court in turn (August 5-10, 1785). At Duana, the Empress was able to tour the massive Appledarian Complex, home to the Empire's largest computer networking system and the chief node of Appeladarian Industries, one of the largest electronics corporations in extra-galactic civilization.
    • From there, Messalina, Chobania, Samantha, Reading, and Breha, all of which were historic and important systems, were visited in turn by the Court, in succession to August 15. At Chobania, the Empress visited the Tomb of Toghun Temur; at Messalina, she resided at the grounds of the Grim Palace, which had been cherished by Sargon the Conqueror; and at Breha, she toured Crystallia City, which was built atop a massive cliff on gigantic crystalline platforms. Goni, Riley, Jarman, Skold, Plath, Novina, Bailey, Allen, Preena, and Harrison all were visited (August 16-25, 1785). It was while she was at Allen that the Empress issued a manifesto commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Bosworthian Fields (August 22, 1785), in which her grandfather Neuchrus I had defeated Titus the Cruel and established the Neuchrian Dynasty. Aurelia made much of touting her own achievements, resulting from those of her great ancestor. The progress finally ended on August 25, and the Court began its journey back to the Core Worlds. On August 29, it reached Americana, and the Empress took up residence at Nonsuchia Palace, which she had confiscated after the death of the Earl in 1780. Here, important negotiations had been underway, which were to usher in the Empire's intervention in the Durthian Rebellion.
  • July 30-On July 30, 1785, Doge Nicolo da Ponte of Haxonia died on San Marino, aged 94. He had ruled for seven years, since his accession to the throne in 1778. At the time of his death, the Doge had been the oldest living monarch, and the only one from any of the sovereign states who had been born in the seventeenth century (January 15, 1691). The Doge's reign had seen the Haxonian Confederacy involved in conflicts with the Barbary States, Vendragian Confederacy, Grand Duchy of Masacavania, and in the Germanic Principalities, which had resulted in the enhancement of the Confederacy's position in the Little Amulak Cloud. Most of Cyprus, Lebanon, and the Dorite Worlds were once again under the control of the Haxonian Government, and da Ponte's insistence on sacrificing nothing and utilizing the resources of his dominions had earned him much respect from his own subjects and from his fellow monarchs. His reform of the Haxonian High Council in 1782 had also served to decrease internal conflict among the aristocracy and to strengthen the position of both Doge and Senate. Condolences arrived at the Haxonian Court from all foreign monarchs, including Empress Aurelia of Laurasia. The Empress, who had conducted a correspondence with the elderly Doge, and had heeded his advice on certain occasions, declared that his death "is a blow to us all, for he was a monarch determined to maintain his position, but to also treat his subjects in a fair and admirable manner." Da Ponte was succeeded as Doge by the Haxonian High-Admiral and Procurator of Venezetio, Pasqual Cicogna, who had previously served as Ambassador to Franconia (1774-76) and Pruthia (1777-81). He was crowned as Doge on August 3, 1785.
  • September 7-
    • Since the Privy Council commenced its "Durthian Consultations" in March 1785, numerous events had occurred which had substantially changed the views of the Empress on military intervention in the Durthian Question, and impacted the Empire's relationship with its Spamalkan compatriots. On April 22, 1785, Emperor Philicus had declared to his Council of State that he could not tolerate for any longer the continued flow of Laurasian mercenaries and financial aid to the Durthian Duchies, and that decisive action needed to be taken to display his displeasure at the policies of the Imperial Laurasian Government. Four days later, the Emperor had issued instructions to the Duke of Parma, ordering him to impose a strict surveillance on the activities and interests of immigrants from the Laurasian Empire in the Durthian Duchies, and to report all financial transactions by Laurasian nobles and banking institutions in the Duchies. Parma followed these instructions to the letter, in spite of protests from the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs. On May 12, Philicus had taken even more direct action when he forbade Laurasian subjects from engaging in the transport of arms, industrial equipment, and electronics in his realms. Furthermore, he ordered the confiscation of all Laurasian civilian vessels in his star systems. Nearly 10,000 Laurasian starships in the Durthian Duchies and the Holy Spamalkan Empire were impounded as a result of these declarations. Empress Aurelia, when she received word of her Spamalkan contemporary's actions, declared to her Privy Council that war was on the horizon.
    • By the beginning of June 1785, Philicus himself had come to this same conclusion. He was now ordering the Spamalkan High Command to issue contingency orders for the possibility of war with the Laurasian Empire, and diverted troops from Portugallia, the Peruvian Colonies, and Grenada to Parma's garrisons in Brabant and Flanders. On June 12, 1785, the Emperor forbade his subjects to travel to Laurasian territory; Empress Aurelia retaliated by freezing all Spamalkan financial assets in the Empire and banishing Spamalkans already in her dominions from her Empire. Furthermore, on June 22, she declared that any subject who distributed or published works expressing support for the Spamalkans or endorsing their campaigns against the Durthian rebels would be liable to fines or imprisonment. And then, finally, on June 26, while at Gilestis, she capitulated to the clamors of Leicesterius, Burghley, Hattonius, and others, authorizing for negotiations to begin with the United Durthian States over the conclusion of financial subsidy and expeditionary corps arrangements between the Empire and the States. Neither she nor Philicus were willing to enter into direct hostilities with each other at this stage; indeed, negotiations with the States were for the Empire to provide auxiliary support to the Durthians while technically remaining at peace with the Holy Spamalkan Empire.
    • On July 2, 1785, delegations from the Imperial Laurasian and Durthian Governments convened at Nonsuchia Palace on Americana, one of the largest palaces of the Imperial Estate. Chancellor Walsingis, Sir Christopheus Hattonius, and Lord Sadelius (negotiating a diplomatic agreement for the last time in his 55 years of service to the Neuchrian Dynasty), comprised the chief members of the Laurasian delegation. Lord Treasurer Burghley, who had been appointed a commissioner by the Empress, had been stricken with feral gout two days earlier and had with permission retreated to Theobaldian House. The Durthian-States General were represented by Vice-Pensioner Jan van Gorts (1738-1801), General Peter-Alexander of Wilverhorst (1723-99), and Secretary Andres Hessels of Utrecht (to which he had been reassigned due to the re-occupation of Brabant by Spamalka). Negotiations continued for over two months, as the two delegations wrangled over the terms of provision, the conditions of protectorship, and demands by the Empress that she be suitably "compensated" for providing aid to the States. The delegations found that their work gained especial importance when, on August 17, 1785, Antwerp finally capitulated to the forces of the Duke of Parma. The fall of Antwerp meant that all of Brabant and Flanders, was now under Spamalkan control once again.
    • In light of this, the Durthians now attempted to persuade the Laurasians into allowing for Aurelia to assume the sovereignty of the Durthian Duchies, but they, acting on her instructions, refused. By the time Empress Aurelia arrived at Americana on August 29, negotiations were virtually concluded. The Empress staged a formal ceremony of greetings for the Durthian delegation, their presence having previously been kept a secret. Negotiations now came to their conclusion, and on September 7, 1785, Aurelia's fifty-second birthday, the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace was concluded. It was ratified by the Empress on the day that it was signed, and by the States-General on September 16. By the terms of this agreement, the Empress of Laurasia acknowledged her recognition of the "absolute and total independence of the Durthian States from the overlordship and tyrannical rule of His Majesty of Spamalka." It was agreed that Spamalkan occupation of the Southern Duchies was an "illegal and illogical act", and that the Empire would not recognize any Spamalkan rights to Durthian territory. In pursuance with this, "Her Imperial Majesty of Laurasia agrees to provide the States-General the forces to wit": a corps of not more than 1,000 military vessels, including 500 Imperial-class warships and 300 support vessels, with squadrons of no more than 45,000 starfighters, 45 million Imperial Marines, and 95 million soldiers of the Imperial Laurasian Army.
    • This corps was to be placed under the command of an officer of the Empress's choosing, who was to have the title of "Lieutenant-General" in the Army of the Durthian States, and subject to the authority of both the Empress and the States-General. In exchange for respecting the autonomy and privileges of the States, and the customs of their subjects, the commander of the Imperial Expeditionary Corps was to have the right to maintain his forces at any systems of the Duchies; to coordinate military operations with the States-General; and to engage in confrontations with Spamalkan units at his own initiative. He would be provided with a force of not more than 200 warships and 15 million mercenaries of the Durthian States Army, and would be permitted to impose martial law at any systems immediately affected by military campaigns. Besides the Expeditionary Corps, the Laurasian Empress was to provide an annual subsidy of €26.6 trillion dataries to the Durthian States, and such subsidy would be employed solely for the "conduct of military operations against the forces of the Holy Spamalkan Empire." As surety for this assistance, the Durthian States-General agreed to hand over Brill and Flushing into the custody of the Laurasian Empire; both systems would be garrisoned at the expense of the Imperial Laurasian Government, with forces separate from those attached to the Expeditionary Corps (but limited to not more than one-fifth of the Corps's warships and personnel each). Over Brill and Flushing, the Empire was to enjoy absolute jurisdiction, including control over laws, commerce, transportation, defense, and justice. These rights were to last as long as Durthia remained at war with the Spamalkans, and would become permanent only if Durthia defaulted on its military obligations. Finally, the Empress was permitted to appoint two representatives to the States-General, and to station her agents in Durthian territory as long as they complied with Durthian laws. The conclusion of the Treaty of Nonsuchia committed the Empire to the Durthian Rebellion more fully than ever before, and Philicus himself considered it a grievous assault on his sovereign rights. Laurasia now stood as the only power actively supporting Durthia in its struggle for independence from Spamalka; a state of undeclared war set in between the Laurasian and Holy Spamalkan Empires, which was to continue for the next two years.
  • September 17-
    • In the aftermath of the conclusion of the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace with the United Durthian States, Empress Aurelia, Imperial Privy Council, and the Imperial General Headquarters entered into a flurry of preparations for the organization and dispatch of the Expeditionary Corps. The Treaty of Nonsuchia had stipulated that the Corps were to be dispatched by the commencement of the new year, and were to assume their duties promptly upon arrival. The Empress now had to find the commander for her Corps. Burghley and Walsingis heavily favored Major-General Surovius, who had proved his ability in combat through his valiant actions in the War of the Bar Confederation and the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War. Surovius, however, was seriously wounded in a repulsorlift accident on September 12, 1785, and was therefore disqualified from assuming command. Field-Marshal Rumanstevius, who had been reassigned to duty in the Kalbachan Governorate, was also suffering from health issues, and begged to be excused from assuming command. Aurelia now turned to one who was close to her, and who had long been the chief proponent of the whole venture: the Earl of Leicesterius.
    • Leicesterius's brother, the Earl of Sarah, lingering from his leg injuries, seemed to be a better choice to many, but Sarah made it clear that he would be unable to assume command. He recommended his brother instead. Leicesterius himself had suffered tragedy earlier in the year. On July 19, 1785, his only legitimate son, Antiochus Dudley, Lord Denbaghia, died at Wanstead Estate on Impania at only the age of five. Without asking permission to depart from the Imperial Court (then at Henderson), Leicesterius hastened to Impania to comfort his wife and supervise his son's funeral. The Empress was saddened by the news, and sent a courtier, Sir Antigonus Killganius (1748-1801), to the Earl with a message of sympathy. The death of Denbaghia, his only legitimate child, had a devastating effect on the Earl. Aged, sick, and desolate, he now seriously contemplated retiring from public life. Hattonius managed to dissuade him from taking this course, while Lord Treasurer Burghley invited Leicesterius and his wife, Countess Laetita, to Theobaldian House so that they could grieve together.
    • Leicesterius and his wife remained there throughout August 1785. The Earl, however, was brought from his dark state when on September 17, Empress Aurelia formally appointed him as the commander of the Expeditionary Corps. She had him promoted to the rank of Field-Marshal in the Imperial Laurasian Army, as befitting his new position. With his weakened health, however, Leicesterius was not the best choice. Moreover, he had not engaged in combat in twenty-seven years, and Parma, who was to become his adversary, was a talented and experienced military commander. The Empress, on her part, could not bear to part with Leicesterius, and on September 25, she actually implored the Earl not to leave her. The following morning, the Empress changed her mind, and declared his departure essential. Then, on September 30, the Empress had Leicesterius woken in the middle of the night by a messenger, who informed him not to make any further preparations for a departure. Irritated and anxious, Leicesterius told Walsingis that he was "weary of life and all." The following morning, Aurelia revoked her order, but displayed such emotion at the fact of his departure that Leicesterius himself was brought to the emotional edge. She told Leicesterius that he must confine himself to his duties as commander of the Expeditionary Corps, and should not accept any offer of sovereignty from the States-General. On October 6, Leicesterius told Walsingis that "Her Majesty will make trial of me how I love her and what will discourage me from the service, but resolved I am that no universal respect shall draw me from my faithful discharge of my duty towards her, though she shall grow to hate me, as it comes very near, for I find no love or favor at all."
  • December 8-
    • By October 1785, the Empress had finally come to terms with the fact that Leicesterius had to depart for the Amulak Spiral, and she now turned her attention fully to preparations for the Empire's intervention. On October 13, 1785, the Imperial Court retired to the Palace of Placenta on Darcia. Here, the Empress issued an open "Declaration", twenty pages in length. In this declaration, she justified her actions to Emperor Philicus and to her subjects at large, declaring that the Lord Almitis had compelled her to intervention and that the Holy Spamalkan Empire's further advances upon the "independence and privileges of a sovereign people could not be tolerated without harming the tranquility of all galactic powers." The following month, Philicus finally expelled all Laurasian subjects from his dominions, and ordered his forces in Brabant, Flanders, Franche-Comte, Milania, and Naparia to be placed on elevated alert. On November 17, 1785, the 27th anniversary of her reign, Empress Aurelia told a session of the Imperial Privy Council that this intervention would serve to "preserve the independence of the United Durthian States and will defeat the evil intentions of Philicus and his subordinates." Preparations for the Corps intensified in the meantime, and by December 1, 1785, its starships and personnel had been assembled at Tivran, Doros, Theodoros, Dumblaine, Dumbarton, Branxholme, Erith, Lithiglow, and Caithness for departure into the Galactic Void. Leicesterius himself, accompanied by his stepson Estatius, his nephew Sir Philip Sidronius (who had graduated from the Cadet Corps in 1778 and advanced to the rank of Colonel through service in Haynsia, Scottria, and the Galactic Borderlands), and his wife, the Countess of Leicesterius, departed from Laurasia Prime on December 8, 1785. Empress Aurelia, attended by Walsingis, Burghley, and Hattonius, saw the commanding fleet of the Expeditionary Corps depart.
    • A massive ceremony of felicitations was staged in the Laurasia Prime star system, and the Empress commanded her subjects to pray for the success of the intervention. Aurelia had only reluctantly permitted the Earl to take his wife with him, having at first threatened to have her banished to remain on Impania. Estatius, on his part, had distinguished himself in a series of jousts and military exercises at the Imperial Court, and was granted an extraordinary commission in the Imperial Laurasian Army, although he was still taking courses at the Cadet Corps. Leicesterius and his subordinates reached Doros on December 11, after having made short stops at Kerch, Kherson, and Bucharina to gather military supplies and equipment. Finally, on December 16, 1785, the Imperial Expeditionary Corps of Durthia departed from the Angelina Spiral and the Empire, having formally assembled as an armada. It traveled quickly through the Galactic Void, reaching Flushing on December 21. When the Corps arrived there, they were given a tumultuous welcome. Leicesterius then embarked on a triumphal progress through Flushing, Niewpoort, Leiden, Middleburg, and Delft. Fireworks and bonfires were lit in his honor, and on December 26, while at Middleberg, he was guest of honor to a lavish banquet. In Leiden, he was treated to a series of magnificent pageants, including one in which the star system itself was portrayed by a "fair maiden", menaced by various allegorical figures. The Earl was overcome by all of this adulation, and on December 29, 1785, in a report to the Privy Council, he remarked that "Never was there people I think in that jollity that these be." As 1785 ended, however, the affair of Scottrian Queen Mariana was assuming central prominence again.

1786

  • January 1-
    • 1786, the 86th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire, which had previously tried to refrain from direct entanglement in the Durthian Rebellion, having concluded a military provision treaty with the Durthian States-General. In pursuance with the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace, the Imperial Laurasian Government had dispatched the Imperial Expeditionary Corps, commanded by the Empress's chief favorite, the Earl of Leicesterius, to provide support and to reinforce the Durthian forces. Leicesterius himself, although in declining health, had for years been one of the chief lobbyists for the Empire's intervention into Durthian affairs, and he firmly believed that his mission was one from the Lord Almitis himself: that it was his task to defeat the rampaging Spamalkans and to restore equilibrium in the Great Amulak Spiral. The Earl, in the midst of all the entertainments with which he was amused by the Durthians, sought to establish an offensive strategy for the defense of the United Durthian States. He was to find this goal elusive because Empress Aurelia, who still did not wish to become embroiled in absolute military conflict with the Spamalkans at this stage, sought to impose limits on the campaigns that Leicesterius could launch and the military moves which he could make. The Empress insisted that Leicesterius defer to the Durthian High Command and Prince Philip William of Orange (who was commander-in-chief of the Durthian military forces in spite of the fact that he was not Stadholder), and that he do no more than what was authorized with his military commission.
    • Conscious of her position as a female sovereign, Aurelia was also determined to maintain firm control of the campaign, interfering whenever she considered it to be expedient. The Earl resented the Empress's attempts at interference, and he grew more and more insubordinate, taking less and less notice of her orders. In spite of these early signs of dissension, however, the arrival of the Expeditionary Corps served to inspire renewed hope in the hearts of the Durthians, and to raise their morale in the face of the threat posed by Parma's forces. Moreover, the Empress herself was satisfied about the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace, and viewed it as an opportunity to extend Laurasian influence into the Great Amulak Spiral to a greater limit than previously. At the same time, however, the "Scottrian Question", in the form of ex-Queen Mariana, continued to vex the Empress, as it had for nearly two decades by that point. This year was to see the increase of tensions between Laurasia on the one hand, and Spamalka on the other, as well as the final conspiracy launched by Queen Mariana's supporters which would usher in her doom. Nevertheless, in her New Year's proclamation, the Empress praised "my loyal subjects for their persistent efforts in maintaining the prosperity and stability of our realms and for loyalty to my person and to this government. Nothing will prevent this our Empire from residing still in peace and in strength towards our neighbors, nor will the actions of dissidents or rebels disturb the reality of my sovereignty."
  • January 7-
    • On January 7, 1786, ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana was, on the orders of Empress Aurelia, moved from Tutsarian Fortress on Cossack to the absent Estatius's fortified residence, Chartlerian Mansion, on Kigonia. The Empress, who had visited the residence a decade earlier during her famed Kenilian progress, was impressed by its defenses, its relative security from outside threats, and its location. She believed that this residence would better ensure the Scottrian Queen's security while also allaying her complaints about comfort. Queen Mariana herself, however, had no change in attitude, crying out in despair when she was told by Pauletius that the Empress had heeded her complaints. Mariana told him that "I will never enjoy true solace as long as I live in a prison!" Pauletius himself, however, believed that it would now be virtually impossible for Mariana to conduct any form of communication with her allies and supporters in defiance of his surveillance. He told the Privy Council on January 12, in his monthly report about the Queen and her status, that "I cannot imagine how it may be possible for them to convey a note as big as my finger." Chancellor Walsingis, however, was not as confident as Pauletius.
    • He knew of her capability to send out secret communiques and to smuggle out messages. The Chancellor then had an epiphany, and now conceived the idea of using this to his advantage. He hoped that Mariana would incriminate herself and give him the excuse he wanted to get rid of her once and for all. Fate played into his hands that same month, January 1786, when on January 15, a Laurasian navigator, Gilbertius Giffordia (1760-90), was arrested at Belkadan immediately upon his arrival from Franconia. He was conveyed promptly to Laurasia Prime, and brought before the Chancellor himself. Walsingis learned that Giffordia had been dispatched by Mariana's supporters on Parri with a view to re-establishing contact with her. Realizing that his plans were known, the weak-willed Giffordia was "persuaded" to work for Walsingis instead, and was instructed to pass on the communiques from abroad that were waiting for Mariana at the Franconian Embassy. Any replies which she gave Giffordia were to be brought directly to the Chancellor, whose secretary, Sir Pantordanus Phelippes (1756-1825), previously a codebreaker with the Imperial Ministry of Defense, would decipher, copy, and reseal the communiques and send them on to their destination.
    • In this way, Walsingis could monitor all of Mariana's correspondence. The trap was set. Giffordia was to inform Mariana that he had organized a secret route whereby communiques could be smuggled out from Chartlerian Mansion. This was done through the use of the household's supply transports, operated by Sir Agathon Perilus (1710-99), a contractor with the Imperial Ministry of Works and Holdings. Perilus, an elderly man who felt sympathy for Mariana, agreed to smuggle her communiques in exchange for the promise of a substantial financial reward. He would not find out that he had been used until it was too late. Using this new channel of communication, Giffordia sent Mariana a communique introducing himself, along with letters of credence from Sir Thomasius Morgania on Parri, and described the secret channel through which she might communicate with her friends elsewhere. To Mariana, deprived of contact with them for so long, this was an answer to her prayers, and she responded enthusiastically to Giffordia's plan, never suspecting that he was not what he seemed. On January 29, the ex-Queen received two databooks worth of communiques from the Franconian Embassy, and set out to answer them. The only individuals who were aware of Mariana's framing were Walsingis, his assistants, Leicesterius, and the Empress herself. Aurelia, although she was still unwilling to move against Mariana directly, had nevertheless given permission for this charade to go on, hoping to discover the identities of any of her subjects who might be conspiring against her. On February 1, 1786, she told the Franconian Ambassador that "You have much secret communication with the Queen of Scottria, but believe me, I know all that goes on in my empire. I myself was a prisoner in the days of the Empress my sister, and am aware of the artifices that prisoners use to win over servants and obtain secret intelligence."
  • February 5-
    • On January 6, 1786, the Earl of Leicesterius, basking in the entertainments offered him by the Durthian authorities, and having progressed through Amsterdam, Haarlem, Utrecht, Rotterdam, Amersfoort, and Gronigen, reached Hague, capital of the United Durthian States. The States-General, which had become increasingly aware of the need for a foreign protector, and in defiance of the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace (which had not included any provision for sovereignty by the Imperial Laurasian Government or its representatives), urged Leicesterius, on January 14, to accept the title of Governor-General of the United Durthian States. Leicesterius, who was flattered by this offer, and believing it was necessary, messaged Burghley and Walsingis, informing them that the Durthian offer should be answered favorably. It was not until January 25, however, before Leicesterius formally accepted the offer posed by the States-General. All of this had been conducted in secret, with no one revealing it in public. The Earl was further encouraged when the Durthian forces of General Steen Maltsen (1725-89) repelled a Spamalkan corps in the Battle of Bosken (January 28, 1786). Leicesterius became convinced that with greater control over the resources of Durthia, he could begin a decisive push into Brabant and Flanders. His hopes, however, were not to be.
    • On February 5, 1786, the Empress learned from one of her Ladies of the Bedchamber, Lady Messalina Cibronia (1752-1812), that Leicesterius had been sworn in as Governor-General two days earlier. She now erupted into a fury which had not been previously witnessed by her courtiers. The Empress immediately contacted Leicesterius, castigating him for his "childish dealing. We could never have imagined, had we not seen it fall out, that a man raised up by ourself and extraordinarily favored by us above any other subject of this Empire, would have in so contemptible a sort broken our commandment in a cause that so greatly touched our honor. Our express pleasure and commandment in that, all delays and excuses laid apart, you do presently, upon the duty of your allegiance, obey and fulfill whatsoever the bearer shall direct you to do in our name. Whereof, fail you not, as you will answer the contrary at your uttermost peril." Leicesterius was greatly upset by her reaction. He believed that he had acted in her best interests, and now dispatched one of his secretaries, Sir Willanius Daviadia (1741-1808), to explain his reasons to her. Daviadia, however, was delayed by interstellar storms at Zest and Roosevelt, and could not depart until February 13. When he finally arrived on Laurasia Prime two days later, the Empress would not listen to him, and lectured him on his "superior's insolence." Leicesterius observed that "At the least, I think she would never have so condemned any other man before she heard him."
  • February 9-On February 9, 1786, Comet Demosthena commenced its periodical perihelion in the inner regions of the Laurasia Prime star system, making its second visit of the eighteenth century. 75 years had passed since its last appearance, on April 20, 1710, during the reign of Aurelia's father, Antigonus III. That period had witnessed the extension of the Laurasian Empire's territory over the entire Galactic Borderlands and the Angelina Spiral; Vectoria, Scottria, and Haynsia had all been absorbed into the Empire, along with Dejanican Lavella and the Marasharite Galactic Borderlands. It had also seen the domestic tribulations of Antigonus's reign; the continued Laurasian endeavors in the Great Amulak Spiral; the Almitian Reformation and Counter-Reformation; and the implementation of further important reforms to the Empire's governmental, political, and economic structure. Empress Aurelia herself noted all of these developments in a commemorative proclamation issued on this day to celebrate the comet's return. Comet Demosthena had been spotted far out in space by Laurasian satellites near the Marsian Asteroid Belt in September 1782, and it passed Marsia in December 1785 before making its approach to the moons of Laurasia Prime. The comet remained in the inner Laurasia Prime star system before departing out again in April 1786. It would not appear again until 1861.
  • March 14-
    • Empress Aurelia, in spite of sharing in the jubilation of her subjects on Laurasia Prime at the appearance of Comet Demosthena (which continued to enthrall all, regardless of the fact that such apparitions occurred in countless star systems every day in the Empire), found herself under severe strain as a result of the Durthian Rebellion and the acceptance of the Governor-Generalship by Leicesterius. Walsingis and Burghley, who had both been aware of the offer before the Empress herself, were criticized by their mistress for not seeking to "arrest" Leicesterius before he accepted the offer. On March 3, Sarah informed his brother that "our mistress's extreme rage continues to increase, rather than in any way diminish. Her malice is great and unquenchable." The Empress even threatened to halt the flow of military supplies to the Expeditionary Corps, but was ultimately dissuaded from this course of folly by Hattonius. Leicesterius now sought to pin the blame for his acceptance of the Governor-Generalship on Daviadia, claiming that the Secretary had instilled in him "ideas of defying Your Majesty's commands." Empress Aurelia did not believe this outrageous claim, to her credit, and on March 7, appointed Daviadia to the Privy Council.
    • The Council itself was alarmed, fearing the Empress's anger might prompt her to recall Leicesterius and therefore expose the rift between them. The Spamalkans, they believed, should not see the Empire divided. They therefore exerted all of their abilities to pacify the Empress and tried to make her understand why the Earl had apparently defied her. It was only after the news came, on March 9, that Leicesterius had fallen ill, that Aurelia conceded that he had acted in what he had perceived to be her best interests. This did not stop the Empress, however, from dispatching on that very same day Sir Thomasius Heneagius to act as her messenger to the Durthian States-General and to the Earl himself. This was the very same Heneagius who had quarreled with Leicesterius during Twelfth Night festivities twenty years earlier. Aurelia appreciated the irony of this; Heneagius himself eagerly grasped at the opportunity to trump himself up over his rival. He departed from Laurasia Prime during the early hours of March 11, and reached Hague by the late hours of March 13, utilizing the Hague-Amsterdam Rapid Transit Corridor from the Galactic Void.
    • The following day, he was formally presented to the Durthian Council of State, the executive council which had been authorized by the States-General six months earlier. In the presence of the Earl, Heneagius immediately embarked upon his mission. He informed the Durthian officials present that the Earl would have to resign his commission as Governor-General. He then read out a communique of condemnation and disapproval, composed by the Empress herself, and demanded that the States-General compel Leicesterius to participate in a formal abdication ceremony. Leicesterius and his Durthian allies now sought to do everything in their power to persuade the Empress to reconsider. These protestations continued for several days, and it was not until March 23, 1786, before the Empress relented. She did so, however, only when Lord Treasurer Burghley, who had grown more supportive of Leicesterius, threatened to resign his post.
    • Aurelia now allowed for Leicesterius to retain his position as Governor-General, but insisted that the Earl remain fully aware of his subordinate position and that by no means he presume to think that Durthia was his to rule, or that it was under her jurisdiction. The Earl complied with these conditions, and on April 7, ensured that at a state banquet in Utrecht, a place of honor was reserved for the absent Empress. Shortly afterwards, Raleghia informed Leicesterius that "Her Majesty is in very good terms with you, and thanks be to Almitis, well pacified, and you are again her Sweet Antioch." Exhausted and demoralized, Leicesterius admitted to Walsingis that he was weary. During all of this time, the front-lines between Durthia and Spamalka remained surprisingly stable, as Parma was still adjusting to the fact of the Expeditionary Corps' presence. Philicus, however, was by now fully engaged in plans for war with the Laurasian Empire, and on April 30, 1786, he ordered his Council of Foreign Affairs to begin considering negotiations with the Marasharite Empire over the possibility of an anti-Laurasian military alliance.
  • May 20-
    • Scottrian Queen Mariana, who thanks to her correspondence was aware of Philicus's intentions against her cousin, and also of Leicesterius's quarrels with her over the Governor-Generalship of Durthia, sent a communique, through Giffordia, to former Spamalkan Ambassador Mendoza (May 20, 1786). Mendoza, in fact, had been appointed by his master, Emperor Philicus, as Ambassador to Franconia on May 11, 1784. He had been greeted by King Hensios III and Queen-Mother Catharina d'Medici with some ceremony, although both distrusted him. From this vantage point, he was able to continue his involvement in conspiracies directed against the Laurasian Empress. In her communique, Mariana informed Mendoza that she intended to "cede and give, by will, my right to the succession of the Laurasian Crown to your Emperor your master, considering the obstinacy of Her Majesty and the refusal of her to confer the succession to me." Philicus, however, soon had Mendoza inform the Queen that he had no intention of seizing the Imperial Laurasian Crown, instead resigning his claims to his daughter, Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia. Then, on May 29, 1786, Giffordia provided Chancellor Walsingis with two communiques from Queen Mariana. The first was to Mendoza, assuring the Spamalkans of her support for their intended invasion plans and of their negotiations with the Marasharites.
    • The second was to Lysimachus Pagentia, asking him to remind the Emperor of Spamalka of the need for urgency in assaulting the Laurasian Empire. Pagentia's reply, which also arrived on Walsingis's desk, described how a Traditionalist priest, Demetrius Ballardia (1722-86), had recently arrived from his residence in Franconia to orchestrate a rebellion by Almitian congregations against Aurelia, timed to coincide with a invasion by Spamalkan forces from the Little Amulak Cloud. Ballardia was soon under the surveillance of Walsingis's spies. Like many other Traditionalists who had left the Empire, he had an exaggerated concept of the level of Traditionalist support for Mariana. Full of zest for his mission, he now visited a wealthy Traditionalist gentleman, Sir Antoninus Babingitia of Tyleria Perea (1761-86), who had been a supporter of the Queen of Scottria for two years. Babinigtia, both handsome and zealous, was twenty-five years old (having been born at Dethickan Manor on Tyleria Perea, October 24, 1761), came from an long established Laurasian gentry family on Tyleria Perea, and had served as a page in Queen Mariana's household during the time of Aretha's guardianship of her (1777-81). It was known to the authorities, however, that he had been involved in a harebrained plot in October 1784 to assassinate the Council when it convened in the Public Council Chambers of the Quencilvanian Palace.
  • June 6-August 14-
    • On June 6, 1786, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court departed from Laurasia Prime to commence the official progress of 1786. The Empress now decided to venture to the Western Barsar Regions, still intent on avoiding the Huntite Provinces where Pugachevia and his units had rampaged a decade earlier. She was attended by Hattonius, Knollysis, and the Earl of Oxfadia, with Burghley, Walsingis, and the other members of the Privy Council remaining on Laurasia Prime. The Empress proceeded from Tudoria to the Murphian Trade Spine, and thence southwards through the Galician and Ashlgothian Provinces to Beverly Hereidu (June 8, 1786). Beverly Hereidu, which had been brutally seized by the Dasian forces of Hulagu and Kitbuga in 858, still hosted historically significant sites, including the Palatial Ruins, the Valleys of Mumrah, the Memorial Library, and the Qadsia Tombs. All of these were visited by the Imperial Court, which remained on the world for four days (June 8-11). The Empress then proceeded to Ain Jalut, where the Dasians of Kitbuga had been destroyed by the Lesian Kingdom's forces in 860 (June 12), and from there to Organza, Solis, and Angela Masia (June 15-22). By June 23, the Imperial Court had reached Beatrice, and from there visited Trieste, Zee, Ginger, Stephanpoulos, Pocket, Mrpath V, and Ipkit. Stephanpoulos in particular impressed the Empress, who viewed a series of theatrical performances at its famed Dwelling Auditorium. At Ginger, the Imperial Court visited the Acropolis of Athor, the world's central religious and commercial complex.
    • On Trieste, Aurelia was able to sail in the Seas of Love, which attracted tourists from all over the Caladarian Galaxy. Then, on July 2, 1786, the Imperial Court proceeded to Stewart, where the Empress was treated to a massive banquet by the Culinary Academy of Mar'isina, one of the most renowned practical arts institutions in the Outer Borderlands. From Stewart, the Court visited Hannibal, Miller, Hamackai Barka, and Lesia Minor. By July 15, the Empress had reached Sharon Alfonsi. This world, with its massive underground cellars and its high-rise caverns, impressed the Court with its natural beauty. At the famed Turvian Caverns, a massive joust and gladiatorial contest were conducted. The Court remained at Sharon Alfonsi for two days, before proceeding to Lesia Major. The former capital world of the Lesian Kingdom boasted the largest population in the Western Barsar Regions (75 billion). The Celestial Palace of Gundobad, Azarian Tower, and the Skyscraper of the Winds all were graced with the visits of the Court.
    • The Empress also prayed at the Jezebersy Monastery, the largest monastery of the Lesian Cryptics. In this, she displayed her toleration towards, and her acceptance of, the customs of her non-Almitian subjects. On July 22, the Court departed Lesia Major, and Aurelia subsequently visited Meridu, Hemkura, Ruumlist, Armenia Major, Ghaza, and Sejucia (July 22-29, 1786). On August 1, she reached Teutonica, where she received fifteen Hospallian Warrior Uniforms. From Teutonica, the Empress toured Skye I, Anastasia Major, Aletis, Damascus, Eliza Spencer, and Caesearea. The Court began its progress back to Laurasia Prime on August 12, 1786, after further visits were paid to Curtis, Tatiana, Bree, Rhodes, and Jacksonian Backory. She arrived at the Quencilvanian Palace on August 14. During the progress, momentous events had occurred as regards to Scottrian Queen Mariana.
  • July 17-
    • In June 1786, Ballardia and Babinigtia, who had been meeting with each other at Babingtia's residence in Soriana, Develaray Manor, were overheard discussing Emperor Philicus's planned military offensives against the Laurasian Empire and plotting the murder of the Empress herself, who was to be murdered either in the Public Throne Room of the Quencilvanian Palace, while walking in the Palace Gardens, or even in her personal bedchambers. Babinigtia undertook to perform the deed of assassination himself, with the aid of six of his friends. These men, like Babinigtia himself, proved to be gently-born, idealistic young "fools" who did not have any common sense and were carried away by chivalrous fervor inspired by the Queen of Scottria. Chancellor Walsingis on his part, while keeping Babinigtia under the strictest surveillance, decided to turn his plotting to the government's advantage. It was fortunate that Sir Thomasius Morgania, Mariana's Parri agent, had learned about Babinigtia and had messaged her commending his loyalty and promising that there would be "many means to remove the beast that troubles the galaxy." It was a simple matter for the Chancellor to ensure that this communique reached Mariana.
    • On June 25, 1786, as the Chancellor had expected, the ex-Queen of Scottria sent a communique to Babinigtia through Giffordia. He replied on July 6 with an outline of his conspiracy, asking for her approval and advice. Addressing Mariana as "My dread Sovereign Lady and Empress", he told her that "six noble gentlemen, all my private friends" would "dispatch the usurper Aurelia", while he himself would rescue Mariana from Chartlerian Mansion on Kigonia, and then, with the help of invading Spamalkan and Marasharite forces, install her upon the throne of the Laurasian Empire. Babinigtia asked that Mariana would extend her protection to those who carried out "the tragic execution [of Empress Aurelia]" and reward them. His communique was delivered to Chartlerian Mansion by Sir Phelippes, who had it smuggled through the normal route to the Queen. Walsingis now waited in suspense to see how Mariana would respond. On July 9, he informed Leicesterius that something momentous was about to happen. The Chancellor declared that "Surely, if the matter be well handled, it will break the neck of all dangerous practices during Her Majesty's reign."
    • The following day, Phelippes reported that the Queen's answer to Babinigtia had been sent out, and had come into his possession. This, however, proved to be only a brief note, in which Mariana promised to write more fully within the next few days. The communique which he and Walsingis had so eagerly awaited was finally composed in code on July 17, 1786 by the Queen's two secretaries, who transcribed it from notes in her own hand which she destroyed immediately afterwards. Phelippes, when presenting the communique to Walsingis, drew the image of a execution platform on it. In this lengthy communication, Mariana incriminated herself by endorsing the Babinigtia Plot and Aurelia's murder. Her message said that "The affair being thus prepared, and forces in readiness both within and without the realm, then shall it be time to set the six gentlemen to work; taking order upon the accomplishment of their design, I may be suddenly transported out of this place."
    • This communique was just what Walsingis wanted, for it enabled him to prosecute Mariana under the terms of the Bond of Association and the Treason Statute of 1786, which had been promulgated by the Empress two months earlier. In order to discover the names of Babinigtia's co-conspirators, he forged a postscript to what Mariana had composed before sending it to Babinigtia on July 29, 1786. Mariana's supporters would later claim that Walsingis had forged other passages in the communique, particularly that endorsing Aurelia's assassination. However, Ambassador Mendoza reported to Emperor Philicus that the Queen was fully acquainted with every aspect of the plot. Babinigtia and his friends, to their folly, were now boasting about their planned conspiracy to others, and he even commissioned a group portrait of himself and the fellow conspirators to celebrate "the execution of so noble an act."
  • August 4-
    • By the beginning of August 1786, Chancellor Walsingis had gathered together most of the evidence which he needed to bring the Queen of Scottria to her death. He now decided that it was not worth waiting for Babinigtia to reply to Queen Mariana. It was essential for him to strike now, before either of them got wind of what was going on and destroyed their correspondence, which the Chancellor intended to use as evidence against them. On August 4, Ballardia was arrested on Selena and conveyed to the Fortress of Baureux, on the grounds that he was a spy for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Learning of this through his associates, Babinigtia panicked. He now sought out one of his co-conspirators, his former steward Pompey Savordia (1757-86). He told Savordia that he should murder the Empress that very day. Savordia was ready to do so, but pointed out that he would not be admitted to the Court because of his attire. Babinigtia, absolutely desperate, gave Savordia a silver chalice, worth about €800, and instructed him to buy himself a new suit of clothes. There was no time, however, and that evening, Babinigtia fled from his residence in Christiania off-world, intending to go into hiding. At this point, the Empress revealed to Lord Treasurer Burghley and the Privy Council about what had been going on, and commanded them to issue a proclamation condemning the conspiracy. The Ministry of Justice quickly circulated photographs of the co-conspirators and offered a reward of €41.3 billion dataries to any information leading to their capture.
    • Five days later, on August 9, 1786, Pauletius had Mariana's belongings searched while the Queen was out hunting with her courtiers and guards. Three chests of communiques, jewelry, and money were impounded and forwarded to Chancellor Walsingis. Pauletius then arrested the Queen's two secretaries, Gilbertius Carlius (1754-86) and the Franconian Claude Nausac (1753-86). After that, he and a battalion of troops went from Chartlerian Mansion to the hunting grounds, where he apprehended the Scottrian Queen herself. She was brought to a nearby lodge to compose herself, having burst into tears, and was then moved back to the Mansion under guard. Empress Aurelia, learning of Pauletius's swift actions, wrote to the Guardian: "Amnystas, my most faithful and careful servant, Almitis reward thee treblefold in the double for your most troublesome charge being so well discharged. Let your wicked murderess know how with heavy sorrow her vile conspiracies compel such actions. Bid her from me to ask Almitis forgiveness for her treacherous dealings toward the savior of her life for many a year, to the intolerable peril of my own." Shortly afterwards, the Empress ordered that Mariana's servants be dismissed and replaced with ones chosen by Pauletius. She did not relent when Mariana fell ill at the prospect of losing these friends.
  • August 14-
    • In spite of all his efforts, Babinigtia could not evade the reach of the imperial authorities for long. On August 14, 1786, the ringleader of the assassination scheme was apprehended by Imperial Intelligence Agents at the Rifles of Clark on Olivia, in the Western Central Core. The authorities were led to this place through tips provided by starhoppers at Goss Beacon, Williams, and Dramis. Babinigtia had managed to flee this far from Laurasia Prime on his personal starfighter, and was intending to head for the Galactic Void when he was apprehended. He was transported back to Laurasia Prime, and to the Fortress of Baureux, the following day. By August 16, all of Babinigtia's fellow conspirators (fourteen in all) had been apprehended and incarcerated at the Fortress of Baureux. They were all charged with treason, conspiracy, and les-majestie. On the orders of Chancellor Walsingis, the prisoners were placed in cells in distant portions of the Fortress, and were given their meals directly in their chambers. When news of these arrests was formally released to the public, many throughout the Empire expressed their relief. Chief Procurator Whitshiftus conducted a Te Deum service at the Westphalian Cathedral, and the citizens of Laurasia Prime's cities gave thanks, lit bonfires, and even held parties in the thoroughfares.
    • The Empress was touched by these demonstrations of loyalty and concern, and composed a moving communique of thanks to her subjects on Laurasia Prime. Babinigtia's residences in Christiania, Soriana, and Constantinople were searched during the four days prior to his arrest, with many seditious Traditionalist and Spamalkan tracts being discovered. There were also prophecies of the Empress's death and diaries in which Babinigtia condemned and insulted her ministers. On August 18, Babinigtia was examined by Lord Treasurer Burghley, Minister Hattonius, and Procurator-General Bromelius. Fearful of torture and led to believe that cooperation would lead to a pardon, Babinigtia confessed that he had plotted to assassinate the Empress and made the first of seven detailed statements describing the conspiracy, in which he made no attempt to protect Mariana or any of his collaborators. Mariana's secretaries, on their part, confirmed that Walsingis's copy of the Queen's communique was an exact replica of the original. The Privy Council now demanded that the Empress move quickly to deal with the Queen of Scottria and with the conspirators. Aurelia tried to stall, knowing that her subjects were in favor of a quick trial and execution of all those involved. Her advisers were implacable, declaring that Mariana should not escape the fates of Babinigtia and his co-conspirators.
  • August 17-
    • On August 17, 1786, Pru'a IX the Great, Emperor of Pruthia and one of the most powerful monarchs of extra-galactic civilization, died at the age of 74. He had ruled for forty-six years (since 1740) and was at the time of his death the senior monarch of extra-galactic civilization, having remained in that position for twenty-two years. During the last several years of his life, the Pruthian Emperor's health had declined substantially. The Emperor suffered a series of minor strokes in 1784, which had exhausted him of physical vitality, and he was, during the last weeks of his life, incapable of movement or of speech. He had grown increasingly solitary during the closing years of his reign. With his circle of friends and associates having died off during the preceding decade, the Emperor had become increasingly critical and arbitrary, frustrating his civil service, military commanders, and the officer corps. Pru'a remained popular to the end of his reign, but he took no joy from the displays of affection or loyalty from his subjects. He now considered provincial tours and military reviews to be an onerous and hateful duty, and he did not seem as interested in military affairs as previously. Pru'a had nevertheless remained active on the international stage. Aurelia's ally, Holy Austarlian Emperor Joseth II, had from the time of assuming sole authority in 1780 following the death of his mother, revived his ideas of obtaining the Electorate of Bavaria.
    • By May 1784, it had become essential for him to strike when he might have the possibility of Laurasian diplomatic support, and with the Durthian Rebellion distracting the attention of Spamalka and other powers. He outlined his plans to Empress Aurelia in a communique of May 13, 1784, seeking the acquisition of Bavaria, the upper Palatinate, and Worms in exchange for Austarlian Brussalia. He hoped to achieve this object by agreement with Char'vak Theodore, Elector of Bavaria, and with his heir, Char'vak II August, Duke of Zweickbrucken. The Elector himself had ideas of becoming the head of a new Duchy of Burgundy which would include Burgundy, the Germanian Palatinate, and Julich-Berg. Aurelia, entangled by the Durthian Rebellion, the Scottrian Question, and the Marasharite Plan, nevertheless gave a prompt response to her ally's message, declaring that she would be willing to offer all necessary financial and diplomatic assistance, short of a military conflict. Joseth also sought to gain Franconian consent for his schemes, taking advantage of the fact that the Treaty of Versailles (1756), technically remained in effect between the two powers. Hensios III, however, opposed the Austarlian schemes, hoping to maintain the current situation in the Germanian Principalities for his own benefit, and to not involve Franconia in any additional conflicts, as it was still engrossed in the struggles with the Huguenots. The Imperial Laurasian Government, on its part, offered only half-hearted assistance; the Laurasian Ambassador to the Court of Munich, Sir Justinian Cabanius, 2nd Viscount Cabanius (1724-96), did distribute bribes and hold a series of meetings with the Elector from July to November 1784, but accomplished little else.
    • Moreover, the Duke of Zweickbrucken was opposed to any territorial exchange. He was aware of Franconian opposition to the scheme, and knowing that he could count on direct Pruthian support, he rejected the Holy Austarlian Emperor's proposals in January 1785. In addition to Pru'a IX, the Elector of Saxony and the King of Vendragia were also opposed to Joseth's plans. The Emperor of Pruthia now applied his efforts, in the waning year of his reign, to once again halting Austarlian ambitions and constraining Austarlian power. In September 1785, he orchestrated the formation of the Furstenbund (League of Princes), which united Pruthia, Saxony, Vendragia, and twenty lesser Germanic Principalities (including Brunswick-Wolfenbruttel, Saxe-Gotha, Saxe-Weimar, Mecklenburg, Oldenburg, Baden, and Brandenburg-Ansbach) to the common goal of "defense for all independent peoples" and was opposed to the ambitions of the Holy Austarlian Empire. The formation of this League took Joseth aback; it served as a major humiliation for him, and he was now forced to abandon his schemes of aggrandizement. It was not a defeat for Aurelia, who in a circular (June 3, 1785), issued to all of the Courts of Germania, had affirmed her support of the Treaty of Teschen (which Pru'a had used as his justification for forming the League), and denied any knowledge of Joseth's schemes. Joseth found that he could not rebut this, lest he reveal the existence of the secret Laurasian-Austarlian alliance. Besides the formation of the Furstenbund, Pru'a IX had also continued to monitor the situation in Durthia; in January 1786, he offered sanctuary in his dominions to any Durthian fleeing due to religious or economic persecution, reiterated his ban on all commerce between Pruthia and the Durthian Duchies, and fortified the boundaries of Cleves and Pruthian Westphalia. Furthermore, he turned a blind eye to the flow of Pruthian mercenaries into United Durthia, which enraged Emperor Philicus. Philicus however, was aware that he could not afford war with Pruthia, due to the Rebellion, his intentions in Franconia, and his schemes concerning the Empress of Laurasia.
    • Pru'a expired in his study armchair, within the private chambers of Scholessian Royal Palace in Potsdam, Berliania III, a peaceful end for a monarch who had relied so much upon war. Condolences now arrived from all foreign courts. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, despite her awareness of Joseth's schemes, and the strains which had developed in her relationship with her Pruthian contemporary, nevertheless saluted the late sovereign as the "paragon to which all monarchs should turn." Joseth II expressed his sincere respects for his mother's great adversary; even Philicus acknowledged the value of the Pruthian Emperor's virtues and qualities of character. Although he had been married, Pru'a had no children, and was therefore succeeded to the Pruthian throne by his nephew, who became A'rua III (r. 1786-97). A'rua was the son of Prua's younger brother, Augustus William (1722-58), who had died at only the age of 35 on June 12, 1758. He would prove to be the complete antithesis of his uncle, known for his laziness and indolence. Pru'a was now succeeded as senior monarch by Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka, the now rival of Laurasian Empress Aurelia. The Pruthian Emperor's funeral would be conducted on Berliania III on August 24, 1786, and be attended by all foreign ambassadors.
  • September 13-
    • On September 13, 1786, Sir Antoninus Babinigtia, his thirteen fellow conspirators, and Queen Mariana's two secretaries were tried by the Special Court of the Laurasian Empire at the Senatorial Palace. The trial lasted for only seven hours, with the verdict being a foregone conclusion. Empress Aurelia, however, insisted that the usual penalty for traitors was insufficient in this case of "horrible treason." Burghley informed Hattonius that "I told Her Majesty that, if the execution shall be duly and orderly executed by protracting the same, both to the extremity of the pain and in the sight of the people, the manner of the death would be as terrible as any new device could be. Her Majesty was not satisfied, however, and ordered me to ensure the penalty was toughened." The normal practice at the executions was for the executioner to ensure the victims were dead from the effects of incineration (radiation), before quartering and disemboweling them. In Burghley's opinion, ensuring that the lives and agony of Babinigtia and his fellow conspirators was prolonged for as long as possible would be a sufficiently awful punishment, and he was finally able to convince the Empress of this. At the trial, Babinigtia admitted his guilt with "good grace" but insisted that Ballardia had been the instigator of the plot. Ballardia, who had been tortured at the Fortress, had admitted only that there had been a conspiracy.
    • The Empress had not wished for her cousin's name to be mentioned, but the Court convinced her that this would render the evidence nonsensical. She agreed, therefore, that the references to Mariana in the indictment and Babinigtia's confessions could remain. On September 20, Babinigtia, Ballardia, and five other conspirators, their death warrants having been signed by the Empress the day before, were dragged on hurdles from the Fortress of Baureux to St. Giles's Fields, where, on the orders of the Empress, a special scaffold and execution platform had been erected. Here, in front of crowds numbering well over 150,000, the condemned men suffered the full horrors of a traitor's death. Babinigtia protested to the end that he believed he had been engaged in a deed "lawful and meritorious." Ballardia suffered first, being strung up and radiated before being cut down; the men's "privities and bowels cut off, taken out alive and seeing" before they were beheaded and quartered. Babinigtia, who was in extremis, cried out "Spare me, my Lord Paul!" The crowds, who had been vindictive, were revolted by the whole spectacle, and expressed such sympathy for the victims that when the remaining seven conspirators were brought to the same platform the following day, the Empress ordered for the prisoners to be radiated to death first before being disemboweled and quartered.
  • September 22-
    • By September 1786, the lull in confrontation between the forces of the United Durthian States and the Laurasian Empire (Imperial Expeditionary Corps) on the one hand, and those of the Holy Spamalkan Empire on the other, had come to a definite end. Both sides had seen their share of victories and defeats. Beginning on April 7, 1786, Spamalkan forces under the command of the Pruthian General and nobleman Peter Ernst von Mansfield (1717-1804), besieged Grave on the orders of Parma. Grave was one of the most important supply bases for the Durthian States, and it commanded the route to Arnhaldat and Durstin. Leicesterius, who had been strengthening the garrisons of Utrecht, Maastricht, and Harlem, was unable to relieve the siege. Grave surrendered to General von Mansfield exactly a month after the commencement of the siege. The Durthians, who had been so optimistic about the arrival of Laurasian forces, lost morale and began to quarrel with Leicesterius over military operations. Following the fall of Grave, Spamalkan forces under Parma and Mansfield advanced to Venlo, which was located near the gateway system of Nimburg.
    • The star system's garrison, with support from mercenary and Expeditionary troops commanded by Major-General Sir Rogerius Willhamia (1739-95) and Durthian General Maarten Schenck (1740-89), resisted the Spamalkans fiercely. Although the allied forces managed to penetrate Parma's forces and to kill Parma's secretary, along with his personal guard, the world buckled under relentless enemy assaults and capitulated on June 28, 1786. Following the fall of Venlo, Parma besieged Neuss, which was located on the border with the Electorate of Cologne. Neuss was besieged for nearly a month, before finally falling on July 28, 1786. Through a combination of artillery fire, plundering, and destructive house-to-house fighting, the world was virtually devastated by Parma and left in ruins, 70% of its population slaughtered or forced to disperse. Leicesterius, however, secured successes of his own. On July 17, 1786, the Battle of Axel resulted in a victory for Sir Philip Sidronius and the young Maurice of Nassau, the brother of Prince Philip William of Orange. Axel's Spamalkan garrison was virtually exterminated by the allied forces, and this major star system fell into the possession of the allies. Following the fall of Axel, Laurasian-Durthian forces stormed Arions, Hasselt, Kollum, and Borgerhout (July 21-August 15, 1786), establishing a foothold in Flanders once more. On September 2, 1786, Parma, seeking to regain the initiative, commenced a siege of Rheinberg. In reaction to this, Leicesterius and his Expeditionary Corps moved towards Zutphen, a Spamalkan military arsenal fifty light years east of Rheinberg.
    • By September 18, the Earl's forces had seized the Jissel Asteroid Bases and constructed a gateway at the edge of the star system. Leicesterius had now received substantial reinforcements from the Durthians, including Haxonian, Vendragian, and Austarlian mercenaries. The Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace had been amended by agreement of both governments in June 1786, to permit for the diversion of more military resources to the command of the Laurasian Earl. The Earl of Estatius, Sir Willanius Pellhamia, and Sir Demetrius Norria commanded the three wings of the Corps. Upon receiving word of the siege, Parma dispatched the Spamalkan Governor of Friesland, Francisco Verdugo (1737-95), to Bocculo with a detachment of transports, destroyers, and corvettes. Verdugo's lieutenant Johann van Taxis (1756-1815) soon arrived with 300,000 Holy Spamalkan Army troopers and a battalion of dreadnoughts. Leicesterius, having established a command headquarters on Deventer, hastened to Zutphen when learning of Parma's approach.
    • Parma and Verdugo reached Zutphen from Lochem, which served as a major transportation terminal. Parma, after having interrogated a Scottrian officer who had been captured two days earlier, considered commanding Zutphen's defenses himself. Verdugo, however, persuaded him otherwise, and he now retreated to Bocculo, leaving Verdugo in command of the garrison. Taxis was dispatched to Arefort to fortify that base against Laurasian assaults. Parma then proceeded to Linge and intercepted a corp of mercenaries from Hanover, who had been hired by the Imperial Laurasian Government. In order to maintain Zutphen's garrison, Parma organized a supply route from Gronelo, Oldenzaal, Lingen, and Munstria. While this supply route was being organized, a convoy commanded by Alfonso Félix de Ávalos Aquino y Gonzaga, Marquis del Vasto (1764-93), was formed to resupply Zutphen.
    • On September 21, Parma commanded Verdugo to depart from Zutphen, meet the convoy, and bring them into the system. Leicesterius's agents, however, intercepted the communique, and the Earl learned of the convoy. He now prepared an ambush and decided to wait for the convoy at Warnsveld, located two light years east of Zutphen. He was supported by Norria, Sir Willanius Stanelis (1748-1830), Lord Willoughby (1755-1801; Perseus Bertania, 3rd Baron Willoughby de Eresby, the son of the late Duchess of Sufforia), Sir Philip Sidronius, the Earl of Estatius, and Sir Willanius Russalia (1753-1813). The Earl deployed his forces in front of Warnsveld, placing his destroyers in a frontal formation and organizing his corvettes and couriers in two flanking arches. During the early hours of September 22, the Laurasians met the Spamalkan convoy. As soon as they passed through Warnsveld, Stanelis launched an attack upon the Spamalkan vanguard, while the Earl of Estatius commanded an offensive from the rear. The Spamalkan vanguard were at first driven off by the allied forces, but the forces of Juan del Aguila (1745-1802) managed to clear room for the transports. Stanelis's starfighters charged towards the Spamalkans, but were quickly repulsed. The Laurasians of Estatius, on their part, succeeded in penetrating the foremost ranks of Aguila's forces, but were soon repelled. Two more attacks upon the Spamalkan rear also failed. The Marquis del Vasto, seeking to reduce pressure upon the Spamalkan destroyers, then collected his couriers and marine corps, and attacked Stanelis's squadrons, only to be repelled in turn. Vasto soon retired from the confrontation, joining with Verdugo and Taxis, who had sallied from Zutphen to reinforce the Spamalkan convoy. Estatius and Sidronius, in the meantime, assaulted the Zutphen Arches, but were repelled. Del Vasto's corps subsequently advanced to Zutphen, managing to evade pursuing Laurasian battleships.
    • His chief subordinate, Count Hannibal Gonzaga (1750-98), and the Albanian mercenary George Cregia (1759-1816) assaulted the besieging forces without orders from the Marquis. Sidronius, on his part, who was commanding a landing operation at Zelft's Moon, was mortally wounded in a skirmish with Spamalkan troopers. Verdugo soon restored order in the Spamalkan ranks, and Leicesterius now called for a general retreat. Sidronius, on his part, was taken to the Hospital of Chermer on Arnhem. At first, it was believed that he would recover. These hopes proved vain, for the surgeons at the Hospital were unable to remove the blaster shrapnel, which had become lodged in his heart arteries. Sidronius died at Arnhem on October 17, 1786, aged only thirty-one. Empress Aurelia, who had chided him for his "recklessness in battle", was deeply affected by his death. In a proclamation to her subjects from the Imperial Court, the Empress would declare that "this young man sacrificed much for the cause of our Empire, and his death is a cruel blow from the hands of the Anti-Almitis."
    • The Sidronius family had suffered much tragedy that year. On May 5, 1786, Sir Antigonus Sidronius, one of Empress Aurelia's most important courtiers and officials, had died on Permi at the age of 57. He had been followed by his wife, Lady Didymeia Sidronius, who died in Christiania, Laurasia Prime, on August 9, 1786, aged 56. The deaths of the Sidroniuses had also deeply affected the Empress. She particularly lamented the loss of Lady Sidronius, who had long been a devoted lady-in-waiting and friend of hers. Their son's body was brought back to the Caladarian Galaxy on November 6, 1786, and ten days later, he was interred, on the Empress's orders, at the Westphalian Cathedral. His funeral was one of the most lavish of the eighteenth century, with all important courtiers of the Imperial Court in attendance. As regards to the war, the successful retention of Zutphen by the Spamalkans harmed the Durthian position in Overijssel and Gelderland. On October 12, Parma reinforced the garrison of Zutphen personally. He remained there for nearly a month before returning to Brussels for winter headquarters. Leicesterius resumed the Siege of Zutphen in November 1786. Deventer would fall into Laurasian hands on November 19, but the Laurasians would fail to Zutphen and the Siege would be abandoned the following month.
  • September 27-
    • The executions of Babinigtia, Ballardia, and their co-conspirators ushered in a flood of publications which quickly informed the populace of the Empire about the details of the Babinigtia Plot. The Empress's own subjects were now clamoring for Mariana's execution. Even now, however, the Empress wished to spare Mariana's life, if only because she could not countenance the execution of an anointed sovereign. She had hoped that the deaths of the conspirators would satisfy her subjects' thirst for retribution, but she quickly realized that she had been mistaken. The Privy Council pointed out to her that there were many valid reasons for proceeding against Mariana. There was no doubt that the Scottrian Queen had plotted against her life, and evidence supporting this could be produced publicly. Mariana's removal would clear the way for an heir who would be acceptable to the Empire's subjects. It would also remove the chief focus for discontent and rebellion against Aurelia's rule. The Royal Franconian Government had never been involved in the conspiracies directly and no longer supported Mariana, while Emperor Philicus, the Council believed, could not harbor any hard feelings against the Empire worse than those he already nurtured. Above all, the Empress was urged to think of her subjects, who had become fearful as a result of recent events and prey to rumors about the Empress's safety and Spamalkan ambitions.
    • All of this unsettled Pauletius, who warned that he could not keep Mariana secure at Chartlerian Mansion indefinitely. He now recommended that she be moved to another stronghold. The Council wanted her sent to the Fortress of Baureux, but the Empress was appalled at the prospect and refused. She also raised objections to every other prison or fortress they suggested, but eventually was persuaded to agree to Mariana being transferred to Fotheringhay Castle on Mommica. It had been constructed by Emperor Tiberius in 1420-23 and had been utilized as a military arsenal and prison by the Imperial Laurasian Government during the preceding three centuries. Mariana was brought there on September 27, 1786. It was still not certain that Aurelia would allow for her cousin to be formally charged and tried. While she conceded that there was justification for doing so, Aurelia was aware that Mariana's supporters would argue that the ex-Queen of Scottria was a foreigner who had never been naturalized as a subject of the Empire, and therefore consequently out of the range of its laws. This, however, had been posed to a commission of Senators and Justices of the Star Chamber and Chancery, who concluded that Mariana's long residence in the realms of the Empire rendered her subject to the Empress's jurisdiction. She did not enjoy any diplomatic immunity.
  • October 11-
    • The Empress realized that she could not delay the trial indefinitely, nor could she allow Mariana to resume her prior position as a prisoner of state. Reluctantly, she now authorized for the Special Court, along with ten other commissioners (nobles and justices) to convene and consider the evidence against Queen Mariana. At the end of September 1786, the members of this specially-constituted tribunal began arriving at Fotheringhay Castle (for Aurelia absolutely refused to have any trial proceedings conducted on Laurasia Prime itself). Among these were Burghley, Walsingis, Hattonius, Knollysis, Husadarania, Hannah, Sarah, Pauletius, Bromelius, Whitshiftus, Sadielius, Rumanstevius, Greysius, Wrayius, Cobhamia (Warden of the Cron Drift), and Lords Montagaius and Lumelius (both Traditionalists). On October 10, Leicesterius, in his latest communique to the Empress, urged her to allow the law to take its course.
    • It was frustrating for him to be out of the Empire at this juncture; he longed to use his influence with Aurelia to make her understand what she must do. The following day, the Special Court assembled, but the Scottrian Queen refused to acknowledge its competence to try her, declaring that she was a twice anointed Queen and not subject to the ordinary laws of the Empire. Burghley was aware that this would compromise the trial, and sought to compel Mariana to reconsider. He told Mariana, in a firm and stolid tone: "In Laurasia, under Her Majesty's jurisdiction, a free prince offending is subject to her laws." Mariana scoffed at this, and declared "I am no subject, and I would rather die a thousand deaths than acknowledge myself to be one!" Burghley then warned that the Queen would be tried in her absence. Hattonius urged her to take advantage of the public platform a trial would afford her and clear herself of the charges against her. The Empress herself, hearing of Mariana's defiance, sent a communique to her cousin. In this, she told her that "You have in various ways and manners attempted to take my life and bring my Empire to destruction by bloodshed. It is my will that you answer the honorable magnates of this Empire, as if I were myself present."
    • At this, Mariana capitulated, although still refusing to acknowledge the court's jurisdiction. On October 14, 1786, Queen Mariana's trial formally commenced. She was accused of treason, conspiracy, les-majestie, and felony against the person of the monarch. The second of these charges, conspiracy, was considered to be the most serious. The Empress had commanded for "careful" preparations to ensure that the proceedings would be conducted in a "proper and lawful" manner, but, as was the custom with all state trials in the legal system of the Laurasian Empire, Mariana was permitted no counsel to assist her.
    • Instead, she conducted her own defense. Limping as a result of chronic rheumatism, she appeared before the commissioners of the court, being, in the words of Knollysis, a "tall, black-clad, heavy-set woman of middle age with a face full and fat, double-chinned, and hazel-eyed." In spite of her poor physical condition, Mariana displayed much vitality and intelligence. She confidently, passionately, indignantly denied all knowledge of the Babinigtia Plot. Her crucial communique to Babinigtia was, she claimed, a forgery; the Queen went so far as to claim that she had never received a single communique from him and denied knowing who he was. As for sanctioning the murder of the Empress, Mariana said that "I would never make shipwreck of my soul by compassing the death of my dearest sister." All that she had ever done throughout the long years of captivity was to seek help to gain her freedom, by any means necessary.
    • Her defense, which impressed all of the commissioners for its eloquence and its passion, was nevertheless crushed by the weight of the evidence against her, which, even in the Empire's autocratic system, was considered irrefutable. Burghley concluded that her guilt was established beyond all doubt. The commissioners saw their duty as clear, and were just about to pronounce Mariana guilty when a messenger arrived with the Empress's command, issued in the middle of the night since Aurelia had been unable to sleep, ordering for the Court to be adjourned to Caladaria to reconvene in ten days' time. Procurator-General Bromelius, acting on the Empress's command, prorogued the Court on October 16, and the commissioners began the journey back to Caladaria. Mariana was left to ponder her fate at Fotheringhay Castle while the Court again examined the evidence at the Provincial Court of Assizes Building in Pollis Caladari, Caladaria, patiently enduring the Empress's constant interference. Walsingis fumed that he would hope "to Almitis Her Majesty would be content to refer these things to them that can best judge of them, as other princes do." The conclusions of the Court remained the same as before, however, and on October 22, 1786, they officially pronounced Mariana guilty of being an accessory to the conspiracy and of imagining and compassing Her Majesty's destruction. These were offenses punishable by death and disinheritance. The Court did not announce the penalty, however, for that was to be the concern of the Empress, who had to ratify the verdict.
  • October 29-
    • On October 29, 1786, Empress Aurelia, who continued to be vexed by the whole matter of life and death for her cousin, Scottrian Queen Mariana, ordered for the three Councils of State and a specially convened assembly of the leading nobles, Governor-Generals, military commanders, and officials of the Empire to gather at the Senatorial Palace and to provide her "advice and information" concerning the fate of ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana. The Empress wished to hear her most prominent subjects out before proceeding any further. She even entertained a vain hope that they would recommend sparing Mariana's life. In contrast to Aurelia's wishes, however, the Councils of State (which had composed the Special Court) and the Assembly of Notables both loudly demanded for Mariana's head. They considered the fate of the Queen of Scottria to be a "problem of great weight, great peril, and dangerous consequence." They soon resolved to petition the Empress so that a "just sentence might be followed by as just an execution." The petition, presented to the Empress on November 12 at the Gilbertine Palace on Tudoria (to which she had retired on November 4), plunged her into an agony of indecision.
    • She stressed to them that, throughout the twenty-eight years of her reign, she had been free of malice towards Mariana. "I have had good experience and trial of this galaxy. I know what it is to be a subject, what to be a sovereign, what to have good neighbors, and sometimes meet evil willers. I have found reason in trust, seen great benefits little regarded." She went on to say that she grieved that one of her own gender and kin should have plotted her death, and she had written secretly to Mariana, promising her that, if she confessed all, she would cover her shame and save her from the ultimate penalty. Mariana, however, continued to deny her guilt. Even now, if she truly repented however, Aurelia was inclined to pardon her. She sought to satisfy her subjects, but realized that they wished for the opposite of what she desired. She told them that "you have laid a hard hand on me, that I must give directions for Mariana's death, which cannot be but a most grievous and irksome burden to me. We princes are set on stages, in the sight and view of all the universe. It behoves us to be careful that our proceedings are just and honorable."
    • All the Empress could say in conclusion was that she would pray and consider the matter, beseeching Almitis to illuminate her understanding. She vowed to do what was right. Two days later, on November 14, Hattonius, on the Empress's instructions, introduced a motion into the Privy Council about whether or not Mariana could be punished some other way. However, it was discovered that there was no alternative besides solitary confinement. Mariana, on her part, did not fear what loomed. On November 16, the Empress warned her cousin that she had been sentenced to death, that her subjects had petitioned her to have the sentence carried out, and that she should prepare herself for her fate. Mariana, officially informed of the sentence by Pauletius three days later, showed neither fear or repentance. She declared that she would "confess nothing because I have nothing to confess."
    • Instead, she sent communiques to all of her friends, including the Duke of Guise and Ambassador Mendoza, proclaiming her innocence and declaring that she was about to dye a martyr for her people. Pauletius tore down the Queen's canopy of estate shortly afterwards, informing her that she was now a dead woman so far as the law was concerned, and therefore undeserving of the trappings of sovereignty. That same day, she wrote thanking Aurelia for the "happy tidings that I am to come to the end of my long and weary pilgrimage." She asked only that her servants be present at her execution and that her body be taken to Franconia for burial. It was her wish to die with no malice towards anyone else, but she reminded her cousin that "one day you will have to answer for your charge, and for all those whom you doom, and I desire that my blood may be remembered in that time." Pauletius, who read this communique, delayed sending it, fearful of the effect that it would have on the Empress. His fervent hope was that Mariana would be executed before Ascentmas.
  • November 23-
    • On November 23, 1786, the Earl of Leicesterius, attended by his step-son, the Earl of Estatius, returned to Laurasia Prime from the campaigns in the Great Amulak Spiral. Twelve days earlier, the Empress had granted Leicesterius leave to return to the Empire, fearful about his health. She also missed him, having not seen him in nearly a year. Leicesterius had departed from Flushing on November 19, the day that Deventer fell to the allied forces, and reached Belkadan by November 22. He had then been escorted by an imperial armada, commanded by Admiral Dracius, to Laurasia Prime, arriving there on this day. A "gracious" welcome was thrown for the Earl, with parades being conducted at the moons and in the cities of Laurasia Prime; a display of turbocannon fired at the outskirts of the system; and crowds at major public locations praising the Earl's accomplishments and his merits.
    • The Empress (who had again returned to Laurasia Prime), Walsingis, Burghley, and his other colleagues in the Imperial Government all expressed their joy in seeing him. They all needed his assistance at this time. Although the Earl's influence on the Council had declined during his absence, with Hattonius and others having gained political prominence, the Empress still had a high view of his opinions and needed his support more than ever before. Aurelia and Leicesterius had a private dinner in her Chambers that evening. Shortly afterwards, the Empress sent a note to Procurator-General Bromelius, ordering him to make preparations for the public announcement of Mariana's sentence. This, however, deprived her of sleep that night. Franconian Ambassador Deplessie, who felt pity for Mariana, tried to plead for mercy for her with the Empress.
    • Aurelia, however, told him that matters had gone too far, and that for her to live, Mariana must die. On November 24, the Councils of State sent another petition to the Empress, urging her to have Mariana's execution carried out, for the preservation of the Empire, the Almitian Church, and her own life. Aurelia's reply was distracted and undecided. She considered it "grievous" that she was forced to proceed against her cousin, having pardoned many criminals in the past. She expressed her fears about what her enemies would say of her, and declared that "I am so far from it [cruelty] that for my own life I would not touch her." She stated that she would prefer for Mariana to remain imprisoned, and then concluded that "Since so many have both written and spoken against me, I pray you to accept my thankfulness, to excuse my doubtfulness, and take in good part my answer answerless." That evening, however, the Empress, having drafted a formal proclamation of the sentence announced on Mariana, ordered Procurator-General Bromelius to read it out at the Public Council Chambers of the Quencilvanian Palace. Bromelius, however, was soon stayed by the Empress and commanded to refrain from announcing the sentence for the next week. The following day, the Special Court reassembled, this time at the Senatorial Palace on Laurasia Prime, and formally condemned Mariana to death. After that, Leicesterius, Burghley, and Walsingis used all of their powers of persuasion to compel Aurelia to do what her people would expect of her. They stated that she would lose all credibility if she did not.
  • December 2-
    • On December 2, 1786, the Empress and Lord Burghley redrafted the proclamation of the sentence against Queen Mariana. Two days later, the sentence was formally published, being read by Procurator-General Bromelius to the public and the notables of the Empire at the Quencilvanian Palace. The announcement of the sentence triggered an outburst of great public rejoicing throughout the Empire. The Empress, however, had not signed the actual death warrant, drafted by Chancellor Walsingis and Privy Seal Hattonius that same day, and in fact announced that she would not sign the warrant until February of the new year, at the earliest. She gave herself that time to steel herself into doing so. Throughout this period, the Empress's ministers would do their utmost to force Aurelia to face the inevitable and sign the warrant. The Empress was torn two ways, for both Franconian Ambassador Deplessie and Austarlian Ambassador Count Hans de Utternich (1737-1802) were trying to persuade Aurelia to show mercy to Mariana. Joseth II of Austarlia wrote to his ally on December 10, and in a bold gesture, reminded her that "Emperor Antigonus III's reputation was never prejudiced but in the beheading of his bedfellow", a reference to Anna Boleyenia which greatly offended her daughter. However, Joseth was not seriously interested in saving the life of a woman he had never seen, and was only doing so in order to be seen as a benevolent monarch to his subjects. Grand Duke Feodor I of Masacavania, King Georg III of Vendragia, and Emperor A'rua III of Pruthia all urged the Empress to consider what could happen if she executed Mariana. Aurelia was now faced with the most agonizing decision of her reign. If she signed the warrant, she would be adhering to the old Dasian custom of condemning defeated monarchs to death, and would also be spilling the blood of her kinswoman.
    • This act could possibly provoke the Spamalkans and Marasharites into an alliance against the Empire (as, it turned out, it would). Yet if she showed mercy, Mariana would remain the focus of plotting by the Spamalkans and other elements for the rest of her life, thereby upsetting the stability and security of both the Empress and of her subjects. Aurelia knew where her duty lay, but did not wish to be responsible for her cousin's death. Throughout December 1786, and into the new year, the Empress existed under the most profound stress, which affected her judgment and even brought her to the brink of a mental breakdown. She became isolated from her ministers and courtiers, making excuse after excuse to the Council to avoid having to make a final decision on Mariana's life. Pauletius, on his part, could not delay sending Mariana's communique to the Empress indefinitely, and it finally reached her on December 23, 1786. Her reaction to it was fierce, and she, according to Leicesterius (when he was conversing with Hattonius), burst into tears. Following this, Pauletius forbade Mariana to communicate with the Empress again. On Ascentmas Day, 1786, the Imperial Court moved to the Ice Palace on Iego, with the Empress desiring to begin the new year far from Laurasia Prime. She did, however, agree that Burghley should prepare a formal warrant from the draft made by Walsingis and Hattonius. Once this was done, it was given to Sir Willanius Daviadia, who was now Minister of Internal Security, for safe-keeping. The Empress did not enjoy herself during the Ascentmas festivities, her mind fixed on her cousin. 1786 thus ended with the Laurasian Empire in the midst of anxiety about Mariana's fate, and with war tensions building in the Great Amulak Spiral.

1787

  • January 1-
    • 1787, the 87th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire, as explained above, placed in a unsettling, unstable predicament. Thus far, the Imperial Expeditionary Corps, which had been dispatched to the assistance of the United Durthian States following the conclusion of the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace in September 1785, had failed to reverse the balance between the Durthians and their Spamalkan adversaries. Although the allied forces had secured a series of victories (at Axel and Deventer) against the Spamalkan units, their failure to seize Zutphen, and their loss of Neuss, Grave, and Venlo had discredited the Earl of Leicesterius and served to strain relations among them. Empress Aurelia had finally, and definitely, rejected the offer of the Durthian Crown in July 1786. As a result of this, the Durthian States-General had turned to Prince Philip William of Orange as the new Stadholder of the United Durthian States. Philip William had been formally elevated as Stadholder on December 7, 1786, with his brother, Prince Maurice of Nassau, becoming the head of the Durthian General Headquarters. In spite of this, the Earl of Leicesterius continued to hold the title of "Governor-General of the United Durthian States", although he had made his leave back to the Laurasian Empire. Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I, who was now senior monarch of extra-galactic civilization, was growing increasingly paranoid, and was angered about the Empress of Laurasia's territorial ambitions, her interventions into the Durthian Rebellion, and the threat posed by the resources and forces of her Empire.
    • He realized that if the Laurasian Empire mobilized itself completely, the balance in Durthia would shift in favor of the "damned rebels." Philicus thus sought to prepare himself further, and to make contingency plans for the upcoming conflict with Laurasia. The Marasharite Empire of Abdulahamid II, on its part, was becoming increasingly fearful of Laurasian ambitions, and was now determined to recover the territories of the former Haynsian Despotate and to restrict Laurasian military power. Finally, the Scottrian Question was coming to its head. As the new year commenced, Empress Aurelia found herself under ever-increasing pressure from her ministers and subjects to execute her cousin, Mariana, formerly Queen Regnant of Scottria and Queen Consort of Franconia. All of this was to explode in this year, resulting in the largest military conflict of the eighteenth century. In her New Year's proclamation of January 1, 1787, the Empress promised her subjects that, as regards to the Queen of Scottria, she would "take measures which would be most fulfilling in the eyes of the Lord Almitis, and will, over the longer span of time, ensure the tranquility and stability of these realms."
  • January 6-
    • On January 6, 1787, Empress Aurelia granted a personal audience to Franconian Ambassador Deplessie. Deplessie, who had been under suspicion by Chancellor Walsingis and his subordinates in the Imperial Intelligence Agency four years earlier, due to the Thorckmortonia Plot, had now earned a grudging respect from the courtiers of the Imperial Household. In the audience, he suggested to the Empress that there would be no need to execute Mariana if she renounced her claim to the succession. He also urged her to research all of the available "hereditary lines of the Imperial Dynasty" and to select a successor, a Reformist and Laurasian, who would be acceptable to the majority of her subjects. Aurelia, however, flared, and declared that, by the passion of Almitis, she would not designate "someone worse in the Queen's place."
    • This angered Deplessie, who did not understand the Empress's fear of the consequences of naming any successor. He attempted to plead with her to delay the execution of Mariana; she stated that she had done so already by not signing the death warrant. Two days later, the Ambassador delivered to the Privy Council a communique from his master, King Hensios III. In this communique, Hensios warned the Empress that he would consider it a "personal affront" if she executed Queen Mariana, and even threatened to revoke the Treaty of Blois, that seminal non-aggression pact between the two realms which had been signed fifteen years earlier. Aurelia retorted, and in a response to Hensios, declared that Mariana's execution was the "shortest way to dispatch the cause of so much mischief in my realms."
    • Nevertheless, the Empress's reluctance to sign the warrant was obvious to everyone. Her ministers had failed to wear down her resistance. They even produced for her precedents from ancient Brethalian and Letousian myths to justify the execution of the person who had been at the center of every conspiracy against her for the past two decades. Burghley asked: "Was is not more than time to remove that eyesore?" Daviadia feared that the Empress would react in the same manner as she had with the Duke of Norfolkius, back in 1772, and that she would not act unless "extreme fear compels her." By the middle of January 1787, the suspense had become intolerable.
    • The Council circulated terrifying rumors throughout the Empire, which alleged that the Spamalkans were planning to invade from the Galactic Void and that Queen Mariana was on the verge of escaping from Fotheringhay Castle. These rumors caused considerable panic throughout the Galaxy. On January 22, 1787, the Council informed the Empress that they had interrogated Ambassador Deplessie about a suspected plot against her life. This was an exaggeration, and although the Empress quickly learned the truth (that the allegations were false), she finally decided to put aside her scruples about offending the Franconians or other foreign powers. Moreover, Leicesterius told her, on January 28, 1787 (the 40th anniversary of her father's death), that the "Scottrian Queen must die" and that she could not delay further. She paced relentlessly in her apartments at nights, declaring in High Laurasian, "Suffer or strike! In order not to be struck, strike!"
  • February 1-
    • During the early morning hours of February 1, 1787, the Empress suddenly sent for the efficient and respected Sir Willanius Daviadia, who had become Vice-Chancellor the previous month. When Daviadia entered the room, the Empress told him that she was disturbed by the continuing predicament of the Queen of Scottria. She expressed her anger at Leicesterius's "betrayal" and asserted again that Mariana was her cousin, the granddaughter of her aunt. Following this, however, the Empress stated that she was finally compelled to sign Mariana's death warrant without further delay. Daviadia placed the document before the Empress. She read it and signed it. She then told Daviadia that the execution was to take place at the Great Hall of Fotheringhay Castle; that Hattonius was to affix the Great Seal of the Empire to the warrant; and that the warrant was to be dispatched with all speed.
    • Aurelia concluded by saying that she would "not hear any more of it until it is done." Daviadia then gathered up his papers and was making ready to leave when the Empress detained him. Acting on the advice of Leicesterius and Whitshiftus, among others, she suggested that Pauletius, who had signed the Bond of Association, should quietly do away with Mariana, so that she could announce that Mariana had died of natural causes and so avoid being held responsible for her death. Daviadia was horrified, declaring Pauletius would never do such a dastardly deed, and that he would be willing to suffer the punishment of the Autocrat himself before committing murder.
    • The Empress told him that wiser persons than he had suggested this, and Daviadia submitted, agreeing to write to Pauletius. Daviadia then bowed, but the Empress held him again and told him not to give the warrant to the Privy Council until she had explicitly ordered it. Daviadia now attempted to protest, but Aurelia dismissed him from her presence. Following this, Daviadia, who acted in direct defiance of the Empress's command, and fully realizing the consequences of his actions, quickly scurried to the Privy Council Chambers. Burghley, Hattonius, Walsingis, Leicesterius, Knollysis, Husadarania, Hannah, Sarah, Aretha, Cobhamia, and Mildmay were all present. Daviadia handed the warrant to Burghley. Burghley told his colleagues: "My Lords, we must all take responsibility for what we are about to do, for I tell you, we shall all hang together." He then stated that they should all dispatch the warrant without further reference to the Empress, so that she would not obstruct Mariana's sentence thereafter. The Council agreed unanimously, all shouting their words of approval, and defying the Empress for the first time in her reign, affixed the Great Seal to the warrant. They then signed the order for the dispatch of the warrant. On February 4, 1787, the Council dispatched the order and the warrant to Mommica, with Sir Athanasius Bealius (1742-1818), Chief Secretary of the Privy Council, responsible for its delivery.
  • February 5-
    • Following the dispatch of the warrant, Empress Aurelia (still unaware of her Council's defiance), ordered Daviadia to come to her again. She told him that she had a nightmare about Mariana's execution. He asked her if she still wished to move forward with it. She answered in the affirmative, and then asked Daviadia if Pauletius had communicated back to him. He said no. Later that day, however, a transmission did arrive from the Scottrian Queen's guardian. It was not the response the Empress desired, however, for although Pauletius was one of those urging her to allow for the law to take its course, he would not stoop to murder. He affirmed that "My good livings and life are at Her Majesty's disposition, but Almitis forbid that I should make so foul a shipwreck of my conscience or leave so great a blot to my poor posterity as to shed blood without law or warrant." The Empress, when she read this communique, complained about it and wondered why Pauletius had signed the Bond of Association in the first place. She raged to her household servants, castigating Pauletius for his insolence and even threatening to order the Guards directly to dispatch Mariana.
    • Then on February 7, the Empress ordered Daviadia to send another transmission to Pauletius, complaining of the fact that "it was not already done." Daviadia, realizing that she still hoped Mariana could be disposed of by covert means, told her that Pauletius required an official order from the Empress, and not a private communique from her secretary, to do anything against Mariana. At this, Aurelia capitulated. In fact, the warrant had arrived at Fotheringhay the previous day, with Pauletius ordered by the Privy Council not to disclose this to the Empress. During the evening hours of February 7, he informed Mariana that she must prepare to die at 8:00 a.m. Galactic Standard Time, the following morning. The ex-Queen took the news well, and was actually cheerful at dinner that evening. She then wrote farewell communiques and gave instructions for the disposal of her personal effects and her remaining dowager funds from Franconia. She then spent several hours in prayer, and did not fall asleep until 2:00 a.m. in the morning.
  • February 8-
    • The ex-Queen of Scottria, Mariana I, the last living sovereign of the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria, awoke at 6:00 a.m., the morning of February 8, 1787. She had slept for only four hours, but considered herself to be more "refreshed" than at any point previously in her life. The weather on Mommica was very fair that day, and the world's star, Horaii I, shined directly upon Fotheringhay Castle. Mariana ate her last meal, a two-course breakfast, and was then readied for the execution. She wept bitterly at the prospect of saying goodbye to her servants, but composed herself by the time she was summoned to the Great Hall. Escorted by the Warden of Fotheringhay Castle and her ladies, her surgeon, her apothecary, and the chamberlain of her household, ex-Queen Mariana entered the Great Hall of Fotheringhay Castle, watched by an estimated 400,000 spectators.
    • Many were astonished that this almost legendary beauty was now a plump, middle-aged woman with a double chin. Her manner, however, was dignified and calm; she had dressed herself with care for her last public appearance. She wore a hood of lace over her head; a pomander chain and a crucifix of Scottrian gold, entitled Angus Dei; and another crucifix of bone with a wooden cross was in her hands. She had a pair of beads around her waist, a veil of lace fastened to the pair, and then a gown of black satin, with long sleeves, trimmed with pearl, satin, and jet, enveloped over her body. As she reached the execution platform, she turned to her ladies and said "You have cause to express joy than to mourn, for you shall see Mariana Stuart's troubles receive their long-expected end."
    • The Laurasian Dean of St. Peter's Cathedral in Veil, Mommica, Athanasius Dorius (1752-1818), then attempted to offer consolation, but she refused, declaring that she was not of the Almitian communion and could therefore receive no comfort from him. She instead recited chants in her Scottrian faith, drowning out his recital of the Book of Common Prayer Service for the Sinners. Following this, the executioner and his assistant came forward to remove her outer garments. Much comment ensued when she took off her black gown to reveal a low-cut satin bodice and velvet petticoat of scarlet; by this, along with the ornaments she wore and carried, she proclaimed herself to be a martyr of the Scottrian faith. When the executioner knelt before Mariana to beg forgiveness for what he must do, she gave it readily, saying, "I hope you shall make an end of all my troubles."
    • She was then brought to the center of the platform, which was laid out with absorbent cloths, and recited a string of Scottrian and Franconian confessionals. As she was doing so, the executioner fired his blaster. It required two rounds to bring down Mariana's body and to terminate her breathing; her lips, due to trauma in the chest and brain, moved for several minutes afterwards. The executioner now lifted Mariana's body up, crying "God save the Empress!" As he did so, the cap and wig on her head fell off, revealing grey hair; her face had also become so contorted as to be unrecognizable. Her body was then stripped of its garments and objects, so that no relics would remain. As the servants began to remove the clothes, however, her little dog crawled out, smeared with blood. He was washed, but refused all inducements to eat and eventually starved to death. That afternoon, on Chancellor Walsingis's orders, her body was securely encased in a heavy coffin.
  • February 9-
    • News of the execution of ex-Queen Mariana, which was now publicly released by the Privy Council, spread quickly throughout the Laurasian Empire. Throughout the Empire, but especially on Laurasia Prime, the Empress's subjects went wild with joy. Bells were rung in celebration at cathedrals and towers; turbocannons fired salutes; bonfires were lit; and impromptu feasts occurred everywhere. The celebrations would last for days. The Empress, however, did not rejoice. When news of Mariana's execution was broken to her at 9:00 a.m., the morning of February 9, 1787, her reaction was almost hysterical. She erupted, not only in a torrent of weeping, but also in rage against the Privy Council, who had defied her commands and had driven her to such a reprehensible act against her cousin. The Council, when it had dispatched the warrant, knew that the Empress would retaliate, but not in this manner. They quaked in fear at what she was capable of doing to them.
    • The Empress berated the entire Privy Council, even beating Hattonius, Walsingis, Burghley, Leicesterius, Husadarania, and Knollysis over their heads with her staff. She had every single member of the Council, except for Sadielius, Bromelius, and Whitshiftus (who had not participated in the "warrant session"), banished from her presence and from the Imperial Court. Hattonius was paralyzed with apprehension; Walsingis fled to Barn Elmian Estate on Taurasia and feigned illness. The Empress even threatened to have them all arrested and tried for treason and conspiracy; defying her orders was ground for such offenses, and she was Autocrat. Not even Pauletius, Mariana's now-former guardian, escaped; the Empress, still angry about his earlier refusal to dispatch Mariana privately, deprived him of the Governor-Generalship of Haynsia on February 12 and imposed a fine of €11.2 billion dataries upon his estates. Burghley, who was threatened with degradation and imprisonment, wrote to Aurelia several times, begging to be permitted to lay himself "on the floor near Your Majesty's feet" to catch her mercy, and offered to resign. She ignored his messages, and declared she could never trust him again. The Empress was barely functioning, mournful for herself and her cousin. She feared that Almitis would punish her for Mariana's execution, and that her international reputation would be ruined.
    • Her chief preoccupation was to exonerate herself from blame. After the worst outpourings of her anger had passed, she claimed to be ravaged by emotion and regret, hoping her enemies would say that one so moved by Mariana's death could not have condoned it. There had to be a scapegoat, for the Empress had to convince her fellow monarchs that her ministers, and not her, were responsible. She backed down from her threats against the entire Council, understanding that they were the most important institution in her government, and that such an act of revenge would destroy her subjects' affection towards her. She now decided to blame Daviadia, asserting his defiance of her orders to keep the warrant secret had violated her sovereign rights. The Empress refused to heed Daviadia's pleas; on February 14, 1787, he was arrested, tried by the Court of the Star Chamber, and sentenced to pay a fine of €25.5 billion dataries.
    • Daviadia was also sentenced to be imprisoned at the Fortress of Baureux, at the Empress's pleasure, and he was dismissed from the Privy Council, as well as his position as Vice-Chancellor. The Empress had threatened to attain Daviadia and have him executed, but was dissuaded from doing so by Chief Procurator Whitshiftus, who pleaded with her to show mercy to the man. Bealius, who had carried the warrant, was dismissed from his post as Privy Council Secretary and forbidden to set foot on Laurasia Prime again. The other powers were not deceived, however. Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka declared that "It is very fine for the Empress of Laurasia now to give out that it was done without her wish, the contrary being so clearly the case."
    • This was the last straw for him, and he, on February 23, 1787, he formally commanded his Council of State to commence negotiations with the Marasharite Empire. Philicus himself mourned Mariana, declaring her a saint "of her species" and ordering all of his subjects to don black and mourn for her soul. It soon became apparent that Mariana had not made a will formally designating Philicus as her successor, but the Emperor was not concerned, and proceeded with his plans of war against the Empire. King Hensios III of Franconia officially condemned the execution. Massive demonstrations occurred on Parri, and Aurelia was decried as a "bastard and shameless harlot." All of this seriously damaged relations between Laurasia and Franconia, and the Empress herself, on March 5, 1787, threatened to support the Huguenots against the King of Franconia. Ultimately, however, nothing occurred between them. Joseth II of Austarlia lamented about Mariana's execution, but in the end, declared his firm support for his ally, Empress Aurelia. Marasharite Emperor Abdulahamid II, on the other hand, now seriously contemplated responding to negotiation offers posed by the Spamalkans, one of his Empire's long-time adversaries, and resolved to move against Aurelia before she could do anything more. Other sovereigns, such as Georg III of Vendragia and Doge Cicogna of Haxonia, expressed their dismay at Mariana's execution, but declared their support for what the Empress had to do.
  • March 17-
    • On March 17, 1787, Empress Aurelia, who was still upset about the whole affair of Mariana's execution, commanded that the offending Privy Councilors appear before Procurator-General Bromelius, Chief Justice Wrayius of the Imperial Star Chamber, and Chief Procurator Whitshiftus in order to justify their actions. Burghley, on behalf of them all, protested that Daviadia had acted within the limits of his authority; that the Great Seal was the final and valid authorization for the execution of the warrant, and that Aurelia had ordered for it to be affixed herself; and that they had all been driven by a desire for Her Majesty's safety. The Empress was still not satisfied, and her mood temporarily declined again when she learned of the death of Lord Sadielius (March 30, 1787). Sadielius had retired to Alicia in January 1787, and his health had declined during the following two months. He died at Standen House, his family residence in the star system, at the age of 80. Aurelia ordered the Imperial Court into a day of mourning for Sadielius, who was the longest-serving official in the Imperial Laurasian Government at the time of his death. He would be buried at St. Mary's Church on Alicia on April 5.
    • On April 7, 1787, two days following Sadielius's funeral, attended by most of the courtiers of the Imperial Court (the Empress was represented by her friend Lady Norria), Walsingis noted that "Our dishonor continues still. The Lord Treasurer is in absolute disgrace, and Her Majesty relentlessly berates me." On April 11, 1787, the Empress was dealt with another blow when Procurator-General Bromelius, whose health had come under considerable strain during Queen Mariana's trial, and the conflict with her execution that followed, collapsed of a stroke at the Senatorial Palace and died, aged 57. He would be buried at the Westphalian Cathedral, on her orders, on May 2. The Empress had to order the Court into yet another round of mourning, but during that time, she restored her relations with the faithful Hattonius. Hattonius, in fact, had already been recalled back to the Imperial Court on April 3, and the Empress, after seeing him perform at a series of jousts, apologized and reconciled with him. When Bromelius died eight days later, Aurelia turned to Hattonius, and decided to reward this man who had never married for her sake. On April 25, 1787, she formally appointed Hattonius as Procurator-General of the Governing Senate. He resigned his position as Captain of the Gentleman Pensioners, which he had held for nine years: it was now given to Sir Walterius Raleghia, who was becoming more and more the Empress's favorite.
  • May 5-
    • By May 1787, Empress Aurelia had come to realize that Mariana's death had been necessary and justified. She understood that it had rid her of the threat of internal rebellion, and that the mainstream Traditionalist congregations harbored no ill-will towards her or her government. The Empress also understood that most foreign powers would not retaliate against the Empire, but that the conflict with Spamalka would escalate. Aurelia, however, believed that the loyalty of her subjects and the strength of her military forces would hamper any possible Spamalkan offensive across the Galactic Void. Although she confided to the Franconian Ambassador that "Mariana's death will wring my heart for as long as I live", she also issued a proclamation to her subjects, expressing her thanks to Almitis that he had preserved her on her throne. Burghley was, on May 5, 1787, finally permitted to return to the Imperial Court. He had suffered tragedy himself, his mother having died in March.
    • The Empress, although continuing to blame the Lord Treasurer for what had happened, expressed sympathy towards him for his emotional predicament, and eight days later, invited herself to Theobaldian House on Durglais. She remained there for most of the month, and was entertained by the Lord Treasurer, his son Robertius Cecilis (now arising into prominence at the Imperial Court), and the Cecilis family lavishly. During the Empress's long stay at Theobaldian House, peace between them was restored and she fully recovered her prior state. Aurelia also found herself again discussing with Leicesterius about the Durthian Rebellion. He was forgiven at the same time as Burghley; by May 17, in fact, all of the Privy Councilors involved had been permitted to return to the Imperial Court and to resume their duties of office. Queen Mariana would finally be buried at St. Peter's Church on Mommica on July 30, 1787, on the orders of the Empress. Pauletius, on his part, was appointed Chancellor of the Imperial Order of the Garter on May 23, 1787. He continued to serve the Empress faithfully until his death in Christiania on September 26, 1788. The Empress also appointed him as Governor-General of Carina, to compensate for having deprived him of the Governor-Generalship of Haynsia.
  • June 2-
    • By June 1787, Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I had lost his patience and had become determined to strike against the Laurasian Empire. His subjects continued to mourn for ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana through the end of May 1787. The Holy Spamalkan Emperor had developed a sort of concern for the former Queen of Scottria, and remembered how, decades earlier, she had explored his late son, Don Carlos, as a potential husband. Although Philicus had never met Mariana, he considered her death at the hands of her second cousin, Empress Aurelia I of Laurasia, to be "a sin under the laws and the Gods of this Universe." Philicus, however, was motivated by political concerns. He realized that the execution of Mariana by the Empress of Laurasia would provide him a perfect excuse to instigate military conflict with the Laurasian Empire. Philicus and his subordinates had continued to nurture the "Enterprise of Laurasia" project, and became convinced that the only way to achieve this was to establish an alliance with Laurasia's most persistent and immediate enemies, the Marasharite Empire.
    • For the Emperor of Spamalka, this was an agonizing decision to make. Spamalka and Marasharita had been on hostile terms for more than three centuries, extending back to the Marasharite Empire's conquest of the Byzzarian Empire and its campaigns against Hungary, Bosnia, and the Danubian Principalities during the fifteenth century. The two powers had been engaged in a series of conflicts over Palestina, the Barbary States, Malta, the Balearics, the Sicilian Wayward Colonies, Grenada, Naparia, and the Dalmatian Protectorates throughout the eighteenth century, the latest having concluded in 1777. Marasharite Emperor Abdulahamid II considered the Spamalkans to be his worst enemy in the Little Amulak Cloud, and second only to the Laurasians themselves in terms of the threat which they posed to his dominions. However, he, like Philicus, now decided to adhere to the adage that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend."
    • Both Philicus and Abdulahamid found their antipathy for each other overridden by their hatred of Empress Aurelia and their fear of her territorial ambitions. Therefore, on June 2, 1787, delegations from the two governments convened at Rakgur, a Marasharite military arsenal located in the Syrian Provinces. Philicus was represented by Alvaro de Bazan, Marquis de Santa Cruz (1725-88; one of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's most prominent military commanders), Hernando de Sales, Duke of Alcanatarra (1730-95), and Fernando de Marcos, Lord of Gadastarta (1725-89); Abdulahamid, on his part, was represented by Grand Vizier Koca Yushuf Pasha (who had been elevated to the position on January 25, 1786, following the death of his predecessor Sahin Ali, who had himself become Grand Vizier when Halil Hamid died in April 1785), Diplomatic Pasha Helay Pasha (1743-1810), and General Karim-Ashuk (1732-99), Chief of the Marasharite Military Headquarters. The two delegations greeted each other with the official pleasantries, and proceeded promptly to business. Negotiations would continue for nearly two months, as the Spamalkans and Marasharites wrangled over terms of contention between their two Empires while at the same time devising the military alliance against the Laurasian Empire. The negotiations were conducted under a veil of absolute secrecy, and the Imperial Laurasian Government remained ignorant of the parleys between the Holy Spamalkan and Marasharite Governments.
  • June 9-November 4-
    • Empress Aurelia, who had by this point fully emerged from her outburst of anger at the matter of Queen Mariana's execution, and determined to display the power and authority of the Laurasian Empire over which she ruled, embarked with the Imperial Court from Laurasia Prime on what was to become one of the most famous progresses of her reign (comparable to the Kenilian progress of 1775). Ever since August 1786, when she had returned from her progress to the Western Barsar Regions, the Empress had been discussing with Burghley, Walsingis, and her other ministers the possibility of a progress to the Empire's territories in the Northern Galactic Borderlands and in the Haynsia. Aurelia believed it essential to communicate to the Empire's Marasharite neighbors, to the Spamalkans, and to all of the powers of the Amulak Spiral that they were dealing with a vigorous, determined realm, which would not shriek out of fear or out of reluctance. She also wished to examine these territories which had been acquired by her military forces in the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War, and to intimidate the Marasharites. By March 1787, in spite of the troubles with her advisers over the death of Queen Mariana, the Empress had instructed the Imperial Chancellory and her household officials to begin making preparations for the progress. Then, the following month, on April 15, she had sent a communique to her ally, Holy Austarlian Emperor Joseth II.
    • In this communique, the Empress of Laurasia declared it essential "for me to demonstrate the strength of my Empire, so as to express to our common foes our might and our ability to withstand anything which they may hurl against us." Consequently, the Empress stated that she would like to have the opportunity to show to her ally some of the gains which had been made by the arms of the Imperial Laurasian Military, and to have another conference with him, so that they could elaborate the Marasharite Plan further. Joseth himself, who had continued reorganizing his military resources and strengthening his garrisons in his Empire's borderland territories, responded positively on April 27. Pleased that "Her Imperial Majesty has forgiven me for my reminders concerning the late Scottrian Queen", he went on to state that he would be willing to meet with the Empress and to tour her acquisitions in the Haynsia, but only under incognito. The Holy Austarlian Emperor did not wish to expose his identity to the public at large, fearful that it might provoke immediate conflict. Nevertheless, he too sought to see with his own eyes what his ally's government had accomplished. Having received this assurance, the Empress then shared her communications with Joseth to the Privy Council. Lord Burghley, when he was restored to favor the following month, heartily supported the Empress's intended progress. Chancellor Walsingis, however, displayed more caution, declaring that the Empress should not "allow for your intentions to be so freely expressed to our neighbors."
    • Ultimately, however, Aurelia decided to proceed, and by the beginning of June 1787, preparations were well advanced for the Imperial Court. Joseth, on his part, made preparations at the Holy Austarlian Court and commanded Chancellor Kaunitz to ensure that news of his rendezvous with Empress Aurelia would remain strictly classified. The Empress's progress, commencing on this day as previously noted, was to be a historical event. The authorities of the regions to be visited made intensive preparations, selecting the mansions, palaces, and estates where the Imperial Court would reside; preparing guidebooks and dossiers on the regions; and arranging the entertainments for the Empress and her courtiers. The Empress was attended by Lord Treasurer Burghley, Procurator-General Hattonius, the Earls of Hannah, Hepudermia, Americana, Aeoleon, Darsis, and the two Calaxies; by all of her ladies and personal servants, including Chief Gentlewoman Lady Parrius; and of course, by her faithful Earl of Leicesterius, along with his step-son, Estatius. Leicesterius, in fact, was due to return back to duty in the United Durthian States, but the Empress wished for him to gain some measure of the glories of her recently-acquired territories before he left.
    • All of the ambassadors at the Imperial Court attended, with the exception of Marasharite Ambassador Habuk-Ashim (1718-97), who reported the Empress's progress to the Grand Council with alarm. They seemed oddly unconcerned, telling the Ambassador to remain on Laurasia Prime. (In reality, negotiations with the Spamalkans were underway, and the Emperor of the Marasharites had decided that he would not act against Aurelia until an alliance had been formally concluded). The Empress, on her flagship, the IMS Galactica Laurasiaiana, proceeded through the Northern Provinces and to the Galactic Frontier Route. She paid visits to Massanay, Sassanay, Cibourney, Shannon, Dennis, Rastaborn, Coen, Deanna, Wendy, Sair, Berhamia, Istantius, Roxuli, Abraham, Margery, Satie, Juxles, Orkhan, and Bingley (June 9-15, 1787). These worlds, however, had already had the pleasure of being host to the Empress and her entourage, and she did not remain in these star systems for but a transitory moment. By June 16, the Imperial Court had reached Natalie, where the Empress resided in the High Tower of Krill in Tamasie City, the world's capital. Tamasie City, in fact, was the largest city of any star system on the Galactic Frontier Route, with a population of almost 34 billion. The Court stayed on Natalie for two days before proceeding onwards to Keely, Tiona, Abrianne, and Adrianne, all of which had been visited by June 18. The Empress then proceeded from the Galactic Frontier Route into the Billian Provinces.
    • She stopped first at Billy Gasis (June 19, 1787), where the Gasian Astrodomos staged a ceremonial dance for the Imperial Court. The Empress toured the Villages of Rita and received a gift of Billian drums, cymbals, and tambourines, among the most prized musical instruments in the Empire. From there, the Court stopped at Teller (June 22); Kia (June 24); Pelaski (June 25); Bocarina (June 27); and Latrice (June 31). Teller, which had a Type III atmosphere, was a world where most of the Imperial Court were required to wear breath masks; this did not, however, distract from the joys of the stop, with the Empress viewing a contest of honor among Tella-Dor warriors. Kia was a far more pleasant world, with the Court's grandees finding relaxation in the Spas of Merth. Latrice, on its part, impressed the Empress with its beautiful algae forests, among the most life-intensive in the Caladarian Galaxy. From Latrice, the Court proceeded to Chardis, where Field Marshal Rumanstevius had clashed with Marasharite forces seventeen years earlier. Chardis itself, a world covered with geothermic cliffs and volcanoes, nevertheless had a visible beauty from outer space, and a pleasant atmosphere. By July 4, 1787, the Court had also progressed through Cando, Riababia Mogila (where the Empress paid her respects at the Memorial to Almitian Soldiers, erected five years earlier in honor of the soldiers who had died there in that battle), and Sackrandis (where the Empress observed a dogfight staged for her around the Sackrandian Station, the largest artificial installation in the Muggal Cluster).
    • On July 7, the Imperial Court reached Ung, once one of the throne worlds for the Torfian Kingdom of Imegina. Ung, one of the premier agricultural worlds in the Empire, was also renowned for the beauty of its countryside and the relative dispersal of its population of ten billion inhabitants. The Empress enjoyed the world immensely, and stayed for four days, touring Salliche City, the Ung Refineries, and the Ung Military Base. From Ung, Kumong, Karlong, Pyongyang, Stary, and Kljondong were all visited by the Imperial Court (July 12-18, 1787). Then on July 19, the Imperial Court visited Larga, the site of one of the most famous victories of the Laurasian Empire in its military history. There, the Empress was greeted by Field-Marshal Rumanstevius himself, who had recovered from yet another bout of illness and was determined to be on harness to escort his sovereign through the star systems which he had battled over nearly two decades earlier. Larga itself now had a population of thirty-five million, having increased substantially since its seizure by the Laurasian Empire in 1770. The Larga prison system had been dismantled, and the world had become a major mining and electronics powerhouse for the Empire. Larga City, which dominated the world, had experienced rapid growth, increasing from 500,000 in 1770 to 1.7 million by 1787.
    • It was dominated at its centerpiece by the Central Governor's Mansion, constructed from 1776-82. It was here that the Imperial Court resided during its two-day stay on Larga. Empress Aurelia witnessed a staged simulation of the battle; toured the sites of the former penal colonies; and received numerous gifts from the colonists on the world. She was astounded by the transformation of the star system, and by its relative prosperity. On July 22, the Court proceeded to Kagul. Aurelia was greeted at the outskirts of the star system by a procession of system and military officials led by the Governor of Kagul, Sir Jong-Hidogong (1738-1803) of the House of Seoul. He was one of the most prominent alien officials in the service of the Empire, having advanced rapidly through the imperial bureaucracy in the years since Laurasian occupation of his home world. The Empress visited the sites of battle, including where Grand Vizier Halil had established his headquarters. Kagul itself had also been transformed since its seizure by the Empire, and now boasted a population of 45 million. Aurelia observed the massive construction and urbanization efforts underway on the world, and the almost continuous stream of starships and goods into the star system. From Kagul (where she stayed for three days), the Empress toured the systems of Braila, Kilia, Verdorium Minor, Seoul, and Dilojong.
    • Finally, on July 29, 1787, the Imperial Court reached Imegina, capital of the Imeginan Governorate (which encompassed the entire Muggal Cluster), and once the capital of the Torfian Kingdom. The Empress was greeted by her Torfian, Tof, and Amelianian subjects in the star system with much enthusiasm. At the Palace of Gongmin (who had overthrown Dasian overlordship in AH 956), Aurelia received formalized greetings, in the Torfian manner, from the ten highest magnates of the Torfian Houses. Prince Kim-un-dong (1735-1801) presented a gift of a Torfian ballisk to Her Majesty; he then staged a performance by Torfian maidens, in their floral garments and masks of white, for the Empress. The Empress toured the Sanctuary of the Torfian Kings; the Joguerian Temple, chief edifice of the Torfian faith; the Gateways of King Ramjin (r. 855-79); the Torfian Folk Museum of Imegina; the Chaundekoung Palace, residence of King Tusamin (r. 401-32); and the Fortress Wall of Verdorium, constructed in the eighth century AH. The Court remained on Imegina for five days, with the Empress being guest of honor and designated "President" of the Verdorium Festival of Solace. When the Imperial Court departed on August 3, 1787, Aurelia expressed her thanks to her Torfian subjects and her joy at being resident in such a star system, which with 120 billion inhabitants, was one of the most populous in the Galactic Borderlands and definitely the most populous of the Empire's Fourth Marasharite War acquisitions (only Kalbacha, Rasdalla Major, and Arachosia Prime had a higher population in that region).
    • From Imegina, the Court proceeded directly into the Northern Reaches. Sappho, the Dnieper Asteroid Bases, Kuban, and Voronezh were visited in succession (to August 7, 1787). On August 9, the Empress reached Tessy, which had in the space of seventeen years been transformed beyond recognition. It now had a population of seven billion (compared to five billion in 1770), with most of the increase due to the influx of Laurasian, Briannian, Rebeccan, and other colonists from the Core Worlds. Jubliee Wheel, one of the largest tourist attractions anywhere in the Empire, proved entertaining for the Empress, Leicesterius, and Estatius. She also visited the Ten Mile Plateau and the Trader's Quarter, the latter of which was a congregation place for merchants, businessmen, and entrepreneurs from throughout the Empire. From Tessy, the Court toured Voronezh (transformed by imperial authorities into the largest shipyard facility in the Northern Reaches), Khotyn (now home to the Imperial Academy of Auxiliary Sciences, established by charter in 1779), Kerch (a major communications terminal and battle site), Marson, Bucharina (capital of the Bucharianian Governorate and the most populous world in the Northern Reaches), Uma (now a major resort colony), Thornton (known for its massive casinos and entertainment houses), Iasi (another important military arsenal), Cantella, Crimea, Jimmie, and Bendery (seized by General Sir Petevius Panius in 1771), all in succession to August 27, 1787.
    • Finally, on August 28, the Imperial Court reached Kherson, which had, since its initial colonization in 1774, been transformed into one of the Empire's most important military shipyards and penal colonies. Kherson's capital city, Gloriana City (named in honor of one of the Empress's symbolic motifs), sprawled, with massive thoroughfares, a huge commercial complex, Imperial Marines barracks, and a dockyard with massive warehouses, construction facilities, and a row of warships. The world now had a population of 97 million, and the countryside was being rapidly filled with new settlements and residences. It was here that the Empress learned that her ally, Joseth II, had arrived at Kaidek, which was located on the northern edge of the Galactic Barrier. Having assumed the incognito of Count Falkenstein, Joseth had departed from Dalmatia on August 15 and made a gradual journey across the Galactic Void. The Empress then learned, however, that he had departed from Kaidek, and was now on his way to Kherson. Determined to meet with her ally first, she hastily embarked on her personal courier (August 29, 1787) and hurried to intercept her ally. They met each other at Kaniev Point, a Laurasian starbase located ten light years north-east of Kherson. Joseth joined her entourage, and returned with her to Kherson. He insisted on maintaining his incognito; thus, no official ceremony of welcome was staged for him in the star system. He attended the Empress, therefore, as if he was one of her servants, but everyone was aware of his identity and treated him with the proper deference.
    • The Imperial Court stayed at Kherson for three days, during which time the Empress christened three Decador-class destroyers, the Titus, the Khersonia, and the St. Joseth, named in honor of the Holy Austarlian Emperor. At the same time, the proximity of the Marasharites (whose possessions were just forty thousand light years north of the Caladarian Galaxy), loomed in the minds of both sovereigns. They saw the arch which had been erected at the Dockyards of Kherson, provocatively emblazoned with an inscription in Grecian: "This is the way to Byzzaria." They held a conference with Sir Yerevus Bulgania, the Empire's ambassador to the Marasharite Court of Topacia. Bulgania warned that the Marasharite Government was engaged in preparations for a military conflict and that Emperor Abdulahamid was determined to reverse the losses of the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War. He was unaware of the Treaty of Rakgur, however (which will be described below), and so Aurelia continued to be apprehensive about the possibility of war. The Empress now decided to be cautious, and a planned tour of the Galactic Void Outposts, which intersected the Marasharite Zone, was abandoned. Instead, she decided to impress her imperial ally, the foreign ambassadors, and her court by conducting her Haynsian tour.
    • The Imperial Court departed from Kherson on September 3, 1787, and proceeded up to the Trans-Angelina Transit Route, passing through Kaidek, Merevop, and Bendery on the way. Once they had reached Batchbey, Joseth was astonished when a force of twelve Haynsian scoutships suddenly appeared before the imperial entourage; here were Haynsian troops, only recently conquered, now considered to be sufficiently loyal to serve as an imperial guard of honor. Impressed by this, Joseth confided to his Ambassador at the Imperial Court of Laurasia Prime, Augustus Villerhoff, Count of Villerhoff (1729-98), that no one "could have expected to see me with the Empress of Laurasia, and the Franconian, Vendragian, and other ambassadors wandering through Haynsian voids! What a page of history!" The Court, now escorted by this Haynsian fleet (specially ordered by the Empress for the purpose of displaying her authority over them), visited the former Haynsian strongholds of Merevebey, Quickbay, and Quinta-il-Vily (Spear of the Raider). The last world, in particular, which had only twenty years earlier been the slave processing market for Haynsian raiding expeditions in the Galactic Void for over three centuries, was one which had a major impact on the Empress and the Imperial Court.
    • She visited the Ishia Stockards, where Laurasian and other Caladarian Galaxy captives had once been branded like cattle and stripped of their belongings; the Platforms of Hushie, where newly-arrived captives were first tagged and numerated; and the Spaceport of Burh, where processed slaves were shipped to the Angelina Spiral for distribution and purchase by slavemasters in the Haynsia, Great Tesmanian Cloud, and in the Marasharite Empire's Homeland Territories. The world's inhabitants, most of whom had formerly been slaves themselves, greeted the Empress with great fervency, thanking her and her Empire for lifting them from the depths of misery. Aurelia trumpeted this up, declaring to her courtiers that "I have defeated the aims of evil tyrants and vile abusers." From Quinta-il-Vily, the Court reached Perekop (September 11, 1787), the gateway to the Angelina Spiral. The Perekop Rampart, long the Haynsian Despotate's chief barricade of access into its dominions, and now a Laurasian fortification line, was visited by the Empress, who received salutes from her garrison officers and personnel. After passing through Perekop, the Empress (and her ally with the Court) visited Badjay and the Brigoff Stellar Nebula (September 13-17, 1787), marveling in the Nebula's swirling clouds and electromagnetic shifts.
    • Palymer was then reached on September 18, where the Empress toured the Hospital of St. Trion's, constructed seven years earlier. She then toured Karasubusar, Little Boravia, Larger Boravia, Chalaa, Isis, Semafpol, and Semrnapoval (September 19-23, 1787), immersing herself in the customs, culture, and architecture of her Haynsian subjects. All of these star systems had been transformed by the Empire's authorities, with the Imperial Ministry of Space and Transportation sponsoring the development of Laurasian colonies on Chalaa, Isis, and Semafpol; of a astronavigation complex on Semnrapoval; and of a transportation terminal on Little Boravia. Karasubusar, the most populous of these systems (with 5 billion inhabitants), had sprawling cities across its equator, dominated by Haynsian Monuments and by the Gleris Commerce Market, cleared of its slave-trading and slave-distribution facilities. The Court then passed through Ikkerman, Doros, and Theodoros, reaching Balaclava on September 26. This world, now a major military arsenal for the Imperial Navy and a headquarters for the Imperial Engineering Corps, had been cleared of its Haynsian inhabitants and repopulated with Caladarian Galaxy colonists, Scottrians, and Grecian immigrants. Aurelia toured the Palace of Jay II Karany; the Military Barracks of Symbolon; and the Old Grecian Commercial Warehouses.
    • She remained at Balaclava for two days before departing on September 28, 1787. The Empress now toured Gezlev, Rostov-on-the-Donetsk, St. Demetrius of Rostov, and Myasniovsky (September 28-October 3, 1787), the most populous Laurasian colonies in the Angelina Spiral. At Gezlev, she was greeted by Field Marshal Surovius, once Magnus Militium of the Haynsian Governorate, and one of her most prominent military officers. Aurelia marveled at the transformation of these worlds, previously obscure Haynsian outposts, into thriving and prosperous systems of the Empire. Joseth, however, was by now impatient to return to his dominions, and the Empress decided to proceed to Haynes. The Court departed from Myasnivosky on October 3, and proceeded through Tivran, Appelodoros, and Bahkhsiray (where the Empress visited the Bazaars of Shannai). On October 9, 1787, the Imperial Court reached Haynes, the most populous system in the Angelina Spiral (it had 50 billion people compared to Ediania's 37 billion) and the former capital of the vanquished Haynsian Despotate.
    • The Court stayed for ten days at the Palace of the Despots. Months earlier, the Empress had dispatched her Scottrian architect, Sir Charles Cameron (1745-1812), to repair and decorate the Palace, in anticipation of her visit. Cameron had preserved the Palace's Haynsian atmosphere. It possessed inner courts and secret gardens enclosed by high walls and mytle hedges. There were uncluttered chambers with tiled walls in glowing colors, thick carpets (of Haynsian velvetine), and elaborate tapestries. Each chamber possessed a marble fountain. Through the windows in her bedchambers (previously the Despot's private apartment), the Empress could see Haynsian minarets rising from the walls, and breathe the scents of roses, jasmine, orange trees, and Haynsian pomegranates. Surrounding the Palace was the city of Balacary, Haynes's capital. The city was dominated by nineteen mosques of the Haynsian Cult, from which, five times a day, the faithful were summoned to prayer. During her stay on Haynes, the Empress ordered for the construction of two more mosques. The city was filled with teeming Haynsian bazaars, as well as the sight of Haynsian princes and men in flowing robes and military armor, and their women, covered except for their eyes. On October 14, Aurelia, Joseth, and her courtiers ventured from Balacary to the Valleys of Haynes.
    • They toured a region of mild temperatures, filled with olive trees, cyprus, pine, orchards, vineyards, pastures, and gardens of jasmine, laurel, lilacs, wisteria, roses, and violets. The massive numbers of fruit trees, shrubs, vines, and wildflowers transformed the Valleys into a vast garden. The Court dined in a specially-constructed pavilion in the middle of the Valleys, and on October 15, the Empress commissioned ten dreadnoughts at the Dockyards of Hisary, Haynes's second-largest city. She toured the world's fortifications, admiralty buildings, magazines, barracks, religious edifices, hospitals, and educational institutions, including the Martial Academy of Arts and the Clerical School of Haynes. When departing from Haynes on October 19, 1787, the Empress declared her satisfaction at her visit to the Court. Joseth too, had been impressed, fully convinced of the power and glory of the Empire. They now proceeded to Yevaporia, located in the Warrior Fastnesses. It was here, on October 22, 1787, that the two monarchs parted. Joseth proceeded rapidly back to Dalmatia, arriving there on October 26. The Empress, on her part, proceeded back to Laurasia Prime, arriving at her capital world on November 4. Her progress had made her the first Laurasian monarch to ever visit the Muggal Cluster and the Angelina Spiral. She was exhausted, but was not to have any rest. That will be explained below.
  • June 22-On June 22, 1787, the last Haynsian Despot, Jay XIV Karany, died. Following his abdication from the Haynsian throne in April 1783, the former Despot had been granted the title of Despot-Emeritus of Haynsia by Empress Aurelia; given the honorary commissions of Field-Marshal and Fleet Admiral in the Imperial Military Forces; and conferred a substantial annuity, amounting to more than €600 billion dataries per year. In March 1784, he had been given the advisory position of "Haynsian Counsel to the Governor-General of Haynsia", which allowed him to provide his "advice" and "input" on the Imperial Laurasian Government's policies as regards to Haynes, Balaclava, Bahkhsiray, and the other systems in the Haynsian Despotate, now under the Empire's jurisdiction. Jay XIV, however, found that he was effectively a dependent and pensioner of the Empress of Laurasia; as a "honorary subject" of the Laurasian Empire, he was therefore obliged to follow Her Majesty's dictates. Government surveillance of the former Despot increased, and in June 1786, the Imperial Ministry of Works & Holdings ordered an investigation of the Despot's personal finance accounts. Two months later, the Despot gained permission to undergo a tour in the Amulak Spiral. He now took the opportunity to flee to the Marasharite Empire, and to take up residence at the system of Rhodes, in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Marasharite Emperor Abdulahamid II granted him asylum. Empress Aurelia was embarrassed that the former Despot had eluded her grasp, and fearful that the Marasharites would use him to their own advantages. The Despot, however, was considered a traitor by the Marasharites, who still did not acknowledge their loss of authority over the Haynsian Despotate. He was imprisoned on Abdulahamid's orders in January 1787 at the Military Prison of Rhodes, and died there at the age of forty-two. Jay XIV's death came while tensions between the Laurasian and Marasharite Empires were intensifying. On the orders of Emperor Abdulahamid, the former Despot's corpse would be pulverized into dust and scattered into space (July 3, 1787).
  • July 29-
    • While Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court were engaged in their triumphant Haynsian progress, negotiations between the delegations of the Marasharite and Holy Spamalkan Empires came to a successful conclusion. On July 29, 1787, the Treaty of Rakgur was concluded. It would be ratified by Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I on August 6 and by his Marasharite counterpart, Abdulahamid II, on August 19. The two sovereigns, who had managed to overcome their scruples, found it an advantageous agreement for their purposes. By the terms of the treaty, the two Empires agreed to acknowledge the present territorial situation as it existed between them. Philicus confirmed his recognition of Marasharite overlordship over the Barbary States of Morocco, Tripoli, Tunis, Algiers, and Mauritania; Marasharite rights of access to the dockyards and facilities of the Order of Malta; and Marasharite jurisdiction over the systems of Aegyptiania, Palestina, and the Syrian Provinces. Abdulahamid, on his part, recognized Spamalkan control of Ceuta and Melilla, originally Portugallian systems that had been conquered by them in 1615; Spamalkan jurisdiction over the Balearic Star Systems and the Azores; and in particular, the Spamalkan annexation of Portugallia and its colonies. All of this set aside, the two Empires then acknowledged their "mutual distrust of the ambitions and the intrigues of Her Imperial Majesty, Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, and her constant interference with the affairs of our galaxy and of our civilizations."
    • A harsh denunciation of the Empress's support of the United Durthian States, of her annexation of the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria and the Haynsian Despotate, and of her execution of Scottrian Queen Mariana followed. In particular, the two governments agreed to consider Mariana's execution to be "the most heinous crime ever committed by any state in this century." It therefore followed that because of the constant outrages and aggressions of Laurasia, a military alliance had to be formed "so as to prevent any further disturbances of the galactic order." Thus, the two sovereigns agreed to conclude a defensive military alliance against the Laurasian Empire. The military forces of the two Empires would cooperate in military campaigns; Philicus pledged to pay an annuity of $31.5 trillion florins per annum to the Marasharite Treasury, and in exchange, Abdulahamid II placed his Barbary corps, Elite Guards, and Arabian mercenaries at the disposal of the Holy Spamalkan Emperor. A extensive offensive plan was devised for joint action by the two Empires against the Angelina Spiral and the Laurasian territories in the Northern Galactic Borderlands. The final provisions of the treaty provided for Marasharite re-acquisition of the Haynsia, Northern Reaches, Muggal Cluster, Billian Provinces, Tof Borderlands, and Galactic Frontier Route (that is, all territories seized from it by Laurasia during the eighteenth century); of Spamalka's re-acquisition of the United Durthian States; and for puppet states to be created in Scottria, Kalbacha, Xilania, Hunt, and the Barsar Regions, subject to both Empires and with them assured access privileges.
    • The Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia, Philicus's daughter, was to be installed on the throne of the Laurasian Empire as a Spamalkan puppet. The foreign policies of the Imperial Laurasian Government were to become subject to the oversight of the Spamalkan Council of State, and the military forces of the Empire were to be strictly limited to no more than one-third of the combined military strength of the Holy Spamalkan and Marasharite Empires. When Emperor Philicus conferred his seal of ratification upon the Treaty of Rakgur, he considered it to be a document that would "restrain the ambitions and the overreach of the Empress of Laurasia" and would strengthen his own power in Durthia and outside of the Great Amulak Spiral. Abdulahamid II, on his part, viewed the agreement as an avenue to avenge the Marasharite Empire's humiliations against Laurasia. In light of all of this, the situation in Durthia continued to remain stalemated. Sir Demetrius Norria and Sir Willanius Pellahmia, Leicesterius's chief subordinates, attempted in vain to cooperate with the Durthian States-General to launch military campaigns against the Spamalkan forces of the Duke of Parma. In April 1787, Stadholder-Prince Philip William of Orange held a conference with his brother, Prince Maurice of Nassau, and with the Laurasian Command of the Expeditionary Corps at Haarlem to devise a series of planned counteroffensives into the Southern Durthian Duchies. Pellhamia and Norria, who wished to strike hard at the Spamalkans, proposed a vigorous assault against Zutphen, and moves against Neuss, Grave, Venlo, and Mechelen to expel the Spamalkans from those particular star systems.
    • Philip William, however, wished to capture Leiden, which served as a major arsenal and shipyard for the Holy Spamalkan Navy, and to secure control of the Spamalkan fortifications of Enkhuizen and Hoorn. Control of these star systems, the Stadholder believed, would weaken Spamalkan supply lanes and allow for Durthian units to advance against Antwerp, Ghent, Bruges, Eindhoven, Lier, and Dunkirk. The Laurasian commanders protested at this, and declared that they would not expose their forces to a reckless offensive against enemy positions. The States-General, on May 2, 1787, had issued a manifesto of support for the Stadholder, and threatened to withhold the Durthian corps provided to the Laurasian Empire's military forces, if they did not participate in the offensives. Pellhamia had complained about this to the Privy Council, and Empress Aurelia was enraged by the obstinate manner of her Durthian allies. At one point, she declared that she would revoke her commitments to the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace and begin negotiations with the Holy Spamalkan Government, as represented by Parma. Ultimately, however, Maurice of Nassau, proving his skills as a diplomat and as the "rational one", was able to alleviate the differences between the Expeditionary Corps and his brother. He now proposed for an offensive against Leiden, and the preparation of campaigns in the direction of Enkhuizen and Hoorn, while at the same time emphasizing the importance of Durthian strikes against Grave and Venlo. This satisfied both sides, and campaign preparations went ahead. Parma, however, who was beginning to receive substantial reinforcements as part of Philicus's preparations for full-scale military conflict with the Laurasian Empire, decided to take the advantage and to launch an offensive against the allied forces before they could join together against him.
    • What he had in mind was Sluis, located eight light years east of Flushing. Sluis had long been one of the chief commerical ports in the Durthian States, and Parma viewed it as a threat to his own communication lines. Assembling his squadrons at Kollum, Eindhoven, and Brussels, he advanced to the outskirts of Sluis (June 12, 1787). The Siege of Sluis, as the confrontation came to be known, lasted for over two months as the forces of Pellhamia and Prince Maurice of Nassau tried in vain to relieve the stronghold. Its fall on August 14, 1787, shortly after the conclusion and ratification of the Treaty of Rakgur, caused much alarm in both the Imperial Laurasian and Durthian Governments. Parma then repelled Durthian expeditions against Leiden, Enkhuizen, and Hoorn, destroying a Durthian supply convoy in the Battle of Tessborg (August 27, 1787). Five days later, Emperor Philicus ordered for Parma to begin assembling warships and Spamalkan troops at Antwerp, Dunkirk, Gembloux, and Namurs, in anticipation of a declaration of war against the Laurasian Empire. The Earl of Leicesterius, on his part, still on the Empress's Haynsian progress, remained in contact with his subordinates and with the Durthian States-General. He was unable to smooth over the differences, however, and on October 15, informed Empress Aurelia that he could be of no more use to the Durthian States. Five days later, the Empress formally discharged Leicesterius from his duties as Field-Marshal of the Imperial Expeditionary Corps. On November 3, 1787, the Durthian States-General deprived him of his position as Governor-General, thus leaving absolute military command authority in the hands of Prince Maurice of Nassau (in subordination to his brother). All of this was ongoing as war loomed between the Laurasian and Marasharite Empires.
  • November 7-
    • By November 1787, the Marasharite Empire of Abdulahamid II considered itself to be "sufficiently prepared" to launch the decisive blow against the Laurasian Empire. Ever since the conclusion of the Treaty of Rakgur at the end of July 1787, the Emperor and his Grand Council had redoubled their efforts to strengthen the garrisons of the Great Tesmanian Cloud and to divert resources to the Galacric Void. Jassy, Akkerman, Izmail, Kolzuduzha, Silistra, Ruse, Varna, Kuchuk Kaynarca, Stavachany, and Ochania; all of these strongholds had seen the arrival of extensive reinforcements, in the form of Elite Guards; conscripts from throughout Marasharita; and troops provided by the Barbary States, Danubian Principalities, among others of the Emperor's vassal states. The Marasharite High Command had, working in conjunction with its Spamalkan counterpart, developed a plan of action against the Laurasian Empire. Two major forces had been formed in the Ochanian Provinces.
    • One, under the command of Admiral Jezim Pasha (1736-88), was to launch an offensive from the Trans-Ruse Route against Perekop, the Brigoff Stellar Nebula, and the Trans-Angelina Route. The second, under the command of High General Kasim-Bey (1740-1804), was to launch an offensive against Kinburn in the Northern Reaches (now one of the Empire's chief frontier military bases), and against Uma, Thornton, Merevop, and Kerch, with a goal towards driving a wedge into the Northern Reaches. At the same time, a third force, assembled in the Galactic Void, and under the command of Admiral Ajajay-Abjay (1718-89), was to penetrate the Corporate Sector and the Theodoran Governorate. Theodore, Andrea Doria, Scanlan, Mackenzia Minor, Coronadia, and the upper Burglais Arm were to become the targets of this offensive. Marasharite intelligence indicated that this region was, compared to the other regions targeted, less heavily garrisoned, and therefore, in their eyes, more vulnerable to attack.
    • The goal was to reconquer the Northern Reaches, the outer regions of the Haynsia, and the Galactic Frontier Route, thereby staking a Marasharite foothold in the Caladarian Galaxy. Abdulahamid had been assured by his Spamalkan allies that they would launch intelligence expeditions into the Barsar Regions, to keep the imperial authorities in those regions distracted, and that a Spamalkan offensive into the Galactic Borderlands would begin by no later than June 1788. Spamalkan and Marasharite forces would then conquer the rest of the Haynsia, and in conjunction with rebel elements in Scottria, drive the Laurasians from Ediania. With this strategical plan now organized, the Marasharite Government dispatched an ultimatum to the Privy Council and Empress Aurelia on November 7, 1787.
    • This ultimatum was read to the Council by the Marasharite Ambassador, Habuk-Ashim, who had been assigned to the Imperial Laurasian Court in August 1785, and had, as mentioned above, been conspicuous in his absence from the Haynsian progress. In the ultimatum, the Marasharites accused the Laurasian Empire of overt "hostility and aggression towards all the other powers of the Great Amulak Spiral, and of extra-galactic civilization", and of incessant interference in the affairs of sovereign states. It pointed to the Laurasian suppression of the Bar Confederation in Dejanica, and of the Empire's orchestration of the First Partition; to the Empire's provocation of tensions in the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria, its interference in the Marianian Civil War, and its ultimate conquest of Scottria with the War of Drury's Intervention. Furthermore, the communique declared that the execution of ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana, one of the "most saintly women to have lived in this universe", was an abominable crime, for which the Marshals of Civilization would exact a terrible revenge upon the Laurasian species. Finally, Empress Aurelia was accused of violating her honorable commitments towards Marasharita and Spamalka. She had, it declared, violated the Treaties of Kuchuk Kaynarca and Aynalıkavak through her annexation of the Haynsian Despotate; the Treaty of Topacia was an "illegal agreement", signed due to the compulsions of the Imperial Laurasian Government. Aurelia's aid to the United Durthian States, in their "unlawful" revolt against their Spamalkan sovereigns, demonstrated that her Empire's reach extended too far.
    • In order to rectify all of these wrongdoings, the Marasharite Empire demanded that the Empress of Laurasia restore all gains made by her Empire since 1774 (that is, the Muggal Cluster, Northern Reaches, Trans-Angelina Transit Route, the Haynsia, and Scottria), back to their prior owners; that she terminate all support for the Durthians and acknowledge Spamalkan jurisdiction over them; that she return Dejanican Lavella to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and revoke the terms of the Partition Treaties of 1772-73; and that she give "due compensation" for having executed the ex-Queen of Scottria. Empress Aurelia, when she read the ultimatum, was enraged by its demands. Declaring the document "the work of the Anti-Almitis's minions", she ordered that no response be given to the ultimatum. Emperor Abdulahamid had given his Laurasian counterpart until November 15 to respond to his demands; he already knew, however, that she would reject them. On November 15, 1787, he issued a formal declaration of war against the Laurasian Empire, announcing, to his subjects, his goals of reclaiming all territories lost during the Laurasian-Marasharite Wars of the eighteenth century, and of ending Laurasian interference in the Amulak Spiral. The Treaty of Rakgur remained a secret; Philicus, however, promised Abdulahamid that he would enter the war against the Empire formally by no latter than the beginning of January 1788. The Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War of the eighteenth century had commenced.
  • December 1-
    • The declaration of war by the Marasharite Empire was, to Empress Aurelia, both surprising and non-surprising. It was surprising in that Abdulahamid, who was still contending with troubles in the Barbary States and with the Haxonian Confederacy, had decided to declare war at this juncture. Ambassador Bulgania, when he had warned the Empress of the Marasharite preparations, had received false information from his agents at the Marasharite Court that Abdulahamid had no intentions to go to war until at least the end of 1788, at the earliest. His declaration of war therefore came a year earlier than the Imperial Laurasian Government had been anticipating. At the same time, the Empress was not surprised that Abdulahamid had decided to go to war. The Imperial Intelligence Agency had been sending reports about the buildup of Marasharite forces and military resources for some time now, and the Empress understood that her execution of Queen Mariana, while it did not arouse the wrath of most other powers, would provoke Laurasia's most persistent enemy into taking action of some sort. Aurelia was also aware that the Marasharites did not accept her annexation of the Haynsian Despotate, in spite of the fact that they had signed the Treaty of Topacia three years earlier.
    • Finally, the Empress was herself determined to expel the Marasharites from the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and to begin work towards fulfillment of the "Marasharite Plan", which she had conceived with her ally, Joseth II. She had wanted to wait until peace was imposed in the Durthian Duchies, but Abdulahamid's declaration of war forced action earlier. Immediately upon the Marasharite declaration of war, Emperor Abdulahamid had imprisoned Ambassador Bulgania, as well as all Laurasian subjects in his realms, and he had issued the final instructions to his military forces to proceed with their planned operations. Empress Aurelia, on her part, held an emergency session of the Imperial Privy Council and ordered Field-Marshal Rumanstevius and Lieutenant-General Surovius to assume their posts. Rumanstevius, who had become Magnus Militium of the Bucharina, Abrianne, and Imegina Governorates, already had his command headquarters established on Bucharina. Surovius, Magnus Militium of the Haynsian Governorates, and now a Lieutenant-General in the Imperial Laurasian Army, moved swiftly to Kinburn, intending to brace the garrisons of the Northern Reaches for possible Marasharite offensives. The Marasharites wasted no time in advancing against Laurasian positions, and during the first stage of their advance through the end of 1787, would actually manage to make some gains, taking advantage of the hastiness in organization of the Empire's garrisons and forces in those regions.
    • On November 16, 1787, just one day following the declaration of war, Admiral Jezim Pasha advanced from Kilirim and Ivrim, across the Galactic Void, and towards Perekop. In a series of skirmishes with Laurasian units at Hathbey, Menbey, and the Gateway Stations (November 16-19, 1787), Pasha managed to prevent possible counteroffensives against his supply lines. By November 22, he had reached Merevbey, so recently visited by the Empress and the Imperial Court. Merevbey was surrounded by Marasharite detachments and fell within a day. On November 25, 1787, Jezim Pasha destroyed a Laurasian task force under the command of Vice-Admiral Sir Samedius Gregius in the Battle of Quinta-il-vily, seizing that stronghold the very same day. By November 29, he had also captured Quickbey and was besieging the Perekop Rampart. Marasharite squadrons launched operations into the Brigoff Stellar Nebula, plundering Laurasian positions on Hirvey, Mervey, and Yesplantia. At the same time, High-General Kasim-Bey advanced to the Northern Reaches. By November 22, Kuban, the Dnieper Asteroid Bases, Thurman, and Dunst had capitulated to Marasharite advance squadrons.
    • On November 26, the Marasharite General stormed Kerch, impounding a large number of Laurasian military supplies and ordering for the execution of 250,000 Laurasian garrison troops. The following day, his force approached Kinburn, the first major target of its offensive. Marasharite couriers and starfighters began an extensive bombardment of the star system's outer defenses. The Marasharite force comprised of sixty destroyers of the line, ten dreadnoughts, four battleships, five squadrons of starfighters, and forty xebecs with 600,000 Marasharite and Barbary troops. The garrison of Kinburn, commanded by Lieutenant-General Surovius, had 200 warships with 500,000 Laurasian and 50,000 conscript troops. Although the Marasharites enjoyed a slight numerical advantage in terms of troops, they were outclassed by the Laurasians in terms of firepower and technology, for Surovius had ten turbolaser barricades at Kinburn's outskirts and a system of shield generators, planetary ion-cannons, and ship disruptors on the world's surface. During the early hours of December 1, 1787, the Marasharites conducted an amphibious landing on Kinburn, taking advantage of a temporary breach in the world's shields. At the same time, Marasharite ships attacked the Spit Defenses, and engaged in a running confrontation with the Laurasian armada. General Kasim-bey soon called in 55,000 reinforcement troops from Sappho (besieged by a Marasharite battalion), while Surovius on his part placed his corvettes and couriers on the far side of the system, holding them in reserve. By the middle of the day, Marasharite troops had penetrated to the Kinburn Command Compound. Surovius, however, now launched his counterattack with 30,000 Haynsian auxiliaries and 15,000 Valedictorian Guards.
    • The Laurasians drove the Marasharites back some forty miles, but Surovius, commanding the troops on the front-lines, was wounded. He was rescued by one of his officers, Lieutenant Didius Secrius (1763-1836), of the 75th Imperial Regiment, 4th Infantry Division. Laurasian reinforcements soon arrived, and Surovius repeated his attack, releasing his Haynsian and Dasian conscripts to swing around the rear of the Marasharite troops. At the same time, his couriers assaulted, driving the Marasharite xebecs and dreadnoughts from the Spit Defenses and inflicting severe damage upon their ranks. The Marasharites lost some seventy miles of ground on the surface, and 34 of the warships in space were destroyed or severely damaged. Surovius, however, was wounded during the combat again. Finally, during the early morning hours of December 2, 1787, Surovius launched a massive counteroffensive, employing his reserve troops and corvettes to finally drive the Marasharites from Kinburn. He was wounded yet again, and was forced to obtain hospital treatment. Nevertheless, the Battle of Kinburn resulted in the first victory for the Laurasian Empire, and with it, Surovius secured Laurasian control of Bucharina, Marson, and the lower Dnieper Route. Although Marasharite troops conquered Tessy (December 5-9), Sappho (December 14), and Bendery (December 17-22, 1787), Surovius was able to halt all Marasharite raiding operations into the Muggal Cluster. While this was ongoing, the Marasharite forces of Abjay-Abjay managed to seize Scanlan Minor (November 27-December 5, 1787) and to sack the outskirts of Andrea Doria (December 14), but were then contained by Laurasian naval forces under Admirals Dracius and Ushavious at Crossan (December 16, 1787). In a proclamation issued from the Imperial Court on Laurasia Prime on December 19, the Empress praised her military commanders for their efforts.
  • December 25-
    • Ascentmas Day, 1787, was not celebrated with much joy at the Imperial Court on Laurasia Prime. The Laurasian Empire was now at war with its implacable Marasharite adversaries, who had managed to regain control of a foothold in both the Northern Reaches and in the Haynsia. Although Lieutenant-General Surovius had obtained victory at Kinburn, the Empress's mood was not the most optmistic. Instead of discussing plans for vigorous offensives into the Great Tesmanian Cloud, Aurelia found herself contemplating the expulsion of Marasharite forces from Laurasian territory, and of instigating a counteroffensive across the Galactic Void. The Empress was also grappling with changes in her personal life, and at the Imperial Court. Leicesterius, following his abdication of his duties with the Imperial Expeditionary Corps, had retreated to Wanstead Estate on Impania. Having continued to decline in health, he sought to relax and to avoid the exertions of state. On November 14, the day before the Marasharites had declared war, the Earl had resigned his post of Master of the Empress's Vehicles, which he had held for nearly thirty years. He now recommended to the Empress that she bestow it upon his stepson, the Earl of Estatius. Estatius, now twenty-two, had become closer to the Empress during the course of the preceding months. Aurelia found herself fascinated by young Estatius, who had distinguished himself on the progress, and found his company to be "stimulating", a distraction from the pressures of state she faced. He possessed all of the attributes which she most admired in men, even though she knew that he lacked political acumen. Many courtiers noticed the relationship that was developing between them, for they now played cards and attended events with each other on a more routine basis.
    • Estatius was chivalrous and confident. A master of court entertainments and masques, he was tall, athletic, and well-formed. Women, including the Empress (thirty two years his senior), were susceptible to his charm, masculinity, and athletic physique. The young Earl paid the Empress extravagant compliments, and acted as if he were love-struck around her, compliments which she enjoyed. The Empress did indeed seem younger than her age, and she remained vigorous. She found that this was elevated even more when she was in Estatius's company, although she regarded him more as the son she never had rather than as a lover or suitor. He did remind her of Sir Thomasius Seymouris, who had first made her aware of matters sexual. However, this was not all of Estatius's personality. He was moody, imperious, and difficult, tending to become rashly impulsive when his temper flared. He had little sense of self-discipline, and could not hide his feelings or thoughts about others. He was easy to offend, and could not move beyond scruples quickly. He was a dreamer and a braggart, conducting himself in an aggressive manner. Estatius was as promisicious as any of the young men of the Imperial Court; by the time he was 21, it was alleged that he had slept with more than a hundred women. However, sexual relations did not distract from a devotion to Almitis, and he would meditate on his faith for hours on end. He yearned to retire to Chartlerian Mansion at times, and from time to time became subject to attacks of nervous prostration.
    • During these attacks, he would lie about for days, incapable of rational thought or movement. Estatius was driven by ambition; he sought to be the leader of the gallants and heroes of the Imperial Court. In order to do this, he needed to have an extravagant lifestyle, but money was something which was never his strong suit. Estatius also cherished a wish to achieve his ambitions in the military sphere. He saw himself as Sir Philip Sidronius's successor, and was confident that he could lead men and inspire their devotion. Estatius, however, was rash, and one who despised authority. Raleghia, who had sought to replace the ailing Leicesterius as the Empress's chief favorite, now found himself overshadowed by this rising suitor. He became obsessively jealous, determined to strike against Estatius by all means necessary. He sought to injure his rival. On December 21, 1787, the Empress visited the Earl of Sarah's mansion in Uris, Northanian Hall. The Countess, who believed the Empress's anger against Estatius's sister, Lady Dorothea Perrotus, had cooled, invited her to join the guests, along with her brother. Raleghia, in attendance, told the Empress that Estatius had brought his sister because he believed he could get away with a display of outright disrespect to his sovereign. Aurelia was angered at this, and ordered Lady Dorothea to remain in her chambers during the duration of her visit.
    • Estatius guessed who was behind the Empress's actions. He defended his sister to the Empress and the Countess at dinner. He accused the Empress of having acted to please "that fool Raleghia." Angered at this, Aurelia said that she would not tolerate anything being said against Raleghia. Estatius, however, continued to rave, irritating the Empress further and leading her to attack the morals of his mother, the Countess of Leicesterius. This was too much for Estatius, who shouted that he would not have his family disgraced and declared he would send his sister away. Aurelia ignored him, however, and he, in a breach of protocol, stormed out of the room. He arranged for his sister to leave immediately, and now hastened from Laurasia Prime to the Galactic Frontier Route, intent on joining in the defense against the Marasharite intruders. The Empress, however, guessing that Estatius would do something rash, sent Lord Husadarania's son, Sir Antiochus Caranius (1758-1837), after Estatius. He managed to catch up with Estatius at Sauvania on December 23, and persuaded him to return back to the capital world.
    • Estatius agreed, and was reconciled with the Empress, although he continued to complain of her "extreme unkind dealing with me"-a complaint which would be heard many times in the upcoming years. This set the pattern for their relationship, with their personalities clashing, followed by a bitter argument, and then an eventual capitulation of the Empress. Estatius knew he had power over her, and knew how to exploit it. It astonished many that this Empress, who never tolerated insubordination, allowed Estatius to flaunt about. Aurelia, however, always knew that she had the upper hand, and that she could, with one word, condemn Estatius to imprisonment or death. Estatius, in turn, knew of this, and would for years take care to refrain from conspiracy against her.
    • In light of all of this, with the Marasharite offensives and her first struggles with Estatius, the Empress was greeted with the news, during the late hours of December 26, 1787, that Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus, who had finally tired of her interventions in Durthia, and in fulfillment of his arrangements with the Marasharites, had announced a declaration of war against the Laurasian Empire. Philicus ordered the Duke of Parma to prepare for counteroffensives into Southern Durthia, and he now hastened the plans for the intended operations against the Laurasian Empire. The last days of 1787, therefore, witnessed the Imperial Laurasian Government placing itself on a higher alert. On December 27, her ally, Holy Austarlian Emperor Joseth II, informed her that he would honor the Treaty of Invictius Mesura, and two days later, he suspended diplomatic relations with Spamalka and Marasharita. The Empress also announced her intention to renegotiate the terms of the Treaty of Nonsuchia Palace with the Durthians, and to dispatch a commander who would better cooperate with the States-General. She realized that only a full-scale commitment of military resources to that theater could harm Spamalka. Aurelia also began looking at the possibilities of reaching out to Morocco, which continued to defy the Marasharite Empire, and of supporting Don Antonio, the claimant to the Portugallian Crown who had been residing in Franconia since his expulsion from the Azores by the Marquis de Santa Cruz in 1783. As the year 1787 ended, the Empire was fully engrossed in war, both in the outskirts of its own territory and in the Great Amulak Spiral.

1788

  • January 1-
    • 1788, the 88th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire of Aurelia I engaged in the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War of the eighteenth century, and in the First Laurasian-Spamalkan War. During the preceding two decades, Empress Aurelia had strengthened the territorial position and the political influence of the Empire through her acquisitions in the Galactic Borderlands and Angelina Spiral, and by her involvement in the diplomatic and economic affairs of the Great Amulak Spiral, and the powers that resided there. This same involvement, however, had finally entangled the Empire in war with its former allies, the Spamalkans. Up until the very moment that he had declared war, Emperor Philicus had expressed to his advisers, and to his subjects at large, his dismay at the behavior of his former sister-in-law. He reminded all that he had played such an instrumental role in Aurelia maintaining favor with her sister Didymeia; that it was his intervention, alone, which had spared her from imprisonment, or worse, execution, at the hands of her half-sister.
    • And how did the Empress of Laurasia repay him? Through war, and supporting the Durthian "vagabonds"! Philicus declared that his father and great-grandparents, each of whom had cultivated such positive relations with the Laurasian Empire earlier in that very century, would have been alarmed in the change of attitudes displayed by the Imperial Laurasian Government. Yet he, as sovereign of his Spamalkan, Durthian, Portugallian, and Italianian realms, could not tolerate the flow of Laurasian mercenaries and financial aid to the United Durthian States; nor could he take a blind eye to Empress Aurelia's territorial expansions at the expense of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria, the Haynsian Despotate, and the Holy Spamalkan Empire's long-time rival, the Marasharite Empire. He would rather "be struck down by the force of our gods" then allow Aurelia to expand her power and influence unchecked.
    • It was for these reasons that he had entered into war against Laurasia, and he was determined to defeat his former sister-in-law, to establish a sphere of influence in the Caladarian Galaxy, and to exterminate the United Durthian States once and for all. Marasharite Emperor Abdulahamid II, on his part, who had entered into an "alliance of convenience" with the Spamalkans, sought to regain the territories lost to the Laurasian Empire earlier in the eighteenth century, and to maintain his authority over the Barbary States and his territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, Little Amulak Cloud, and the Great Amulak Spiral proper. War was a means to an end, from the Marasharite Emperor's view, and it was a necessary means. Finally, Empress Aurelia, on her part, entered the year with a renewed surge of confidence.
    • She understood that the vast economic and military resources of her Empire, once they were mobilized to action, would allow for the tables to turn against Laurasia's adversaries. Still entertaining in her mind the "Marasharite Plan", Aurelia sought to deprive the Marasharites of their territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and to force the Spamalkans to concede Portugallian and Durthian independence. For most of this year, Laurasia's focus would be on repelling the offensives directed against it by the Marasharites and Spamalkans; on sending reinforcements to the Durthian Duchies; and on preparing for counteroffensives into the Great Tesmanian Cloud and elsewhere. In her New Year's proclamation of January 1, 1788, the Empress assured her subjects that "this Empire, keeping its trust in the Lord Almitis, will defeat its enemies and will, with his grace, hurl back all the threats posed against it by the Spamalkan and Marasharite fiends."
  • January 25-
    • Empress Aurelia, in pursuance of the objectives which she had stated in her New Year's proclamation to her subjects, mobilized her government and her military forces for the war which had now descended upon the Laurasian Empire. Throughout the early weeks of January 1788, the Marasharite forces in the Haynsian Governorates, under the command of Admiral Jezim Pasha, had managed to make more gains against their Laurasian adversaries. Bypassing the Perekop Rampart, which remained under siege by Marasharite starfighter and transport units, Pasha advanced against Gezlev, the most populous of the Laurasian colonies established in the former territories of the Haynsian Despotate. Gezlev was besieged beginning on January 2, 1788, and remained under siege for the next five days. On January 7, the world's shield generators suffered a catastrophic reactor failure, and it capitulated to the superior Marasharite armada within hours. Following the humiliating Siege of Gezlev, which had seemed to expose the "unpreparedness" of Laurasian forces for combat at that juncture, Jezim-Pasha stormed Doros (January 8); Theodoros (January 9-11); Little Boravia (January 12); Isis (January 16); Chalaa (January 19); and Rostov-on-the-Don (January 22).
    • A Marasharite offensive against Palymer and Karaubusar (January 21-27, 1788), however, failed, and by the beginning of February 1788, Laurasian forces stationed at Balaclava, Tivran, Greater Boravia, Haynes, and St. Demetrius of Rostov, under the command of Lord Greysius (who had been hastily summoned from his garrison command duties in the Ediania Governorate), had begun preparing for a series of counteroffensives into the Warrior Fastnesses. In light of this, the Empress now decided to reorganize her military commands. On January 25, 1788, Field-Marshal Rumanstevius, at his headquarters on Imegina, was named as the commander of the 59th, 60th, 61st, and 62nd Imperial Armies, and of the 40th, 42nd, and 45th Imperial Fleets. At the same time, the Empress elevated her cousin, Lord Howardis of Effinga, as the Minister of Defense and Chief of the Imperial General Staff. Howardis, a veteran of the War of Drury's Intervention, the War of the Bar Confederation, and the Didymeian War of Franconia, was considered to be one of the most experienced tactical officers in the Imperial Armed Forces.
    • Lieutenant-General Surovius was confirmed in his command of the armies of the Northern Reaches, and was also named Magister Militum of the Chalaa Governorate, thereby giving him authority over the Trans-Angelina Transit Route and the garrisons stationed there. Field-Marshal Lord Greysius, on his part, became Magister Militum of the other two Haynsian Governorates, given command of the 67th, 68th, 69th, and 70th Imperial Armies with the 51st, 52nd, and 53rd Imperial Fleets. Rear-Admirals Dracius and Ushavious, Vice-Admirals Gregius and Seniavin, and Fleet Admiral Hawkius were all placed under the overall direction of Lord Howardis of Effinga, and were assigned to duty in the Galactic Barrier (Dracius); the Muggal Cluster (Ushavious); the Burglais Arm (Gregius); and the Dasian Heartland (Hawkius). Finally, Sir Willanius Pellhamia, now promoted to the rank of Major-General, was given command of the Imperial Expeditionary Corps and of the Durthian Auxiliary Corps in the United Durthian States, and was placed on awareness for the arrival of reinforcements, pending the conclusion of new treaty arrangements with the Durthian States-General. The Empress also turned to her faithful Leicesterius, and on January 30, she recalled him back to Laurasia Prime. Leicesterius, although in declining health, never wavered in his duties towards his sovereign, and arrived on the capital world by February 2.
    • Once there, she appointed him as Commander of the Laurasia Prime Capital Command and as President of the Imperial General Headquarters. Leicesterius now regularly attended the Privy Council's sessions, and he took a major role in the further strengthening of the armed forces. Lord Treasurer Burghley and Chancellor Walsingis worked day and night to mobilize the Empire's resources. Hundreds of trillions of dataries were now spent by the Imperial Treasury towards the procurement of military supplies, equipment, and armor; the drafting, training, and quick enrollment of troops and conscripts from throughout the Empire; and the strengthening of all the Empire's major defenses, garrisons, and military fortresses. Governor-Generals and Assemblies of Nobility throughout the Empire brought the resources of the gentry and of their star systems into play. By the end of February 1788, the Laurasian Empire was fully geared for military conflict.
  • February 9-
    • Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus, on his part, was engaged in his own further intensive preparations for his intended offensives against the Laurasian Empire. January 1788 had seen Spamalkan troops storming the Durthian garrisons of Lochem, Grenelo, Oldenvaal, and Lingen, in spite of the best efforts of Major-General Pellhamia and Prince Maurice of Nassau. These successes had convinced Philicus that he was on the way to turning the tables in the Durthian Duchies, and that a decisive blow against the States-General's protector, the Laurasian Empire, would seriously weaken the Durthian Rebellion. By February and March 1788, Spamalkan forces throughout Greater Spamalka, Lesser Spamalka, Valencia, the Basques, Portugallia, Naparia, and in Southern Durthia had been readied for a move across the Galactic Void. Philicus, who had been formulating his plans for years, was convinced that they would be successful. He envisioned that the main Spamalkan armada would move from his possessions in the Great Amulak Spiral, across the Galactic Void, and to the Western Galactic Barrier of the Caladarian Galaxy. Spamalkan units would penetrate the garrisons of Waxefield, Onasi, Dehner, Ladelle, and Antwone, and would establish a foothold in the Borderlands.
    • The Kalbachan, Rasdallan, and Canite strongholds would also be occupied by the Spamalkans. At the same time, Traditionalist elements in the Laurasia Prime Purse Region, the Malarian Provinces, and in the Huntite Provinces would erupt in revolt against the Imperial Laurasian Government. A smaller Spamalkan force would seize the Hutsite Reaches, Drea, Duana, Strongstine, Gardiner, and Leo's Redoubt, and harry the strongholds of the Kimanian Trade Run. Finally, a third Spamalkan force, commanded by Parma himself, would combine with Marasharite units in the Northern Reaches and in the Corporate Sector to drive down the Rebeccan Galactic Trade Route, reach Laurasia Prime, and depose Empress Aurelia. This plan, grandiose and filled with bold ideas of conquest and of war, aroused concerns from the Marquis de Santa Cruz, one of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's most respected military commanders. Santa Cruz warned Philicus, in December 1787, that he must not "rely so much on internal dissent in the Laurasian realms."
    • He pointed out that most of Aurelia's Traditionalist subjects were loyal to her, and would not seek to rise against her for Philicus's sake. He also pointed out that Spamalkan supply lines could be overextended, and that the Durthians might launch an offensive against the Southern Duchies whilst Parma was distracted by the Laurasian campaigns. Philicus, however, had refused to listen, and he had continued to press his schemes forward. Santa Cruz entered a great decline in health in early January 1788, and was soon confined to his personal estate, Olivara House, on Lisbon in Portugallia. Despite the efforts of the Emperor's physicians, he died on February 9, 1788 at the age of 62. Philicus, who was upset about the loss of his subordinate (whom he had intended to appoint as commander-in-chief of the invasion forces), was now forced to seek out another commander. That turned out to be Alonso Perez de Guzman (1750-1815), Duke of Medinia Sidonia since 1781, who was regarded by Philicus as hard-working, competent, loyal, and efficient. While Medinia Sidonia, a veteran of the Portugallian War of Succession and the Cyprian War, was indeed a fine soldier and dedicated administrator, he had no naval experience, or experience in commanding a large-scale military operation. Throughout the remainder of February 1788, he begged numerous times to Philicus to be relieved of the command, pointing out his inexperience, his weak financial resources, and his ignorance of the Emperor's war plans. Philicus refused all pleas, and on February 26, 1788, named Medinia Sidonia as the commander-in-chief of the Spamalkan invasion forces. This mistake was to cost Philicus dearly.
  • February 27-
    • As explained above, the forces of the Laurasian Empire in the Angelina Spiral, under the command of Field-Marshal Lord Greysius, had begun preparing counteroffensives against the Marasharite units. Greysius, who established his command headquarters at Vermapol on January 28, was determined to strike hard and to use the superior technology, organization, and supply lines of his forces to his advantage. On February 2, 1788, the Battle of Chanceldodt resulted in a decisive victory for Lord Greysius, who inflicted severe losses upon the ranks of Jezim-Pasha's starfighter and corvette squadrons. Four days later, Greysius drove Marasharite units from Semnrapoval, Semafpol, and Baina. By February 15, Laurasian units had terminated all Marasharite raiding expeditions into the Brigoff Stellar Nebula, and had isolated Chalaa, Isis, and Little Boravia. Jezim-Pasha launched a massive counteroffensive against Palymer, Balaclava, and Tivran on February 17. This, however, came to grief in the Battle of Himmeria (February 22, 1788), in which nearly half of the Marasharite starfighter corps was captured by Lord Greysius. Little Boravia, harried by Laurasian raiding expeditions, capitulated to Greysius on February 24. Then, on February 27, 1788, Greysius scored a larger victory in the Battle of Isis.
    • Marasharite units in the star system were raided by faster Laurasian corvettes, and two Eclautor-class destroyers cut off Marasharite communication lines from the northern outskirts of the system. Greysius then launched a flanking maneuver against the farther side of Isis, catching the orbiting Marasharite warships off guard and breaching the world's northern shield defenses. Laurasian troops stormed onto Isis, and within two days, the star system was back in Laurasian hands. By March 5, Chalaa, Doros, Theodoros, and Rostov-on-the Don had all been reconquered by the Laurasian Empire, while Gezlev was besieged by units under the command of Commodore Sir Thomasius Interria (1740-1823). On March 9, 1788, Greysius relieved the siege of Perekop, driving Marasharite destroyers and dreadnoughts towards Merevebey and Quickbay. At the same time all of this was going on, Lieutenant-General Surovius was making substantial re-acquisitions in the Northern Reaches. On February 4, he repelled a Marasharite offensive against Dejan; two days later, the Battle of Billy Gasis ended in a decisive victory for Surovius and Admiral Ushavious. By February 12, Thornton, Thurman, Uma, and Dunst had all been reconquered by Laurasian troops. Merevop proved a harder nut to crack, and did not fall until March 7. But by the end of February 1788, Laurasian troops had also recovered Kerch, Tessy, Sappho, and the Dnieper Asteroid Bases, terminating the Marasharite threat to Voronezh. Kuban was also under siege by a Laurasian force. And in the Burglais Arm, Scanlan Minor was recovered by Admiral Gregius (February 25, 1788), although Garner and Whytcliffia did suffer severe damage from Marasharite raiding expeditions.
  • March 14-
    • On February 12, 1788, Chancellor Walsingis, acting on the instructions of Empress Aurelia and the Privy Council, had dispatched a communique to the Durthian-States General. In this communique, Walsingis declared that the "common enemy" of both states, the Holy Spamalkan Empire, was one which could not be defeated except through the total application of military force. Consequently, he declared that Her Majesty of Laurasia was willing to renegotiate alliance arrangements with the United Durthian States, to provide for the diversion of more of the Empire's military resources to the Durthian theater of conflict. Prince Maurice of Nassau, gaining more influence in the affairs of Durthia, and with his own bloc of supporters on the States-General, heartily supported this. Within three days, he convinced his brother, Stadholder-Prince Philip William of Orange, and the Durthian Council of State to respond positively to the Chancellor's offer. Then, on February 25, 1788, delegations from the two governments had convened at Delft, in order to conduct negotiations over the revision of alliance arrangements. Sir Willanius Pellhamia and Sir Demetrius Norria acted as the plenipotentiaries for the Imperial Laurasian Government, while Prince Maurice himself and the Penisionary of Utrecht, Jar-Marladat (1734-1809), represented the United Durthian States. After nearly a month of negotiations, the Treaty of Delft was signed on March 14, 1788.
    • By the terms of this treaty, the provision arrangements between the Laurasian Empire and the United Durthian States were formally transformed into a military alliance. It was now agreed that the Empress of Laurasia would divert substantial reinforcements to the "aid and needs of the Durthian States"; the Imperial Expeditionary Corps was to be folded within this larger Laurasian force, and was now to operate under the orders and the direction of the Imperial General Headquarters. The Empire agreed to recognize Durthian privileges and the customs of its subjects, as previously, but was now to have a co-ordinate role with the Durthian States-General in planning and executing military offensives against Spamalka. Durthia, on its part, agreed not to make any separate treaty with the Holy Spamalkan Empire; to permit Laurasian units unrestricted access across their territories; and, in a secret codicil, to support Laurasian ambitions in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, Morocco, and Portugallia. Although Durthia remained at peace with the Marasharite Empire, it nevertheless agreed not to conduct commercial relations with that power or to provide any financial loans or other aid to Marasharite authorities. The Treaty of Delft was ratified by Empress Aurelia on March 19 and by the Durthian States-General on March 24.
  • March 27-
    • Throughout the early months of 1788, Empress Aurelia and her Privy Council waited impatiently for Holy Austarlian Emperor Joseth II to oblige by his commitments under the Treaty of Invictius Mesura and to declare war against the Marasharite Empire. Several times, the Empress wondered aloud to Burghley and to Walsingis whether Joseth had been bluffing when he talked about partitioning the Marasharite Empire's dominions, and also if he had the stomach for military conflict. These fears, however, proved to be unfounded, for Joseth finally issued a declaration of war against Marasharita on March 27, 1788 and publicly revealed his military alliance with the Laurasian Empire. Austarlian units, assembled in Bukovina, Dalmatia, Royal Hungary, Transylvania, and Croatia, immediately launched a series of offensives into the Pazak Cluster, Olthenia, and Belusia. Austarlian troops quickly stormed Pest (March 27-April 4); Ivill (April 7); Tirana (April 9); and Conkura (April 15), putting pressure on Marasharite resources in those regions.
    • Josias, Prince of Saxe-Coburg (1737-1815), who acted as the Austarlian commander-in-chief, then launched an offensive against Moesia (April 16-25, 1788). Despite the fierce resistance of the Marasharite garrison, Moesia ultimately fell on April 25. By the middle of May 1788, Torontal and Temes, both of which were important strongholds in the Pazak Cluster, had been seized by Austarlian troops. A Austarlian move against Kovin (May 14-21, 1788), failed however, as did an offensive against Banja Luka and Denherria (May 25). Nevertheless, the Austarlian entry into the war on the side of the Laurasian Empire served to help the Laurasians advance further against Marasharite units in the Northern Reaches, Trans-Angelina Transit Route, and Burglais Arm. Kuban and Bendery had both been reconquered by Laurasian forces by the end of March 1788. On April 5, General Surovius destroyed a Marasharite starfighter squadron in the Battle of Dilojong, and then stormed Akkan, Kilia, and Seoul, conclusively expelling them from the Muggal Cluster.
    • By April 14, the remaining Dnieper Asteroid Bases had been secured, and the remaining Marasharite units were pushed out of the Northern Reaches. That same day, Lord Greysius obtained victory in the Battle of St. Demetrius on the Rostov, ending the Marasharite move against that stronghold. Quickbay fell on April 19, followed by Batchbey five days later. On May 4, 1788, the Battle of Cherson resulted in a smashing victory for Laurasian forces. Jezim Pasha himself was killed when his starfighter collided with a half-destroyed Marasharite battleship. By May 17, 1788, Quinta-il-vily and Merevebey had both been recovered, and the Marasharites were expelled from the Trans-Angelina Transit Route. Marasharite units, however, commanded by General Hevah-Bey (1735-99), now launched a sudden counteroffensive into the Dasian Heartland. Storming Belkadan (May 22, 1788), they drove towards Sernapasia, Houston, and the Oirat Complex. Although Sernapasia fell into Marasharite hands (May 26) and the Oirat Complex was blockaded, the Battle of Houston (May 29-June 2, 1788), resulted in a decisive victory for Laurasian forces under Admiral Gregius. By June 6, Gregius had stormed Andrea Doria and Garner, driving Marasharite units from the Corporate Sector and the Theodoran Governorate. And then on June 11, 1788, he destroyed a Marasharite force in the Battle of Tyson. Hevah-Bey was forced to abandon his siege of the Oirat Complex, and by June 22, both Sernapasia and Belkadan had been recovered by Laurasian forces. By the end of June 1788, all Laurasian territories occupied by the Marasharites had been recovered, and the Empire's military forces were now posed for offensives across the Galactic Void and into the Great Tesmanian Cloud.
  • July 17-
    • On June 28, 1788, shortly after Admiral Gregius and Lieutenant-General Surovius completed the expulsion of Marasharite forces from the territory of the Laurasian Empire, the Spamalkan Armada, under the command of the Duke of Medinia Sidonia, finally departed from Lisbon, in Spamalkan Portugallia, and began its journey from the Great Amulak Spiral to the Galactic Void. Medinia Sidonia, having heard of Laurasian victories against the Marasharites in the northern Caladarian Galaxy, and of the Austarlian entry into the war against Marasharita, had grown even more pessimistic about the prospects of victory against Laurasia. Emperor Philicus, however, had overridden these objections, and believed that Empress Aurelia's energy had been drained by her focus on the campaigns against Marasharita. In this, however, he was to prove grievously mistaken. The initial Spamalkan force, as envisioned in Philicus's plan, comprised of nearly ten thousand military warships, including 700 Crucia-class dreadnoughts, 600 Santa-class destroyers, and nearly a thousand Impacia-class battleships, along with 150,000 starfighters and nearly 600 million Spamalkan troops.
    • It was a substantial armada, and was intended to match by far the Laurasian Empire's garrisons and fleets in the Galactic Barrier. Empress Aurelia, however, had been alerted to Philicus's plans by her Intelligence Agency, and the Privy Council had taken all measures to slow the Spamalkan advance. On July 2, a Laurasian task force operating from Flushing, under the command of Admiral Whyrtia (who was in declining health and would die on August 4), intercepted an advance Spamalkan supply convoy near the Straits of Medra, along the route to the Void Transit Highway. The ensuing Battle of the Straits of Medra resulted in a tactical victory for the Laurasian Empire, for Whyrtia managed to inflict severe damage upon the Spamalkan transports, capturing thirty of them. He was soon forced back to Flushing, however, and Medinia Sidonia continued his advance. Five days later, he captured a Laurasian commercial convoy in the Void of Verth, some thirty-thousand light years northwest of the Caladarian Galaxy, and imprisoned the crews of the ships involved.
    • Finally, on July 17, 1788, the Spamalkans reached Hogland Point, which was located nine hundred light years north-west of the Galactic Barrier. Here, however, they were confronted by a fleet under the command of Admiral Dracius. Dracius, although heavily outnumbered (he had only seven hundred warships compared to two thousand for the advance Spamalkan formations), managed to bring them to combat for two days. Using the superior mobility of his starfighters and his knowledge of the surrounding stellar regions, he destroyed nearly half of the Spamalkan armored transports (343 out of 700) and captured 40 Crucia-class dreadnoughts before being compelled to retreat by Medinia Sidonia's approach. The Battle of Hogland Point therefore ended as a tactical victory for the Laurasian Empire. On July 20, 1788, Lord Howardis of Effinga, who had established his command headquarters on Onasi, arranged his vast force of 9,000 warships and military support vessels, including 230,000 starfighters (the chief Laurasian advantage over the Spamalkans), along the Barrier and launched reconnaissance expeditions against the Spamalkan units.
    • This was the largest military combat force ever assembled by the Laurasian Empire (out of the Empire's total of 175,000 warships and nearly 5 million starfighters), and it was necessary, for this was the largest threat to its territory ever posed by a foreign power. The following day, July 21, the Battle of Outer Onasi resulted in a strategic victory for Laurasian forces, as Howardis of Effinga and Dracius managed to disrupt the crescent formation of the Spamalkan advance squadrons, to capture seventy Spamalkan armored transports, and to arrest Spamalkan raiding expeditions against Dehner. Although Medinia Sidonia's units managed to storm Cane, Barching, and Sasha VI (July 22, 1788), they were unable to advance to the Metallasian Trade Route, with their expeditions against Onasi, Kathy, McKellen, and McFadden being repulsed. The following day, July 23, 1788, the Battle of McFarland occurred between the forces of the Holy Spamalkan and Laurasian Empires.
    • In a full-scale offensive, Dracius and Commodore Sir Athanasius Mooria (1741-1806) disrupted the Spamalkan momentum and hurled their units back from Crusher and Frederickshamm. Dracius pursued them as far as two hundred light years into the Galactic Void before Medinia Sidonia reformed his reformations and the Laurasians were forced to pull back. Nevertheless, the Duke of Medinia Sidonia was forced to abandon Barching and to re-assemble his command squadrons at Grasseles Point, which was located two hundred light-years northwest of the Galactic Barrier. The Duke also dispatched a number of his destroyers and battleships to Heresfoort, in order to escort the Duke of Parma's forces, which were waiting at Dunkirk in the Great Amulak Spiral. Communications between Parma and Medinia Sidonia had proven to be far more difficult than previously expected; the Duke soon discovered that Parma's forces had yet to be equipped with sufficient transports or to be assembled into offensive formation, a process which could take at least six days. Furthermore, when on July 27, 1788, Sidionia's escort reached Heresfoort, it encountered a Durthian-Laurasian expeditionary force under the command of Prince Maurice's younger half-brother, Durthian Admiral Justin of Nassau (1759-1831).
    • Admiral Justin, who had received his instructions from the Durthian States-General, had departed from Haarlem and Flushing twelve days earlier and had established a barricade near Dunkirk, thereby preventing supplies and ships from being able to enter, or to leave, the star system into the Galactic Void. Parma, on his part, now wished for Medinia Sidonia to launch a full-scale offensive against Justin of Nassau's squadrons, and to use his corvettes to prevent further Durthian attempts at blockade. Medinia Sidonia, however, refused to do so, declaring that he could not risk sacrificing his convoy and that he might need the ships to prevent a Laurasian offensive from Brill and Flushing. As a consequence of this, the Spamalkan forces, both at Dunkirk and in the Galactic Void, were exposed to a counteroffensive from the forces of the Laurasian Empire and the United Durthian States. The Durthian Navy therefore enjoyed unchallenged naval supremacy in the regions intersecting Dunkirk, Heresfoort, and Flushing, although it was outnumbered by the Spamalkan fleets and did not possess naval armaments as advanced as those of its adversaries. A major part of the Spamalkan scheme of invasion against the Laurasian Empire: to bring in Parma's forces to launch an operation in conjunction with the Marasharites into the northern Caladarian Galaxy, could therefore not be carried out so long as the Durthians patrolled the relevant zones. Consequently, Empress Aurelia and her Imperial Privy Council were able to breathe a sigh of relief, and the Empire was therefore not under threat from Parma's forces. It could focus on defeating Medinia Sidionia in the Galactic Void and on expelling Spamalkan units from the outskirts of the Galactic Borderlands.
    • On July 28, 1788, Admiral Dracius launched a surprise offensive against the Spamalkan supply transports, corvettes, and frigates at Hellsburner's Dial, which was located at the outskirts of the Galactic Barrier. In this offensive, the Admiral employed the use of eighteen automated transports, a strategy which had been employed by the Imperial Laurasian Navy to its advantage in the Battle of Chesma, eighteen years earlier. The transports, which were filled with combustives, quickly penetrated the arch of the Spamalkan forces. Although Medinia Sidonia's flagship, the IMS Alacantarra, was undamaged, eighty of the one hundred Spamalkan transports in anchor were destroyed, and the remainder of the formation was broken. Following this victory, Dracius drove Spamalkan troops from Mogilov, Waxefield, and the Gate Solarian Cluster. The following day, July 29, 1788, Medinia Sidonia, who was still determined to penetrate into the Kalbachan Provinces, and believed that he could penetrate through Laurasian fortifications at Vilmanstrand, Kathy Major, Rasdalla, Antwone, Dejan, and Shashanaya, reformed his formations at Oland, a minor outpost located eighty light years north of Waxefield. Dracius and Howardis of Effinga, however, were now more aware of the Spamalkan Armada's strengths and weaknesses as a result of these previous skirmishes, and they determined to use their starfighters to inflict severe damage upon Medinia Sidonia's command formations. Throughout the early hours of July 30, 1788, the Laurasian starfighters and couriers, swooping from out of hyperspace, passed by the Spamalkan battleships and dreadnoughts, inflicting severe damage on them through a combination of turbolaser broadsides, torpedo assaults, and coordinated hits against Spamalkan defenses and weapons batteries.
    • They then stayed out of range of Spamalkan fire, darting among the ships of the Spamalkan fleet and confusing them. Medinia Sidonia was about to order a retreat when Admiral Dracius launched the decisive offensive, driving the Spamalkan warships towards Oland and then out of the star system. The Battle of Oland resulted in the destruction of 450 Spamalkan warships by the forces of the Laurasian Empire, the capture of three hundred others, and severe damage inflicted on over 40% of the remaining fleet. Medinia Sidonia, who had never been confident in the venture, and now convinced that all was lost, ordered his forces to pull back from the Galactic Barrier. During the early weeks of August 1788, the Spamalkan naval forces would gradually retreat across the Galactic Void. They were pursued by Howardis of Effinga and Dracius, who in confrontations at Deveris Point, Knollia, and Hangast's Turn, destroyed a number of Spamalkan transports and corvettes. By the time Medinia Sidonia arrived back at Lisbon, on September 5, 1788, nearly 70% of the Spamalkan military forces had been destroyed. This was the greatest naval victory in Laurasian history, and the repulse of Philicus's attempted invasion irrevocably swung the balance in the war to the Laurasian Empire. By August 15, Barching, Cane, and Sasha VI had been recovered by Laurasian troops, and all foreign units had now been cleared out of the Empire's territory.
  • August 8-
    • Empress Aurelia, having learned of the Spamalkan Armada's disastrous defeats at the Battles of Hogland and Oland, and of the retreat by the Duke of Medinia Sidonia back across the Galactic Void, decided to respond to an invitation extended by the Earl of Leicesterius, and to go to Garama in the Galactic Borderlands, where the 38th, 39th, and 40th Imperial Armies had been assembled in order to repel any potential Spamalkan expeditions into the Rogerian Cluster and the Wild Marshes. Although the victories obtained by Dracius and Howardis of Effinga now made it unlikely that there would be any renewed foreign operations into the Caladarian Galaxy, the Empress was nevertheless resolved to instill morale in her troops and to demonstrate to her subjects that she shared in their concern, and in their hopes for victory in the impending battles of the military conflict. The Empress departed from Laurasia Prime on August 4, 1788. She arrived at Garama four days later, having overridden a request by her Privy Council that she remain on Laurasia Prime and deliver a speech to her subjects from the Quencilvanian Palace. Although she had decided not to go on progress this year, in which the Empire's dominions were faced with intrusions by enemy forces, she nevertheless sought to display herself to her troops.
    • Upon arriving at Garama, the Empress's entourage was escorted by Leicesterius, on his personal flagship, and his command vessels to Tilbury Grounds, located on the planetary surface. Emerging from her personal spacecraft, the Empress then drove on a repulsorlift, appearing before her assembled troops in the guise of an "Venasian Empress", in a white velvet dress with a shining silver cuirass. Her briht red hair flowed down her back in long tresses, and she was preceded by a page carrying her silver helmet on a white cushion, with Prince Repanius of Kalbacha bearing her sword of state. Leicesterius had stage-managed the occasion, incorporating much pageantry and spectacle. As the pennants fluttered in the breeze, and the drummers and pipers of the Imperial Regiments played, the Empress, with tears in her eyes, inspected the front lines of the millions of troopers and Marines assembled before her, calling our "Almitis bless you all!" as many fell to their knees and cried aloud, "Lord preserve our Empress!" As she passed, pikes and ensigns were lowered in respect. After a stirring service of intercession, she insisted on retiring to the official command headquarters, in the midst of her assembled Armies, and to reside there for the night.
    • The following morning, August 9, 1788, there was a burst of spontaneous applause as the Empress made her presence known before the Imperial Armies again. She commented to Leicesterius that she felt she was in the "midst and heat of battle." When the noise had died down, the soldiers staged a mock simulation of the Battle of Garama (1602), one of the most famous victories of Demetrius Severus I in his war with the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria, and then paraded before her. Then, mounted on a honorary steed of war, and dressed still with a silver breastplate, as well as a gold staff of war in her hands, the Empress again touched their hearts by delivering the most rousing and famous speech of her 44-year reign: "My loving people, we have been persuaded by some that are careful of our safety to take heed of how we commit ourselves to armed multitudes, for fear of treachery; but I do assure you, I do not desire to live to distrust my faithful and loving people. Let tyrants fear. I have always so behaved myself that, under Almitis, I have placed my chiefest strength and safeguard in the loyal hearts and goodwill of my subjects, and therefore, I am come amongst you, as you see, at this time, not for my recreation and disport, but being resolved in the midst and heat of the battle to live or die amongst you all, to lay down for my Almitis and for my Empire, and for my subjects, my honor and my blood, even in the dust!" At this, the soldiers gave a rousing cry. Aurelia then continued: "I know I have the body of a week and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a Emperor, and of a Emperor of Laurasia too, and think it foul scorn that Parma, or Philicus, or Abdulahamid, or Spamalka, or Marasharita, or any prince of the Universe, should dare invade the borders of my realm; to which, rather than any dishonor shall grow by me, I myself will take up arms, I myself will be your general, judge, and rewarder of every one of your virtues. In the meantime, my Field-Marshal [Leicesterius] shall be in my stead, than whom never prince commanded a more noble or worthy subject, not doubting but, by your obedience to my general, by your concord in the camp, and your valor in the field, we shall shortly have a famous victory, in this war, over these enemies of Almitis, of my Empire, and of my people." The soldiers then gave a resounding cry of joy, and all hailed the Empress.
    • Shortly afterwards, the Empress was informed that Emperor Philicus, realizing the futility of any further offensives at this juncture against the Laurasian Empire, had commanded Parma and Admiral Diego van Ver (1732-1801; who was to command the Spamalkan invasion of the Barsar Regions), to stand down, and to maintain their forces in the Durthian Duchies. Philicus was desolated by the defeat; on August 12, he retreated into the recesses of the Escorial Palace on Madrid, and sought to pray with his ancestors to gain consolation. Nevertheless, Philicus was determined to continue the war; it did not occur to him that the advantage had shifted to the Laurasian Empire, and he would pay dearly during the next five years for his decision. Four days later, the Garaman Armies were ordered to report back to their normal garrisons. Leicesterius himself now returned to Laurasia Prime. He followed after the Empress, therefore, who had already arrived back at the Quencilvanian Palace on August 15. A massive Te Deum service was conducted at the Westphalian Cathedral; celebrations were held throughout the Empire to commemorate the failure of the Spamalkan offensives; and Leicesterius himself was greeted as a hero in the Empire's capital star system. Accolades were paid to Dracius, Howardis of Effinga, Gregius, Surovius, Rumanstevius, and Greysius, and the Empress announced, in a proclamation to her subjects on August 19, that the Empire was on the way to victory over its adversaries. On August 26, 1788, Estatius staged a triumphal military review at the Circus Maximus, which the Empress watched with Leicesterius, Burghley, Walsingis, and Hattonius. The Earl himself jousted against Viscount Paladaria (1762-1819; Seleucus Vremius, 2nd Viscount Paladaria of Meaganian) and the Earl of Zama (1767-1831; Tiberius Anusius, 6th Earl of Zama). Leicesterius himself, who had regained his position of preeminence among the Empress's favorites, dined every day with her. He was, however, a sick man, exhausted by the stresses of war, and he now sought to gain relief at Idyll, which had long been a favorite retreat of his.
  • September 4-
    • The Earl of Leicesterius, who had been so hailed by Empress Aurelia and by the Empire's subjects for his vigorous efforts in organizing the defense of the Galactic Borderlands and for the Empress's own security, retreated to Idyll immediately after the conclusion of the military review. The Earl's health was now in a very precarious state, and he entertained fervent hopes that the waters of Idyll would restore him. Leicesterius proceeded slowly from Laurasia Prime, arriving at Shannon three days after the review. There, he wrote what became his final communique to the Empress. In it, he humbly besought "Your Majesty to pardon your old servant to be thus bold in sending to know how my gracious lady is, and what ease of her late pain she finds, being the chiefest thing in the Universe I do pray for, for her to have good health and long life. For my own poor case, I continue still your medicine, and it amends much better than any other thing that has been given me. Thus, hoping to find a perfect cure at the bath, with the continuance of my prayers for Your Majesty's happy preservation, I humbly kiss your foot. From your old lodgings at Shannon this August morning, by Your Majesty's most faithful and obedient servant, A. Leicesterius." At Shannon, however, Leicesterius decided to proceed back to Kenilian Castle on Taurasia, and from there to Idyll. The Earl, however, could not make it that far, and was forced to stop at his hunting lodge, Constock Lode, on Tyndaris.
    • It was here, at 4:00 a.m. Galactic Standard Time, September 4, 1788, that Empress Aurelia the Great's closest friend and chief suitor during the first thirty years of her reign died, aged 55. Leicesterius had hardly any one accompanying him when he died, save for his niece, Didymeia Herbertia (nee Sidronius), Countess of Aeoleon (1761-1821). The slanders continued, however, and Leicesterius was "spoken of reproachfully by many" (according to Lord Monompahlaus in one of his private communiques). News of Leicesterius's death spread quickly to the Imperial Court, and throughout the Laurasian Empire. The Empress herself, aware of her favorite's declining condition, but confident that he would rise above these troubles and would be back at her side again, was in her personal chambers, discussing with her advisers about the campaigns against Marasharita (to be described in quick order below), when Lord Treasurer Burghley approached her. Addressing her as "Gracious Majesty" and "My Madame", he broke to her the news that Leicesterius had died. Aurelia, previously in a cheerful and energetic mood, found her whole manner changed at that very moment. Burghley quietly exited the quarters to allow for the Empress to grieve. Estatius, however, now appeared, and, conducting himself in a carefree manner, asked Her Majesty why she was not enjoying the Court's entertainments.
    • Aurelia responded in a grave manner, asking him if he was aware that his stepfather had died. Estatius replied, declaring his mother had told him. He did not seem to express any true concern for the man who had been his mentor and guardian. At this, the Empress plunged into an outburst of anger, calling Estatius an "ungrateful wretch", throwing objects at him, and shouting at him to leave her presence immediately. She then took up Leicesterius's last communique, re-read it, and inscribed it with the words: "His last letter." The Empress locked her chambers, sank down to the floor, and cried as she never had before. Aurelia now refused to emerge; according to Chancellor Walsingis, she would not attend to state affairs "by reason that she will not suffer anybody to have access unto her, being very much grieved with the death of the Lord of Leicesterius." Aurelia remained within her bedchambers for two days, until Lord Treasurer Burghley finally had the doors knocked down.
    • The Empress finally emerged from her delirium, but remained in a darkened mood. When the Earl of Aretha, on September 9, messaged the Empress congratulating her on the Empire's recent victories against the Spamalkans and Marasharites, and condoling with her on her sad loss, she confided to this "very good old man" that "Although we do accept and acknowledge your careful mind and good will, yet we desire rather to forbear the remembrance thereof as a thing whereof we can admit no comfort, otherwise by submitting our will to Almitis's inevitable appointment. Notwithstanding His goodness by the former prosperous news, he has hath been pleased to keep up in exercise by the loss of a personage so dear unto us." In his will, Leicesterius left "my most dear and gracious sovereign, whose creature under Almitis I have been" a diamond and emerald pennant, and a six-hundred pearl necklace, which had been manufactured on Gilestis. He had lived extravagantly, however, having never recovered from the huge expenses of the Empress's Kenilian visit back in 1775, and he died virtually bankrupt, leaving his widow, Countess Laetita, with debts amounting to nearly €500 billion dataries. Nearly half of this amount was owed to the Empress, who had granted her favorite loans and annuities amounting to €215 billion dataries, with interest, during the preceding five years. She now exacted her revenge against Laetita, whom she never forgave for marrying her favorite.
    • In October 1788, the Empress ordered for a detailed investigation of the Earl's financial affairs by the Heraldry Department of the Governing Senate; confiscated Kenilian Castle and all of his properties on Laurasia Prime, Caladaria, Darcia, and Americana; and ordered the Countess to auction off the contents of his three main residences, Kenilian Castle, Wanstead Estate, and Leicesterius House. She had no sympathy for the widow, and continued to behave as if she did not exist. Laetita, although she had maintained a happy marriage with her second husband, decided to remarry for financial security. On June 5, 1789, at her father's estate on Azatha II, Rotherfieldian Greys, she would marry Sir Christopheus Blountia, the only one of her husbands who was younger than her (he was born in 1755), and a friend of her son, the Earl of Estatius. The title of Earl of Leicesterius became extinct, for Leicesterius had no surviving heirs. His illegitimate son, Sir Antiochus Dudley, did receive the bulk remainder of Leicesterius's goods that had not been auctioned off, while Leicesterius House and Wanstead Estate both became the properties of his stepson, the Earl of Estatius. Estatius renamed the former residence after himself. Leicesterius was buried at the Beuachamian Chapel on Sarah, next to his son Viscount Denbaghia, on September 19, 1788. The Empress was represented by her friend, Lady Norria; otherwise, few courtiers of the Imperial Court attended Leicesterius's funeral. His death, in the midst of the ongoing war, went virtually unnoticed and unmourned.
  • September 22-
    • By September 1788, the Marasharite Empire had been placed within the context of a paradox situation. It was a paradox in that in one theater of conflict (with the Holy Austarlian Empire), the Marasharites managed to actually make gains at the expense of their rivals, while in another (that with the Laurasian Empire), they suffered a series of humiliating defeats which drove them into the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The first to be noted will be that with the Laurasian Empire. At the same time that Dracius and Howardis of Effinga clashed with the Spamalkan forces of the Duke of Medinia Sidonia in the Galactic Void, and on the outskirts of the Galactic Borderlands, Lord Greysius, Field-Marshal Rumanstevius, and General Surovius pursued a coordinated campaign against the Marasharites. On July 9, 1788, the Imperial General Headquarters, acting on the Empress's orders, shuffled commands among these military commanders again. Gregius and Ushavious were now transferred to the oversight of Field-Marshal Rumanstevius, while General Surovius now answered to Field-Marshal Lord Greysius.
    • Fleet Admiral Hawkius, on his part, had returned to Laurasia Prime from directing the defenses of the Barsar Regions, and he now assumed the effective oversight of the Imperial General Staff, and of the Admiralty, in light of Lord Howardis's absence. The commanders remained in control of their respective armies and armadas, however; only who they answered to was modified. Five days later, the 54th and 55th Imperial Fleets, subordinate to Rumanstevius and commanded by Admiral Ushavious, advanced from Sernapasia, Belkadan, Houston, and Tyson, into the Galactic Void. Marasharite forces in the lower Ochanian Provinces and in the Galactic Void were now commanded by Grand Admiral Hassan Pasha (1713-90), who had been detached to duty in those regions by Emperor Abdulahamid II at the end of May 1788. A series of confrontations ensued at Liman, Desna, and Halting-Man's Point (July 15-27, 1788), which resulted in Ushavious repelling Marasharite counteroffensives and capturing a number of Marasharite xebecs and galleys. By August 2, 1788, he had reached the outskirts of Fidonsi, which was a major Marasharite supply base in the Lower Districts of the Ochanian Provinces.
    • It was necessary for the Laurasian forces to seize Fidonsi in order to proceed against Ochania and Mardot, the chief Marasharite arsenals from which operations against the Caladarian Galaxy had been launched. Hassan Pasha, who was determined to bar a further Laurasian advance, assembled a massive force of fifty destroyers of the line, one hundred xebecs, two hundred galleys, sixty dreadnoughts, and five squadrons with 50,000 starfighters, along with 50 million Marasharite troos and 500 transports, in order to strike a decisive blow against the 54th and 55th Imperial Fleets. Ushavious, however, whose intelligence had fed him information about the Marasharite positions, now joined with Vice-Admiral Gregius, who brought substantial reserves of starfighters, battleships, and corvettes from Glassia, Sierra, and Kronstadt (a major naval base for the Laurasian Empire in the Outer Borderlands).
    • On August 13, a Laurasian advance convoy under the command of Captain Reingold Saken (1748-88), a Theodoran, approached Hassan-Pasha's offensive front-line squadron. Pasha's Marasharite vessels quickly surrounded the convoy, but suddenly, a massive explosion erupted on Saken's flagship, the IMS Impruder. This explosion resulted in the destruction of twelve Marasharite galleys and the infliction of severe damage on another thirty. Saken himself was killed, having volunteered to sacrifice himself to slow the Marasharite advance. The following day, a Marasharite counteroffensive against Quinta-il-Vily, Thornton, and Dunst was brought to ruin by Ushavious and Gregius in the Battle of Summoria, which resulted in Hassan-Pasha losing a third of his xebecs. These preliminary confrontations had weakened the garrison of Fidonsi, which was surrounded by Laurasian detachments from August 19, 1788. Three days later, the Battle of Fidonsi erupted between the Laurasian and Marasharite Empires. Fidonsi was located thirty-eight thousand light years northeast of Kinburn; the Laurasians had, in advancing this far, effectively cleared all Marasharite opposition from the intervening Galactic Void.
    • Lord Volyvonch (1736-1803; Crassus Veheria, 2nd Baron Volyvonch of Sierra), Rear-Admiral of the 55th Imperial Fleet and Ushavious's third-in-command, formed a offensive line northeastwards towards the formations of Pasha's force, which had now staked itself for battle at the outskirts of Fidonsi. Pasha ordered his galleys, remaining xebecs, and battleships to attack spaceward towards what appeared to be a thin and vulnerable Laurasian offensive line. The leading Laurasian warships in the front line, the frigates IMS Kalbania and IMS Margarina, repelled the first move by the Marasharite galleys, but then seemed to be in danger of being cut off from their supply lines. Hassan-Pasha, believing he had the advantage, pressed against Volyvonch's formation, forcing the Laurasian destroyers and dreadnoughts back and opening a gap in their lines. It was at this point that Admirals Ushavious and Gregius launched the decisive move. Having hid his battleships, starfighters, and corvettes in reserve, Gregius launched a pincer offensive against Hassan-Pasha's command formations. At the same time, Ushavious closed the gaps in the front line and crunched the Marasharite xebecs and galleys into a pocket with his superior couriers and frigates. Within hours, the battle shifted totally to the advantage of the Laurasian forces, and by the early hours of August 23, 1788, Hassan-Pasha had been forced to retreat. Nearly all of the Marasharite xebecs and galleys were destroyed or captured, and 20 million Marasharite personnel became prisoners of war.
    • Following this decisive victory, Fidonsi capitulated to the Laurasian Empire on August 29, 1788, giving it a foothold in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Hassan-Pasha now fled towards Mardot, but realized that defending this stronghold was useless. Mardot fell to Admiral Ushavious on September 4, the same day of Leicesterius's death. By September 14, Lord Greysius had repelled Marasharite expeditions against Perekop, Merevbey, and Batchbey, capturing a number of Marasharite officers and troopers in the Skirmish of Alanta's Point. At the same time, Lieutenant-General Surovius and Field-Marshal Rumanstevius arrived at Fidonsi, which they established as their command headquarters. From here, the 51st and 52nd Imperial Armies (soon to be reformed into the 50th Imperial Army), advanced with Ushavious's fleets to first Mardot, and then to Ochania. Ochania itself was one of the chief military strongholds of the Marasharite Empire in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Having been under Marasharite control since 1506, it boasted a garrison of nearly four million Marasharite troops, protected by orbital defenses, a ring of space stations, and minefields in the outskirts of the star system. Furthermore, the garrison of Ochania possessed a defensive fleet of five hundred military warships. Surovius advocated a full-scale onslaught against the garrison, but Rumanstevius and Ushavious both opted for a joint siege by the Empire's land and naval military forces.
    • On September 22, 1788, Ochania fell under siege by the forces of the Laurasian Empire. During the next three months, numerous actions took place between the fleets of Hassan Pasha and Ushavious at the outskirts of Ochania, while the Siege proceeded and the morale of the Marasharite garrison whittled away. Troops dispatched by General Surovius stormed Kilirim and Ivrim (September 23-29, 1788), preventing Marasharite reinforcements from reaching Ochania. Laurasian expeditions harried the length of the Upper Danube Military Highway, inflicting severe damage on a number of Marasharite colonies and fortresses. On October 2, 1788, after a minor clash near Berezin between opposing Laurasian and Marasharite corvettes, Hassan-Pasha ordered an offensive by the garrison destroyers and battleships against the 55th Imperial Fleet at Starzen's Station. Marasharite Admiral El-Ghazi (1738-99) managed to destroy a number of Laurasian transports and to launch a assault on Starzen's Station, inflicting severe damage on the third and fourth Fleet dockyards. Ultimately, however, Admiral Ushavious's fleet-lines held, and the Marasharites were driven back with a loss of four of their offensive battleships. The Laurasians, however, rashly pressed their advantage, and a further confrontation on October 4 resulted in the Marasharites capturing five Laurasian transports and the troops onboard them.
    • On October 14, another Marasharite offensive resulted in the loss of nine Laurasian frigates and 200 starfighters; Ushavious, however, prevented Marasharite ships from breaking out to the Danube Military Highway. Then, on October 27, 1788, shortly after Trans-Ruse was stormed by a Laurasian Marine Corps, Hassan-Pasha pressed Admiral Ghazi into breaking out from Northern Ochania and assaulting Kilirim, hoping to draw off sufficient Laurasian strength so that the Admiral could call reinforcements from Stauvachany and break the siege. Ghazi managed to break out to Near-Kila, and to force a pursuit by Admiral Seniavin (who had become Ushavious's second-in-command following the sudden death of Admiral Gregius near Perekop on October 15), but at 12:00 p.m., his flagship suffered a catastrophic reactor failure. Ghazi and his officers managed to escape, but the flagship and with it, eight Marasharite galleys, were destroyed in the ensuing explosion. This disoriented the Marasharite formations, and Seniavin caught up with the Marasharite task force at the outskirts of Kilirim. At the same time, Admiral Ushavious repelled a Marasharite offensive from Stauvachany, impounding a number of Marasharite corvettes at Turnadatia. The following day, October 28, 1788, Admiral Seniavin launched a full-scale offensive against Ghazi's forces. Although IMS Alexandra Karina, a Laurasian first-class frigate, was destroyed by a pair of Marasharite xilanium torpedoes, Seniavin, with the assistance of reinforcements sent by Ushavious, destroyed the two leading Marasharite destroyers in Ghazi's second-line formation, and forced a third to flee from the battlefield. Ghazi now attempted to flee for Hadjibey, which was beyond the range of Laurasian offensive forces. He was pursued by Seniavin, and on November 1, 1788, the Battle of Pirhen Adasi resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Nine Marasharite destroyers were annihilated, and another fifteen captured; Ghazi lost more than a third of his naval officers and escort personnel. He managed to reach Hadjibey nevertheless, but without the bulk of his forces. By the middle of November 1788, Laurasian forces had stormed Koca, Del Vile, and Pildrin, posing a serious threat to Stauvachany, Silistra, and Ruse. Ochania was now completely isolated.
    • The Austarlians, however, had not been so successful. In June 1788, Emperor Abdulahamid appointed Pasha-General Kavik-Bey (1744-1805) as commander of the garrisons of Serbia, Olthenia, and the Danubian Principalities, and ordered him to expel the Austarlians from Tirana. Kavik-Bey destroyed superior Austarlian armies at Megathon (June 15-22, 1788) and Berat (June 25, 1788). By the early weeks of July 1788, Austarlian forces had been expelled from Shrakapar, Mat, and Durres. The Prince of Saxe-Coburg, who had been the chief Austarlian commander in the earlier stages of the campaign, had fallen ill on June 22, 1788, and been allowed to retire to his estates in Dalmatia to recuperate. His successor, the incompetent Hermann de Vorrhent, Count de Vorrhent (1745-1801), proved unable to stem the reversal in Austarlian fortunes. On July 14, 1788, Marasharite forces approached Tirana. In spite of impounding Marasharite vessels in a confrontation at Shirra (July 15-17, 1788), Vorrhent was ultimately unable to prevent Kavik-Bey from penetrating the star system's defenses and reconquering it (July 24, 1788). By the end of July 1788, the Austarlians had also been repelled from Conkura and Ivill. Kavik-Bey's forces then invaded Bukovina, overruning Zhasti, Zakhavana, Kitsman, Chernivsiti, and the Hyboskian Colonies (August 1788). Joseth, who was growing fearful that the pattern of failures in the last Austarlian-Marasharite War was repeating itself, now vigorously reorganized his military command.
    • Count de Vorrhent was relieved of duty on September 7, 1788, after failing to relieve the Marasharite siege of Frasin, which had become a major commercial entrepot for the Austarlian Empire. He was replaced at this juncture by Karl Heinrich, Prince von Nassau-Siegen (1743-1808). Nassau-Siegen managed to repel a Marasharite offensive against Ejhanay (September 9, 1788) and secured Mohacs against further Marasharite moves (September 14-22, 1788). Frasin, however, fell to Kavik-Bey on September 29, 1788, and by October 12, he had stormed Mehadia, Slatina, and Timosara, inflicting humiliating losses on frontier Austarlian garrisons. It was not until November 25, 1788, however, by which point the Austarlians had been driven from Upper Temesvar, Pest, and Dubrovnik, that Joseth finally recalled old Field-Marshal Ernest Gideon von Laudon, who had been one of Pru'a IX's most formidable adversaries during the Seven Year's War and War of the Bavarian Succession. He had also fought in the War of the Dejanican Succession and the Dalmatian War with Haxonia and Vendragia. Laudon, who became commander-in-chief that day, would completely reverse Austarlian fortunes and lead the Empire to a series of victories over its long-time Marasharite adversaries. That will be described later.
  • November 17-
    • The Laurasian Empire, in the midst of all of the victories which were described above, was in a especially jubilant state during these last months of 1788, whereas Emperor Philicus's subjects were in distress at the failure of his offensives against the Laurasian Empire, and of the stalemate which had persisted in the Durthian Duchies throughout the months of their master's "Enterprise of Laurasia" project. Spamalka, through suffering such horrendous losses in its attempted invasion of the Empire, had lost the advantage to its Laurasian rivals, which would be clearly seen in the military campaigns of the following year. Empress Aurelia, on her part, although she continued to be bothered with thoughts of her late favorite Leicesterius, nevertheless had to turn her attention to the festivities to celebrate the destruction of the Spamalkan Armada, and the Empire's advances into the Great Tesmanian Cloud. With Leicesterius gone, preparations for the Accession Day festivities now fell to Estatius, Hattonius, and the Empress's Champion, Sir Antigonus Lesius. On November 5, 1788, in honor of the victories obtained over Medinia Sidonia and over the Marasharites, a commemorative coin was struck by the Imperial Treasury. It bore the legend "Almitis blew with His winds, and they were scattered"; on the reverse side, was a depiction of the Battle of Oland, with the Spamalkan warships fleeing before the might of the Empire's forces. This coin proved to be immensely popular, and it would become a permanent issue of the Imperial Treasury in 1790. Sir Thomasius Heneagius, who coincidentally had expressed his regrets for the death of his rival, Leicesterius, commissioned the Armada Jewel, cast by the Empress's chief jeweler Sir Nicholas Hillardia (1747-1819). He presented it to the Empress on November 10. The following day, Empress and Imperial Court moved to the Old Royal Palace in Christiania.
    • Six days later, Accession Day was celebrated with much pomp and vigor throughout the Empire. Lesius, Hattonius, Oxfadia, Estatius, Raleghia; all these personages distinguished themselves in the gladiatorial contests and jousts that day, and the Empress reveled in the acclaim of her subjects. The thirtieth anniversary of her reign was indeed cause for much joy. She had reigned far longer than either of her siblings, and longer than her grandfather; all had no doubt that she would surpass her father's record in due course. Aurelia was now the second-most senior monarch of intergalactic civilization, behind only her enemy, Emperor Philicus. Services of thanksgiving, devotional processions, feasting, physical performances, jousts, bonfires, and parades; all of this marked the victories won, and the glories of the Empress's reign. The culmination of the celebrations came on November 26, 1788, when the Empress, passing through railings hung with blue cloth, behind which stood her cheering subjects, came in an elaborate canopied craft, drawn by two white steeds (hearkening back to the medieval and ancient days on Laurasia Prime, and to the Brethalian myths), to the Westphalian Cathedral, to give public thanks for the successes of this war, and to acknowledge her, and her Empire's, debt to Almitis and Providence. The enormous procession which attended her was larger than any that had been seen since her coronation, twenty-nine years earlier. There were pageants, songs, and ballads sung throughout the City of Christiania in her honor as she proceeded onwards. At the west door of the Cathedral, the Empress descended from her lift and fell to her knees, praising Almitis before the huge crowds. She then went inside the Cathedral, hung with massive Imperial banners and with captured banners of the Empire's Spamalkan and Marasharite enemies.
    • Following the sermon, delivered by the Archbishop of Laurasia Prime, Dr. Aurelian Zoprhus (1722-94), and a benediction conducted by the Dean of the Cathedral, Dr. Carus Icasus (1729-96), the Empress delivered a formal speech to the congregations, and to her subjects. She alluded to the "sacrifices made to bring our Empire to this stage of victory"; praised the devotion of her subjects and of her government; and declared that in the upcoming year, Laurasia would inflict such defeats upon the Spamalkans and Marasharites that they would truly be aware of her Empire's power and prestige. They responded to her speech with a great shout, wishing her a long and happy life (she had turned fifty-five two months earlier, three days after the death of Leicesterius). The Empress then went in procession to the Ecrelian Palace, dining with the Archbishop, the Dean, Chief Procurator Whitshiftus, and the chaplains of her imperial household. She subsequently returned to the Old Royal Palace. Aurelia now had a high reputation with her fellow monarchs. She was praised by Doge Cicogina of Haxonia, who marveled that "This woman, mistress of an entire galaxy, has made herself feared by Spamalka, by Franconia, by Marasharita, and indeed, by all!" Hensios III of Franconia and A'rua III of Pruthia both lauded the Empress's "valor and prudence", while her ally, Joseth II, congratulated her on her victories. Aurelia's own subjects were now endeared to her, and she was now one of the most beloved sovereigns in all of Laurasian history. Traditionalists had proved themselves loyal, and had given their full support to the government, in contrast to Philicus's misguided hopes. The Empire was now united, and Philicus could not find any one to conspire against the Empress in his own interests. His own mood was worsened when on November 23, 1788, Bergen op Zoom, a major Spamalkan supply base, was stormed by General Pellhamia and Prince Maurice of Nassau; nearly two-thirds of the Spamalkan garrison died in the offensive. By the end of December 1788, the coalition forces had recovered Neuss, Lingen, and Lochem, and were preparing for a move against Gronelo and Sluis.
  • December 6-
    • By the beginning of December 1788, Ochania was under severe strain by the Laurasian Empire's military forces. Admiral Ushavious, who had successfully repelled all counteroffensives by Marasharite forces against his positions, and had prevented Hassan-Pasha from breaking out to the Danube Military Highway, was now convinced that a direct offensive against Ochania would be advisable. Field-Marshal Rumanstevius, who had continued to maintain the line against possible thrusts by Marasharite units from Stauvachany, Hadjibey, and Kuchuk Kaynarca, was at first reluctant about the prospect of rushing into the Ochania star system. He still carried memories of the failed Laurasian offensives against Silistra, Ruse, and Varna back in 1773. Lieutenant-General Surovius, however, was more confident, believing that the garrison of Ochania was so exhausted that it would not be able to pose a substantial threat to the Empire's forces. In this, he was proved correct. On December 2, 1788, Lord Howardis of Effinga, who had returned to Laurasia Prime from the Galactic Void, and acting on the Empress's commands, gave the authorization for a final offensive against Ochania to be launched. Four days later, Ushavious and Seniavin combined their squadrons together to penetrate the star system at two junctures. Hassan-Pasha's remaining warships fought a running battle with the Laurasian forces as their line advanced, but in vain. Within four hours, Ushavious and Seniavin had swept all before them. Hassan-Pasha himself, who attempted to flee on his personal starfighter, was now a prisoner of the Empire; his remaining destroyers and assault vessels had been destroyed or captured by the Imperial Laurasian Navy; and Ochania's shields had been breached by extensive bombardment from superior Laurasian warships.
    • Lieutenant-General Surovius then directed a offensive against Ochania's garrison, and by the end of the day, most of the planet's surface had been overrun by troops of the 50th and 63rd Imperial Armies. The Commander of the Garrison of Ochania, Cenzham Pasha (1739-1800), surrendered only on December 8, 1788, having attempted to resist Laurasian troops for some time. On the orders of Surovius, all of the Marasharite officers were bound in chains. Nearly ten million Marasharite troops died in the offensive, compared to just 200,000 Laurasian troops. With Ochania now in the possession of the Laurasian Empire, there was nothing to bar a further Laurasian advance into the Great Tesmanian Cloud. By Ascentmas Day, 1788, Bocasnea had been secured by Laurasian troops, and Vochanay was under siege by a Laurasian detachment. The Holy Austarlian Empire, on its part, had recovered some of its losses to the Marasharites. Laudon, establishing his command headquarters at Decs on December 3, repelled a Marasharite offensive in the Battle of Dumrovia, and drove towards Banja Luka, cutting a hole in the Marasharite supply lines. Banja Luka itself was besieged from December 7, 1788, and fell to Laudon on December 22. By the end of the month, Laudon had driven Marasharite units from Pest and Dubrovnik, and was besieging Slastin. The year 1788 therefore ended with the tide turning against Marasharita and Spamalka, who had failed to cooperate effectively with each other in campaigns against their enemies, and were still separated by mutual differences.

1789

  • January 1-
    • 1789, the 89th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire having gained the upper hand in the confrontations of the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War and of the First Laurasian-Spamalkan War; both conflicts were now becoming known collectively as the First InterGalactic War. The year previously, it had seemed as if the Empire's military forces were on the defensive. The Marasharite Empire of Abdulahamid II, and the Holy Spamalkan Empire of Philicus I, both of whom nursed a considerable grudge against Empress Aurelia's government, had both taken the initiative in offensives against the Laurasian Empire. The goal of Marasharite Emperor Abdulahamid had been the recovery of all territories conceded to Laurasia during the eighteenth century. This included the Galactic Frontier Route, the Muggal Cluster, the Billian Provinces, the Tof Borderlands, the Northern Reaches, the Trans-Angelina Transit Route, and the Haynsia. Abdulahamid had been determined to ensure that the Empire would not pose a future threat to Marasharite possessions in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and that the Marasharites would continue to be assured a stake in the affairs of the Caladarian Galaxy. Emperor Philicus, on his part, as explained above, was angered by the flow of mercenaries and aid to the United Durthian States (which had been ongoing for years), and then the conversion of that indirect aid into a formal provision pact between the Laurasian Empire and the United Durthian States. He had also considered the execution of ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana to be an excuse for war, and for his seizure of the Imperial Laurasian Crown (to come into the possession of his daughter, who would be merely a puppet of her father's). These ambitions, as had been embodied in the Spamalkan Armada which was commanded by the Duke of Medinia Sidonia and advanced across the Galactic Void, came to ruin at the hands of the Empress's most skilled naval commanders, including Lord Howardis of Effinga and Rear-Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius. The Marasharite plans had also fallen short, with commanders such as Surovius, Ushavious, Gregius, Rumanstevius, and Greysius securing a succession of victories over Marasharite forces.
    • At the beginning of 1789, the last year of the 1780s, Laurasian forces had occupied the Lower Ochanian Provinces and were preparing to launch offensives against Silistra, Ruse, and other major Marasharite strongholds in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Empress herself, pleased by the victories which had been obtained by her military commanders, praised her troops, her government officials, and her subjects in her New Year's proclamation. Although she had suffered personal tragedy due to the death of the Earl of Leicesterius, for thirty years her chief favorite and courtier, Empress Aurelia was determined to pay homage to his memory, and to the memories of her father and grandfather, through shepherding Laurasia in this war and expelling the Marasharites from the Great Tesmanian Cloud, at the least. She was confident in her military commanders, and believed her alliances with Durthia and Austarlia would place her Marasharite and Spamalkan adversaries on the edge. In her proclamation (January 1, 1789), the Empress declared that "the Lord Almitis, through His bounty and His grace, has allowed for us to defeat the evil foreigners, and to permit no prince of the realms of the Universe to interfere or to harm this our Empire. As we look forward to the new year, we see our subjects, under the guiding hand of the Almighty Lord of the Heavens, obtaining further victories over the enemies of this realm, and exerting our influence far beyond the confines of this, our galaxy." And indeed, 1789 would see the Laurasian Empire secure a succession of victories over its Marasharite and Spamalkan adversaries, in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, in the Little Amulak Cloud, and in the Durthian Duchies.
  • January 11-
    • As mentioned above, Empress Aurelia had entered 1789 without her favorite of so many years, the Earl of Leicesterius. Yet immediately following Leicesterius's death, the Empress had turned to the Earl of Estatius. Although Estatius had disappointed her with his reaction to his stepfather's death, he nevertheless rapidly assumed the role of chief favorite, moving into his stepfather's old apartments at the Imperial Court and being constantly in the Empress's company. Courtiers seeking patronage and favors thronged about him, for they had heard of his "forwardness to pleasure his friends", and he did prove assiduous in using his influence with the Empress on their behalf. However, if she turned down his requests, he would sulk. He was, according to Hattonius, a "great resenter and weak dissembler of the least disgrace." Aurelia, whose patience he often strained, enjoined him to be content with his good fortune, but he did not cease his demands, and often threatened to retire to his estates off Laurasia Prime, believing this would bring her around to his point of view. Estatius thought he could manipulate her, but constantly underestimated her formidable intellect and strength of will. However, such was her affection for him was that she would forgive him for minor transgressions: this led him to believe that he could do almost anything. The major difference between him and Leicesterius was popularity: Estatius had a high standing with the Empress's subjects, whom he courted with "affable gestures and open doors, making his table and his bed popularly places of audience to suitors." The Empress soon grew jealous, wishing for him to be dependent upon her alone for his success; she did not wish for there to be any rivals for the affections of her people.
    • Estatius's old guardian, Lord Treasurer Burghley, attempted to act as a mentor to Estatius, but Estatius was resentful of Burghley's influence and power (he, despite the favorite's presence, continued to be the Empress's unchallenged chief adviser), and he also resented the rising influence of Burghley's son, Robertius Cecilis. He desired to reach spectacular heights of his own as soon as possible. The Empress herself, on her part, remained vigorous and healthy, still dancing six gaillards some mornings, and walking, riding, and hunting regularly. Age and victory had invested her with an even greater dignity and presence; whenever she appeared in public, she seemed to be "like a goddess" to her subjects. Estatius was clever enough to defer to her in this respect, and sought to communicate to her his love and devotion. He thought that his influence would be unchallenged as long as he retained the Empress's favor. However, he soon found himself to be "disabused" of this notion. In early January 1789, the Empress's attention again focused upon Sir Nicanor Blountia, the brother of Lord Mountjaria, described as a "scholarly youth with brown hair, a sweet face, a neat composure, and a tall bearing." Impressed by his performance at a joust, the Empress sent the young man, on January 4, 1789, the gift of a chess set, with the pieces cast from gold. Blountia, grateful for Aurelia's gesture, tied the piece of the Golden Queen to his crimson ribbon. Observing it, Estatius lambasted Blountia, stating that "I perceive that every fool must have a favor."
    • Angered by this, Blountia challenged Estatius to a duel at the Celestine Park. The duel (January 9, 1789), resulted in Estatius suffering an injury to his thigh, and being disarmed of his weapon. Aurelia, who did not tolerate dueling at the Quencilvanian Palace itself, was becoming wary of Estatius's high-handedness. When she learned of the duel, she responded that "By Almitis's blood, it was fit that someone or the other should take him down and treat him better manners; otherwise there will be no rule in him." She ordered Estatius and Blountia to apologize to each other, forbidding them to return back to the Imperial Court until they had done so. They did so, and later became devoted friends, although Blountia remained a favorite of the Empress. Blountia, on his part, was eager to resume his commission in the Imperial Laurasian Army (he had fought under Leicesterius's command in the United Durthian States, and had later been one of Dracius's fleet subordinates in the battles with Medinia Sidonia), but Aurelia would not allow it. She would appoint him a Gentleman Pensioner on January 11, 1789. That same day, Estatius quarreled fiercely with Raleghia, and challenged him to a duel, but the Council, alarmed, forbade it. Having discussed the further rise of Estatius's influence at the Imperial Court, it is prudent to turn to other matters: namely the conduct of the war.
  • January 25-
    • By January 1789, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council became fully convinced that, in order to strike a blow against the Holy Spamalkan Empire, it was necessary to exploit the turmoils in Philicus's most recent territorial acquisition: the former territories of the Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia. Philicus I, who had utilized his hereditary claim to the Portugallian Crown as his means to seize and annex those territories in 1780-81, had, during the course of the decade, made himself exceedingly unpopular. The Emperor of Spamalka had granted numerous asiento bulls, or bulls of privilege, to Spamalkan merchants and navigators. These bulls granted them the right to "most favored status" at all Portugallian colonies, and permitted them to trade their goods, and to conduct their financial services, without having to pay taxes to the Portugallian Treasury or to report to the Portugallian Concordat for Economic Affairs. Increasingly, monopolies on gold, sugar, and on other goods produced by the Portugallian Colonies, such as Singapore, Malacca, Brazil, and Goa, had been granted to Spamalkan, Milianian, and Naparian magnates; the Emperor ignored the complaints of the Portugallian Cortes.
    • The Cortes itself successively lost influence to the Emperor's Portugallian Council of State, which assumed the authority to implement executive orders; to oversee the Portugallian bureaucracy; and to represent Philicus's interests in those realms. The Council of State was comprised mostly of Spamalkans, with Philicus refusing to allow for Portugallian nobles to hold anything other than advisory positions. The Emperor had also begun a crackdown on Portugallian religious customs, insisting on the imposition of regulations concerning estates, vestments, and rituals based along the lines of the Spamalkan Catholic Order. All of these served to alienate the Portugallian nobility of Lisbon and the Colonies against Emperor Philicus, and to invite foreign intervention. Empress Aurelia, in seeking ways to strike back at Philicus for his launching of the Spamalkan Armada, and his patronage of ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana (while she lived), now decided to threaten his rights to the Portugallian Crown, and to back the claims of a Portugallian noble who would be able to muster a patriotic resistance to the Spamalkan occupiers. That turned out to be Don Antonio of Canto, who had, as previously mentioned, been in exile on Parri since 1783.
    • Don Antonio had continued to claim the title of "King of Portugallia", refusing to acknowledge Philicus's rights to the Portugallian Crown, and operating his own mock court on Parri. King Hensios III had defied the Holy Spamalkan Emperor's demands for Don Antonio to be handed over, and had allowed him to recruit mercenaries, maintain a network of spies, and issue manifestos across the Franconian Media, decrying the foreign occupation of his "hereditary realms." This was the person, Aurelia decided, who would become the next King of Portugallia. As early as March 1788, the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Imperial Intelligence Agency had been encouraging rebel tensions in Portugallia against Philicus's government. Now, the Empress decided to extend her support to Don Antonio. On December 19, 1788, Chancellor Walsingis, acting on the Empress's instructions, had sent a communique to Don Antonio. In this communique, Walsingis declared that "Her Majesty of Laurasia is concerned about your predicament, and recognizes that the rule, by the Spamalkan fiends, over your hereditary realms is against the laws of the Lord Almitis and the Laws of the Contrito of Portugallia." Therefore, the Chancellor stated that the Empress was willing to grant sanctuary at the Imperial Court to Don Antonio, and to negotiate with him a treaty to offer him military assistance to gain the Portugallian Crown and expel Spamalkan forces from his native realms. Don Antonio, who found this an irresistible offer, responded within two days. Praising the Empress for her "wisdom and her generosity towards me", Don Antonio went on to state that he would be glad to negotiate a military alliance with the Laurasian Empire, and to accept Laurasian aid.
    • Walsingis then ordered the Laurasian Ambassador at the Court of Parri, Sir Didomenes Ieries (1718-95), to make arrangements for the translation of Don Antonio and his household to the Empire. Ieries did so, holding several conferences with King Hensios and with Franconian Foreign Affairs Minister Jacques Necker (1732-1804), who had succeeded Vergennes upon his death on February 9, 1787. On January 3, 1789, Don Antonio secretly departed from Parri on the Franconian transport Claire, disguised as a navigator. His court followed on four smaller Franconian vessels. Thanks to the efforts of the Imperial Intelligence Agency, neither Parma nor Philicus got wind of what was going on. Don Antonio reached the outskirts of the Laurasian Empire four days later, and on January 13, Laurasia Prime. He was greeted by Empress Aurelia secretly at the Diplomatic Palace, followed, on January 16, by a public revelation. Negotiations had been ongoing since his arrival, and the Privy Council was able to speedily reach agreement with the pretender, who was practical and a political realist.
    • On January 25, 1789, the Treaty of Christiania was signed by the Laurasian Empire and the Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia-in-exile, resulting in the establishment of a formal military alliance between the two realms. By the terms of this treaty, Empress Aurelia agreed to assist "His Majesty of Portugallia" in regaining possession of his hereditary realms, in expelling Spamalkan forces from his territories, and in acquiring the Spamalkan Balearics, Colombiana, and parts of the Peruvian Colonies. To that purpose, the Empress would detach a substantial military force, as least as considerable as that which had been waging military campaigns in Durthia, and would place this force under the command of two of her respected military commanders. In exchange, Don Antonio agreed to provide all "worthwhile military assistance to the forces of Her Imperial Majesty of Laurasia", to recognize Laurasian acquisitions made at the expense of the Marasharite Empire, and to acknowledge the independence of the United Durthian States. Neither he nor Aurelia would conclude any separate treaties with their enemies without consulting the other.
    • The Treaty of Christiania, when it was announced, enraged Emperor Philicus, who declared it was further evidence that the Empress of Laurasia sought only to extend her influence so as to destroy the independence of all other powers. Aurelia, however, reacted to this in a mocking manner, claiming that Philicus's own record was not the "most admirable" and that all means were necessary to maintain the balance of power between the two states. During the next two months, the Imperial Privy Council and General Headquarters made substantial preparations for the planned offensives in Portugallia. Sir Franconius Dracius and Admiral Seniavin, who had both proved their abilities in the previous year's campaigns, were now designated as the co-commanders of Laurasian naval forces; Field-Marshal Lord Greysius, as commander of the land forces. Don Antonio, on his part, and with the approval of the Imperial Laurasian Government, assembled his household resources, recruited mercenaries in the Empire, Durthia, and Franconia, and issued manifestos to his subjects from abroad, urging them to rise against the Spamalkans. In March 1789, in fact, he established communications with Teodosio II, Duke of Braganza (1768-1830), one of the most powerful Portugallian magnates. Braganza commanded much influence on the Cortes, and he, along with his allies Duarte Flores, Duke of Braga (1749-1804) and Hernando de Velasco, Count de Porta (1753-1822), mobilized his retainers and personal corps for an outright revolt against Spamalka.
  • February 28-
    • By February 1789, the forces of the Laurasian Empire in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and those of the Holy Austarlian Empire in the Great Amulak Spiral, had both made, and were continuing to make, further advances against the overstretched and outclassed forces of the Marasharite Empire. Attention must be first paid to the further exploits of Austarlian Field-Marshal Laudon. Slastin, which had been besieged by Laudon from December 27, 1788, fell on January 4, 1789. The reconquest of this stronghold forced Kavik-Bey to retreat to Timasora and Slatina. Laudon now pressed the offensive forward. By January 11, he had reconquered Conkura, Kitsman, and Zhasti, and was besieging the Marasharite supply base of Jagasonia. Kavik-Bey launched a counteroffensive against Ivill, Pest, and Mitrovica (January 12-17, 1789) which came to an abrupt halt in the Battle of Tumu Severin, in which Laudon destroyed a number of Marasharite xebecs. On January 22, Jagasonia capitulated to the Austarlian Field-Marshal, and he soon stormed the Marasharite repository of Tuzla, freeing more than 300,000 Bosnian and Olthenian slaves.
    • By the end of January 1789, Laudon had stormed the Olthenian strongholds of Turceni, Horezu, and Tismena; Craiova, the Province's capital, was besieged by Austarlian forces beginning on January 31, 1789, and would fall into their possession on March 2. On February 4, Kavik-Bey launched a counteroffensive from Timasora, temporarily driving Austarlian units from Bihac and Luvanac, which they had stormed in June 1788. Laudon quickly recovered, however, and on February 14, 1789, the Battle of Corabia resulted in a decisive victory for the Holy Austarlian Empire. By February 21, Bihac and Luvanac had been recovered; Slatina had fallen into Austarlian hands; and Timasora was blockaded by a Austarlian expeditionary force. On February 24, the garrisons of Sarajevo, Mortu, and Targu Jiu fell to Laudon. The Holy Austarlian Empire now controlled most of Upper Serbia and Olthenia. By the middle of March 1789, Laudon had also recovered Mehadia, the Hyboskian Colonies, and Zakhavana, thereby reasserting Austarlian authority over all of Bukovina except for Chernivsiti.
    • On March 12, 1789, the Holy Austarlian Empire's forces occupied Silisburg, in the Marasharite Gateway Provinces, thereby opening a route of communications and intercourse with the Laurasian Empire's forces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. This would prove pivotal. Admiral Ushavious and Lieutenant-General Surovius, on their part, had made further advances (the second stage to be described). Ushavious, promoted to the rank of full Admiral in January 1789 by a grateful Empress Aurelia (Dracius had been promoted in November 1788), advanced from Fidonsi, Ochania, and Del Valle against Duros. Duros was besieged by the Empire's forces from January 7, 1789; despite the efforts of the Garrison Commander, Hassalat-Bey (1746-1811), the world fell into the possession of Ushavious just three days later. Duros was quickly followed by Sivash (January 12-14); Surabaya (January 22); and Rauglaki (January 25). On February 2, Surovius intercepted and destroyed a Marasharite armored convoy in the Battle of Divan; by February 12, Laurasian units had blockaded the garrison of Turkutkai, and were pressing perilously close to the outskirts of Kuchuk Kaynarca, where the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War had been ended in January 1774.
    • Mapudan-Bey (1731-99), Marasharite Commander of the Garrison of Kolzuduzha, now launched a desperate offensive to relieve Turkutkai and to drive Laurasian units from Ivirim, Trans-Ruse, and Del Valle. On February 15, 1789, the Marasharites destroyed a Laurasian communications relay in the Battle of Liman. Laurasian outposts on Grad (February 17); Vikhta (February 22); and Sofia (February 24) were stormed. On February 28, 1789, Mapudan-Bey attempted to storm Pernik, which had been seized by Laurasian forces one month earlier. Here, however, he now encountered a disastrous defeat. General Surovius, who had held his reserve of starfighters and Marines at Debleim, barricaded the outskirts of the star system and directed a frontal onslaught on Mapudan-Bey's ranks. Marasharite formations were repelled, and nearly half of the Marasharite personnel who landed on Pernik were slaughtered by superior Laurasian troops. Mapudan-Bey, however, brought his warships to formation, and his destroyers succeeded in reducing Pernik's shield generators. At this point, however, Surovius released his reserves, and the Marasharites were quickly hurled back. By the end of the day, the Battle of Pernik had resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Surovius now stormed Vikhta and Grad (March 1, 1789). On March 7, Sofia was reconquered by Laurasian troops, and from here, Surovius intensified the siege of Turkutkai. Turutukai, site of a decisive Laurasian victory back in 1774 which had hastened the end of the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War, fell into the Laurasian Empire's hands, this time permanently, on March 12, 1789. Ushavious, at the same time, destroyed superior Marasharite armies at Vimeshin, Chios, and Navarino, occupying all three strongholds (March 2-22, 1789) and giving the Empire a foothold in the Gateway Provinces. By the beginning of April 1789, Laurasian forces were besieging Hadjibey, Vitvoka, and Kaushany. Ruse and Silistra suffered from constant Laurasian expeditions. On April 4, the Battle of Athos resulted in another naval victory for the Laurasian Empire, sundering supply lines to Chesma and Lesbos.
  • March 17-
    • Following the conclusion of the Treaty of Christiania in January 1789, with the Portugallian pretender Don Antonio of Canto, Empress Aurelia and her Privy Council turned their attention to the other possibility, one which had been in their minds since the beginning of the war: the establishment of a military and diplomatic alliance with the Marasharite Sultanate of Morocco. Morocco, as previously explained, had, by 1787, effectively broken away from the overlordship of the Marasharite Empire. Under the rule of the vigorous Khatib III, Morocco had conquered the formerly Marasharite vassal systems of Nouackhott, Atar, Kiffa, and Aleg (1787-88), thereby acquiring control of the northern portions of the Barbary State of Mauritania in the Little Amulak Cloud. Khatib was now determined to gain the rest of Mauritania; to expel the Holy Spamalkan Empire from Ceuta and Melilla; and to force the Marasharite Empire to acknowledge Morocco's full independence as a sovereign state. He now considered alliance with a foreign power, in particular the Laurasian Empire, to be fitting for his goals. Laurasia and Morocco had already been enjoying diplomatic and economic relations for some years. The Treaty of Kuchuk Kaynarca (1774), had permitted for the Laurasian Empire to establish, subject to conditions laid by the Marasharite Government, commercial and diplomatic ties with the courts of the Barbary States. The Empire had opened relations with Tripoli (1774); Tunis (1775); Algiers (1776); Mauritania (1777); and Sale (1777).
    • In February 1778, Empress Aurelia dispatched Sir Demetrius Hogania (1726-94) to the court of Sultan Khatib II of Morocco (r. 1757-81) in Casablanca, in order to establish a treaty between the two governments. Hogania succeeded in his mission. The Sultan, who spoke Spamalkan, Haxonian, and Franconian, was reasonably well-educated, and he proved amenable to all Laurasian offers. A Treaty of Amity and Commerce had been signed on April 2, 1778, approved by the Marasharite Government ten days later, and ratified by the Empress. Diplomatic consulates had at that date been exchanged between the governments of the two realms; full commercial relations established, with Laurasian and Moroccan merchants, starhoppers, and navigators assured rights of access and of tariff-free transport in the territories of the other; and provisions made for the release of all Caladarian Galaxy natives held as slaves by the Court of Casablanca. Shortly afterwards, the Empress and the Sultan began conducting a correspondence over matters of interest between their two realms. This was continued by Khatib's son, Khatib III, when he became Sultan in 1781. That same year, Aurelia, overcoming her previous reluctance for arms sales between the two realms, authorized for the exportation of naval-grade neuranium to Morocco in exchange for vitier, an essential ingredient in the manufacture of nylon torpedoes. In 1785, the Empress formally chartered the Barbary Merchantile Consortium, a consortium of Laurasian businessmen and entrepreneurs for the development and maintenance of factories, trade arrangements, and common liabilities in Morocco and in the Libyan States.
    • The following year, the Consortium was granted a monopoly on all non-essential commerce between the Empire and the Barbary States. Thus, by 1789, the Empress had a good grasp of the state of affairs in Morocco, and realized that alliance with that state would be essential in defeating the Marasharites. On March 4, 1789, Lord Treasurer Burghley, in a Privy Council discussion about ongoing preparations for the campaigns in Portugallia and the Portugallian Colonies, suggested that negotiations with Morocco be geared towards obtaining the Sultanate's support for the war against Spamalka. Aurelia agreed, and two days later, ordered the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, now under the direction of Lord Buchamia (formerly Sir Thomasius Sackvillius, who had been elevated to that rank in 1777), to open a "avenue" of communications with the Moroccan Chancellory. On March 7, the Ministry sent the first of several communiques to the Morrocan Government.
    • In these communiques, it was declared that the Empress of Laurasia desired for the "reduction in influence of the Spamalkan and Marasharite monarchies", for the maintenance of a "reasonable balance of power in the Little Amulak Cloud, whereas all of the Barbary States shall exist in unison and without being subject to the authority of a foreign state", and for "common operations against Spamalka, for the aim of restoring Portugallian independence." Therefore, the Empress, the communiques stated, now proposed a full military alliance between the Laurasian Empire and the Sultanate of Morocco. The Empire promised to assist Khatib III in any conflicts which he might undertake against his neighboring States, and in forcing recognition of his sovereignty from the Marasharite Empire. Khatib, when he received these communiques, was at first cautious. He did not wish to rush into an alliance with the Empire at the first juncture, and sought instead to examine "all angles" of what was occurring. Eventually however, he concluded that an alliance with the Empire would be beneficial for his purposes. On March 17, 1789, the Sultan responded positively to the Laurasian offers, agreeing to open a conference with representatives from the Imperial Laurasian Government over the conclusion of an alliance. Chancellor Walsingis now acted promptly, and on March 25, 1789, delegations between the two governments convened on El Aauin, a Moroccan resort colony in the outskirts of the Little Amulak Cloud. Negotiations would continue for nearly a month.
  • April 7-
    • On April 7, 1789, the Emperor of Marasharita, Abdulahamid II, the enemy of Laurasian Empress Aurelia the Great and erstwhile ally to Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I, died at the Imperial Palace of Topacia, aged 64. Abdulahamid had ruled for fifteen years, since the death of his older half-brother Mustapha III in January 1774. Like his brother, Abdulahamid died while his realms, the Marasharite Empire, were engaged in war with their most powerful enemies, the Laurasian Empire. Unlike his brother, however, Abdulahamid died during the early stages of such a military conflict; the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War was to continue for nearly another three years after his death. Ever since the failure of the Marasharite offensives into the Haynsia, the Northern Reaches, and the Corporate Sector during the early months of 1788, Abdulahamid's health had entered a serious decline. The Emperor had, in any case, never enjoyed the most robust health; his years of confinement, before his accession to the throne, had deprived him of much exposure to the public, and of the capability to travel and maintain physical alertness. Consequently, he had became lazy, indulging himself in the excesses of luxury and with the maidens attached to his household. This had continued throughout his reign, and it had worsened with the passage of time.
    • Abdulahamid, however, was also distressed by the failure of his Empire's offensives against the Laurasians. The Holy Austarlian Empire, on its part, was performing far better than it had five decades earlier, having gained military combat experience through the wars with Pruthia, Haxonia, Vendragia, and Franconia, among other powers, and having undergone extensive military reforms. All of this combined with increasing nationalist tensions against the Empire in Albania, the Grecian Provinces, and Syria, as well as the mutiny of Morocco and its refusal to adhere by the terms set by the Emperor's government. Abdulahamid finally deemed that he could take no more and he expired, lamenting that he could not preserve the realms bequeathed to him by his ancestors. He was now succeeded as Marasharite Emperor by his nephew, Selim III (r. 1789-1807), son of his predecessor Mustapha. Selim was determined to continue the war against the Laurasian Empire, and to suppress any further outbreaks of rebellion against his authority.
  • April 21-
    • After nearly a month of negotiations between the diplomatic delegations of the Imperial Laurasian and Moroccan Governments, the Treaty of El Aauin was signed by the Laurasian Empire and the Sultanate of Morocco on April 21, 1789 (which was, coincidentally, the eightieth anniversary of Neuchrus the Reformer's death). Sir Demetrius Hogania, who had served as Consul to the Court of Casablanca since 1778; Demetrius Casalarania, 2nd Baron Casalarania of Chapelle (1735-1810); and Sir Sixtus Cagranius (1751-1802) signed as the plenipotentiaries of the Laurasian Empire. Abel el-Quahed (1758-1829), Chief Secretary of Diplomacy to the Sultan; Governor Mers-el Crasat of Rabat (1744-1818); and General Sevah el-Medidi of Agadir (1739-1801) signed as the plenipotentiaries of the Sultan of Morocco. By the terms of this treaty, a military and diplomatic alliance was established between the Empire and the Sultanate. In the preamble to the Treaty, it was declared that "the Emperor of Marasharita has, through his constant aggressions and his hostility to the stability and prosperity of all other powers, demonstrated his oppressive nature and the cruelty of his species." It was therefore declared necessary for the two monarchies to combine against such a great evil, and to take all measures of war necessary to ensure that the Marasharite Empire's power and influence would be restricted. Consequently, the Holy Spamalkan Empire of Philicus I was also decried in the treaty; its "oppression" over the Durthian Duchies, and its unlawful occupation of the Serene Kingdom of Portugallia and the Portugallian Colonies, justified an alliance against that power. Thus, the Sultan of Morocco undertook himself to support the acquisition, by the Laurasian Empire, of the territories of the Great Tesmanian Cloud and Gateway Provinces; to recognize the independence of the United Durthian States, and its sovereign rights to the territory of the Durthian Duchies; and to denounce the Spamalkan acquisition of Portugallia.
    • To that end, the Sultan pledged to declare war on the Holy Spamalkan Empire, and to provide a force of not more than 700 military warships, twelve million soldiers of the Moroccan Army, and a subsidy of €6.7 trillion dataries ($10.1 trillion ducats), in the campaign to restore Portugallia's independence and to install Don Antonio of Canto on the Portugallian throne. The Laurasian right to establish military bases in the Azores, Malacca, Singapore, and Brazil was acknowledged, as far as the Empire "respected the customs, autonomy, and privileges of the subjects of the Portugallian Crown." In exchange, the Empress of Laurasia pledged herself to provide for the transport expenses of all Morrocan soldiers employed in the military campaigns; to continue the exportation of military arms, equipment, and supplies to Morocco; and to provide the Sultanate military forces with which to subdue Mauritania and repel invasions by Marasharite and Barbary forces. Ceuta and Melilla were to become possessions of the Sultanate of Morocco.
    • Finally, the Treaty provided for full Laurasian support for Moroccan independence; the acknowledgement of such by the Imperial Laurasian Government; and the establishment of full-status diplomatic embassies at the courts of the respective powers. The Treaty of El Aauin was ratified by Empress Aurelia on April 24 and by Sultan Khatib on May 2. Immediately upon the ratification of the Treaty of El Aauin, both Laurasia and Morocco proceeded forth with their respective military campaign plans. By the beginning of May 1789, the Empire had assembled its naval forces for the Portugallian Expedition, as it was labeled, at Branxholme, Erith, Dumbarton, Dumblaine, Baltinglass, Leith, Stirling, Derith, and Cork in the Angelina Spiral; Haarlem, Flushing, Brill, Neuss, Lochem, Hague, and Gravelines in the Great Amulak Spiral; and Belkadan, Sernapasia, Scanlan, Houston, Tyson, Kerch, Kuban, Thornton, Merevop, and Voronezh within the confines of the Caladarian Galaxy. The Sultan of Morocco, on his part, assembled his military squadrons at Tangier, Fes, Agadier, Tautoan, Meknes, and Nador. Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus, in response, strengthened the garrisons of Lisbon, Corruna, San Sebastian, and Santander, and ordered the Duke of Parma to maintain his forces for readiness in the Southern Durthian Duchies. These measures, however, did not prove sufficient against the forces of the Empire and of its allies, as would shortly be demonstrated.
  • May 14-
    • While the negotiation and conclusion of the Treaty of El Aaouin was ongoing, and the preparations underway for the offensives in the Little Amulak Cloud, the Laurasian Empire's military commanders continued to make gains in the Great Tesmanian Cloud against the Marasharites, while Laurasia's Durthian and Austarlian allies advanced in their respective theaters of combat. Following the Battle of Athos, Admiral Ushavious's military squadrons moved against Taganrog, which served as a major Marasharite military arsenal and transport link. From Taganrog, Marasharite units could be rapidly moved to reinforce Silistra, Ruse, and Shumen. It was thus important for the Empire's forces to seize control of this stronghold. After a series of confrontations with Marasharite forces at Kelindari, Bostra, and Nemedia (April 5-9, 1789), the 50th and 53rd Imperial Fleets reached the outskirts of Taganrog on April 11. The ensuing Battle of Taganrog lasted for two days, with Marasharite Admiral El-Ghazi (once again facing Laurasian forces in combat), conducting a fierce resistance. Ultimately, however, the power of the Empire's forces proved too great, and Taganrog fell. From Taganrog, Admiral Ushavious stormed the Marasharite fortresses of Chigrin (April 15) and Bushin (April 17).
    • On April 22, 1789, after having resisted Laurasian forces for over three weeks, Vitvoka capitulated to Admiral Ushavious. Kaushany followed four days later, with Ushavious and Gregius capturing a number of battleships and dreadnoughts. Aldeormeia was stormed (April 30, 1789); by May 3, both Koron and Moreia had been stormed by Laurasian detachments. Then on May 14, 1789, Admiral Ushavious and Field-Marshal Rumanstevius, operating from Navarino, launched a massive offensive against Chesma, site of Admiral Hawkius's victory nineteen years earlier. The Grand Council, fully aware of the symbolic importance of this star system, had ordered Admiral El-Ghazi to take command of the world's garrison and defenses. Chesma now boasted one of the largest forces then at the disposal of the Marasharite Empire. This force was comprised of one hundred destroyers, fifty xebecs, seventy galleys, and a corps of transports, frigates, and couriers. Admiral Ushavious, however, had assembled a substantial force of nearly three hundred military warships with 25 million soldiers of the 61st and 62nd Imperial Armies. Chesma now fell under a siege by the forces of the Laurasian Empire, for the Admiral understood that a direct offensive into the star system would be an act of folly.
    • The Siege continued for thirteen days, as the garrison of Chesma fiercely resisted Laurasian offensives, repelling moves by the Admiral's units against the Chesma Straits and the Nemeian Outpost. Ultimately, however, Admiral Ushavious was able to exploit a gap in the front lines of the Marasharite forces, and on May 28, 1789, launched the final and decisive offensive. Laurasian warships quickly surrounded the Nemeian Outpost; a set of automated transports was then released, destroying thirty of the Marasharite xebecs and the garrison flagship, the Coros. Within seven hours, the naval confrontation was effectively decided, and by the early hours of May 29, El-Ghazi had been forced to retreat from Chesma, and the world had capitulated to the Empire. In the meantime, Yefstavy had been secured by Laurasian units (May 21-25, 1789), and the Bosporan Straits were now under direct assault from Laurasian forces. As regards to the Holy Austarlian Empire, Chernivsiti was besieged by Field-Marshal Laudon beginning on March 17, 1789; it fall ten days later completed the expulsion of Marasharite forces from Bukovina. Laudon, with the assistance of his subordinate, Prince Carl von Siegen of Carlsbad (1745-1820), then defeated the Marasharite garrisons of Megathon (March 24-29); Berat (April 2); and Durres (April 7), recovering those strongholds for the Holy Austarlian Empire. Sharakapar and Mat had both been stormed by April 15, and on April 25, Austarlian units approached the outskirts of Tirana. Despite Marasharite counteroffensives at Devoli, Has, and Korce (April 26-May 7, 1789), Tirana was reconquered by Laudon's forces on May 12. Laudon then destroyed a Marasharite supply convoy at Regec (May 15). By the end of May 1789, Marasharite forces had been expelled from the Lower Pazak, including the strongholds of Korns and Qumic. Prince Siegen had distinguished himself in the meantime by seizing the Serbian systems of Palanka, Rudorac, and Cacack.
    • On June 7, 1789, Chancellors Walsingis and Kaunitz, in a series of communiques over the continued military offensives against the Marasharite Empire, agreed that Prince Josias of Coburg, previously one of Field Marshal Laudon's field commanders, and now in command of the Austarlian offensive against Balti and Chrisnau in the Danubian Principalities, should coordinate military offensives in the Gateway Provinces, the Danubian Principalities, and the upper Great Tesmanian Cloud with Laurasian Lieutenant-General Surovius. Surovius, who had stormed the Marasharite terminal of Piatra Nemat in the Gateway Provinces (June 1-3, 1789), had established a direct route of contact with Austarlian forces at Silisburg, and with the Laurasians having driven the Marasharites from Chesma and Navarino, cooperation now seemed pivotal. On June 12, 1789, Surovius and Prince Josias held their first joint command conference on Moreia, and agreed to launch a coordinated push against Galati, Bocasni, and the Sucreava Colonies. By June 26, Galati had been stormed by a joint Laurasian-Austarlian corps, while Surovius overran the Marasharite fortresses of Oradea, Bihor, and Blaesti, penetrating deep from the Gateway Provinces into Marasharite Wallachia, in the outskirts of the Great Amulak Spiral.
    • In the Durthian Duchies, in the meanwhile, the Duke of Parma found himself hard-pressed to maintain his recent gains in the face of renewed Laurasian and Durthian offensives. By the beginning of January 1789, reinforcements from the Empire had begun to arrive in substantial numbers in the United Durthian States. Flushing, now the chief center of Laurasian operations in Durthia, had become transformed into the Empire's largest extra-territorial garrison. It boasted a defense force of six million troops of the 69th Imperial Army; a system of turbolaser batteries, particle shields, and defensive barricades; and a patrol fleet of nearly two hundred warships. General Pellhamia, who had repelled Spamalkan moves against Brill, the Inner Gravelines, and Neuss, was now ready to launch a massive counteroffensive against Deventer, Axel, and Sluis. On January 7, 1789, Prince Maurice of Nassau, coordinating operations with the Empire's forces from Hague, defeated a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of Rittersburg. Five days later, Gronelo, which had been seized by Parma the year before, fell once again into the hands of the allies. By the end of January 1789, Axel and Sluis were both under siege by Laurasian and Durthian forces, while Parma's offensive against Meurs and Rees had been repelled, with the Spamalkan Duke losing nearly a third of his assault vessels. On February 5, however, the Battle of Steenbergen resulted in a decisive victory for Parma, who impounded a number of Laurasian transports. Laurasian offensives against Lier, Veurne, and Menen also proved indecisive, although, on February 19, Pellhamia destroyed a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of Diest. He then maintained the defenses of Wouw, and in conjunction with Prince Maurice of Nassau, destroyed a Spamalkan corvette corps near Niezji. Turnhout fell to the Allied Coalition on March 4, and by March 17, Parma's units had been driven from Aaylst, Diskmuide, and Roselare.
    • Maurice of Nassau and General Pellhamia now moved their forces in the direction of Geertuidenberg. This stronghold had been captured by the Marquis del Vasto in November 1788, and had since been the site of Spamalkan expeditions against Hague, Amsterdam, and Roosevelt. Its capture was essential to terminate this threat to the Durthian Capital Worlds and to secure the route to Nassau, located in the outskirts of the Principality of Orange, which had been blockaded by Spamalkan forces for over two years. By the end of March 1789, although Parma had overran Laurasian positions at Dillenburg and Lochem (which fell into Spamalkan hands for the second time), Pellhamia and his subordinate, Brigadier General Sir Demetrius Whertfadia (1738-1804), had effectively isolated Venlo and Jissel. Rheinberg, which had been recaptured on March 22 from the Spamalkans, became a major supply repository for the impending offensive. Finally, on April 7, 1789, Geertuidenberg was assaulted by Generals Pellhamia and Whertfadia. Although a allied offensive against Warnsveld and Bergh's Scone failed, Parma was unable to move from Namurs and Ghent to resupply the stronghold. Geertuidenberg fell on April 10, giving the allied coalition a major victory. By the middle of May 1789, allied forces had also secured Bep and Gies, breaching into Brabant. Parma's losses in these recent campaigns against Laurasia and Durthia demonstrated what effect the diversion of the Empire's military resources into this conflict could have. On June 3, 1789, the Empress conferred the Order of St. Antiochus the Great upon Admirals Seniavin, Dracius, and Ushavious, and upon General Pellhamia, as a reward for their victories and their valor in combat.
  • June 5-
    • As explained above, the Laurasian Empire's military preparations for its offensives in the Portugallian Homeland Territories and in the Portugallian Colonies had become well-advanced by the beginning of May 1789. The same was true for the Duke of Braganza's retainers and supporters in Portugallia itself. Sintra, Porto, and Vila Nova de Gaia were among Braganza's chief strongholds; it was in these star systems that he assembled his mercenaries for action against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Don Antonio of Canto, in the meantime, had by now assembled a substantial military force of more than two thousand warships and 95 million troops, comprised of his Portugallian supporters as well as Haxonian, Durthian, Franconian, and Scottrian mercenaries. Empress Aurelia, on her part, had followed the preparations closely, and she was now convinced that the stage was set for the commencement of the offensives.
    • On May 11, 1789, in a session of the Imperial Privy Council, the Empress expressed her hope that her Spamalkan counterpart would be humbled and that "the threat which he has continued to pose to my realms, and to the tranquility of extra-galactic civilization, will be permanently terminated." Five days later, the assembled forces of the Laurasian Empire, under the joint command of Lord Greysius and Admiral Dracius, departed from their various garrisons in the Empire and in the Durthian Duchies. On May 25, the two military commanders decided to divide their military forces into two smaller armadas, and to launch co-ordinate offensives into the outskirts of the Little Amulak Cloud. Dracius proceeded immediately towards Corunna. Corunna was a major Spamalkan naval dockyard, supply post, and transportation terminal located ten thousand light years north of Lisbon. From this stronghold, Spamalkan convoys patrolled the commerce routes leading to the Peruvian Colonies, the Azores, and the Malaccas. Its capture would be vital in disrupting the Spamalkan commercial lanes and in giving the Empire a vantage-point from which to strike against Spamalkan colonies and military convoys. After a series of confrontations with Spamalkan units at Quiebron (May 29-June 2) and Habana (June 3), Dracius reached the outskirts of the Corunna star system (June 4, 1789).
    • Under his immediate command was Major-General Sir Demetrius Norria, who had been reassigned from his duties in the Durthian Duchies two months earlier and attached to the Portugallian Campaign. The ensuing Battle of Corunna (June 5-8, 1789), witnessed a series of decisive offensives by Laurasian warships and troops into the star system. Dracius placed his starfighters and couriers in reserve at Aaia, seeking to sunder all supply lines to the star system. At the same time, he directed his battleships and destroyers in a frontal offensive against Corunna's defenses. The Corunnian Asteroid Belt was quickly overwhelmed by Laurasian units, and by the early hours of June 7, they had penetrated the world's shield defenses. General Juan de Avila (1750-1802), Commander of the garrison of Corunna, proved to be incompetent and unable to repel Laurasian landings on the world. Within hours, Norria's troops had secured the Corunna Command Citadel, the Upper Fortress of Citade Alita, and the Corunna Military Repositories. Combat continued for another day, as Dracius seized most of the Spamalkan merchantile ships in harbor within the star system. General de Avila surrendered during the afternoon of June 8, and Corunna was now in the hands of the Laurasian Empire. From Corunna, Dracius stormed Vigo (June 9-14); Salamander (June 16); and Baiona (June 22).
    • At the same time all of this was ongoing, Greysius had made his appearance at the Azores (June 1, 1789). He and Don Antonio (who had established his command headquarters at Franca's Point), quickly stormed Porta Delegada (June 2), impounding a number of Spamalkan warships and gaining the loyalty of the Portugallian garrison. Although a allied offensive against Horta (June 3-6, 1789), failed, Don Antonio's corps seized the Spamalkan fortifications of Salga, Gruto de Naval, Gruta das Torres, and the Pico Nebula (June 2-9, 1789), inflicting serious losses on the Spamalkan position in the Star Cluster. Then on June 12, 1789, the Battle of Prainha, fought between Greysius and Don Antonio on the one hand, and Spamalkan Admiral Cassandaro de Svila (1752-1803), on the other, resulted in a decisive allied victory. By June 25, Flores, Villa de Corvo, and Villa de Porto had all been stormed by allied troops, driving Spamalkan units from the Faisal Sect. With the Laurasian Empire's forces having secured this succession of victories over the Spamalkan garrisons, the Duke of Braganza now deemed it prudent to rise in revolt. On June 27, 1789, from his estates on Sintra, Braganza, Braga, and de Porta announced that they were officially in rebellion against Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I; rejected his authority over the Serene Kingdom of Portugallia's territories; and pledged their allegiance to Don Antonio as King of Portugallia. Rebel forces, now reinforced by the pretender's mercenary corps, and by Laurasian detachments, drove Spamalkan troops from Cavado, Braixo Vouga, Franca de Xira, and Coimbra (June 28-July 3, 1789).
    • By July 5, when Lord Greysius defeated a Spamalkan armored convoy in the Battle of Sao Roque, Braganza had also stormed Oliveres, inflicting a humiliating loss upon the Holy Spamalkan Navy and impounding thirty Spamalkan corvettes. Within another three days, allied forces had stormed San Sebastian and Biscay, pressing perilously close to Lisbon. On July 14, 1789, Lisbon was formally placed under siege by the forces of the Laurasian Empire and the Serene Kingdom of Portugallia (in exile). Dracius and Greysius now combined their land and naval forces for the decisive blockade of the Portugallian capital system. Braganza, on his part, had stormed the Spamalkan arsenal of Montalegre (July 10-11), thereby providing a vital supply line to the allied forces at Lisbon. Lisbon's garrison was commanded by Don Alfredo Marssiano (1745-99), the Duke of Cadiz. He had a force of five hundred military warships and 33 million Spamalkan, Portugallian, and mercenary troops at his disposal. This was compared to the allied forces of nearly six hundred warships, with 12,500 starfighters, and 40 million troops of the Imperial Laurasian Army, Imperial Marines, and Portugallian Corps. Furthermore, Braganza provided auxiliary support to the besieging forces. The siege would be destined to drag on for the next two months. Dracius and Greysius would focus their effort on suppressing supply lines to the star system, repelling Spamalkan expeditions against their conquests in the Azores, and in establishing a barricade in the Lisbon Straits. On July 19, 1789, matters would be changed further, by the arrival of the Earl of Estatius.
  • July 19-
    • Ever since March 1789, the Earl of Estatius had declared to his allies and associates at the Imperial Court that he would obtain glory, financial relief, and recognition if he were to serve in the offensives against the Holy Spamalkan Empire in Portugallia and in the Portugallian Colonies. His service in the United Durthian States under his stepfather, the Earl of Leicesterius, had created in him a fanatic hatred of Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus. Estatius had come to believe that the Emperor of Spamalka was the agent of the "Anti-Almitis" and that he needed to be defeated at all costs. He was, in the Earl's view, even more of a threat and a vicious enemy than the Empire's perennial Marasharite adversaries. On April 16, 1789, the Earl had first raised to Empress Aurelia the prospect of his participating in the Portugallian offensives as a fleet subordinate of Greysius. He pointed out his combat experience in the Durthian States and desired to command Imperial Marines in operations within the Azores, at Lisbon, and in Brazil. The Empress, however, feared his rashness, and on April 29, after having been pestered by the Earl three further times, she explicitly forbade his leaving the Imperial Court without her permission. Aurelia told Chancellor Walsingis and Lord Treasurer Burghley that the "vain youth would seek to trump himself up, at risk to the success of our ventures." Estatius, however, now defied the Empress's commands, and he maintained a secret correspondence with Major-General Sir Rogerius Willhamia, now one of Greysius's command subordinates. With his aid, Estatius was able to secure the promise of a commission in the Imperial Marines Corps, and of the command of the 4th Imperial Batallion.
    • He delayed his secret departure from Laurasia Prime until June 22, 1789. Estatius reached the Galactic Void in less than two days. The Empress did not learn of his flight until the early hours of June 25, while completing her morning toilette. She discovered a farewell communique which had been composed by the Earl and left in her office. Aurelia, thrown into utter despair and rage at this, questioned the ladies of her Privy Chamber as to his whereabouts. They trembled in fear, telling Her Majesty that they did not know where he had gone. The Empress subsequently stormed up and down the private apartments of the Palace, with her ladies and guards following her. Chancellor Walsingis attempted to inform her of a planned audience with the Pruthian Ambassador, but the Empress said that he could wait. When he asked as to what he should tell the Ambassador, Aurelia responded that he should say, "The Empress is looking for the Earl of Estatius!" The Chancellor, himself just informed of Estatius's departure, informed her in turn that he was already in the Void and had joined a convoy of Laurasian warships heading to reinforce the Empire's position in the Little Amulak Cloud. In fury when hearing of this, Aurelia had taken one of her shoes and thrown it at the Chancellor, shouting she would send everyone present (ladies, guards, councilors all) to the execution gallows. She sank to the ground and burst crying. Her faithful Chief Gentlewoman, Lady Parsius, comforted her, and the Empress ultimately emerged from her bout of anger. She rose and then warned anyone from revealing what had transpired, on pain of death. The Empress now proceeded to business. She dispatched Lord Husadarania, in vain, to intercept the convoy before it reached Corunna.
    • The Empress then messaged Dracius, and in a furious communique (July 4, 1789), stated that "His offense is so high a degree that the same should be punished by death. We command that you sequester him from all charge and service, and cause him to be safely kept until you know our further pleasure therein, as you will answer for the contrary to your peril, for as we have authority to rule, so we look to be obeyed. We straitly charge you that you do forthwith cause Estatius to be sent back in a safe manner. Which, if you do not, you shall look to answer for the same to your smart, for these be no chilidsh actions." The Empress's attitude, however, was soon mollified when she learned of how Estatius had distinguished himself in confrontations with Spamalkan troops at Sao Jorge and Riberia Grande (July 5-10, 1789), and on July 12, she rescinded her order, permitting for the Earl to remain with the offensive forces for the time being. Estatius reached Lisbon on July 19, 1789, and quickly proved his valor in combat. On July 26, he would lead a charge by Laurasian Marines against Lisbon Terminal, overrunning several of the docks and pining his sword of honor against the Chief Gateway. Such actions would induce the Empress to forgiveness, and to praise his qualities and merits to the Privy Council. Burghley, however, pointed out that Lisbon had not yet been taken, and stated sourly that Estatius would eventually place the Empire's military in harm's way. While this was ongoing, the Empire's forces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud had obtained a major victory.
  • July 21-
    • By the beginning of July 1789, the allied forces of the Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Empires, under the command of Lieutenant-General Surovius and the Prince of Coburg had begun to proceed against Bocasani. The capture of Galati, Bihor, and Blaesti had posed a serious threat to the Marasharite strategic position in the Danubian Principalities. Chrisnau suffered from continuous Austarlian and Laurasian moves. Emperor Selim III, who followed the events of the war closely, now ordered, on July 4, for General Osman-Pasha (1749-1815), then stationed at Covasnha, to advance against Prince Coburg (who was then besieging Targu), in the hopes of dividing him from his Laurasian allies. Osman-Pasha at first made some gains, briefly storming Austarlian garrisons on Vidin, Sokin Bajaka, and Oradhea (July 6-11, 1789). On July 14, he was defeated in a confrontation with Laurasian and Austarlian troops at Timis.
    • Three days later, General Surovius, advancing from Oradea and Bihor, joined with Prince Coburg's corps near Arad. Then, on July 21, 1789, General Osman-Pasha, seeking to again divide Coburg and Surovius, launched a offensive against Focasani in the Gateway Provinces, which had been stormed by Rumanstevius in March 1789. Surovius and Coburg, however, had anticipated Osman-Pasha's move. The Laurasian Lieutenant-General had stationed his Marines and a corps of warships, under the command of Commodore Sir Aurelius Marvus (1741-1805), near the outskirts of Focasani. The main allied forces, under Surovius and Coburg, waited at Milcov, located three light-years northeast of Focasani. Therefore, when Osman-Pasha's warships and troops penetrated into the star system, they were able to land on Ooboesti and Vrancea, the two outlying worlds. Marasharite expeditions penetrated to the Alexandru Asteroid Belt, and it seemed as if they had obtained the advantage. Surovius and Coburg, however, now launched a decisive offensive against the outskirts of Focasani.
    • Within four hours, Ooboesti and Vrancea had been recovered by allied forces, and Osman-Pasha was forced to flee towards the Muteni Straits. It was at this point that Commodore Marvus launched an offensive from the rear, cutting off General Pasha's route of escape. By the end of the day, the Battle of Focasani had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Empires. Out of 350 Marasharite warships, 113 were destroyed and another 65 were captured. Nearly 700,000 Marasharite troops were killed in the land confrontations of the battle, compared to just 75,000 allied units. General Osman-Pasha himself barely managed to flee the star system, but was forced to leave behind his flagship, the Cassadrios, and the bulk of his Army Corps. For this victory, Surovius was praised in a proclamation by Empress Aurelia. Following the Battle of Focasani, the Laurasians and Austarlians both made further advances. By the end of July 1789, Surovius and Rumanstevius had stormed Brasov, Cluji-Napora, Berenakza, Kazanka, and Krye, securing the Empire's position in the Gateway Provinces. On August 4, 1789, Surovius obtained another victory over the Marasharite forces, under the command of General Al-Kedik (1755-1802), in the Battle of Yelanets. He then repelled Marasharite counteroffensives against Trans-Ruse, Ivrim, and Kaushany (August 5-9, 1789).
    • In the meantime, Field Marshal von Laudon stormed the Serbian systems of Cuprjina, Valjveo, and Karanovac (August 1-17, 1789), driving ever closer to Belgravia, where the previous Austarlian-Marasharite War had been ended in 1739. The capture of this stronghold, which had been held by the Holy Austarlian Empire between 1718 and 1739, was considered essential to Emperor Joseth and his advisers on the Council of State. By August 22, Laudon had secured Palez, Sabac, and Loznica, expelling the last Marasharite units from Olthenia and the Lower Pazak Cluster. On August 25, 1789, he destroyed a Marasharite force in the Battle of Uzlce, capturing nearly 200,000 Barbary and Syrian warriors. On that same day, Surovius gained a decisive victory in the Battle of Kuchuk Kaynarca. This world, so important symbolically to the Laurasian Empire, capitulated on August 27. By the end of August 1789, Grand Vizier Cenzaze Hassan Pasha (1740-1810), who had assumed the post on May 28, 1789, and had established his command headquarters at Karansebes (where he had destroyed a Austarlian force in September 1788 and thus gained the notice of the Grand Council), was preparing a counteroffensive against the Gateway Provinces.
  • August 2-
    • By August 1789, the situation in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia had degenerated once again into civil conflict. King Hensios III had, since December 1776, attempted to negotiate a settlement with the Franconian League, which was ardently opposed to the Huguenot League. The Duke of Guise and his supporters, however, wished to disrupt the Huguenots and divide their assets with King Hensios. The Estates-General of Blois, in December 1776, which had only one Huguenot delegate, pressured the King of Franconia into conducting a war against the Huguenot League Hensios had then asked the Estates-General to finance him with the necessary taxes to defeat the League; the Third Estate, however, vetoed the King's request, and as a result, he did not receive the funds. Regardless, open warfare ensued. Poitou and Guyenne had subsequently come under Huguenot domination, a situation Hensios exacerbated in September 1777 by the Concordat of Beregac and the Edict of Poitiers, when he revoked many of the privileges which had been granted to the League. Hensios, Prince of Conde (1752-88) had seized Le Fere in November 1779, resulting in a series of skirmishes between government and Huguenot forces until the Treaty of Fleix in November 1780. The death of Hensios's brother, the Duke of Anjou, in June 1784, had worsened the situation and deprived him of his last surviving sibling. Grand Duke Hensios of Navarre, who had now become the heir to the throne, sought aid from Empress Aurelia of Laurasia. The Empress, however, distracted by the events in Durthia, and (after 1787), with the wars with Marasharita and Spamalka, refrained for years from intervention.
    • In December 1784, the Duke of Guise signed the Treaty of Joinville with Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka, who pledged the Franconian League a grant of $3.4 trillion ducats per year to maintain its struggle against the King and his authorities. In July 1785, Hensios, desperately attempting to maintain the peace, issued the Edict of Nemours, revoking his namesake's rights of succession to the throne and cracking down further on Huguenot privileges. This strategy did not work, however, and in May 1788, the Uprising of the Barricades, provoked by Guise, resulted in the King being forced to flee from Parri. Guise and his supporters now constituted the Committee of the Sixteen, and took control of the Royal Franconian Government. The following month (June 1788), the King agreed to the Edict of Union, surrendering to the most recent demands of the Franconian League. This was negotiated by his mother, Queen Mother Catharina d'Medici, who was now in declining health. In September 1788, Hensios convened a session of the Estates-General at Blois; he soon became convinced that Guise had manipulated members of the Third Estate, and that he was a dangerous threat to the Franconian Crown. On December 23, 1788, the Duke and his brother, Lujak, Patriarch of Guise (1755-88), were lured into a trap by the King's guards at the Chateau de Blois. The guardsmen, having told the Guise brothers that the King wished to meet them, subsequently fell upon them and hacked them to death with vibroswords. Guise had been popular with many in the Kingdom, and in January 1789, the Franconian League declared war on King Hensios.
    • On January 5, 1789, his mother, Queen Mother Catharina d'Medici, died at the age of 69 at the Chateau de Blois. Her death marked the passing from the scene of a woman who had played a important role in Franconian affairs for more than four decades. Two days later, Guise's younger brother, Charman of Lorraine, Duke of Mayenne (1754-1811), assumed leadership of the League. The League utilized the Holonet to disseminate messages and pamphlets attacking the King; the Franconian Sorbonne proclaimed it lawful to depose Hensios from the throne. In June 1789, King Hensios and his cousin, Grand Duke Hensios of Navarre, instigated a siege of Parri, attempting to secure the capital star system from the League. On August 1, 1789, the King was mortally wounded by Jacques Clement (1767-89), a fanatic supporter of the Franconian League. Clement had disguised himself as a Franconian cleric and had gained access to the King's presence. He stabbed the King with a dagger. Clement was instantly killed, and Hensios was taken to the medical quarters. At his deathbed, he formally named Hensios of Navarre as his successor, enjoined his troops and subordinates to be loyal to him, and declared that he would soon meet his ancestors. Then, on August 2, 1789, Hensios III of Franconia, last of the Valois Dynasty, and last surviving son of Hensios II and Catharina d'Medici, died at the age of only 37 from his wounds. Hensios of Navarre now became King of Franconia as Hensios IV (r. 1789-1810), the first ruler of the Bourbanoite Dynasty. News of Hensios's death was received with much joy on Parri, and throughout the League's territories. The new King of Franconia decided to postpone the offensive against Parri. He would now seek to gain the assistance of a foreign power: namely, the Laurasian Empire. Hensios was aware of Empress Aurelia's fear of the Franconian League and of her desire to have a strong, and friendly, Franconian monarchy than one which was unstable and hostile. And his efforts to secure a military alliance with the Empire would soon meet success.
  • August 22-
    • Empress Aurelia convened a special session of the Imperial Privy Council at the Gilbertine Palace on Tudoria (August 22, 1789). The Empress had continued to monitor the progress of the Empire's military forces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, Portugallian Homeland Territories, and the Southern Durthian Duchies. Events in the Great Tesmanian Cloud have already been noted. It is now prudent to address the continued events surrounding the Siege of Lisbon, and of other offensives in Portugallia. Throughout August 1789, the forces of Admiral Dracius and Lord Greysius kept up the pressure upon Lisbon's defenses. On August 5, a Spamalkan counteroffensive, launched by General Manuel Commenraz (1743-91) against Peinche, which had been secured by Laurasian forces three days earlier as a communications terminal, failed. The Earl of Estatius then distinguished himself in a series of confrontations at the Lisbon Spaceports (August 7); Almada (August 11); and Matosinhos (August 14). On August 17, 1789, Admiral Dracius's subordinate, Commodore Sir Thomasius Gangius (1753-1826), destroyed a Spamalkan naval convoy in the Battle of Maia, preventing the reinforcement of Lisbon from the Spamalkan garrisons of Cavado, Algrave, and Fairo. Viseu, a major Spamalkan mining and industrial goods colony, fell to the Commodore on August 20. By the time Empress Aurelia convened the Privy Council, Dracius's forces were pressing upon Lisbon's Northern Straits, having overrun Alfa Pendular, Belem, and Chiado Spaceport. During the early hours of August 20, the Empress had received a communique from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in which the Sultan of Morocco pledged to enter the war against Spamalka by no later than the end of the following month. With all of this in mind, the Empress conducted herself in a confident, upright manner.
    • She declared to her Privy Council that the continued victories by her forces had humbled the Empire's adversaries, and that all were aware that she would not shrink on her promises. Aurelia quickly moved on to affairs in Franconia. The Empress had been monitoring the civil conflicts in this, once Laurasia's most persistent enemy from the Great Amulak Spiral, for years, and she was utterly alarmed by the assassination of King Hensios. Following his death, most foreign sovereigns, with the exception of Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I, had expressed their shock and regrets at his demise. In a communique to the new King of Franconia (August 7, 1789), the Empress had declared that "the death of your predecessor, by such foul and vile means as would be employed by any agent of the Anti-Almitis, is one which brings great sadness to my heart and to my dominions." Two days later, Aurelia had ordered for a memorial service to be held in the murdered Franconian King's honor at the Westphalian Cathedral. These actions had served to further strengthen relations between the Imperial Laurasian Government and the authorities loyal to King Hensios.
    • The Empress herself leaned towards intervention, realizing that Laurasian aid to Hensios would ensure Franconia's future friendship and cooperation with the Empire. Chancellor Walsingis and Lord Treasurer Burghley were among the chief proponents of it among her advisers, believing that intervention would give the Empire leverage in the affairs of the Great Amulak Spiral, and serve as a counterbalance to the further ambitions of the Holy Spamalkan Empire. This was all quickly revealed at the Privy Council's session, with the Empress's councilors almost unanimous in urging her to move forward with treaty negotiations with her Franconian counterpart. Aurelia obliged, and on August 25, ordered Lord Buchamia to send a message to his Franconian counterpart, Necker, requesting for alliance negotiations between the two realms. Necker responded positively on August 31, and on September 4, Hensios himself granted permission for negotiations to proceed. Delegations from the two governments would convene at Carcassone, one of Hensios's chief strongholds in the Grand Duchy of Navarre, from September 7, 1789. On that day, the Empress and the Imperial Court, having conducted a minor progress through the Galician and Goldarian Provinces, and now residing at the Palace of Harmony on Clancia, celebrated her fifty-sixth birthday, and the Empire's continued war successes, with much pomp and ceremony.
  • September 22-
    • By the beginning of September 1789, Marasharite Grand Vizier Cenzaze Hassan Pasha had assembled his military forces at Rymnik (which had been controlled by the Marasharite Empire as a military base since 1434), Drobea, and Pitetsi. The Grand Vizier had decided to launch a series of counteroffensives against Austarlian and Laurasian units at Focasani, Oradea, Bihor, Balesti, and the Bosporan Straits. On September 5, 1789, the Grand Vizier advanced from Rymnik against Oradea. In a series of confrontations with Prince Coburg and Laurasian Admiral Seniavin at Mures, Satu Mure, and Lower Oradea (September 5-11, 1789), he managed to inflict a series of defeats upon the allied forces, and to thrust to the outskirts of Oradea. During the next four days, the Grand Vizier wasted his manpower and naval resources in launching a series of assaults against the garrison of Oradea. This gave General Surovius the advantage. Surovius now decided to launch a surprise offensive against Rymnik, bypassing the Grand Vizier's positions in the outskirts of the Oradea star system. He reckoned that the Grand Vizier would hasten back to this major military base, and that his supply lines would therefore become overextended.
    • Coburg, who had been repelling Marasharite assaults against Galasti and Silisburg, was to join with him at the decisive moment and cut off the Grand Vizier's lines, preventing his retreat. On September 20, 1789, the 50th Imperial Army and the 66th Imperial Fleet advanced to Rymnik. Surovius and Seniavin had 570 warships and a force of nearly one million soldiers of the Imperial Laurasian Army at their disposal. The garrison of Rymnik alone had 235 warships with 1.3 million soldiers; the Grand Vizier's main command force had 700 warships and nearly 2 million Marasharite troops. Surovius would thus be outnumbered. However, Coburg had a substantial force of 550 warships and 3 million troops of the Imperial Laurasian Army, which would give the balance in the confrontation. As Surovius had expected, Grand Vizier Cenzaze Pasha quickly hastened from Oradea with his formations, and by the early hours of September 22, was approaching Surovius's formations in the outskirts of Rymnik.
    • The first confrontations of the Battle of Rymnik saw the garrison of that star system combining with the troops and marines of the Grand Vizier, and Surovius's first landings on Rymnik Post and the Rymnik Asteroids were repelled. By midday, however, the advantage had shifted. Coburg's formations now advanced swiftly from Galasti to Rymnik, and launched an immediate offensive against the Grand Vizier's force. He drove all before him, and by 2:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, the Prince had stormed several of the Marasharite command positions. Surovius subsequently launched a vigorous counteroffensive from the rear. Seniavin released his reserves of starfighters and marines, bottling up the garrison of Rymnik and laying a series of mines at the Rymnik Asteroids. The General then landed his corps on Rymnik Minor, crippling the Marasharite enemy artillery and utilizing infantry square formations to repel massive counterattacks by Marasharite marine corps. Bogsa soon fell to Surovius's units, and he now combined with Coburg for a decisive push against the Grand Vizier and Garrison General Kemeneskh Mustafa of Rymnik (1757-1820), driving their formations directly into the star system.
    • Seniavin's flank attacks against the Rymnik Posts inflicted serious damage upon Marasharite positions and swept away most of their destroyers and dreadnoughts. By the middle of the afternoon, allied troops had landed on Rymnik and were advancing towards Mustafa's chief command headquarters. The Austarlian corps under Coburg advanced and pinned down Marasharite formations near Rymnik Station, while Surovius launched a massive flanking attack against the Grand Vizier's forces, assaulting them with his marines and transports. By the end of the day, the Battle of Rymnik had ended in a complete and utter victory for the Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Empires. Grand Vizier Cenzaze Pasha barely managed to flee Rymnik, but Garrison General Kemeneskh Mustafa became a prisoner of war, along with his officers. The Marasharites lost nearly 1.4 million troops, all of their turbocannon and ion cannon batteries, and a third of their warships. Surovius and Coburg, on the other hand, lost only 150,000 troops and less than a fifth of their warships. Celebrations erupted throughout the Laurasian Empire. Empress Aurelia declared Surovius her best commander; on October 15, 1789, she would reward Surovius by raising him to the nobility as 1st Baron Surovius of Rymnik. He would be awarded the Order of St. Seleucus the Victor, the Empire's second highest military honor, in December 1789.
    • Following the Battle of Rymnik, Laurasian and Austarlian forces made swift gains. Mures and Satu Mure were reconquered by the end of the month, and on October 2, the Sucreava Colonies fell to a combined assault by Surovius and Coburg. Bacau and Tighina both capitulated to the allies five days later. At the same time as these operations were ongoing in the Gateway Provinces and the Danubian Principalities, Austarlian Field-Marshal Laudon had made a major gain at the expense of the Marasharite Empire. Smederevo, Palez, Sabac, and Zemun had been stormed by Laudon's forces in August 1789, and on September 15, the Field-Marshal had commenced the siege of Belgravia. He surrounded this major Marasharite military bastion, which had been in their possession (with the interlude 1718-39) since 1521, with nearly 300 military warships and a substantial force of Austarlian troops, Marines, and Reiffers. Despite the efforts of Marasharite General Al-Sissi of Aegyptiania (1754-1808), Belgravia fell on October 8, 1789. Nearly two-thirds of the Marasharite garrison died or were captured. By the end of November 1789, Laudon had secured the rest of Lower Serbia. This included the strongholds of Kragujevec (October 12-14); Svilajnac (October 18); Aleskinac (October 22-25); Soko Banja (October 30); Soko (November 4); and Srebnirca (November 12). The Second Battle of Karanovac, on November 21-22, 1789, resulted in another humiliating defeat for the Grand Vizier and the fall of this Marasharite military stronghold to the Holy Austarlian Empire. Laudon also repelled Marasharite counteroffensives against Palez, Braska, and Kovin.
  • October 6-
    • As regards to the Portugallian campaigns, September and October 1789 witnessed dramatic advances by the forces of the Laurasian Empire, Don Antonio of Canto, and the Duke of Braganza. On August 25, 1789, Laurasian and Portugallian troops, under the command of Braganza and General Norria, advanced from Maia to the Tagian Straits. Along the route, Norria and Braganza seized seventeen Spamalkan transports and commercial vessels at Lourdes (August 27, 1789). Two days later, the Battle of the Tagian Straits resulted in a decisive victory for the allied forces. By September 11, the Portugallians had liberated the systems of Gunimares and Seixal, and on September 15, 1789, another Spamalkan counteroffensive, launched from Vigo, Cadiz, and Gibraltar, came to ruin in the Battle of Cale Guestria. By September 29, Porto Santo and the Madeira Comets had been stormed by Dracius, who captured a stockpile of Spamalkan turbocannons. Two days later, Philicus suffered a serious blow: Sultan Khatib III of Morocco, adhering to the Treaty of El Aauin, issued a declaration of war against the Holy Spamalkan Empire.
    • By October 4, Almiera, Granada, Grehalio, and Lower Gibraltar had all been seized by Moroccan expeditions, and Ceuta was blockaded by the Sultan's forces from Agadir and Casablanca. Three days later (October 7, 1789), the Duke of Cadiz finally surrendered, and Lisbon now fell to the Laurasian Empire and to Don Antonio of Canto. On October 14, 1789, he was formally acknowledged as King of Portugallia by the Cortes of Muraillo. And by the end of October 1789, the Spamalkan garrisons of Odivelas, Fairo, and Cavado had been ejected. Most of the Portugallian Homeland Territories had now been liberated from the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Philicus, who had retreated into the recesses of El Escorial on Madrid, was embarrassed by these losses. On October 22, 1789, General Norria was dispatched to Fez, in order to provide reinforcements to the Sultan in his siege of Ceuta, and to fulfill the Empire's military obligations in the alliance. Marasharite Emperor Selim III now declared the Sultan a contumacious traitor, and on November 2, 1789, issued orders to the Beys of Algiers and Tunis, commanding them to advance into Morocco.
  • November 17-
    • Empress Aurelia, who once again resided at the Fountain Palace on Venasia Prime with the Imperial Court, celebrated the thirty-first anniversary of her reign with much pomp and ceremony (November 17, 1789). Sir Antigonus Lesius, the Empress's Champion, ensured that the Accession Day jousts staged for the benefit of Her Majesty and her courtiers would be ones of much "joy, ceremonial, and triumph." The Empress observed a parade of returning troopers of the Imperial Laurasian Army, Valedictorian Guards, and Imperial Marines. She herself rewarded several of the Empire's military veterans in the parade with the Order of St. Antigonus the Conqueror, which was the highest honor which could be accorded to enlisted soldiers in the Imperial Military. They were afterwards treated to a afternoon banquet with the Empress, and were guests of honor at a ceremonial joust among the chief courtiers of the Imperial Household.
    • Oxfadia and Hattonius both distinguished themselves; the latter, although his health was beginning to enter a decline, was nevertheless still an accomplished duelist. The Empress then attended a series of masques and balls which were held in her honor, including the Ball of Praise by the assembled matrons and noblewomen of Venasia Prime. This was followed by a performance of Venasian High Maidens at the Palace Court, and by a massive fireworks display. Manifestos issued from the Imperial Court to the subjects of the Empire praised the efforts of the Empress's military forces in the confrontations with the enemy, and also the accomplishments made by the Empire's allies. The following morning (November 18, 1789), the Empress attended a service of benedictions and praise conducted in honor of the Imperial Military at the Matronly Church of Fa'kha in Ta'cuaghay, and offered her fervent prayers for the continued success of her military forces. And indeed, the Empress's prayers were not in vain.
    • Hadjibey, which had long been a headquarters for the Marasharite Navy in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, finally capitulated to the forces of the Laurasian Empire on October 21, 1789. By October 24, Shumen was being constantly harried by Laurasian units from Ivrim, Ochania, Kilidrim, Hadjibey, Navarino, Chesma, and Moreia. On October 29, 1789, Admiral Ushavious utterly destroyed a Marasharite force launched from Briceni in the Battle of the Lower Danube Asteroids. Bessarabia was in Laurasian possession by November 3, and on November 7, 1789, Akkerman was also besieged by the Laurasians. Despite the efforts of Garrison General Mustafa-Pasha (1744-1812), the stronghold fell to Admiral Ushavious and Field-Marshal Rumanstevius ten days later.
    • With the fall of Akkerman, Laurasian forces advanced to the Peldavian Gateways and Stauvachany. The garrison of Stauvachany, isolated from its supply routes and realizing that resistance was futile, surrendered to Admiral Ushavious on November 24, 1789; the Peldavian Gateways followed ten days later. By the beginning of December 1789, Varna had been virtually isolated by the Imperial Laurasian Navy, and Ushavious now stationed his units at Bessarabia, Duros, Del Valle, and Kuchuk Kaynarca, determined to make a decisive move against this Marasharite stronghold which had previously eluded Laurasian forces. Surovius, in the meantime, had ruined a Marasharite counteroffensive at Yesidan (November 5-9, 1789) and had stormed the Marasharite arsenals of Yuzhne, Teplovar, and Rezni in the Gateway Provinces, completing the expulsion of Marasharite units from that region.
  • December 12-
    • Following the declaration of rebellion by the Marasharite Empire against the Sultanate of Morocco in early November 1789, a new theater of war quickly opened in the Barbary States and in Mauritania. Moroccan forces, which had already been assembled at the Sultanate's chief strongholds from the conclusion of the Treaty of El Aauin with the Laurasian Empire, took the advantage from the first. Advancing from Nouackhott, Atar, and Kiffa, the Sultan's younger brother and heir apparent, Prince Ahmad al-Mansur (1749-1803), defeated a Mauritanian-Marasharite force in the Battle of Kedai (November 5, 1789). Selibaby, which was the Marasharite consulate of affairs in the Guidmaka District, was stormed five days later. By November 12, General Norria, whose chief military command headquarters was at Fez, had repelled a Marasharite offensive against Kenitra and Nador, gaining the respect of his Moroccan allies.
    • On November 16, 1789, Ceuta, having been besieged by Moroccan and Laurasian forces for more than a month, surrendered. Two days later, Norria and Morooccan General Haydir en Barbarossa (1742-1813) secured a major victory over Spamalkan units in the Battle of Aranjuez, driving Spamalkan troops from their strongholds at Ifini, Marrakesh, and Kanish. On that same day, King Antonio I of Portugallia (as he was now recognized by his subjects and by Laurasia, Durthia, Austarlia, Dejanica, Pruthia, Franconia, and Haxonia), defeated a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Teutores, preventing their advance against Lisbon. By the end of November 1789, Portugallian forces had completed the expulsion of Spamalkan units from the das Flores, Horizomo, and Santa Marma sects of the Azores Star Cluster. On December 3, 1789, two days after Dracius repelled a Spamalkan offensive against San Sebastian (which had now become a major base from which Laurasian troops and naval vessels harried Spamalkan commerce), the Siege of Nordeste, the last significant stronghold held by the Spamalkans in the Azores Star Cluster, commenced.
    • King Antonio assigned his nephew, Prince Fernando (1760-1826), to command the siege along with Braganza and Field-Marshal Lord Greysius. Nordeste's garrison and defenses were commanded by Hernan de Soto, Count de Muur (1736-1807), who was under orders from Philicus to not surrender and to await reinforcements from Canaira and Tenefire. On December 7, however, Dracius's destruction of a Spamalkan naval force under the Duke of Majorica (1724-97; Francisco Pizzaro, 2nd Duke of Majorica) in the Battle of the Cayman Nebula put paid to all hopes for the garrison of Nordeste. Nordeste's inhabitants, in any case, despised their Spamalkan occupiers and were determined to rid themselves of them. On December 12, 1789, they erupted in revolt against the garrison, overrunning the world's shield generators and blockading the Garrison General and his main troops in their headquarters. Within hours, the world had been flung open to the allied forces, and Nordeste fell into the possession of Portugallia and the Laurasian Empire. The Count de Muur did not surrender, however, until December 21, after receiving word of further victories by Dracius at Cacabanna and Sibana over Spamalkan relief squadrons. On December 24, 1789, the Siege of Mellila commenced, as this last Spamalkan foothold in the Barbary States was surrounded by a force of nearly 800 Laurasian, Moroccan, and Portugallian warships with nearly 35 million soldiers from the three allied states. As the year 1789, and the 1780s, came to an end, the Laurasian Empire and its allies had gained the ascendancy on all fronts.

1790

  • January 1-
    • 1790, the 90th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire and its allies, the Holy Austarlian Empire, the United Durthian States, the Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia, and the Sultanate of Morocco, having obtained the dominant position in the InterGalactic War. The Marasharite and Holy Spamalkan Empires, who had been reluctant allies at first, were hampered by the inefficiencies of their military and diplomatic resources; by the over-extension of their forces; and by the internal dissensions which existed in both realms. Austarlia's military forces, under the command of the aged but still skilled Field-Marshal Laudon, had conquered the Banat of Temesvar, the Pazak Cluster, Serbia, Olthenia, Belgravia, Upper Bosnia, most of Wallachia, and Albania, having inflicted a endless series of humiliations upon the Marasharites in the Balkan Provinces. Its cooperation with the Laurasian Empire had yielded results, with Surovius and Coburg having developed a close relationship and a good partnership of military coordination and cooperation. Surovius, Rumanstevius, Seniavin, and Ushavious had led the Empire to an uninterrupted series of victories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud and Gateway Provinces. Marasharite forces clung on to Izmail, Jassy, Varna, Shumen, Kolzuduzha, Ruse, and Silistra, but with a growing unease, and a painful awareness of the superiority enjoyed by their adversary's military forces. Durthia, on its part, had reestablished itself in portions of Brabant and was beginning to drive Spamalkan units from the Northern Provinces.
    • Portugallia had restored its homeland territories, driven the Spamalkan garrisons from the Azores Star Cluster, and was ready to launch campaigns to reclaim its colonial territories. Morocco, under Khatib III, had repelled all Marasharite offensives and had advanced further into Mauritania. This year would see the allied coalition make more gains and the entry of Franconia into the conflict. However, it would also see the sudden withdrawal of the Holy Austarlian Empire which, in spite of its victories over the Marasharites, was facing troubles in Hungary and Burgundy, and had a poor relationship with the Haxonian and Vendragian Confederacies. Empress Aurelia entered the last decade of the eighteenth century as probably the most powerful sovereign of inter-galactic civilization. Ruling over an Empire of nearly sixty-two million star systems, encompassing the whole of the Caladarian Galaxy and Angelina Spiral, Aurelia could reasonably claim to have a full stake in the affairs of the Great Amulak Spiral. And it was this message which she trumpeted in her New Year's proclamation (January 1, 1790). The Empress declared that "the Lord Almitis has, in his greatness, and his glory, bequeathed us with much success and much prosperity. He has ensured that this Empire will remain predominant in this Universe, with the valor of its forces overawing all." For the Empress, however, there was ahead personal tragedy, anxiety about affairs at the Imperial Court, and renewed worries about the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Empire's old ally, Pruthia.
  • January 7-
    • After four months of long, arduous negotiations, the Treaty of Carcassones was finally signed by the delegations of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia on January 7, 1790. The Laurasian signatories to this agreement were the Laurasian Ambassador to the Court of Parri (who actually resided at Toulouse, since Parri was still in the hands of the Franconian League), Sir Achilles Prasius (1739-1813); Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sir Cassander Burnqhamia, 1st Baron Burnqhamia of Kherson (1753-1821); and Sir Antigenes Selevies (1746-1818). The Royal Franconian Government was represented by Maximilien de Béthune, later Duke of Sully (1760-1841), King Hensios's right-hand man; Foreign Affairs Minister Necker; and Lord Hensios de'Bravanate of Orange (1731-98), a Durthian-Franconian hybrid who had been in the service of the Franconian Foreign Service since 1779. By the terms of this treaty, a diplomatic and military alliance was established between Laurasia and Franconia. Empress Aurelia pledged herself to "the recognition of His Majesty's authority over the entire extent of his realms, including Parri, Orleans, Burgundy, Brittany, the Metzian Lordships, Lorraine, Bar, Normandy, Calais, Poitiers, and Anjou." Therefore, the Franconian League was to be formally denounced by the Imperial Laurasian Government. Prohibitions were to be imposed on the provision of mercenaries, loans, or intelligence information to the League.
    • Furthermore, the Empire pledged to provide a force of not more than 1,200 military warships and 20 million Imperial Laurasian Army troops to the aid of the King of Franconia. Hensios, on his part, affirmed his recognition of the independence of United Durthia; conferred such recognition for the restoration of Portugallia's independence; and pledged, with all of his effort, "to resist Spamalkan and Marasharite pretensions to Morocco, the Barbary States, and other territories therewith in the Little Amulak Cloud." The King agreed to grant Laurasian forces free privileges of military transit through his realms, and to allow for the Empire to hold Boulougone as a base of operations against the League forces. The Treaty of Carcassones was ratified by Empress Aurelia on January 10 and by King Hensios on January 12. On January 22, 1790, the Empress appointed Lord Willoughby (who as mentioned above, was the late Dowager Duchess of Sufforia's son), as the commander of Laurasian forces in Franconia. Willoughby, already stationed at Flushing, would arrive at Boulougone by February 1, 1790. Hensios, on his part, had gained a series of victories at Ardres, Coutras, and Arques since August 1789. Laurasian intervention would serve to buttress the King's position.
  • January 19-
    • After a siege of nearly a month, Mellila fell to the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire, Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia, and Sultanate of Morocco on January 19, 1790. The fall of Mellila was a disastrous blow to the Holy Spamalkan Empire. All of the Spamalkan military equipment, supplies, and arms at Mellila were captured by the allied forces. General Alvardo de Silva (1740-1812), Commander of the Garrison of Mellila, was, by the agreement of General Norria and Sultan Khatib III, transported back to the St. Xaeranian Prison and Fortress on Kherson, in the Caladarian Galaxy. Nearly half of the world's 5-million man Spamalkan garrison died during the long siege, and the world's extensive military factories, spaceports, and dockyards now fell into Moroccan hands. Following the fall of Mellila, Laurasian and Moroccan forces made substantial gains in the Canaries, Mauritania, and Algiers. The Algerian strongholds of Gorgol, Tarzant, and Rosso fell on January 22; three days later, the Battle of Gama resulted in another decisive victory for Laurasian General Norria and Moroccan Prince al-Mansur.
    • By January 25, when Laurasian forces had overrun the Spamalkan garrison of Fuertuventura, Marasharite and Mauritanian units were expelled from Dar-Naim, Ayoun el Atrous, and Nema. On January 26, 1790, Oran capitulated to the Laurasian Empire after a brief struggle between allied forces and the Algerian garrison. By the middle of February 1790, Laurasian troops conquered the Spamalkan systems of Gran Canaria, Las Palmas, and Del Rossio. Prince al-Mansur, on his part, had gained further renown in Morocco, and elsewhere, through his victories at Setif, Belida, and Batna. At the same time, Dracius and Fernando inflicted a series of humiliations upon Spamalkan forces in the vicinity of the Azores Star Cluster and in the Spamalkan Colonies (known as the "Spamalkan Main"). On January 24, 1790, the Battle of Bayona was waged between a Spamalkan force under the command of Don Pedro de Zubiaur (1740-1805) on the one hand, and a Laurasian-Portugallian force under the command of Admiral Dracius. Within five hours, Dracius had obtained a decisive victory, and he captured a third of the Spamalkan battleships. From Bayona, Dracius stormed Terceira, Santa Delegada, and Ferrel (January 25-February 2, 1790), capturing a large amount of Spamalkan equipment and humiliating Emperor Philicus.
    • By February 7, 1790, the 50th and 51st Imperial Armies, as well as the 66th and 67th Imperial Fleets, combined with the Portugallian 1st and 2nd Expeditionary Forces, for a directed offensive against the Spamalkan strongholds of San Juan de Ulua, San Domingo, Sao Vicente, and Cartagena, all of which were major commercial and military strongholds for the Holy Spamalkan Government. Dracius and Prince Fernando defeated Spamalkan fleets in confrontations at Sesimbra and Lower Cadiz (February 8-11, 1790). Then (February 13, 1790), Dracius blockaded the outskirts of San Juan de Ulua, which was under the command of Don Francisco Lujan (1752-1809). The Laurasian-Portugallian force comprised of two hundred warships with a combined total of 11,000 starfighters and 1 million troops. The Spamalkan garrison, on the other hand, had one hundred warships with 3,000 starfighters and 950,000 troops.
    • Lujan, in a foolish attempt to drive the allied forces from the star system, launched a frontal attack against their offensive lines, intent on impounding their transports and recovering a number of lost Spamalkan turbocannon. Dracius, however, who had stationed his destroyers and battleships to take the brunt of any Spamalkan moves, then launched a counterattack against the charging Spamalkan dreadnoughts with his mobile corvettes and couriers, sending them into disarray and driving them through the star system. The Spamalkans lost ten of their dreadnoughts and more than 300,000 military personnel. Dracius subsequently captured Almanza Point; Imperial Marines and Portugallian troops proved to be superior to the Spamalkan terceiros stationed there. A series of confrontations around Almanza Station ensued, with Lujan losing his flagship, the Santa Clara, and his support vessel, the San Pedro. Both vessels succumbed to superior allied turbolaser fire. Dracius then brought his transports and frigates forward, and within hours, San Juan de Ulua's shields had been penetrated by Laurasian troops. Although the IMS Angelica was lost, and another Laurasian battleship, the IMS Swallow, suffered severe damage, Dracius's marines managed to penetrate the three chief Spamalkan defense batteries.
    • By the end of the day, the Laurasians had captured the Spamalkan transports Minion and San Salvador; and by the early hours of February 15, Lujan was finally forced to surrender to the allied forces. The fall of San Juan de Ulua proved a major humiliation for Emperor Philicus, who lambasted his military commanders for their incompetence. From San Juan de Ulua, Dracius's forces now proceeded to Sao Vicente, previously a Portugallian colony, which had now become a military outpost for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. On February 19, 1790, Spamalkan Commodore Andres de Equino (1748-1802) attempted to bear down upon the Laurasian-Portugallian forces, launching a sally with two of his dreadnoughts, the Santa Maria de Begona and the Concepcion. He stationed his largest battleship, the San Juan Bautista, near the outskirts of Sao Vicente, which was defended by a minefield and a barricade of outposts.
    • The Commodore's attempt, however, came to ruin, as Dracius employed his starfighters and corvettes to harry the Spamalkan warships. Laurasian automated transports anchored the convoy, and the Santa Maria de Begona was destroyed within an hour. The Laurasian ships, then encircling the Spamalkan force, withstood all enemy fire and ultimately overwhelmed the Concepcion, which was captured during the afternoon of the day. Commodore de Equino attempted to launch a final offensive with his corvettes and frigates, but Portugallian Prince Fernando, who had been harrying Espirito Santo, moved into the rear of the star system, attacking the barricade defenses from behind. De Equino was forced to flee, and Sao Vicente fell to the allied forces during the early hours of February 20. By the end of February 1790, Dracius and Fernando had stormed Salvador, Olinda, and Pernambuco, establishing a foothold in the Spamalkan-occupied colony of Brazil. From here, Dracius planned to storm Cartagena and San Domingo, both of which suffered from continual Laurasian raids.
  • February 20-
    • By January 1790, the physical and mental condition of Holy Austarlian Emperor Joseth II had become utterly exhausted. During January 1790, Field-Marshal Laudon, himself in declining health, had gained a string of further victories in the Marasharite Province of Bosnia, consolidating his earlier gains in the Temesvar, Olthenia, and the Pazak Cluster. On January 5, 1790, the Battle of Brcko had resulted in a decisive victory for Laudon. Marasharite Admiral Al-Sasik (1725-90), who commanded the Marasharite naval forces in the confrontation, was captured and became a Austarlian prisoner of war. During the next six days, Laudon stormed the Marasharite garrisons of Zenica, Mostar, and Bijor, terminating any remaining threat posed by the Marasharites to Banja Luka (which was now one of the Holy Austarlian Empire's chief military arsenals, and a command headquarter for the operations).
    • On January 14, the Marasharite Governor of Bosnia, Hapik-Pasha (1756-1804), who had established his command headquarters on Tesjani because Sarajevo was in Austarlian hands, launched a counteroffensive, seeking to penetrate into the Lower Pazak and to drive Austarlian units from Mehadia, Pest, and Dubrovnik. Although the Governor managed to destroy a Austarlian force near Slatina (January 17-22, 1790), Laudon inflicted a ruinous defeat upon him in the Battle of Guinan (January 24, 1790), ending the Marasharite moves. By February 12, 1790, the aged Austarlian Field-Marshal had driven Marasharite troops from Zivornik and Zivinice, and was blockading Tesjani. Other troubles, however, had descended upon Joseth's dominions. Joseth, who unlike his ally Empress Aurelia was not popular with his subjects, had attempted to impose a series of radical administrative and judicial changes upon his realms.
    • Between 1780 and 1790, the Emperor issued more than 17,000 new laws, which covered all matters of concern, ranging from the clothes and cultural customs of his subjects, to their morals, education, and healthcare. He sought to build a rationalized, centralized, and uniform government for his diverse territories, a hierarchy with himself as supreme autocrat. He sought to imbue his government personnel with a dedicated spirit of service; to provide advancement without favor for class or ethnic origins; and to maintain a merits system. The Emperor was successful in introducing a uniform budgetary system (previously, Austarlia, Bohemia, Hungary, Croatia, Transylvania, Dalmatia, Burgundy, and Galicia had all had their own separate budgets), and he instigated an extensive reform of the legal system, which included the abolition of the death penalty, relaxations on the press and on organized religions, and the establishment of principles of equality for all criminal offenders.
    • Joseth also suppressed more than a third of the monasteries of the Austarlian Religious Order; reduced the number of holy days; simplified Austarlian rituals; abolished ecclesiastical courts; and defined marriage as a civil contract, being far more radical in his innovations then Aurelia (a relative moderate on religious matters), had been with hers. Joseth's reforms, however, offended his subjects. His nobility were angered by the high taxes levied on them, and by his egalitarian and despotic attitudes. His subjects in Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia, and Burgundy were angered by his attempts to curtail their self-government privileges and to subordinate all to his personal rule. Many Austarlians believed the Emperor was a tyrant, and feared the impositions of his secret service. In 1784, Joseth attempted to make Austarlian the official language of all his realms, and refused all demands by his Hungarian nobles that he submit to the traditional coronation ceremony. By October 1789, rebellion had exploded in Burgundy (the Brabarintine Revolt) and in Hungary (the Horea Revolt), both of which seriously threatened the Emperor's authority.
    • By the beginning of January 1790, Buda, Pest, and the Austarlian stronghold of Great Liega in Burgundy had fallen into the hands of rebels, and Joseth was forced to cancel his ambitious plans for offensives into Marasharite Macedonica and Thracia. The Empire's realms became ravaged with civil and economic turmoil. All these matters worsened the Emperor's health, which had been poor since November 1788. Disillusioned, and abandoned by even his Chancellor Kaunitz, Joseth withdrew all of his Hungarian reforms on January 30, 1790. He then retreated to the recesses of the Imperial Palace on Vienna, and refused to appear in public again. Finally, on February 20, 1790, the Emperor of Austarlia died, having reigned as sole monarch for a decade, and after a total of twenty-five years on the Austarlian throne. The death of Joseth II was greeted with shock and sadness by Austarlia's allies. Empress Aurelia in particular, who had not been able to afford the diversion of military resources to assist Joseth in suppressing the revolts in Hungary and in Burgundy, and who had not been obliged to do so in any case, nevertheless declared that his death was a "severe blow to the security of this universe."
    • She lamented over his end and recounted her memories of their meetings. Joseth was buried at the Imperial Crypt on February 27. His brother, Grand Duke Lea'dus of Tuscany (who had warned Burghley two decades earlier about the Ridolfius Plot), was now hastily summoned to Vienna to assume the Austarlian throne as Emperor Lea'dus II. Although Lea'dus was by no means hostile to the Laurasian Empire, he nevertheless believed that Austarlia's pressing internal troubles required his attention first. Lea'dus was determined to suppress the revolts in Hungary and Burgundy; to preserve what he could of his brother's reforms; and to turn his attention to the deteriorating relationship with Haxonia and Vendragia. By March 1790, the new Emperor had resolved upon bringing the war with Marasharita to an end. During the early months of his reign, he focused his efforts on examining and revising his brother's legal and administrative measures; on reinforcing the garrisons in Hungary and in Burgundy; and on ingratiating himself with the nobility of his realms. Tuscany was now in personal union with the Holy Austarlian Empire, as a result of Le'adus's accession to the throne, and he sought to defend it against Haxonian aggression. This was to become his primary focus.
  • February 21-
    • Empress Aurelia, who had entered the year with such triumph and joy, experienced two personal tragedies during February 1790, at the Imperial Court. The death of her ally, Emperor Joseth II, has already been noted. It would in the immediate future have an impact upon the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War, leading to the termination of the Empress's ambitious "Marasharite Plan". As regards to the personal tragedies, however, the Empress had already seen her share. The deaths of Chief Procurator Parsius (1775); Procurator-General Bagonius (1779); Jadia (1783); the Sidronuises (1786); Bromelius and Sadielius (1787); and Leicesterius (1788), had all deeply affected the Empress when they had occurred. Then on May 31, 1789, Sir Walterius Mildmay, Minister of Finance, and one of the Empress's most trusted advisers, had died on Oxia Vixius. His death had much upset the Empress, and for months afterwards, she declared that she feared the Lord Almitis's wrath was now beginning to be displayed.
    • This, however, was only the preliminary to the beginning of a long series of deaths in the last decade of the eighteenth century. The Empress would find herself stripped of almost everyone with whom she had entered her reign; by 1800, the entire Imperial Court and Government had undergone a significant realignment. On February 12, 1790, Lady Meguilla Parrius of Welch, Chief Gentlewoman of the Privy Chamber and Mistress of the Robes, died at the age of eighty-one. Lady Parrius was the Empress's longest-serving lady in waiting: she had served her for fifty-six years, since the moment of her birth. To Aurelia, Parrius was like the mother she had never had. Her death was a great blow to her. The Empress ordered the Court into a day of mourning for the late Baroness, and herself wore black for some days afterwards.
    • On her orders, Lady Parrius would be given a state funeral at the Westphalian Cathedral on February 15. She was now succeeded in her positions by Lady Norria, long a close friend of the Empress. Unbeknownst to Aurelia, Lady Norria would also be carried away in the wave of deaths that were to occur during this, the last decade of the eighteenth century. The next one in the cycle happened almost immediately. On February 21, 1790, the day after the death of Aurelia's ally Joseth II, Ambrosius Dudley, 3rd Earl of Sarah and last surviving of the sons of the Duke of Northumberlais, died at Sarah House in Christiania at the age of fifty-nine. He was accompanied at his deathbed by his wife, the Countess of Sarah, and by his step-nephew, the Earl of Estatius. When the Empress learned of Sarah's death, while attending a session of the Privy Council, she hastened from the chamber and burst into tears. Only nine days had passed since the death of her senior lady-in-waiting, and now her beloved favorite's only surviving brother was dead. Sarah would be given a ceremonial funeral at the Westphalian Cathedral on February 27, 1790, although he would be interred at the Collegiate Church of St. Didymeia's on Sarah. The Empress assumed a brave face, and threw herself into work.
  • March 4-
    • By the beginning of March 1790, the forces of the Laurasian Empire and the United Durthian Duchies had made a series of further gains in Brabant and Flanders against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. The Duke of Parma, who had previously been so acclaimed by his sovereign, Emperor Philicus, for his operational successes, was now struggling to hold off the advances of the allied forces. During January 1790, Cambrai, Luxembourg, and Nimburg were stormed by Maurice's forces, breaching into Southern Brabant. In February 1790, Prince Maurice ordered Count Charles de Heraugiere of Cambrai (1743-1806) to make a reconnoiter of Breda. Heraugiere was able to discover a weakness in the star system's defenses; when he reported back on February 22, 1790, the Prince and General Pellhamia agreed that the operation would proceed. By February 25, Nassau and Pellhamia had moved to Willemsted, located thirty light-years east of Breda. Then on March 3, 1790, Heraugiere and his corps were able to penetrate into the star system and soon dispatched a warning signal to the allied forces. They now initiated their assault against Breda. On March 4, Heraugiere and his Franconian mercenaries assaulted Breda's arsenals and shield generators, storming most of them within hours.
    • By the middle of the day, Prince Nassau's warships had entered the star system, while General Pellhamia launched a series of coordinated land offensives against Breda Citadel and the Central Fortress. Within hours, the Breda garrison was surrounded and cut off from its supply lines. Finally, during the early hours of March 5, 1790, the Haxonian mercenary-General Paolo Lanzaveechia (1754-1811), Commander of the Garrison of Breda, surrendered to the allies, on the condition that they would respect the properties held by Spamalkan troops in the star system and would not "harm anyone's religion or customs." Pellhamia and Maurice of Nassau agreed to these terms. Parma was humiliated by this stunning defeat, and the Emperor of Spamalka ordered for the garrisons of Namurs, Brussels, and Antwerp to be strengthened in response. During the next two months, the unified allied forces conquered Hertogenbosch (March 11-15); Steenbergen (March 22); Roosendaal (March 29); Oosterhout (April 4); Nivelles (April 14); and Warvur (April 27-May 11), further entrenching themselves in Brabant. The Count of Mansfield's counteroffensives against Breda and Lier (May 1790) ended in utter failure, with Maurice of Nassau obtaining a major victory in the Battle of Spamnjaardsgat (May 21, 1790).
  • March 14-
    • While the Laurasian Empire's forces, and those of its allies, continued to gain a series of victories in the Barbary States, Spamalkan Colonies, Durthian Duchies, and Marasharite Empire, events proceeded further in Franconia. By the beginning of March 1790, with the assistance of Lord Willoughby and the Laurasian reinforcements under his command, King Hensios had managed to consolidate his control of Burlada, Montejurra, and Tudela, repelling offensives by Spamalkan and Haxonian mercenaries. On March 2, 1790, the King of Franconia decided to gain control of Dreux, a major agricultural colony in the hands of the Franconian League. During the next four days, Franconian units stormed the League garrisons of Olite, Chartes, and Nogent. The Duke of Mayenne, however, reinforced Dreux on March 11, and King Hensios wisely decided to refrain from a direct offensive against the stronghold. Instead, the King decided to send reconnaissance expeditions to the outskirts of Dreux and to deploy between the minor Franconian colonies of Nonancourt and Ivry. He had at his disposal 70 warships of the Royal Franconian Navy; 30 warships of the Imperial Laurasian Navy; and a corps of 2.2 million Franconian, Navarran, and Imperial Laurasian troops.
    • Mayenne, on the other hand, commanded a larger and diverse force of nearly 6 million Haxonian, Franconian, and Durthian troops with 150 warships. He also had a number of troopers provided by the Guise family and detachments of rebel Franconian personnel. Charman of Guise, Duke of Aumale (1755-1831), served as the commander of the foreign mercenaries and as Mayenne's second-in-command overall. On March 14, 1790, the two forces clashed on Ivry. The battle opened with a volley of turbocannon fire from the King's forces. Mayenne then unleashed a general offensive with his Haxonian mercenaries, but they, sympathetic to Hensios and heeding his promises of greater pay, defected to his side. The Baron de Biron, Henri de Villains, Duke of Montpensier (1743-99), and General Jean de Aumont (1752-95), the King's battlefield subordinates, now joined together to disrupt Mayenne's left flank and to cut off his battleships. King Hensios himself pursued the Duke out of the star system. In the naval confrontation that ensued, Philip, Count of Egmont (1758-90) was killed, while the Duke of Aumale was forced to surrender. By the end of March 16, the Battle of Ivry had ended in a decisive victory for the King and for his Laurasian allies. Mayenne was forced to pull back to Senlis. Aumale, on his part, remained a prisoner of the King until January 1795. Esonne, Hauts, and Julich fell to Hensios in April 1790, as he pushed forward to Parri.
  • March 29-
    • By March 1790, the situation in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth had descended into one which was unacceptable for the Laurasian Empire. The decade following the Partition Diet (1775) had witnessed the Imperial Laurasian Government, through Ambassador Stackelburg, continuing to maintain its influence in the affairs of the Commonwealth, and seeking to obstruct further reform initiatives by the Dejanican nobility and government. By the mid-1770s, it had become apparent to many in the Commonwealth that a fundamental "renewal" of the Commonwealth's strength and unity would occur only if the middle nobility involved themselves and supported a process of further reform. The first conflict of reform was over the Zamaskia Code. Andrew Zamaskia, formerly the Crown Chancellor of the Commonwealth, and long a proponent of reforms to the Royal Dejanican Government, was commissioned by the Diet in 1776 to formulate a new legal codification, based loosely off the Codex Aureliana of the Commonwealth's protector, the Laurasian Empire. This legal code would be aimed at the unification of the laws of the Commonwealth. Among the former Chancellor's collaborators in this great project were the reformers Joachia Wycharazia (1729-1812) and Jozef Wybkickia (1747-1822).
    • In 1777, in his Patriotic Letters, Wybkickia expressed the primary aims of the reform movement: the strengthening of the Commonwealth's central government and the improvement of relationships among the Commonwealth's classes. The proposed code would deal with some of the issues of contention in the Commonwealth, without tampering with the privileges of the nobility. Marriages between the nobility and the common classes would be permitted; the larger municipalities would be granted non-voting representation in the Diet, independent of the planetary governments; and the Diet's approval would be required for all future religious bulls and manifestos issued by the Dejanican Patriarchs. Ambassador Stackelberg, who rightfully feared that the Code would unite the Dejanican population to a greater extent than ever before, decided to ally with the Patriarch of Wroclaw, Nicolai Wonaclaia (1728-97), in opposing the Code. The Diet, many of whose magnates were bribed by the Laurasian Ambassador, agreed, and in September 1780, decisively rejected the Code. As the 1780s progressed, polarization among the ruling classes increased, but the reform camp also gained increased strength. To many, the necessity and inevitability of changes was becoming more apparent. The younger noble generations were the ones who were now following the path to effective reform. Political restlessness took root among all classes, inspiring a flood of pro-reform materials throughout the Commonwealth.
    • Authors such as Stanis Slazic (1755-1826) and Hugo Jolljata (1750-1812) affirmed the view in their works that the Commonwealth required reform and that the longer time was spent without doing so, the more vulnerable it would become. Jozef Palisawakia (1743-1821) was another Dejanican author who voiced his concerns for the Commonwealth's classes, particularly for the commoners, and their possible fate under foreign rule. Many realized that reform could only be achieved if the Commonwealth's neighbors were distracted, and more importantly, disunited. The dissolution of the Laurasian-Pruthian alliance, which by 1780, was merely a formality, was of vital importance. The War of the Bavarian Succession (1778-79), although they drained the energies of both Pruthia and Austarlia for a time, did not affect the situation in the Commonwealth. Other events, however, such as the Ameridinian Rebellion; the Vendragian-Franconian War; and in particular, the Durthian Rebellion, would all have a more substantial effect on the affairs of the Commonwealth. By 1786, this had become apparent.
    • The death of Pru'a IX that year terminated any last semblances of alliance between the Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Empires, as the new Pruthian Emperor A'rua III had a innate dislike of Laurasian Empress Aurelia. Three years earlier, the Empress's annexation of the Haynsian Despotate had served to arouse fears in Pruthia and in the Commonwealth alike, while worsening the Empire's relations with the Holy Spamalkan and Marasharite Empires. The Durthian Rebellion had become the most important crisis among the inter-galactic powers, and by the time of Prua's death, the United Durthian States were receiving military and financial assistance from the Imperial Laurasian Government. War now seemed to be a greater possibility between Laurasia and Spamalka. Many in the Commonwealth believed that closer relations with Pruthia would be beneficial, so as to provide it a defense against its other, aggressive neighbors, both of whom were colluding against the hated Marasharite savages. Two factions now emerged in the Commonwealth. The first was the Patriotic Party, led by aristocrats of pro-Pruthian sympathies. They were annoyed by Empress Aurelia's interference in the affairs of the Commonwealth, and were opposed to King Stanis Vorrust I, viewing him as a Laurasian puppet. This faction was represented by members of the Pulawy group, including Prince Adamis Czartoyskia, the Potockia brothers, and their Haxonian associate, Scripolie Pitoli (1734-1801). They counted on a Dejanican-Pruthian alliance as the means of regaining the partitioned territories lost to Austarlia and Laurasia. The other faction, the so-called Imperialist Faction, led by Prince Sewereyn Rzewuski and Grand Hetman Branickia, sought to overthrow the King and to maintain the relationship with the Laurasian Empire.
    • In August 1787, King Stanis held a conference with Ambassador Stackelburg at Kaniev, and offered to tender Dejanican military aid in any possible Laurasian conflict with the Marasharite Empire. Empress Aurelia rejected this offer derisively, declaring to Burghley that the Commonwealth had not been engaged in military conflict for more than five decades and had no military experience. The following year however, the Imperial Laurasian Government proposed a defense treaty and the participation of a Dejanican corps in the hostilities. In order to formalize a military alliance and to strengthen the Commonwealth's forces, the King summoned a Diet to deliberate on Dejanica Major in the autumn season of 1788. On October 9, 1788, the Diet convened in Warsaw, Dejanica Major, and was soon confederated, with Stanis Malackowia (1736-1809) elected as Marshal of the Diet. The Great Diet, as this body would be labeled, would drag on for four years. The pro-Laurasian faction turned out to be ineffective. It consisted of the non-uniform, conservative, anti-King group on the one hand, and of the King and his supporters at the Dejanican Court and on the Permanent Council, on the other hand. The King's supporters, including Crown Chancellor Jalek Malackowia (1737-1821), considered an alliance with Laurasia as an essential element of Dejanican politics. The lack of unity and conflicts within the pro-Laurasian faction were taken advantage of by the possibly more numerous patriotic faction, advocates of independence from Laurasia with the aid of Pruthia. The Pulawys and Marshal Malackowia were among the members of the nationalist faction. This faction eventually become dominant on the Diet and was able to persuade the King to support the measures which they promoted.
    • In November 1789, with the First Spamalkan War fully under way, one hundred and forty of the Commonwealth's most prominent star systems signed the "Act of Unification of the Systems", by which they advocated for greatly increased political and economic rights for system residents to the King and Diet. But now, the matter of a Dejanican-Pruthian alliance reached its head. Pruthian Ambassador Ludwig Heinrich Bucholtz (1740-1811) had proposed a treaty of alliance as early as October 1788. Pruthians believed that it would usher in a long debate which would serve, at best, to weaken Laurasian and Austarlian influence in Dejanica. To many Dejanican politicians, however, it became a new and increasingly, the only available strategy. The reception of the Pruthian proposal by the Diet exceeded their expectations, and it significantly strengthened the Patriotic Party. For over a year, however, the Pruthians decided against taking any action, and sought to keep their options open. Ambassador Bucholtz was actually reprimanded by the Pruthian Cabinet for taking matters too far. By October 1789, however, the run of successes by Laurasia and her allies against Marasharita and Spamalka increased the value of the military alliance for the Autocratic Pruthian Government. The patriots, on their part, were now drifting closer to the King.
    • By February 1790, concrete proposals were being exchanged between the Pruthian and Dejanican Courts. The Pruthians demanded the concession of Danzig and Torun (where they had enjoyed free trade privileges since 1772) and for the elimination of all remaining Dejanican tariffs. The threat of a Dejanican-Austarlian alliance, however, caused the Pruthians to withdraw most of the demands that the Dejanicans were finding hard to accept. The Treaty of Warsaw was finally signed on March 29, 1790, a year and half after the first proposal of the military alliance. The Treaty was formally ratified by Emperor A'rua III on April 4 and by the Dejanican Diet on April 23. The Treaty was merely defensive, with both monarchies promising to defend each other against attack. Its conclusion, nevertheless, alarmed Empress Aurelia and her Privy Council considerably. On April 5, 1790, the Empress declared that the rashness of her Pruthian counterpart had "exposed all powers to further instability and disunion." Lord Buchamia, on the Empress's orders, issued a series of communiques to the Pruthian Bureau of Foreign Affairs during that month, expressing concern at the Autocratic Pruthian Government's actions and intentions. The Empress of Laurasia, however, was also aware that Pruthia's relations with Haxonia and Vendragia were worsening, and that many in the Autocratic Pruthian Government harbored hopes of advancing at Dejanica's expense. The Empress's efforts were also devoted to the prosecution of the war effort. For the time being, she could only watch events in Dejanica with apprehension.
  • April 6-
    • On April 6, 1790, Sir Caligula Walsingis, Chancellor of the Laurasian Empire, and one of Empress Aurelia's chief advisers, died at the age of fifty-eight. During the preceding three years, since the execution of Scottrian Queen Mariana in February 1787, the Chancellor's health had entered a severe decline. Walsingis complained constantly of illness, and he retreated to Barn Elmian Estate on Taurasia on a routine basis, seeking to escape the pressures and the conflicts of the Imperial Court. By November 1789, he was heard complaining about pains in the stomach, head, and back, urinary complications, and kidney stones. A emergency surgical operation at the Hospital of St. Katherine's (January 19, 1790) alleviated the Chancellor's symptoms only temporarily. By March 1790, he had ceased attending meetings of the Privy Council, and lay in delirium at his house in Christiania, Setheria Place. His colleagues on the Privy Council, including Burghley, Knollysis, Hattonius, and Husadarania, visited him at his residence routinely. Empress Aurelia, still distressed by the deaths of Sarah and Lady Parrius earlier in the year, could not bring herself to see her dying Chancellor. At his deathbed, he was attended by his wife, children, and faithful secretary, Sir Phelippes (who had become Vice-Chancellor in March 1789, a reward for his loyal service in the Queen Mariana affair, and would hold that position until his resignation in 1797).
    • His funeral was swift and private; he was buried at St. Chalmer's Cathedral the following day. Walsingis had exhausted himself, and his finances, in servicing the Empress. He had preserved her from all of the conspiracies promoted by the Spamalkans and by others, and had gained much respect from many throughout the Empire for his service to her. The Empress, when she learned that Walsingis died, burst into tears and stayed in her bed for several hours, refusing to move until at last prompted to do so by Burghley (after much persuasion had been applied). Hailing him as "one of the most loyal servants of any sovereign anywhere", the Empress ordered the court into four days of mourning for the late Chancellor; erased all of his debts and obligations; and granted his widow, Lady Urania Walsingis (1735-1802), an annuity of €9.9 billion dataries a year, as well as a travel allowance and the use of vessels from the Imperial Household Corps. Walsingis's death so deeply affected the Empress that she decided to leave the Chancellorate vacant for the time being. Lord Treasurer Burghley did become Imperial Privy Seal (adding further burdens to the shoulders of a man approaching his seventieth birthday), and his son, Robertius Cecilis, now came to carry out the Chancellor's duties, without actually holding the office. The Empress had come to recognize his abilities, for his father had prepared him for state office. Cecilis, who was born on June 1, 1763, in Christiania, was the only son of Burghley and his second wife, Lady Messalina Cecilis (1726-89).
    • He was from his younger years physically deformed; the Empress would call him "Pigmy". Cecilis resented the name at first, but would eventually realize that it was only a term of affection. Being delicate, he had been educated by tutors before attending the University of the Empire, graduating magna cum laude in 1783 with degrees in administration, forensics, and jurisprudence. He then became a member of the Imperial Diplomatic Service, and from 1784 to 1787 served at the Laurasian embassies in Franconia and Durthia. Upon his final return to the Empire, he resumed his education, and in 1789, received his M.A. in Political Science, this time from the Imperial Jurisprudence Academy of Christiania. And then, in January 1790, the Empress had, on the persuasion of Lord Treasurer Burghley, appointed Cecilis to the Privy Council. He was designated as Minister of Imperial Works and Holdings, and as Secretary of the Privy Council. This was an extraordinary honor for a man not yet thirty years old. Cecilis quickly gained respect with the Council, and among the other bodies of state, for his intelligence and excellent concentration on affairs of business.
    • He was an astute politician and a gifted administrator, with a limitless capacity for hard work. He had "beautifully modulated" speech, a charming manner, and a good sense of humor. Although he was possessed of cunning, and involved himself in Court intrigues as his father had during the early years of the reign, Cecilis was nevertheless absolutely loyal to the Empress, the Neuchrian Dynasty, and the Laurasian Empire. Although she was never as close to him as to his father, Aurelia trusted Cecilis without question. To many at the Imperial Court, however, it seemed as if the Empress, by promoting the son of Burghley and the stepson of Leicesterius, was trying to recreate the court of her youth. While Cecilis was content to share the stage with Estatius, the latter, aware that he was relegated to the role of court favorite, was resentful of Cecilis's political position and sought to undermine it.
    • He saw no reason why he should not be favorite and chief political adviser at the same time, and never understood why the Empress would not allow for him to exercise such authority. Estatius's insistence on regarding Cecilis as his rival led to the formation of factions at the Imperial Court, resulting in much squabbling and opportunism. Estatius and his followers were avid for military glory and the continuance of the war with Marasharita and Spamalka, while Cecilis and Burghley would, in the course of time, advocate for peace (a view which would ultimately prevail). From 1790 onwards, Estatius began building an aristocratic following at the Imperial Court, and throughout the Empire. Those who were excluded from political office, as well as those who sought to aggressively pursue the continued war, hastened to offer Estatius their support. He also sought to gain the support of the Unction Reformists on Laurasia Prime. Cecilis, on his part, kept a vice-like grip on court appointments and political offices, and over time, came to dominate the affairs of the Privy Council. The Empress, who was now seeing her own generation of friends and councilors gradually disappearing, had to adjust to a court under the influence of a younger, less congenial generation, whose ideas and tastes were unlike her own, and who were becoming increasingly dismissive of the attitudes and authority of their elders. She also had to maintain the peace among her courtiers and provide a balance between the factions, another task which drew upon her energies.
  • April 24-
    • By April 1790, the forces of the Laurasian Empire and its Portugallian and Moroccan allies had made further gains in the Barbary States and in the Crone Colonies against the Marasharite and Holy Spamalkan Empires. On March 5, 1790, Admiral Dracius advanced from Salvador against Cartagena with the 66th Imperial Fleet, 1st Portugallian Expeditionary Force, and the 55th Imperial Army. The Governor of Cartagena, Don Pedro Fernandez de Busto (1737-1804), fully aware of the fate of San Juan de Ulua and Sao Vicente, attempted to ready his star system's defenses against the allied offensives. He organized a systematic evacuation of non-combatants from Cartagena's capital city, Equarillo; called for reinforcements from neighboring star systems; and mustered the militia and garrison troops available to him. Governor de Busto, who had a force of only seventy warships and 700,000 military personnel, knew that he was hopelessly outnumbered, and could only entertain the hope that his master, Emperor Philicus, would provide extensive reinforcements. Cartagena itself, however, was well protected from a potential offensive against its leeward side. De Busto decided to concentrate his military forces near the La Busta Spaceport and to construct a boom across the Boca Grande Straits, hoping to blunt allied moves in the outskirts of the star system. He placed the garrison naval forces under the command of Vice-Admiral Don Pedro Vique Manrique (1741-96). Manrique was assisted by Captain Juan de Castanada on the battleship HMS Santiago, and by Captain Martin Gonzales (1753-1814) on the HMS Occasion. In Equarillo, Captain Pedro Mirabel (1755-1819) commanded the Cartagena Citadel, with nearly a third of the land troops and most of the world's turbocannon batteries. Across the northern continents of Cartagena were stationed the 2nd and 4th Regiments of the Cartagena Militia, who were supported by a number of native auxiliaries and by three shield generators.
    • As for the Laurasians, Dracius delegated land command duties to Major-General Sir Demetrius Norria. During the early afternoon of March 9, 1790, the allied forces appeared near the outskirts of Cartagena. Dracius dispatched Commodore Sir Martinius Frobisherius (1735-94) to probe the defenses with corvettes and couriers. Frobisherius examined the La Busta and Boca Grande barricades, but was forced to retreat by directed fire from Spamalkan warships. This convinced Dracius that the best way by which to assault the star system was by an offensive through La Caleta, on the windward side of Cartagena. Although La Caleta was protected by a string of mines, Dracius reckoned that the Spamalkan garrison's focus on the leeward side would permit his warships entry. At midnight on March 9, Laurasian troops stormed the La Caleta Monitoring Station, capturing a number of Spamalkan officers, while Dracius directed a naval diversion. A confrontation soon ensued as the Laurasian battleships bombarded the Spamalkan defenses with ion cannon fire. Commodore Frobisherius directed an offensive which resulted in Laurasian ships swinging around La Caleta and penetrating to the Las Indias Spacegate, storming the Spamalkan defenses there. Laurasian troops soon seized the Spacegate and penetrated Cartagena Minor, with more than 70,000 Spamalkan military personnel losing their lives in the confrontation. Admiral Manrique dispatched Captain Gonzales to launch a counteroffensive with the Occasion and four of the garrison dreadnoughts; Dracius, however, repelled him in a swift and sharp action, using his starfighters and automated transports to devastating effect. By the early morning hours of March 10, 1790, Laurasian troops had landed on North Cartagena, and soon drove to the outskirts of Equarillo, making several breaches in the Spamalkan command lines. The Cartagena Citadel was bombarded constantly by Imperial battleships. Admiral Manrique, however, on the Santiago, attempted a counter-landing at Cartagena Minor, but was repelled by Norria's marines and space troopers. Manrique was forced to pull back with his warships. As the day progressed, Laurasian troops seized control of Cartagena Station and pushed into the cities of Gallesas and Alonsa, penetrating to the Southern Cartagenan Ocean.
    • On March 12, Captain Castaneda of the Santiago attempted to reinforce the Citadel, trying to divert fire from the battleships in orbit. Castaneda, however, found his supply lines harried by Laurasian starfighters, and all his efforts at landing marines were foiled by AS-class walkers and DS-class fighters. Captain Gonzales now attempted to flee across the Boca Grande Straits, but lost several of his frigates to superior Laurasian firepower. Captain Mirabel, who still held the Cartagena Citadel, resisted all Laurasian frontal offensives, and it was not until March 17, 1790, before the citadel was finally overrun. Mirabel himself was captured, as was Captain Gonzales. Admiral Manrique and Captain Castaneda barely managed to flee the star system, as Laurasian warships penetrated La Busta Spaceport. The fall of Cartagena to the Laurasian Empire was a major blow for the Spamalkan position in the Crone Colonies. By the end of March 1790, San Juan, Augustine, and Tortallo had all been captured by Laurasian troops. On April 2, Prince Fernando destroyed a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of Al-Murdir, allowing for him to impose a blockade of Olinda (April 5-11, 1790); the world was then subjected to a frontal offensive on April 12, and fell within four hours.
    • By April 21, Serro, Caete, and Pitangui had all defected to the Portugallian Prince, who now posed a serious threat to Bahia and Rio de Janiero, the capital star systems of Brazil. Emperor Philicus, utterly desperate and determined to expel allied units from his colonial territories, ordered Admiral Don Pedro de Acuna (1745-1806) to launch a counteroffensive at the Gibraltar Straits, to disrupt allied supply lines to the Balearics and Azores Star Clusters. De Acuna, with units from the garrisons of Alonzia, Barcelona, Cadiz, and Seville, advanced against the Straits on April 26, 1790. Admiral Dracius, who was then harrying the defenses of San Domingo (having seized the Portugallian system of Tiradentes two days earlier), diverted units under the command of Commodore Frobisherius to repel the Spamalkan moves. Frobisherius, operating from Ceuta, Agadir, and Casablanca in Morocco, intercepted Acuna's fleet near the Straits. In the ensuing Battle of Gibraltar Straits (April 28, 1790), Frobisherius destroyed fifty Spamalkan galleys, captured another twenty, and blunted all of Acuna's frontal offensives. The Laurasians lost only two corvettes to enemy fire. Acuna was forced to retreat to Algecircas in Spamalka, while the Laurasian Commodore took advantage of his victory to storm Jimena and Sao Roque (May 1-4, 1790). On May 12, Empress Aurelia would promote Dracius to the rank of Vice-Admiral, and Frobisherius to the rank of Rear-Admiral, for their successes in the Colonies and in Morocco.
  • May 7-On May 7, 1790, King Hensios IV of Franconia commenced the siege of Parri, which had continued to serve as the chief headquarters of the Franconian League. Hensios was fully aware that possession of the Franconian capital world would confirm his contested claim to the Franconian Crown, and would place a severe dent in the ambitions of his enemies. The King of Franconia was supported by the troops of Laurasian Major-General Lord Willoughby, whose 70th and 71st Imperial Armies proved auxiliary and command support to the Royal Franconian Army. Within hours of arriving at Parri, Hensios's forces surrounded the star system, imposing a blockade and destroying a number of hypergates to sunder communications and supply lines to the capital world. Hensios had 3.3 million troops of the Royal Franconian Army, and slightly over a million of the Imperial Laurasian Army, along with 250 warships, at his disposal. This was compared to the nearly 8 million troops possessed by the garrison of Parri, who also had access to a naval force of 370 warships. Due to the limited number of turbocannons and siege batteries in the Franconian-Laurasian force, it seemed likely that only a long blockade could force Parri's surrender. Charman Emmanuel, Duke of Nemours (1767-95), assumed command of Parri's defenses. It was from Montmare that Hensios stationed his turbocannons, and bombarded the planetary shields from there. His forces engaged in numerous confrontations with the naval garrison, attempting to use mobility and their organization to repel their offensives. The Siege, however, was destined to drag on unsuccessfully for five months, as the authorities and people of Parri refused to submit to him as their King. Hensios was also distracted by confrontations with League forces in Brittany, the Metzian Lordships, Avignon, and Navarre, and was forced to divert units from the Siege of Parri to maintain his own conquests. Orthez and Jarnac became the scenes of fierce confrontations between Hensios and the forces of the House of Guise (May 1790).
  • June 6-August 19-
    • On June 6, 1790, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court departed from the Quencilvanian Palace on Laurasia Prime to commence the official progress of 1790. This year, the Empress had decided to embark on a progress through the Kalbachan and Rogerian Provinces, which had not been visited by her previously. It would also mark her first significant excursion into the heart of the Galactic Borderlands. Shortly before departing from Laurasia Prime, the Empress told Lord Treasurer Burghley that "the Lord Almitis has preserved me still, and my journey will confirm the continuing might and power of our Empire." The Imperial Court, proceeding westwards from Laurasia Prime, paid visits to Caladaria, Darcia, Mercedes, Merandaz, Constantine I, Andriana, Sapphire, Kelby, Metallasia, Metallina, Zeena, Tyndaris, Ietas, Heuthros, Courdina V, Gordasis, Economus, and Adys (June 6-12, 1790). The Empress also toured Cannae, site of Heuthrian General Hannibal's victory over the Stellar Republic in 216 BH, one of the worst defeats in Laurasian military history. Utilizing the Metallasian Trade Route, the Empress progressed quickly to the Rogerian Cluster. Roger Minor, one of the Empire's chief agricultural colonies, was reached on June 13. The Empress, who enjoyed a banquet of Rogerian wheats, stayed in the star system for two days. From Roger Minor, she progressed to Roger Major (June 14-17, 1790), observing where Arachosian Emperor Ashari-Adad (r. 246-59) had destroyed a Rogerian-Kalbachan force in 248. From Roger Major, the Empress progressed through Will and Wildcats (June 18-22, 1790), renowned for their natural beauty and the diversity of their wildlife. By July 1, 1790, the Imperial Court had departed from the Rogerian Cluster. The Empress now visited Bane (July 2-4, 1790), touring the world's infamous Caracllian Caves.
    • Here, legends persisted of the Dark Murderer, an alleged ghost who haunted all of those who trespassed on his realm. These myths dated all the way back to the 3rd millennium BH, and had become famous throughout the Laurasian Empire. The Empress displayed no "fear" when visiting the Caves, and a performance of Banian "manacles" was staged for the Court's benefit. Cognus and Zannah were subsequently visited by the Imperial Court in turn (July 5-10, 1790). At Cognus, the Empress received an honorary tribute from the Kitachi Maidens, among the most skilled martial-arts artists in the Empire, and at Zannah, a gift of Cremllian gems. Palaris III, which the Court visited from July 12 to 14, 1790, particularly enthused the Empress with its vast pastures of iffimirte and its swirling magnetic clouds. There, Aurelia stayed at the estate of Sir Julius Caesar (1758-1836), who claimed to be a descendant of the Laurasian dictator of that same name from the 1st century BH. Caesar presented her with a gown of Palarian silver, among the rarest and most extravagant materials in the Caladarian Galaxy, as well as a "black mantle with pure gold, a taffeta hat, white, embroidered with emblems of passion, and a jewel of gold set with rubies, neurites, and diamonds." The Empress departed from Palaris III with great contentment (as it seemed to her guests). From Palaris III, the Empress proceeded to Gadweria (July 18, 1790). She toured the massive Rings of Fire, one of the Twenty Wonders of the Galaxy (as had been compiled by the Millian historian Vo'rill in the 3rd century AH). The Empress stayed at the Palace of King Verna (r. 297-43 BH), the legendary Kalbachan conqueror of Bane in the 3rd century BH. Goriance was also graced with the Court's presence; the Empress paid her respects to the Caverns of Horir, which encompassed the remains of Cadanian City, which had been destroyed by a volcanic eruption in the thirteenth century.
    • She then sought spiritual solace at the Kalbachan High Tomb of Gagana, where she received blessings from the Marshalnia of the Kalbachan Order, Tuda (1723-97). From Goriance, the Imperial Court visited Sherry, Seeben, Sabinia, Richel V, Gwynne, and Dehner (July 20-24, 1790). Finally, on July 26, 1790, the Empress reached Kalbacha Minor. She stayed at the Palace of Artaxerxes I, one of the largest surviving Arachosian edifices in the Caladarian Galaxy. Aurelia visited the Tombs of the Arachosian Family (July 27, 1790), and paid her respects at the tomb of Xerxes (r. 353-76), founder of the Arachaso-Kalbachan Dynasty. Kalbacha Minor, which had served as a throne world for the Arachso-Kalbachan Dynasty and Great Kingdom of Kalbacha, had a population of three billion by the late eighteenth century. And then, on August 2, 1790, after touring Vervia and the Iswill (where she saw a simulation of Levashius's victory there in October 1744), the Imperial Court arrived at Kalbacha Major. The Empress was greeted by the Governor of Kalbacha, Sir Tyautas Temershin (1743-1815), a Kalbachan of half-Laurasian descent, by the Princes of the Kalbachan House, and by the Arachosian Hierarch of Kalbacha Major, Shishak-Isides (1728-95).
    • The Empress now progressed through Kalbacha City, reveling in the acclaim of her subjects. She took up residence at the Great Palace of Kalbacha, that 12th century BH edifice which had been the residence of Kalbachan sovereigns for more than 2,000 years. The Empress reveled in the glories of the Inner City of Kalbacha, and on August 5, visited the Sur Arena, where in 545, the Kalbachan nobleman David-nay was proclaimed the Great King of Kalbacha (r. 545-571). The Imperial Court stayed on Kalbacha Major for six days, with the Empress visiting the Point of Departure, where General Ibliya (501-546) had forced Artaxerxes VII (r. 544-46), last Emperor of the Arachso-Kalbachan Dynasty, to flee from Kalbacha Major in 545. On August 9, the Empress departed from Kalbacha Major, declaring her joy for her visit. She proceeded to Toggul, site of a confrontation between Artaxerxes V and Ashur-tilani (506). At Toggul, the Empress was entertained by the Kalbachan nobleman Prince Harid-nay of the House of Sourul (1720-96), father-in-law of Prince Nicholas Repanius, formerly Ambassador to Dejanica and Marasharita. From Toggul, the Empress toured Toma and the Bori Nebula (August 11-17, 1790). At Toma, she was entertained by the daughters of Lady Russalia. The Empress then began her journey back to Laurasia Prime, arriving there on August 19, 1790. In spite of the progress, her mood was considerably worsened, primarily because of Austarlia's sudden departure from the war (as will be described below).
  • June 22-By June 1790, the situation in the Barbary States had progressed far in favor of the Sultanate of Morocco and the Laurasian Empire. In February 1790, Moroccian Prince al-Mansur, with the assistance of Sir Demetrius Norria (before his reassignment to the Colonial theater), repelled a series of Algerian counteroffensives against Nema, Ayoun el Atrous, and Dair-Naim, consolidating Morocco's control of those star systems. On March 2, 1790, al-Mansur obtained a decisive victory over Algerian forces in the Battle of El-Setif, capturing more than a third of their frigates. Chlef and Timnecen were both in Moroccian hands by March 21, and on March 25, the stronghold of Annaba surrendered to Prince al-Mansur without a fight. By the end of March 1790, Mauritania was on its last knees. A Moroccian victory at El-Sadant (March 25, 1790), prevented any further Marasharite reinforcements from reaching the outskirts of Nema. By April 5, Bogue and Zougreat had both fallen to Moroccian-Laurasian forces. On April 8, 1790, the siege of Kaedi, the last significant Mauritanian stronghold, commenced. The system was surrounded by the 2nd Moroccian Expeditionary Force and the 64th Imperial Fleet of the Laurasian Empire. The following day, Sultan Khatib III of Morocco died suddenly at the age of 47 after having reigned for nine years. Prince al-Mansur, who had been commanding the siege forces of Kaedi, now rushed back to Casablanca to assume the throne as Sultan Ahmad-Mansur I. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia extended her condolences for the sudden death of his brother. Kaedi proved extremely resistant, however, and the Siege dragged on for over two months. Finally, on June 22, 1790, the world fell to the allied forces of the Sultanate of Morocco and the Laurasian Empire. A attempted Spamalkan move from Ori Laka (June 24, 1790) ended in failure at Timbuctu, and by early July 1790, all of Mauritania was occupied by allied forces. Most of Algiers, with the sole exception of Quarrkia and Bejuda, was now under allied occupation as well.
  • July 19-
    • By July 1790, the Laurasian position in the Great Tesmanian Cloud had been strengthened considerably. The early months of 1790 had witnessed a succession of Laurasian victories over the overstretched Marasharite units. On January 7, 1790, Admiral Ushavious and General Surovius held a conference of strategy at Del Valle. It was now decided to launch a direct offensive against the defenses of Varna; to isolate Kolzuduzha, which suffered from Laurasian expeditions; and to besiege Shumen, with the intention of forcing its garrison into surrender. During the next twelve days, Surovius repelled moves by Marasharite fleets against Quickbey, Ochania, Focasani, Stauvachany, and Kinburn, obtaining a major victory in the Battle of the Rifles (January 11, 1790). On February 1, 1790, Admiral Ushavious launched a direct offensive with the 68th Imperial Fleet against Varna. Defeating Marasharite patrol units in confrontations at Ovill (February 2) and Makacash (February 5-9), he then pushed Marasharite warships from the Rings of Varna Outer, employing the superior firepower of his warships to disorient and confuse his Marasharite adversaries. During the next six days, Laurasian units cleared the Marasharites from Shivrlia and Nord-Varma; a attempted Marasharite counteroffensive from Ruse and Silistra was ruined in a confrontation at the Peldavian Gateways.
    • By February 15, 1790, Ushavious's warships had appeared in orbit of Varna, and relentlessly bombarded the world's defenses. It was not until February 26 before the shields cracked, and a landing corps was issued. General Surovius now directed the final land offensives, and within hours, all resistance at Varna was suppressed. The Commander of the Garrison of Varna, General Shazhat-Padalia (1749-1803), finally surrendered on March 3, 1790. Laurasian units subsequently cleared the Marasharites from Briceni and Pistra, and pressed to Silistra. April 1790 witnessed Laurasian units storming the Marasharite garrisons of Bolhrad, Isdadid, and Ashrytz. Marasharite moves against Kotovsk and Teplodar (April 22-May 3, 1790), failed to change the situation. Kolzuduzha, realizing that continued resistance was suicide, surrendered on May 12, 1790. And on May 24, 1790, Ushavious annihilated the opposing Marasharite force in the Battle of Jassy.
    • Jassy was one of the chief Marasharite strongholds in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Colonized by the Danubian Principality of Moldavia in 1408, Jassy remained part of the Principality until 1564, when it was directly incorporated by Marasharite Emperor Suleyman I. Before that, it had been sacked by the Haynsian Despotate in 1513, and by the Marasharites themselves in 1538. Jassy was seized by the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1686, and remained in their possession for four years until its recapture by Marasharite and Haynsian forces in 1691. The world was sacked yet again in 1738 by the forces of Field-Marshal Munnich; afterwards, Marasharite authorities strengthened its fortifications. By 1787, it had a population of nearly two billion, making it one of the most populous systems in the Ochanian Provinces. As a result of Ushavious's victory, this world, renowned for its fortifications, religious edifices (with more than two thousand faiths represented), resorts, nature preserves, and museums, fell into the hands of the Laurasian Empire. Here, the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War would be ended nearly two years later.
    • By the end of June 1790, Trabzon and Kulvecha had been stormed by Laurasian troops. Ruse and Silistra were now under a serious threat from Laurasian troops. On July 4, 1790, after the Marasharite naval port of Samsun had been seriously damaged by a Laurasian raiding expedition, Marasharite forces under the command of Kapudan-Pasha Hussein advanced towards Kerch in the Northern Reaches. Marasharite Emperor Selim III was determined to obtain a surprise victory at the expense of the Imperial Laurasian Navy; Hussein himself dreamed of nothing but Marasharite victory. Bypassing Laurasian patrols at Fidonsi, Trans-Ruse, and Ivrim (July 9-14, 1790), he reached the outskirts of Kerch two days later. Admiral Ushavious, alerted to the Marasharite advance, had already established his command headquarters on Thornton, and now prepared to repel this latest Marasharite threat to Laurasian territory. On July 19, 1790, just as Hussein commenced his assaults against the outskirts of the Kerch star system, the Laurasian fleet appeared. Ushavious formed a offensive line on the frontal tack, quickly sundering many of his Marasharite foe's escape routes. Hussein, confident that his larger force (he had a three-to-one advantage in firepower and troops towards Ushavious), could fight on two fronts at once, detached his battleship squadrons to form a parallel line to the east of the Laurasian line. Seeing that the Marasharites had detached only their battleships, Admiral Ushavious sent twelve of his frigates to form a second line to leeward of the main line. Three hours of long-range fighting then ensued, and the Laurasian ships soon pursued the Marasharites, forcing them to stretch themselves out from Kerch. By the end of the day, the Battle of Kerch Straits had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Most of the Marasharite battleships were destroyed in the confrontation, and Admiral Hussein was forced to terminate his plans for moves against Uma, Thurman, Merevop, and Bendery. By the end of July 1790, Pleven and Ala Dag had both been stormed by Laurasian troops. Bad news, however, now arrived from the Great Amulak Spiral, regarding Laurasia's ally, Austarlia.
  • August 4-
    • As previously stated, Holy Austarlian Emperor Lea'dus II had, since the time of his accession to the Austarlian throne in February 1790, seriously considered the possibility of concluding peace with the Marasharite Empire. The early months of his reign had seen a final series of Austarlian successes against the Marasharite forces. Tesjani fell to Laudon on March 7, 1790. By March 28, Laudon had conquered the Marasharite systems of Cangraniuna and Veheria. From April 4-13, 1790, the forces of Prince Coburg besieged Orsova, which was a Marasharite military base in the Danubian Principalities. Orsova's fall on April 13 secured Austarlian occupation of Wallachia and Lower Moldavia. By the middle of May 1790, Austarlian units were besieging Zhuzhova and the Danubian Iron Gates. Laudon, whose health had entered a further serious decline, obtained one last victory over the Marasharites in the Battle of Kalefata (May 25, 1790). By that point, the Holy Austarlian Emperor's plans for ending the war had proceeded even further. Lea'dus had continued in his efforts to rollback many of his brother's more radical reform measures. On May 9, 1790, he was formally crowned Emperor of Austarlia on Vienna. On that day, the Emperor reconfirmed the privileges and immunities of the Austarlian, Bohemian, and Hungarian nobility, exempting them from income and property taxes. He was also forced to restore a third of their landed properties so as to placate their concerns. On May 15, Lea'dus revoked his brother's decrees concerning education and the precedence of languages, thereby restoring Hungarian as the official language of that constituent kingdom. And on June 4, 1790, the Emperor of Austarlia sent a communique to his Pruthian counterpart, A'rua III, requesting for his assistance in negotiating an end to the conflict with the Marasharite Empire and for a conference between them directly to discuss the disputes with Haxonia over transit privileges in the Dalmatian and Upper Venetian Provinces.
    • A'rua, who inherited his uncle's suspicion for Austarlia, did not respond to the Emperor's request until June 14. Following the Pruthian acceptance of the Austarlian request, Chancellor Kaunitz contacted Marasharite Grand Vizier Celebizade Serif (1727-91), who had assumed his post on April 16, 1790, with an offer for an armistice and negotiations between the two Empires to conclude the war between them. In this, he was violating his obligations to the Laurasian Empire. Le'adus, however, whose forces were making progress in Burgundy against the rebel forces, was desperate to focus all of his effort on a compromise settlement with his Hungarian nobles. Grand Vizier Serif, believing that the withdrawal of Austarlia from the conflict would relieve the pressures on Marasharite resources, and allow for the Empire to focus its attention against Laurasia and Morocco, submitted the request to the Grand Council. Marasharite Emperor Selim III finally granted his approval (June 24, 1790). Four days later, Field-Marshal Laudon suffered a stroke at Sarajevo and was forced to retire to his estates on Novy Jicin in Austarlian Moravia. Prince Coburg now assumed temporary command of all the Austarlian forces, and on July 3, 1790, held a armistice conference with Marasharite General Al-Eedir (1733-1810) at Negotin. The Truce of Negotin was signed three days later, leading to the cessation of all military hostilities between the Austarlians and Marasharites. Each side was to hold the territories they now occupied. The Imperial Laurasian Government, for the time being, remained in ignorance of the Austarlian negotiations with Marasharita.
    • Then on July 14, 1790, Field-Marshal Laudon died at Novy Jicin, aged 73. The Empress of Laurasia, still unaware of the Austarlian negotiations, sent a communique to Lea'dus, expressing her condolences and declaring that the allies would soon crush Marasharite resistance. By that point, however, delegations from the two governments had convened at Sistova, a Marasharite stronghold in Upper Macedonica, for the negotiation of the peace between them. The Pruthian Ambassador to the Marasharite Court, Count Ernest von Fereheirr (1745-1813), proved instrumental in the negotiations process, and in obtaining terms more favorable to the Marasharite Empire. Emperor Lea'dus, desperate to end the war (prompted by Haxonian violation of Austarlian territorial rights in Salzburg and the Styrian Duchies), declared his willingness to concede most of the gains made by Austarlian forces during the course of the conflict. The Marasharites, on their part, proved amenable, and sought to maintain their rule of Serbia, Albania, the Danubian Principalities, and Bosnia.
    • Finally, on August 4, 1790, the Treaty of Sistova was signed, resulting in the withdrawal of the Holy Austarlian Empire from the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War. By the terms of this treaty, the Emperor of Austarlia pledged to withdraw all of his units from the Great Tesmanian Cloud and the Gateway Provinces in a "prompt and speedy manner"; to terminate his military alliance with the Laurasian Empire; and to recognize Marasharite overlordship of the Barbary States. He agreed to restore Wallachia, Lower Moldavia, Serbia, Bosnia, Albania, Lower Bulgania, and the Danubian Gateway Provinces to the authority of the Marasharite Empire. Belgravia, Tirana, Chrisnau, and Sarajevo were among the chief strongholds to now be returned to Marasharite authority. In return, Selim III agreed to restore the Pazak Cluster, the Banat of Temesvar, Olthenia, and Banja Luka to the Holy Austarlian Empire, which thereby regained 90% of the territories it had lost in 1739. Austarlia also acquired Orsova, Veheria, Hawtin, Unna, and Zhuzhova, thereby rounding out its territories in Bukovina. All Austarlian units in the restored territories were to be withdrawn by the end of the year. Selim, moreover, agreed to recognize Austarlian rights of influence in Dejanica, and to remain neutral in any conflict between Austarlia on the one hand, and Haxonia, as well as Vendragia on the other. The Treaty of Sistova was ratified by Emperor Lea'dus on August 5, and by Emperor Selim on August 11.
  • September 8-
    • Following the conclusion of the Treaty of Sistova, Marasharite Emperor Selim III and the Grand Council, determined to regain the advantage in the military offensives against the Laurasian Empire, began the diversion of Marasharite military units from the Danubian Principalities, Bosnia, and Macedonica to the Great Tesmanian Cloud. On August 2, 1790, two days before the Treaty was signed, Selim had declared to the Council that he would not countenance the continued occupation of the territories won by his ancestors by a power "possessed of much avarice and ruled by an Empress dominated by greed and desire for power." By August 17, 1790, Marasharite military squadrons had been assembled at Chrisnau, Izmail, Shumen, Ruse, Silistria, Batal-Pasha, Kilrania, and Kalefata. Two days later, the Emperor formally designated Admiral Hussein and Pasha-General Bereim-Kasa (1735-98) as the joint commanders of the intended Marasharite counteroffensive. They were to expel the Laurasian garrisons from Varna, Jassy, Ivrim, Trans-Ruse, and Kilidrim; to drive towards Focasani; and to cut off Laurasian supply lines to Ochania, Kolzuduzha, and Del Valle. Bereim-Kasa in particular, a veteran of the Second Cyprian War and the Vendragian-Gilanian War, was determined to strike a blow against the Laurasians. By August 26, Marasharite units, operating from Kilrania and Chrisnau, had stormed the Peldavian Gateways, Pleven, Trabzon, and Doros, posing a serious threat to the Laurasian position in the Gateway Provinces. By September 1, 1790, General Bereim-Kasa had advanced to Kabarda on the Upper Danube, formerly a Marasharite military base which had been occupied by Admiral Ushavious seven months earlier.
    • The Marasharite supply lines had become overextended as a result of these offensives, leaving them exposed to a series of swift counter-assaults by Admiral Ushavious and General Surovius. On September 5, 1790, Admiral Ushavious, who had held a command conference at Bendery, departed with the 67th Imperial Fleet. He stopped at Kherson to collect reinforcements from the 62nd and 63rd Imperial Fleets. Upon departing from Kherson (with a force of nearly four hundred warships, 2.1 million Imperial Army soldiers and Imperial Marines, and two squadrons of 14,000 starfighters), he proceeded rapidly to the Lower Ochanian Provinces. During the early hours of September 8, 1790, Ushavious and his force intercepted the main Marasharite battlefleet under Admiral Hussein near Telindra, located forty light years east of Kabarda. Admiral Hussein now formed his squadrons into an offensive battle-line, but Ushavious organized his battleships into three parallel lines, which merged into one line as they approached the flank of the Marasharite fleet.
    • Admiral Hussein, seeking his tail threatened, turned north and came back parallel to the Laurasian fleet. Ushavious followed suit, with the two fleets ending up in paralleled tracks, towards a northeasterly direction. Ushavious ordered three of his frigates to guard against an Marasharite doubling of the Laurasian line, leaving thirteen of his dreadnoughts in the line. Ushavious subsequently turned towards the Marasharite ships. The Marasharites began to bear away, and by the middle hours of the afternoon, were in full retreat. The Laurasians followed closely, inflicting much damage. Five Marasharite xebecs were destroyed, another six damaged, and Vice-Admiral Hausein-Pasha's flagship, the Idieter, suffered a catastrophic shields failure. The Laurasians soon retreated, and battle ceased for the night. The following day, the Laurasians attacked the Kapitana and Melike Bahri, both of which had been seriously damaged in confrontation with the Laurasian forces the previous day. Within an hour, Melike Bahri surrendered to the IMS Marie Magadelene, but the Kapitana presented a stout resistance. She was now assaulted by the IMS George Pobolysnia, the Gospderia, and the St. Andreus. By noon, she was completely surrounded, but it was not until three hours later that the ship, the largest in the Marasharite fleet and battered beyond endurance, finally surrendered. The ship then suffered a catastrophic reactor failure and most of its crew died, before the Laurasians could begin their boarding procedures.
    • By the late hours of the day, Admiral Hussein had managed to flee on his starfighter, but nearly two-thirds of the Marasharite warships had been destroyed or severely damaged, while 600,000 Marasharite troops and personnel were Laurasian prisoners of war. The Battle of Tendra had therefore ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Admiral Ushavious and General Surovius wasted no time in regaining the advantage. By September 12, Marasharite raiding expeditions against Quinta-il-vily, Batchbey, Merevbey, and Quickbay had terminated, and Ushavious had instigated a siege of the Peldavian Gateways. The Battle of the Peldavian Gateways (September 14-16, 1790) ended in another decisive Laurasian victory. On September 19, Pleven and Trabzon both surrendered to superior Laurasian forces without a fight. And then on September 24, 1790, Surovius destroyed a Marasharite corps in the Battle of Batal-Pasha. His subordinate, General Sir Honorius Ferven (1749-1828), stormed a Marasharite position in Seraksian City, capturing more than 20,000 elite Marasharite Troops. Batal-Pasha's capture by the Laurasian Empire proved a serious blow for the Marasharites. By the end of September 1790, Kilia and Kabarda were both under siege by Laurasian units. Admiral Ushavious repelled a Marasharite counteroffensive against Stauvachany (October 4, 1790) and captured a Marasharite convoy at Kakilaria (October 7). By October 11, Marasharite units had been expelled from Briceni and Rezni. On October 15, 1790, Duros surrendered, completing the expulsion of Marasharite units from the Ochanian Provinces. Kilia finally surrendered five days later, and Kabarda fell on October 22 after a directed offensive by General Surovius. By the end of October 1790, Shumen was blockaded by the forces of the Empire.
  • October 7-
    • As previously mentioned, King Hensios IV of Franconia, with the assistance of the Laurasian Major-General Lord Willoughby, had laid Parri, the capital world of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and now headquarters for the Franconian League, under siege since May 1790. The King's forces had pursued a strategy of blockade and harassment, intending to sever the supply lines leading to the Parri star system and therefore compel the beleaguered garrison into surrender. During the first few months of the Siege, it seemed as if events were trending in the favor of the King of Franconia. Hensios, though distracted by conflicts elsewhere in the Franconian realms, and by confrontations with the League in Brittany, Lorraine, Normandy, and the Pale of Calais, was able to repel many of the League's attempts to relieve the garrison of Parri. He defeated a League convoy in the Battle of Jersey (May 27-June 4, 1790), and then stormed Guernsey (June 7); Caen (June 11); and Bayeux (June 14-17), terminating League expeditions towards Calais and into the Franconian Channel Colonies. By the end of June 1790, Hensios had blunted League forces at Orleans and Crayon, and on July 7, he obtained another victory in the Battle of Cherbourg, preventing the League units from seizing the military factories and spaceports in the star system. The King attempted numerous times during this month to negotiate the surrender of Parri, but the Duke of Nemours and the Franconian League Council rejected all of his demands; the Siege dragged on. By August 1790, the King's forces had seized all of the outposts in the immediate vicinity of Parri, and he had received more than 250,000 Franconian, Laurasian, and mercenary troops as reinforcements.
    • It was at this point, however, that Hensios's luck fled him. Fulfilling his obligations under the Treaty of Joinville, Emperor Philicus ordered the Duke of Parma (who had managed to blunt Laurasian-Durthian operations against Nemurs, Brussels, Antwerp, and Maastricht during the preceding months) to detach a expeditionary corps and send it to open the supply lines of Parri. Parma had done as ordered, and he had begun his progress from Gembloux and Briell on August 28, defeating Franconian border patrols in a series of confrontations at Graveline's Mist, Dunkirk, and the Pas-de-Norde Gateways. On September 4, the Battle of Charleroi resulted in a decisive victory for Parma, who captured nearly a third of the Franconian destroyers that opposed him. Franconian units at Mons, St. Quentin, and Brabaggia failed to stem his advance, and by September 11, he was approaching Upper Lurdon, just seventy light-years to the north of Parri. Six days later, King Hensios, realizing that his forces were outclassed, and fearful of being cut of by Parma's corps, decided to terminate his siege of Parri. A final attack against the barricades of Parri (September 19, 1790) failed, and the King of Franconia hastily pulled back.
    • Parma reached Parri (September 23, 1790), and was hailed by the world's population for saving them from the grasp of the "scheming and conniving fiend of Navarre, who seeks to gain rule over territories which do not belong to him." And although the Spamalkan Duke then stormed Stephani and Julianne (September 30-October 5, 1790), he was soon compelled into retreat by news of a Laurasian-Durthian offensive against Cambrai and Nimburg; he halted his campaigns and returned back to Luxembourg (October 7, 1790). Four days later, the Battle of Cambrai resulted in a tactical victory for the Holy Spamalkan Empire; General Pellhamia was forced to terminate this offensive and to reinforce the garrisons of Lier, Axel, and Amsterdam. Nevertheless, Hensios had suffered a serious setback in his ambitions, and on October 15, 1790, was forced to withdraw from Sancerre after a bloody confrontation with the world's inhabitants, supported by a League expeditionary force. By the end of October 1790, Rouen was firmly in the hands of the Franconian League, and Hensios's units had been forced to retire from the Trans-Parri outposts.
  • November 5-
    • Although events in Franconia and Durthia had gone in the favor of the Holy Spamalkan Empire and Franconian League (as far as the Siege of Parri was concerned), the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and the Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia continued to make progress in the Colonial Territories. Admiral Dracius, pursuing his ultimate goal of seizing the Spamalkan stronghold of San Domingo, now directed a operation against Santiago. Santiago, located two hundred light years northeast of San Domingo, controlled access to the vital Cidade Viaha Highway, along which the Spamalkans transported agricultural and mineral goods from San Domingo, Cartagena, and Augustine to Vigo and the Galician Worlds. After storming the Spamalkan outpost of Praia (May 15, 1790), Dracius's forces had then progressed to the outskirts of Santiago. Three days later, he penetrated the outer defenses of the star system; within hours, a corps of Imperial Marines and Imperial Army soldiers under the command of General Sir Christopheus Cariellia (1751-93) landed on Santiago Outer, surprising the Spamalkan garrison and seizing control of the communications terminal without much difficulty. Dracius then unleashed a surprise offensive with his starfighters, frigates, and corvettes, commencing an intensive bombardment of the world's defenses. The Spamalkan-Portugallian garrison returned fire, but it proved sporadic, and it soon petered out when Cariellia's troops stormed the chief weapons arsenal in the Santagian Asteroid Belts.
    • Within another five hours, the shields of Santiago had been breached, and Laurasian troops overran the world with little resistance; Dracius faced no substantial naval opposition, and twenty Spamalkan transports fell into Laurasian possession. By May 22, 1790, Santiago was completely in the possession of the Laurasian Empire. Dracius impounded seventy Portugallian commercial vessels at Santiago Spaceport and handed them over to the custody of the Portugallian Stellar Navy. Santiago's main ordnance warehouses were sacked by Laurasian troops, with turbocannons, blasters, grenades, personal shields, body armor, and nellpepper (an ingredient in artillery shells) being seized in large quantities. From Santiago, Dracius captured the Spamalkan garrison of Porto (May 25, 1790) and dispatched a reconnaissance expedition, examining the defenses of San Domingo and other neighboring Spamalkan bases. By June 1, 1790, San Domingo was under direct threat from the allied forces; the Battle of San Domingo now commenced in earnest. The Spamalkan garrison, which had hastily constructed a minefield barricade, sought to bring in reinforcements, but it was already too late. Dracius detached Cariellia and his corps of Marines to the farther side of San Domingo.
    • He then made a staged landing at San Domingo Point, causing the Spamalkans to divert many of their troops and defensive warships towards his direction. Scarcely did the Spamalkans make their move that Cariellia and his corps assaulted the planetary side, landing in the Northern Quadrant of San Domingo and threatening the Spamalkan garrison from the flank. The Garrison Commander, General Cristobal de Ovalle (1746-1807), attempted to assume new positions, and detached a squadron of garrison starfighters to harry Dracius's transports. Cariellia, however, stormed the Quderia Landing Bay, and the Laurasian forces advanced further, receiving intensive fire from the Spamalkan troops as they did so. By this point, San Domingo's shields had been conclusively breached, and the world was subject to constant landings by armored troops from above. Cariellia soon penetrated the Lenba and the Mereda Checkpoints, rushing his troops forward to capture the cities of Vidad and Combad (June 3-5, 1790).
    • The Spamalkan units were swept away by Laurasian troops and armored vehicles under Cariellia and Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Laetus Powellia (1761-1835), and the Laurasian columns now converged in Agnes's City, the world's capital. The Fortaleza Ozama, the chief fortress of Agnes's City, resisted Laurasian offensives while the rest of the city fell into their hands without much difficulty. General de Ovalle himself fled from the world, abandoning his family and his garrison commanders. By late day of June 8, 1790, the Fortaleza Ozama had finally been overrun by Laurasian troops, having endured a significant bombardment over the course of the preceding two days. All remaining Spamalkan troops in the countryside and on Torra de Homejae (San Domingo's sole moon), had surrendered by the following day, and the world was completely in the possession of the Laurasian Empire. The world's spacedock, warehouses, and military arms factories were comprehensively plundered by Laurasian troops.
    • The fall of San Domingo proved a heavy blow to the Spamalkans. Dracius and Prince Fernando subsequently stormed Popayan, San Juan de Pasto, and Santa Maria (June 12-22, 1790), securing their position in New Granada, Spamalkan Hisparilla, and the Spamalkan Spice Colonies. In July 1790, Fernando moved against Rio de Janiero, placing this capital star system of Portugallian Brazil under siege. The Portugallian inhabitants of the world, who were disenchanted with Spamalkan rule, ultimately rebelled against the world's authorities on July 22, 1790, and joined arms with Fernando's forces; within hours, Rio de Janiero was once again in Portugallian possession. On August 2, 1790, Bahia, isolated from its supply routes and feeling threatened by the Prince's seizure of Canderso, surrendered without a fight. At the same time, Dracius stormed Bogota and Tunja (August 1-12, 1790), humiliating the Spamalkan Governor Don Rigo de Variellio (1722-97) in those confrontations.
    • By the end of August 1790, Caenanela and Laguna had both fallen to Dracius and Prince Fernando, entrenching them further in Brazil. And on September 14, 1790, the Battle of Grao Para resulted in a decisive victory for the combined allied forces. Within another six days, the Spamalkan garrisons of Parati, Cabio Firo, Itamarca, and Brazilla had surrendered, with allied forces driving deep into the interior of the Brazillian Territories. Bertioga, however, resisted until its final capture on October 3, 1790, completing the reconquest of Brazil. Repeated Spamalkan counteroffensives against San Juan de Ulua, the Balearics, the Gibraltar Straits, and Santiago (October 4-9, 1790), yielded no results, with Dracius capturing a Spamalkan convoy at Ser Marria. On October 14, the allied forces began their push towards Malacca, storming the Spamalkan garrisons of Johor (October 15-19); Pahat (October 22); and Penang (October 29).
    • By November 3, allied forces, having stormed Kedah and Perak, had reached the outskirts of Malacca itself. Spamalkan General Don Ferdinand de Alberquerque (1742-90) stationed his forces in a "parallel" formation, attempting to blunt the allied advance. The Battle of Malacca (November 5, 1790), saw the Spamalkans having some success at first; a series of rash assaults by Dracius against the Spamalkan formations resulted in the loss of thirty frigates. The battle soon turned in his favor, however, as Portugallian Admiral Enrique de Amerigo (1744-1815) penetrated through the Spamalkan left flank, exposing a gap in Alberquerque's battleship formations. Malacca was doomed, and Alberquerque himself, who commanded the fleet from his personal starfighter, was killed in a running confrontation with Portugallian frigates. The land garrison of Malacca, having suffered constant bombardment, surrendered during the late hours of the day. The fall of Malacca restored control of the most populous and economically important Portugallian colony (it specialized in the spice and medicinal trades) to the control of King Antonio I. This would be secured by the conquest of Ordin (November 9); Mulatarr (November 15); and Perai (November 16-22). By the end of November 1790, Singapore was being harried constantly by Admirals Dracius and de Amerigo, while the whole of the Spamalkan Spice Colonies were under Laurasian military occupation.
  • November 17-
    • Empress Aurelia's mood at the beginning of November 1790, was decidedly "mixed". Although the Empress was enthused by the victories of her military commanders over the Spamalkans and Marasharites (in spite of the failure of Hensios's siege of Parri), she was distracted by events at the Imperial Court, again concerning her favorite, the Earl of Estatius, and by the actions of the Holy Austarlian Empire under Le'adus II. Following the conclusion of the Treaty of Sistova, Emperor Lea'dus had wasted no time in extending further overtures to his Pruthian neighbors and in nurturing diplomatic relations with that power. Emperor A'rua III had himself become more amendable to building friendly relations with Lea'dus. Within months of the Treaty of Warsaw, its value had already become reduced to the Autocratic Pruthian Government. A'rua's parleys with the Holy Emperor of Austarlia gradually convinced him that the Austarlian sovereign would not pose a threat to his own security. The Dejanican Diet, on its part, now took a series of foolish decisions which undermined the alliance with Pruthia. On July 27, 1790, the Diet demanded that the Pruthian Cabinet provide an explicit guarantee of the Commonwealth's territorial integrity against the intrusions of foreign powers.
    • The King's Minister, Count Reinhold von Isgriff (1735-1802), refused to answer to the Diet's demands, declaring that the provisions of the recently-concluded alliance meant that Pruthia was obliged to support Dejanica only if it were assaulted by a hostile power. The Diet, however, continued to press it, and on August 14, declared its intention to revoke privileges to Pruthian Martialists at Krakow and Lublin. This angered Emperor Pru'a, and he issued numerous protests to his Dejanican counterpart, King Stanis Vorrust I. The King was ultimately able to compel the Diet to back down from its threats, but on September 9, the Diet affirmed that the Commonwealth's territories could not be divided. A'rua, who had still been half-expecting Torun and Danzig as his rewards for "aiding" the Commonwealth, now saw Dejanica as far less valuable to his future goals. Four days after this humiliating setback, he opened negotiations with Austarlian Chancellor Kaunitz and the Austarlian Council of State, aiming towards the resolution of "certain differences between our respective Empires." Negotiations proceeded rapidly at Reichenbach, and on September 27, 1790, the two powers concluded a treaty there.
    • By the terms of the Treaty of Reichenbach, Austarlia agreed to honor the commitments made at Sistova towards the Marasharite Empire; to terminate its alliance with the Laurasian Empire; to grant the Burgundians amnesty for their rebellious acts and to guarantee their constitutional rights; and to affirm Pruthian rights to Bayreuth and Ansbach (both margarivates would become formally part of Pruthia following the abdication of their last ruler, Char'vak Alexidos (1736-1806), on December 2, 1791). In exchange, Pruthia agreed to defend Austarlian territories against the actions of any "immediate aggressors" (implying Haxonia and Vendragia); to recognize an Austarlian stake in the affairs of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth; and to provide financial compensation to Austarlia for all of its military expenses incurred since January 1, 1789 (amounting to $300 trillion Austarlian krona). The Treaty of Reichenbach was ratified by Lea'dus II on October 2, and by A'rua III on October 5. Five days later, Lea'dus, obliging by the Treaty's provisions, sent a communique to the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Laurasian Empire, informing them that his obligations under the Treaty of Invictus Mesura towards "Her Imperial Majesty of Laurasia" were formally terminated. This had angered Empress Aurelia, and she even feared that the Holy Austarlian and Pruthian Empires were going to declare war against her.
    • This proved to be an exaggerated fear, but Lea'dus's actions had seriously damaged relations between Laurasia and Austarlia; for the remainder of her reign, Aurelia would entertain a hearty distrust of Austarlia, even after the death of Lea'dus II in 1792. Lea'dus's conclusion of the Treaties of Sistova and Reichenbach, however, had freed him to focus on internal affairs. On November 11, 1790, Lea'dus was finally crowned Apostolic King of Hungary at Buda, and he shortly afterwards concluded the Final Settlement with the Hungarian nobility, confirming their official language, privileges, and positions in government administration and the military. Six days later, the Pact of Barbia reconciled his subjects in Burgundy, restoring the Brabantine State Assembly and all of the customs previously enjoyed by those in Burgundy. These arrangements restored internal tranquility in the territories of the Holy Austarlian Empire. Lea'dus's attempts to convince Aurelia that he harbored no ill-will towards her, failed however.
    • And then on October 16, 1790, the Empress learned from Lord Treasurer Burghley that on May 14, 1790, a little over a month after the death of Sir Caligula Walsingis, Estatius had married his daughter and heiress, Franconia (1768-1833). Franconia was the widow of the late Sir Philip Sidronius, to whom she had been married in 1783. She was one of the most beautiful ladies at the Imperial Court, and had been a lady-in-waiting to the Empress since 1788. Although the Empress bore no-will for Franconia, she was nevertheless angered by the marriage, and believed that Estatius should have consulted her first. For the next several days, she raged in her bedchambers, refusing to see anyone and threatening to have the couple cast into the Fortress of Baureux. Eventually, she was persuaded that Estatius had only done what "every other man of rank and wealth did": that is, to marry in order to produce heirs.
    • Aurelia, however, remembered that Estatius was the great-grandson of her own aunt, Lady Antonia Boleyenia, and of one of her father's mistresses, Anna Hastinga, Countess of Hannah (1683-1744). She believed that his union with Franconia would present a family line that would seek hold of the Imperial Laurasian Crown. The Empress's birthday (September 7, 1790), had been celebrated with much pomp and circumstances. Now fifty-seven, however, Aurelia was aware that her advancing age caused further unease at the Imperial Court, for she still had not named a successor. She knew that Estatius and others would continue to think that they could gain influence through gaining access to her ear. This all colored the Empress's attitude as she entered November 1790. And indeed, as the Empress had feared, Estatius used all of his "gallantry" and "pleasantries" to induce Aurelia to forgive him for his marriage. On Accession Day (November 17, 1790), the Earl, who was wearing black funerary clothes, entered the Circus Maximus in a funeral procession, to symbolize his disgrace. He was attended by many of his friends and associates, including the Earl of Oxfadia.
    • It was soon obvious to all that the Empress had forgiven him, although she would never agree to receiving Franconia as his countess. Estatius then distinguished himself in the Accession Day jousts and athletic competitions that followed. This occasion marked another ending for the Empress: her Champion, Sir Antigonus Lesius, stage-managed the ceremonies for the last time, having done so for the preceding twenty years. To mark his retirement, Lesius put on a magnificent pageant of vestal virgins, with lyrics performed by the Christiania Symphony Orchestra. At the end of the ceremonies, the Empress embraced Lesius, presented him with a pennant of favor, and granted him a retirement pension of €22.2 billion dataries per year. Lesius then retired to Dichetlian Park on Caladaria with his mistress (and later wife), Lady Anna Vasavoria (1759-1850), formerly one of the Empress's ladies-in waiting; he would die there on February 11, 1798, at the age of 64. No sooner had Lesius retired than the Empress of Laurasia was dealt with another blow. On November 18, 1790, the Earl of Aretha, who had been the guardian of ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana for fifteen years, as well as Imperial Marshal and one of the Empress's chief advisers, died at the age of 62 at his estate on Trebek. The news of Aretha's death shook the Empress considerably, and she lamented to her ladies that the Lord Almitis had been particularly cruel to her in that year. Walsingis, Sarah, Parrius, and now Aretha; she wondered why all of this was occurring. Aretha would be buried at his family plot on Aretha, Talibetan Chapel, on November 22; his son Gilbertius succeeded him as Earl of Aretha. For the time being, Aretha's post of Imperial Marshal remained vacant.
  • December 22-
    • Whilst the Accession Day festivities were ongoing on Laurasia Prime, Major-General Lord Surovius continued to distinguish himself in his victories against the Laurasian Empire. Surovius, well on his way to becoming the only Laurasian commander in the history of the Space Age to have never been defeated in battle, cleared Marasharite units from Baia and Suret (November 2-9, 1790). Shumen, in the meantime, now completely isolated from its supply lines, posed a serious resistance to the forces of the Empire. Admiral Ushavious repelled Marasharite moves from the Shumen Straits and the Soroca Outposts (November 12-14, 1790), and by Accession Day, Laurasian units finally breached the star system's outer defenses. A fierce confrontation ensued, and it was not until November 22, 1790, before Shumen City was finally overrun by Laurasian troops. The world's garrison surrendered the following day, with General Surovius (who had arrived on November 21), himself accepting the surrender of the commanders. The fall of Shumen now pressed the Laurasian threat to Ruse and Silistra even more than previously; by the end of November 1790, Laurasian forces were within close proximity of these worlds, among the last significant Marasharite strongholds of note in the Great Tesmanian Cloud.
    • On December 5, after blunting a Marasharite offensive in the Battle of Hewerau, Surovius decided to move against Izmail, which was one of the Marasharite Empire's most formidable military arsenals. It possessed a garrison of nearly two million troopers and Marasharite Guards; a fleet of one hundred warships; and a complex system of shield generators and ion disruptors. Four days later, on December 9, 1790, Surovius and Ushavious blockaded the star system and installed stockades on the farther side of Proedy. Ushavious's third-in-command, Admiral Jose de Ribas (1751-1800), a Portugallian in the service of the Imperial Laurasian Navy, successfully stormed Marasharite positions at Proedy, Lower Izmail's Outpost, and Khalar, seriously weakening the Marasharite formations. By December 15, Surovius's troops had issued the outpost of Gergail, posing a serious threat to Marasharite communications lines from Izmail and the Izmail Starbase to the outskirts of the star system. On December 17, Ushavious drew the naval garrison out and decisively crushed them in the Battle of Siegen, five light-years east of Izmail.
    • Four days later, the two Laurasian military commanders launched a joint naval and land offensive against the world, having bombarded the world immediately following the confrontations at Siegen. Surovius sent a warning to the Garrison Commander of Izmail, Aidos Mehmet Pasha (1732-90), warning him that if he did not surrender, much retribution would be exacted. General Aidos-Pasha ignored the message, and ordered his troops to resist the Laurasian onslaught. During the late hours of December 21, 1790, the Laurasians, advancing from the northerly, easterly, and westerly vector directions, penetrated through Izmail's inner defenses and the Izmail Starbase; soon, a third of the world's land surface was overrun by Surovius's troops. By 8:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, the Marasharite garrison had been overwhelmed by the fury of the Laurasian offensives, and Cridel City fell into Surovius's hands. Nevertheless, they had resisted fiercely, and much fighting had occurred at the planetary ramparts and throughout the countryside. It was not until December 25, 1790, before General Aidos-Pasha and his command officers were captured. Nevertheless, the Siege of Izmail had resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. The Laurasians suffered 250,000 casualties, compared to the Marasharites's loss of over 800,000. The remainder of the garrison (more than a million men), became prisoners of war. Aidos-Pasha and his officers were executed by blaster fire on December 27, and Surovius treated the world's inhabitants with much brutality. His troops sacked many of Izmail's businesses and properties. The fall of Izmail now left Ruse and Silistra as the only remaining Marasharite strongholds of note in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. As the year 1790 came to an end, the Empire had gained a definite advantage over its Marasharite foes.

1791

  • January 1-
    • 1791, the 91st year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire and its remaining allies (the Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia, Sultanate of Morocco, Serene Kingdom of Franconia, and United Durthian States) having made further advances against their common enemies, the Holy Spamalkan and Marasharite Empires. This must be placed in context, however. During the preceding year (1790), Empress Aurelia's military forces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir Alexander Surovius, 1st Lord Surovius of Rymnik and Vice-Admiral Sir Theodosius Ushavious had all but expelled the Marasharites from the Ochanian Provinces. At the beginning of the new year, Marasharite garrisons held on tenaciously to Ruse, Silistra, Anapa, and minor bases such as Kars, Ardahan, Akhaltsikhe, Bayazaid, and Poti; their hold over the Danubian Principalities also remained weak, due to the continued Laurasian occupation of the Sucreava Colonies, Oradea, Bihor, and other Gateway strongholds. In the Barbary States, the position of the Marasharite Empire had been seriously weakened.
    • Under its new Sultan, Ahmad al-Mansur I, himself a renowned military commander in his own right, Morocco had repelled all counteroffensives by Marasharite and Barbary forces, besides occupying all of Mauritania and Algiers. Tunis continued to hold out against the allied forces, but there was no doubt that the Sultan of Morocco had gained the advantage. As for Spamalka, its situation was horrendous. The loss of Brazil, Portugallia, the Malaccas, the Spice Colonies, and the Balearics to the allied forces of Laurasia and Portugallia had seriously damaged Emperor Philicus's reputation, the security of his Hereditary Dominions (Lesser Spamalka, Great Spamalka, Catalonia, Valencia, the Basques, Spamalkan Navarre, Galicia, Asturias, Andalusia), and the economic vitality of the Holy Spamalkan Government.
    • The Spamalkan Council of State found itself hard-pressed to pay the salaries of the soldiers of the Holy Spamalkan Army; the state had now incurred a deficit of nearly $1.4 quadmillion ducats, the most crippling debt of any state, and the Stock Exchange of Madrid had lost more than half of its value. Many of Philicus's subjects were now protesting the conditions produced by war, and were beginning to desire for peace, so that "normalcy would return to these dominions under our Gods." Emperor Philicus, however, refused to make peace until his hereditary realms had been secured and the Durthian Duchies subjected to his authority once again. The Emperor of Spamalka continued to declare to his advisers and his subjects that he would stop at nothing to restrain the influence of the Empress of Laurasia, and to secure a reliable ally for the Holy Spamalkan Empire in the form of the Franconian League.
    • The League had managed to retain Parri, in the face of offensives by King Hensios IV. Although Hensios now had definite control of Orleans, of the Metzian Lordships, and of Poitiers, he nevertheless found that his position would never be secure so long as the League forces held out in defiance of him, and as long as the Spamalkans supported them. All of this was in Empress Aurelia's mind as she issued her New Year's proclamation. She lamented all of the sacrifices which had been made during the preceding year, and again praised the efforts of her commanders and her military subordinates in the campaigns. The Empress, however, also declared that her subjects must "march on until absolute victory is obtained." And indeed, this year would see the Laurasian Empire and its allies slowly advancing their position, although reverses would be suffered in Franconia and in the Portugallian Colonies.
  • January 22-
    • Empress Aurelia, besides dealing with the circumstances surrounding her Empire's continued conflict with Marasharita and Spamalka, also contended with further upheavals at the Imperial Court. She found herself distressed by the brazenness of her godson, Antiochus Harringtia, who at the end of December 1790 had published his translation of Orlando Furioso, a 3rd century BH Meaganian poem which was known for its bawdiness. This translation had circulated among the ladies of the Imperial Household, and the Empress was appalled when she read it. She learned that Harringtia was the author, and declared that it was inappropriate for her ladies to be reading such material. Harringtia was reprimanded by the Empress, who commanded him not to return to the Imperial Court until he had translated all of the works of the Meaganian Ariosto (d. 223 BH), the author of the original poem. This would take him most of the year to complete. Estatius, on his part, was now coming increasingly under the influence of Franconius Bagonius.
    • He was the youngest son of the late Procurator-General Sir Nicholas Bagonius, having been born in Christiania at Yorth House on January 22, 1761. His elder brother Antoninus (who had been born in 1758), had joined the Imperial Intelligence Agency upon his graduation from the University of the Empire in 1781, and had been assigned by Chancellor Walsingis as an agent on Parri. He had become acquainted with the new King of Franconia, Hensios IV, during that time. Their mother, Lady Anna Bagonius (1727-89), had been Lord Treasurer Burghley's younger sister. The Lord Treasurer, however, had no time for his nephews, suspecting them of working to undermine his son's influence. He had therefore refused to extend his patronage to them. This had led to a bitter family rift, leading Bagonius to align himself with Estatius's faction. Bagonius himself, now thirty years old, was an accomplished lawyer and member of the Christiania City Council, having graduated from the University of Christiania Law School in 1779 at only the age of eighteen, and having served on the Christiania Inns from 1784. He had been an attache of Sir Amnystas Pauletius (1781-82), and was well acquainted with Leicesterius, Walsingis, and others on the Privy Council. He was of "middling stature, with his countenance indented with age before he was old, and his presence grave."
    • This man, destined to become Chancellor of the Empire under Lysimachus II, was more intelligent than either Cecilis or Estatius, but the Empress never liked him and never appointed him to high office. Bagonius, nevertheless, quickly established a friendship with Estatius, who soon perceived that he could strike a blow against Cecilis by promoting his friend's rise. Bagonius, who was proud and calculating, saw in Estatius's "rare perfections and values" a means by which he could achieve political prominence and discomfit the Cecilis family. However, it had already been seen that while the Empress might give Estatius anything he wanted (within reason), she would not allow him to dispense patronage to anyone else, and those who came to him looking for favors usually went away unsatisfied. Aurelia feared that Estatius would build up a substantial base of support.
    • Bagonius quickly determined the situation and sent a communique offering Estatius his advice. He told him that he should not appear to the Empress as "A man of a nature not to be ruled; of an estate not founded on his greatness; of a popular reputation; of a military dependence: I demand whether there can be a more dangerous image than this represented to any living monarch, much more to a lady and of Her Majesty's apprehension." He urged Estatius to abandon his military ambitions in order to set the Empress's mind at rest, and to seek advancement by peaceful means. It was sensible advice, but Estatius ignored it. The Earl also neglected to allay Aurelia's jealousy of his growing popularity. She was jealous not only of this, but at his play-acting with other women. On January 22, 1791, the Empress caught Estatius flirting with two of her Ladies of the Privy Chamber, Katharina Bridigius (who was then 22) and Aurelia Russalia (25); she slapped Mistress Bridigius (who later became Estatius's mistress) and banished the girls from the Imperial Court for three days. Estatius, however, could also be jealous, and grew angry if the Empress paid attention to one of her male courtiers.
  • February 11-
    • Following the fall of Izmail, Admiral Ushavious and General Surovius had convened a strategical conference at Del Valle (January 3, 1791). In this conference, the two Laurasian military commanders decided to launch, over the course of the following months, a three-pronged military offensive that would eliminate the final Marasharite strongholds in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, drive into the Danubian Principalities, and sunder Marasharite supply lines leading to Upper Bulgania and Macedonica. Ushavious now resolved to storm Ruse and the Marasharite garrisons of Kornos, Meveros, and Hetheros, thereby depriving them of their last routes of access into the Galactic Void. Surovius, on his part, would move against Silistra, and from there, advance to Chrisnau and Silisburg, both of which had been restored by the Austarlians to the Marasharite Empire in October 1790, in accordance with the Treaty of Sistova. Finally, a smaller Laurasian expeditionary force under the command of General Sir Honorius Gudovia (1741-1820) would seize Anapa and the Caucasian Colonies, thereby depriving the Marasharites of their last strongholds on the Upper Danube. Following the conference, the Laurasian forces proceeded immediately.
    • Admiral Ushavious, advancing from Del Valle, repelled a Marasharite counteroffensive against Stauvachany, Ochania, and Fidonsi in the Battle of the Era Straits (January 4-11, 1791). On January 15, 1791, Ushavious captured the Marasharite communications relay of Novoruuk, thereby severing communications by the General Headquarters with Ruse and Kornos. Within the next five days, he destroyed Marasharite patrol fleets at Tambov, Razgrad, and Batan. Girgiu was then secured by Laurasian forces (January 22, 1791), and on January 26, Meveros was stormed after a confrontation with Admiral Hussein's subordinate commander, Commodore al-Methi of Tripoli (1748-1818). Hetheros surrendered without a fight on February 2, 1791; Kornos fell on February 6 after a Laurasian assault ruined the system's supply lines. Finally, on February 9, Ushavious's forces, with auxiliary support from Surovius, blockaded Ruse. The star system resisted for two days; Marasharite General Husain al-Fifi (1737-91) barricaded the Ruse Ramparts and launched several raiding parties from the Ruse Outer Facilities. Ultimately, however, the strength of the Laurasian forces proved too great, and the star system's defenses were penetrated on February 11, 1791. The land garrison of Ruse was overrun within hours, the Ramparts destroyed, and General al-Fifi himself killed in the Battle.
    • The world finally fell into the possession of the Laurasian Empire, after having eluded it back in 1773. Following the fall of Ruse, Admiral Ushavious stormed Byala, Tsenevo, and Borovo, completing the subjection of the Marasharite Void Garrisons. At the same time, Surovius had made advances of his own. Overrunning the Marasharite garrisons of Lom, Montana, and Vedktherom (January 4-19, 1791), Surovius then besieged Varshets (January 23-27, 1791). This stronghold, home to a substantial garrison of Marasharite Elite Guards, fell only after a series of ruthless, coordinated Laurasian assaults against its defenses. Following the fall of Varshets, Surovius quickly stormed Brusarti, Glavinistia, and Dulovo (January 28-February 4, 1791), driving Marasharite units into Silistra. Pildrim, already in Laurasian possession, proved to be the vantage point from where Surovius blockaded the Silistrian Asteroid Belt (February 7-14, 1791).
    • Silistra itself was constantly bombarded by Laurasian warships, and the General landed three regiments of Marines who quickly secured control of the Northern Cloud Mists and the Orbital Platforms. And then, on February 21, 1791, a Bulganian officer, who held sympathy for the Laurasian Empire, and disgruntled with his superiors, shut down the planetary shield grid. Surovius quickly took advantage of this, and the world's defenses were conclusively penetrated. Silistra was totally overrun by February 26, with Marasharite Garrison General Basir-Ashad (1734-92) and his chief officers becoming Laurasian prisoners of war. The fall of Silistra now extinguished the Marasharite presence in the Ochanian Provinces. Surovius then captured the minor garrisons of Vikin, Sitovo, and Turakan in the Gateway Provinces (February 29-March 7, 1791), finally completing the expulsion of the Marasharites from that region. By the middle of March 1791, Laurasian forces were advancing into the Danubian Principalities and against Anapa, as General Gudovia's efforts had been focused on securing his supply lines and repelling Marasharite moves towards the Northern Reaches.
  • March 27-
    • By March 1791, the position of the Holy Spamalkan Empire had deteriorated further in the Colonial Territories, while the Sultanate of Morocco had made major advances in Tunis, with its forces beginning to press into Tripoli. On December 7, 1790, a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Penang and the Malacca Straits was repulsed by Dracius and Field-Marshal Lord Greysius (who had been out of action for some months due to illness) in the Battle of Ang-Haydang. By December 14, the combined Laurasian-Portugallian forces had captured the colonial garrisons of Brunei, Bedok, Tuas, and Sangahor. Then on December 19, 1790, the allied forces imposed a blockade of Singapore Colony. Singapore was one of the most significant colony worlds in the hold of the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Having been originally colonized by the Vendragian Confederacy in 1519 (following a war with the Malaccan Potentates), it had been transferred to Portugallia as a result of the Treaty of Hador (1596), which was signed during King Richar's War against Franconia.
    • Singapore briefly enjoyed a period of independence from 1657 to 1665, under the leadership of the rebel Lee Yuan Kew (1621-65), before it was reconquered by Portugallian forces under Alfonso de Canales, Duke of Corbon (1616-93). By 1781, when Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka was acclaimed as King of Portugallia by the Portugallian Cortes, Singapore had a population of nearly two billion inhabitants. It was renowned throughout extra-galactic civilization for its financial, shipbuilding, electronics production, agricultural, and consumer services sectors. It was also a major communications and transportation hub, with spices from Malacca and Penang being shipped through here to Brunei and then onwards to Brazil, Portugallia, Spamalka, and the Barbary States. The world was therefore defended by a substantial Spamalkan garrison and by a patrol fleet of some two hundred military warships. Its capture would not be easy.
    • Dracius's first frontal assaults against the And and Jurong Defenses were repelled (December 22-29, 1790), as the Spamalkan frigates Lahia and Basa Maria, equipped with Singaporan arms, proved to be formidable opponents to the Imperial Laurasian Navy. Field-Marshal Lord Greysius, who had blockaded the Spamalkan arsenals of Lang and Juhong, was able to land on the New Quarter of Singapore (January 2, 1791) and to seize its fortifications. The rest of Singapore's garrison remained intact, however, and several naval skirmishes occurred between them and the allied forces throughout the early months of 1791. By March 12, 1791, however, the world's shield defenses were faltering, and four days later, Dracius (with assistance from Prince Fernando) launched a coordinated naval offensive through the Port Garrison of Singapore, overrunning the famed dockyards and landing on the planetary surface. Laurasian landings became more intensive, and they soon began to advance, seizing Pulau Tekong and Pulau Ubin. It was not until March 27, 1791, before Upper Garrison, Singapore's chief fortress city, was finally stormed by Laurasian and Portugallian troops. And even then, all resistance on Singapore did not cease until April 12. The fall of Singapore, nevertheless, secured control of the Malaccas for Portugallia, and forced Emperor Philicus to call on a loan from the Haxonian Consortium of Milan. Naparia itself was now being harried by Laurasian and Portugallian naval forces; Taranto and Corome were both sacked by Laurasian expeditions in April 1791. And on April 14, 1791, the Second Battle of the Gibraltar Straits was fought between detachments of the 66th Imperial Fleet under Rear-Admiral Pompey Braderia (1745-1812), and a Spamalkan convoy under Admiral Giovanni Doria (1739-1806), a Milanian commander in Spamalkan service.
    • Admiral Doria assaulted the Laurasian force, with six of his galleys bearing down upon the IMS Centurion, Rear-Admiral Braderia's flagship. Braderia, however, employed his corvettes and couriers to harry the galleys, and then launched his starfighters into the Spamalkan flanks, disorienting them. The Spamalkan turbocannon on their lead frigate, the Icania, suffered a widespread systems failure, and the frigates were soon forced to retreat. Within hours, Braderia destroyed nearly a third of the Spamalkan convoy, with more than 100,000 Spamalkan military personnel dying in the confrontation. Doria was forced to retreat, and the Gibraltar Straits came firmly under the military occupation of the Laurasian Empire's military forces. The Laurasians suffered only 300 casualties; for his victory, Braderia would be promoted to the rank of full Admiral and knighted by Empress Aurelia in June 1791. As for the campaigns in the Barbary States, Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur and his new Laurasian attache, General Sir Rudomentus Herria (1746-1813), destroyed a Algerian force at the Battle of Chlef (March 2-7, 1791). This followed the Moroccan occupation of Sidi bel Abbes, Tlmecen, Tebessa, Bou Salada, and Skidda during January and February 1791. By March 22, the last Algerian stronghold remaining in the possession of the Marasharite Empire, Bordji Arrerjdi, had fallen, and allied forces were now pressing into the territory of Tunis. On March 24, 1791, the Sultan destroyed a Marasharite-Tunisian force in the Battle of Gabes. Ariana and Sfax then fell into allied possession (March 28-April 4, 1791), followed by Sousse (April 7) and Bizerte (April 12-15). Kairouan capitulated on April 14, 1791, the same day of the Battle of Gibraltar Straits, and by April 24, Laurasian-Moroccan forces had seized the Tunisian systems of Gafsa and Ben Arous. By the end of April 1791, allied forces were approaching the outskirts of Tunis itself.
  • April 22-Following the conquest of Silistra and Ruse by the forces of the Laurasian Empire in February 1791, advances had been made into the Danubian Principalities and in the direction of Anapa. On March 17, 1791, Surovius repelled a Marasharite counteroffensive against Oradea and Balesti. Two days later, the Battle of Satu Mare resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire, as this stronghold fell to Ushavious and Surovius with little resistance. By March 25, Surovius had stormed Drobea and Pitetsi, recovering these worlds which had been restored to the Marasharites upon the Austarlian withdrawal the previous year. On March 29, 1791, Silisburg fell under siege from the forces of the Laurasian Empire; the world's garrison was totally outclassed by the larger and superior enemy forces, and it fell into the possession of Surovius just two days later. By April 7, Chrisnau was under serious threat from Laurasian units, with Surovius having overrun the Marasharite garrisons of Galati and Bocasani. On that same day, Laurasian General Gudovia destroyed a superior Marasharite force in the Battle of Eruzrum. Two days later, he stormed Shamkhal, Sulak, and Semender, inflicting a series of humiliating defeats upon his Marasharite opponent, General Sevir-Pasha (1749-1805). Bayazaid capitulated almost without a fight (April 15, 1791). And then, on April 22, 1791, Gudovia launched a major offensive against Anapa, the largest remaining of the Marasharite military bases in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Anapa's garrison, however, could not resist the coordinated assaults of the Laurasian forces, with Gudovia utilizing the discipline, firepower, and organization of his land units to overwhelm Marasharite command positions. By the end of the day, the world had surrendered to the Laurasian Empire, with nearly 100,000 Marasharite troops and Elite Guards becoming Laurasian prisoners of war. The fall of Anapa was shortly followed by those of Kars (April 24) and Ardahan (April 29-May 5, 1791). By May 9, General Gudovia had instigated a blockade of Akhaltsikhe, having effectively isolated Poti from outside support. Marasharite moves against Eruzrum, Kabarda, and Duros ended in failure (May 10-19, 1791).
  • May 3-
    • Although the Autocratic Pruthian Empire of A'rua III had proven itself reluctant to provide support to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and was now shirking from its commitments to defend the Commonwealth in case of war, the leading figures of the Dejanican Diet nevertheless deemed it prudent to move forward with their plans. Laurasia was still engrossed in war with Marasharita and Spamalka; Austarlia was contending with internal reforms and with hostile diplomatic relations versus both Haxonia and Vendragia; and Pruthia itself seemed as if it would soon become involved in those same tensions. In April 1790, the Diet appointed a so-called "Commission for the Betterment of the Form of the Government", in order to hasten the preparations. King Stanis Vorrust I now actively participated in the sessions of the Commission and offered his own suggestions for the legislative proposals. In October 1790, additional elections were held to supplement the Diet, which was prolonged beyond its original term. The proposed reforms had gradually gained support from all segments of society, with nearly two-thirds of the newly elected Diet delegates becoming involved in the Committee deliberations. In January 1791, the Commonwealth's local sejimiks were reformed by an act of the Diet.
    • The numbers of those who could vote were restricted, thereby depriving the magnates of many of their traditional clients. This was followed by the Free Royal Municipalities Act (April 18, 1791), which would be formally incorporated into the final constitution. This act addressed a number of matters relating to the municipalities and planetary systems of the Commonwealth, expanding the electoral and property rights of commoners, burghers, and merchants. They were granted personal legal inviolability, access to offices and distinctions, the right to acquire non-landed properties, independent self-government, and limited representation in the Diet. The acquisition of noble status by commoners was made easier, while nobles themselves gained additional rights to engage in commerce and manufacturing. Although the legislation did not grant all estates equal citizenship rights, it nevertheless caused a significant change in social, political, and economic relations within the Commonwealth, serving to strengthen the government in the face of foreign threats. Following this, the Diet authorized for the final drafting of the formal constitutional settlement.
    • The King took a leading part in drafting its provisions; the protests of the Laurasian Ambassador Sir Yerevus Bulgania, formally Ambassador to the Marasharite Court (he had assumed this new position on September 14, 1790, following his release from captivity by the Marasharite Government), availed nothing. Stanis Vorrust himself wished for the Commonwealth to become a formal constitutional monarchy, with the King taking the dominant role; Potockia, however, wished for the Diet to become the chief branch of government. Nevertheless, this did not hamper the drafting of the Constitution's provisions. The Hetman's Party strongly opposed all efforts at advancing forth a new Constitution; in response, the proponents of the document pushed forward the debates on it while many of the deputies were gone on recess. On May 3, 1791, the Diet again convened, with only half of its members present, and with its Chambers surrounded by the King's Royal Guard. The proposed constitution was read and formally adopted, with much rejoicing on Dejanica Major and throughout the rest of the Commonwealth. A protest was submitted by a number of pro-Laurasian deputies, but the following day, the protests were formally overridden by the Marshal of the Diet, who validated the conclusion of the constitutional settlements. This marked the first time in more than 76 years that a constitutional act had been passed by the Diet without the interference of Laurasia or another of the Commonwealth's foreign neighbors. The Friends of the Constitution, a Dejanican noble group which had been formed in February 1791, now sought to support and defend the Constitution, and to propose future reforms. Anti-Laurasian dissent increased daily throughout Dejanica. The Constitution itself was a remarkable document.
    • It declared that its goal was to ensure that the "integrity of the Commonwealth, civil liberty, and social order will be maintained in equilibrium." Article I acknowledged the position of the Dejanican Holy Order of Patriarchs, but assured toleration for all religious minorities, congregations, and faiths. Article II confirmed many of the centuries-old privileges of the Dejanican nobility, stressing that all were equal and had the inviolate right to property. Article III incorporated the Free Royal Municipalities Act into the Constitution. The right of habeas corpus was extended to commoners, who now gained the right to acquire landed property as well and were eligible for military officers' commissions, public offices, and seats of limited representation in the Diet and on the executive commissions of the Permanent Council. Article IV placed all commoners under the protection of the national law, but made it clear that they remained subordinate to the nobility and their social superiors. Article V declared that all "power in civil society should be derived from the will of its inhabitants." The constitution provided for the separation of powers into the bicameral Diet, the King and his Permanent Council, and the judicial courts.
    • Article VI provided that all legislative power remained with the Diet. The Diet was now to be convened for a full session once every two years; the King would have the power to call the body to special session whenever there was a national emergency. The Chamber of Deputies, the Diet's lower house, was now to be comprised of 435 deputies, with Greater Dejanica, Lesser Dejanica, and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania receiving one hundred deputies each. This was meant to reduce the complexity and the argumentative nature of the Chamber, which previously had more than 3,000 members. The King's Chancellory now became responsible for providing legislative drafts to all local assemblies, so that the deputies could prepare in advance. The Dejanican Senate, now capped at 130 members, was subjected to the King's direct jurisdiction; he would now have the right to designate those ministers and religious officials who would sit on the body, and retained his tie-breaking vote. The King and all deputies had the right to propose legislation. "General laws": that is, laws concerning constitutional, civil, criminal, and taxation matters within the Commonwealth, could be approved by a simple majority of both houses. 'Resolutions": that is, treaties of alliance, declarations of war and peace, ennoblements, and increases in the debt limit, would have to be approved by a two-thirds majority of both houses and ratified by the Permanent Council. The Senate was allowed to suspend the enactment of laws already passed, but such suspension would expire upon the next session of the Diet.
    • Article VI confirmed the reduction of the voting rights of the nobles at the sejimiks, imposing a property qualification. Nobles who were in military service regained the right to vote, but only those over the age of eighteen were allowed to exercise this right. The eligible voters would elect deputies to the powiats, special sessions of the local assemblies which would in turn hold elections for the Diet. Article VI also abolished the liberum veto, confederations, confederated diets, and the mandatory "instructions" of sejimiks to their deputies. This was intended to deprive the Laurasian Empire of the means by which to intervene in the Commonwealth's affairs. Articles VI and VII defined the nature of the Permanent Council. The Council could not interpret or create laws, only enforce them. Acts of the Commission on Foreign Affairs had to be approved by the Diet under all circumstances. The King remained President of the Council, to be composed of the Primate of Dejanica as well as the ministers of police, the seal, foreign affairs, war, and finances.
    • The Council's non-voting members were to include the Crown Prince, the Marshal of the Diet, two secretaries, and ten lesser ministers of state. All executive orders of the King required the countersignature of the Minister who was affected; if he refused, the King could propose the order directly to the Diet, which would then pass it by a simple majority vote. The ministers were responsible to the Diet, not the King; they could be removed from office with a two-thirds majority in both houses (a vote of no confidence). Ministers could also be impeached by the Diet Court, which could convict them by a simple majority vote. The King now became the commander-in-chief of the Commonwealth; the office of Crown Hetman was formally abolished. The King could also grant pardons, commutations, and reprieves, except in cases of treason. The Council's orders would be executed by the commissions. The Constitution also changed the government from an elective to a hereditary monarchy, although the coronation pact was retained. This was intended to reduce the destructive influence of foreign powers at each election. Upon the death of King Stanis Vorrust, the throne would become hereditary and pass to Elector Ernest Augustus I of Saxony (r. 1790-1824) of the House of Wettin. This provision was contingent on the Elector's consent. Ernest Augustus, however, who was aware of the consequences, and fearful of Laurasian Empress Aurelia's military might, would reject the offer in September 1791.
    • Article VIII separated the judiciary from the other branches; judges were to be elected. Courts of first instance now were to exist in voivodeships, with judges in constant session elected by the regional assemblies. Appellate tribunals, culminating in the Crown Tribunal and Lithuanian Tribunal, were established for the Commonwealth's provinces. Referendary courts were established to deal with cases among commoners and the municipalities; the Diet Court became the highest court in the Commonwealth. Article IX covered procedures for regencies, with the Permanent Council, headed by either the consort or the Primate, assuming responsibility. Article XI covered the Commonwealth's military forces, removing the caps which had been imposed in 1768 and 1775 through the initiative of Empress Aurelia. The Constitution itself required further elaboration, which was provided by a series of laws through May and June 1791 concerning the courts, the reformed Council, the Commissions, and municipal administration. The Constitution also included provisions for an amendment process. Finally, the King and the Diet began drafting plans for a new legal codification, based off the Codex Aureliana of the Laurasian Empire. This Constitution, a major accomplishment in the history of Dejanica, nevertheless aroused the fear and hatred of the Empress of Laurasia.
  • May 9-
    • Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court arrived at Theobaldian Estate on Durglais (May 9, 1791); she stayed with Lord Burghley for the next ten days. The Empress's arrival came just six days after the adoption of the 1791 Dejanican Constitution by the Dejanican Diet. When she first learned of the Constitution's conclusion while attending a session of the Imperial Privy Council, the Empress erupted into a fury. She declared to her advisers that the Lord Almitis was "scourging these dominions for our sins by inviting the introduction of new vigor and energy into a power which once threatened this Empire's rightful position." Referring to the brutal Fourth Dejanican War in the 1630s, the Empress declared that "Vologravius did not stop at anything to humiliate our honor. How long is it before the present King of Dejanica deigns to do the same?" Burghley's son, Cecilis, said that "The worst possible news has arrived from Dejanica: the King has become almost sovereign." Before her departure for Durglais, Aurelia had ordered Lord Buchamia to instruct Ambassador Bulgania to post a formal protest with the King and the Dejanican Commission of Foreign Affairs. Bulgania did as ordered, but pointed out that without military force, Dejanica would continue to "drift its own way."
    • This was all on the Empress's mind as she visited Theobaldian Estate. The Empress knighted Burghley's younger son during the visit; the Cecilis family, in response, staged a play in which it was "suggested" that she formally appoint Sir Robertius to the Chancellorate. Aurelia ignored this, but nevertheless praised Cecilis for having followed in his father's shoes. In private, however, the Empress consulted with Burghley about affairs in Dejanica. Burghley, who had at the public festivities begged leave to retire (which had been courteously refused by the Empress), nevertheless proved his loyalty to her again, and advised her that she should not take action against the Commonwealth at this juncture. He pointed out that the Empire's military forces were still diverted to the conflicts against Marasharita and Spamalka, and that until at least one of those wars was ended, Laurasia would not be able to effectively impose its will on the Royal Dejanican Government. The Empress agreed reluctantly, and for the time being focused her efforts on fomenting dissent in Greater Dejanica and Lithuania against the Diet, and in favor of the Empire. In the meantime, her attention shifted to other matters: namely, the continued progress of her forces in Durthia and elsewhere.
  • May 19-
    • By May 1791, General Sir Willanius Pellhamia and Durthian Prince Maurice of Nassau had made further progress in Brabant against the forces of the Duke of Parma. Amersfoordt had fallen to the allied forces in February 1791, in spite of Parma's counteroffensives against Roosevelt, Breda, Utrecht, and Brill. On March 15, 1791, Pellhamia had obtained a decisive victory over a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of the Upper Jissel, capturing a number of Spamalkan warships and allowing Durthian forces to harry the supply lines of Gravelines and Dunkirk. Gies and Biep then became the scenes of constant skirmishes between allied and Spamalkan forces, but by the middle of April 1791, both strongholds were definitively in the hands of Prince Maurice. The Prince of Nassau decided that the seizure of Zutphen, which had eluded the Earl of Leicesterius's grasp nearly five years earlier, would allow for him to push onwards towards Nijimegen, a site of constant struggle between the Durthians and the Spamalkans. He sought to deny the Spamalkans from bringing reinforcements for a counteroffensive against Gies, Biep, and Amersfoordt. The garrison of Zutphen itself was hopelessly outnumbered by the combined allied forces, and isolated from its supply lines. On May 19, 1791, General Pellhamia advanced against Zutphen's Sconce, which, if taken, would cause all hope for the garrison to flee.
    • The Imperial Marines used a false communications signal, and captured Spamalkan battleships, to trick the Spamalkan garrison into admitting them; they then seized control of the transit terminals and opened them to the Durthian forces. Within hours, the Laurasian-Durthian forces overwhelmed the Sconce Outposts, and established a barricade around the outskirts of Zutphen itself. Maurice then opened up a heavy bombardment with his destroyers and dreadnoughts. The Spamalkan garrison remained under siege for eleven days. Finally, on May 30, 1791, the garrison, realizing any further resistance was useless, surrendered. Zutphen now fell into the hands of the United Durthian States and the Laurasian Empire. Its loss was a major blow to the Spamalkans. Maurice treated the surrendered garrison with much generosity, allowing many of them to depart as long as they surrendered their arms and military supplies. He then decided to move against Deventer, which had been recaptured by Spamalkan units in January 1791. The Siege of Deventer (June 1-10, 1791), saw the Spamalkan garrison, commanded by Flanderian General Hermann van den Burgh (1750-1807), pose a fierce resistance to Nassau and Pellhamia. The stronghold, however, was ultimately breached, and surrendered during the late hours of June 10. From there, Nassau and Pellhamia stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Delfji, Hulst, Himlada, and Valenciennes (June-August 1791), pushing perilously close to Groningen. Utrecht was now definitively secured from Spamalkan assaults.
  • June 6-
    • Whilst the allied forces made continued gains in the Durthian Duchies, the Colonial Territories, and Tunis, those of the Laurasian Empire in the Great Tesmanian Cloud completed the expulsion of Marasharite forces from that satellite galaxy. By May 1791, the Marasharites held on tenuously to Akhaltsikhe, Poti, and the minor garrisons of Bai Rham, Sheka, Arparchai, Tulcea, Pleven, and Verin. Generals Gudovia and Surovius were determined not to rest until every last Marasharite unit in the Cloud had been destroyed or compelled into surrender. Akhaltsikhe was, as previously stated, besieged by the forces of General Gudovia from May 9, 1791. Gudovia took care in storming the world's supply outposts and in launching expeditions against the Akhaltsikhe Asteroid Belts, preventing the world's garrison from attempting a breakout offensive. A series of confrontations with Marasharite units at Akhura and Khoy (May 14-19, 1791), resulted in Gudovia capturing Marasharite General Yusuf Pasha (1742-1801). Akhaltsikhe itself was subjected to a final assault (May 24, 1791), and stormed, with nearly half of the garrison being slaughtered. On May 26, 1791, Surovius and Gudovia combined to destroy a Marasharite force under General El-Hereri (1733-91) in the Battle of Arparchai; more than 200,000 Marasharite troopers lost their lives in the land confrontation. By June 2, 1791, Tulcea and Bai Rham had both surrendered to the forces of the Laurasian Empire.
    • Four days later, Gudovia and Ushavious (who had repelled a Marasharie expedition from Kena in the Grecian Provinces the previous month) advanced against Sheka, on the junction of the Higher Caucasian Military Route, which directly bordered the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia. The ensuing Battle of Sheka (June 6-7, 1791), resulted in severe casualties for both forces, but ultimately, the Laurasian commanders prevailed. The fall of Sheka left Pleven and Verin defenseless; by June 14, 1791, both systems had been captured. And then on June 18, Gudovia launched a massive offensive against Poti, the last Marasharite stronghold of note in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Battle of Poti lasted only four hours and ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Poti was then followed by the Marasharite outposts of Plodiv and Akhalzc (June 22-27, 1791), completing the occupation of all Marasharite territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. By early July 1791, Chrisnau was under direct threat from the Laurasian Empire, and Surovius's assaults against Demberg, Velven, and Herven kept Marasharite units off-balance. On July 9, 1791, he launched a flanking offensive against the Marasharite strongholds of Bagadag and Macin in the Danubian Principalities; both had been conquered by July 18, with the Marasharites suffering more than 400,000 casualties. By the end of July 1791, Chrisnau was under siege by Surovius, and Marasharite Emperor Selim III was beginning to consider opening peace negotiations with the Laurasian Empire.
  • July 15-
    • During the two months following the reduction of Gafsa and Ben Arous to the authority of the Sultanate of Morocco (in conjunction with its Laurasian allies), allied forces gradually advanced their position in the Canaries, in Tunis, and in the Colonial Territories against the forces of the Barbary States, Holy Spamalkan Empire, and Marasharite Empire. General Herria and Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur I secured victories over Marasharite units in confrontations at the Gabes Nebula (May 3-9); Tozeur (May 11); and the Kasserine Comets (May 14-19). The Tunisians and Marasharites suffered the loss of nearly 300,000 troops and one hundred warships in these confrontations, while the combined allied forces lost only 15,000 personnel and only twenty of their own warships. By May 22, 1791, allied forces had reached the outskirts of the Tunis star system. The Siege of Tunis formally commenced the following day, and dragged on for nearly a month. Although the Sultan of Morocco and General Herria had forces at their disposal enjoying a three-to-one advantage over the garrison of Tunis, they nevertheless encountered fierce resistance. The High Admiral of Tunis, Ber Reydin (1729-1801), launched a series of daring naval expeditions against Moroccan and Laurasian positions in Algiers.
    • He harried Ain Bedea (May 25-29, 1791) and stormed the Moroccan-occupied stronghold of Medea (June 2, 1791), capturing nearly 30,000 Moroccan warriors as prisoners of war. From Medea, he stormed the garrisons of Bejaa and Ouragla (June 4-7, 1791). On June 11, 1791, however, Admiral Braderia, who had provided reinforcements to the Moroccan garrisons of Ceuta, Agadir, and Fez, intercepted Ber Reydin at Biskra. The ensuing Battle of Biskra (June 12-14, 1791) resulted in a decisive victory for the naval forces of the Laurasian Empire. Braderia quickly recovered Medea and Bejaa (June 15-19) and on June 21, destroyed Ber Reydin's supply convoy in the Battle of Tarpal. Finally, on June 26, 1791, while Admiral Braderia drove Tunisian units from Ouragla and Ain Bedea, Tunis capitulated to the allied forces of Morocco and Laurasia.
    • Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur himself, commanding the military forces, received the keys of submission from Hasul Basul (1730-99), the Governor of Tunis. By the end of June 1791, Moroccan troops had stormed Tatouine, Skhira, and El Kef, completing the subjugation of Algeria and Tunis. During May and June 1791, Laurasian naval forces under the command of Sir Georgius Cliffordia, 3rd Earl of Cumbria (1758-98) had continued to harry Spamalkan fortresses and arsenals in Andalusia, Granada, Valencia, and the Canaries. Ubeda, Baeza, and Gudadix were stormed by Laurasian task forces (May 4-9, 1791), and on May 17, Cumbria destroyed a Spamalkan force under Admiral Antonin Reyes (1736-1805) in the Battle of Scalia. By May 24, the Spamalkan military arsenals of Osuna, Ecuila, and Lebrija had fallen to the Earl, and Spamalkan naval convoys at Minorca and Barcelona found themselves constantly harried by Laurasian expeditions launched against those star systems. On May 29, however, Cumbria's attempt to storm the defenses of San Fernando failed, and on June 4, Spamalkan forces under the same Admiral Reyes were able to repel a Laurasian offensive against Granada itself.
    • Although Cumbria quickly retaliated by destroying the Spamalkan military fortresses of Roquetas and Estepona (June 15-19, 1791) and seized Spamalkan transports at Nijar (June 22, 1791), he was unable to prevent Reyes from reinforcing the garrisons of Grand Canaria, Arrceife, and Calceta le Somo (June 24-29, 1791). On July 2, Cumbria, seeking to regain the advantage, launched a offensive against Cape St. Vincent, a departure point on the Trans-Atlantian Highway which led to Cartagena, San Domingo, and Santiago, all of which remained in Laurasian hands. His second-in-command was Fleet Captain Sir Willanius Monsoria (1759-1843), later to become head of the Imperial Naval Command under Lysimachus II. During the next two days, Cumbria and Monsoria seized several Flemish and Spamalkan commercial vessels at Antequedera and Rincon de la Victoria. On July 7, 1791, just as his force approached the outskirts of Cape St. Vincent, Cumbria decided to instead redirect his units to the Berlengas Pulsars, located ten light years to the east. The Pulsars had been colonized in the fifth century AH, and had been under the control of Portugallia, Greater Spamalka, the Marasharite Empire, and the Order of the Knights of Malta and Rhodes at various times during the preceding five centuries.
    • On July 14, however, Spamalkan Admiral Francisco Columa (1744-1809), who was preparing to reinforce Cadiz and Seville, discovered that Cumbria was heading towards the Pulsars. He now decided on a strategy of interception. Archduke Albert of Austarlia (1759-1821), who served as Governor of the Canaries and had been Viceroy of Portugallia (1786-89), ordered Columa to push his offensive with all speed and, upon disrupting the Laurasian force, to join with the force of High Admiral Alsono de Bazan, who was stationed at Algrave. On July 15, 1791, Columa launched a surprise offensive against Cumbria's naval squadrons, taking advantage of their lowered state of readiness to penetrate the Laurasian Admiral's defensive lines. Within five hours, he had secured the most decisive naval victory yet for the Holy Spamalkan Empire in the more than two and a half years that had passed since the destruction of the Spamalkan Armada. Thirty of the forty-five Laurasian battleships were destroyed; a third of their corvettes and transports; and almost all of their frigates and couriers. Columa also captured more than two-thirds of the industrial and military equipment, arms, and merchantile transports which had been seized by Cumbria. Cumbria was forced to halt his offensive against the Berlengas Pulsars. By July 24, Laurasian forces had been expelled from Ecuila, Lebrija, Ubeda, and Gudadix, while Spamalkan units besieged Baeza and Scalia. On July 29, Cumbria was defeated again in the Battle of Las Noches; Baeza and Scalia both fell back into Spamalkan hands the following day. This string of Laurasian reverses was to continue into September 1791, as will be demonstrated below, and would motivate Philicus to continue the war.
  • July 22-September 16-
    • On July 22, 1791, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court formally departed from Laurasia Prime to commence the official progress of 1791. The previous year, the Empress had announced that she would be progressing to the Rasdallan and Canite Provinces. The Empress was determined to visit these territories which, five decades earlier, her father had seized from the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria. These were also territories of much historical and symbolic importance, having been controlled by the Arachosian Kingdoms of Northania and Marcia; by the Timurid Empire; the Rasdallan Dynasties; and the Arachosian Empire (along with its successor-states). The Empress paid brief visits to Andriana, Merandaz, Sapphire, Chloe, Trebesos, Mylae, Rainnan, Ietas, Tyndaris, and Wroona (July 22-26, 1791) before proceeding to the Metallasian Trade Highway and from there, rapidly into the heart of the Galactic Borderlands. The Empress reached Halesia (July 27, 1791), receiving tributes from the cadets of the Imperial Naval Academy and visiting the Halesia Military Command Citadel; both facilities had been chartered in 1751, during the reign of her half-brother Demetrius II. From Halesia, the Empress toured the Riverite Asteroid Belt (renowned for its unique formations and its mineral riches), Bristain, Devily, and Partsia (July 28-August 5, 1791).
    • At Devily, Aurelia was honored by the Rasdallan Tower Droids in their annual Parade of Honors; at Partsia, she received a gift of twelve Hevenian Statutes, mysterious statuettes renowned for their antiquity and for the virtual indestructibility of their components. From Partsia, the Empress visited Vilmanstrand (August 6, 1791), now one of the Empire's chief military assembly bases. She toured the Berwick Barrier and the Vilmanstrand Approaches, which had been transformed into major hyperspace transit terminals by the Imperial Ministry of Space and Transportation. Frederickshamm was next graced by the Imperial Court's presence (August 7, 1791), with the Empress touring the High Cities of Kramia and the Frederickshamm Docks. From there, she visited Wheaton, McFadden, Frasier, McKellen, and Crusher (August 8-11, 1791). During the preceding half-century, these star systems had seen a influx of colonists from the Core Worlds and Outer Core, seeking to escape the overcrowding of the Empire's capital star systems. The Empress marveled at the Springs of Wheaton; visited the Spiral Cities of McFadden; and took a stroll in Crusher's famed Equatorial Gardens. From Crusher, the Imperial Court visited Aspo, Vyborg, Janeway, and then Barching (August 12-15, 1791).
    • The Empress's visit to Barching, one of the most ancient Rasdallan colonies (it had been colonized in the 21st century BH), was particularly memorable. With a population of 57 billion, Barching was the ninth most populous system in the Galactic Borderlands, surpassed only by Kalbacha Prime, Imegina, Arachosia Prime, Rasdalla Major, Kathy Major, Vector Prime, Kathy Minor, and Kania. The Empress toured the Industrial Peaks and the Soaring Tower of Barching, reveling in the sights of these landmarks. The assembled Barchianite magnates of the world, among the wealthiest alien personages in the Empire, entertained the Court vigorously during its two-day stay. Following her departure from Barching, the Empress visited Patricia I (August 16); Noonan's Star (August 17); Sasha VI (August 19); the El Paso Colonies (August 20-22); Hango (August 23); Pellinge (August 24); and Helingsia (August 25).
    • On August 26, the Imperial Court reached Hidemnia Sauria, which was one of the most beautiful worlds in the Laurasian Empire. The world adhered to strict standards of cleanliness, rivaling Venasia Prime by the rigor of its standards. The Empress was able to bathe in the Springs of Cala, one of the largest aristocratic bath complexes in the Empire; to enjoy the sights of the Flying Flames of Kisi; and to tour the Saurian Luxury Quarters, home to several of the largest and most lavish private residences in the Galactic Borderlands. The Imperial Court stayed until August 29, and subsequently proceeded to Kathy Minor. This world, once one of the Rasdallan Throne Worlds, boasted several famous sites, including the Tooth Temple, the Mortuary of Amelianian King Offa, the Grammite Financial Tower (the third-tallest freestanding structure in the Caladarian Galaxy), and the Valleys of the Shadows of Hope. The Empress, who resided at the Rasdallan Treasure Palace during her stay, toured all of the world's various sites.
    • Then on September 3, the Court reached Kathy Major. This world, the most ancient Rasdallan colony (having been reached by sleeper ships as far back as the 27th century BH), impressed the Empress with its Grand Palace, Historic Settlements (which contained many of the earliest colonial relics, excavated by archaeologists and historians during the preceding three centuries), Shang Fuh Canals, War Pho Temple, and Ther Tu Walkway. The Empress marveled in the unique Rasdallan architecture of the Grand Palace, and announced her intention to construct a similar palace on Constantia (the Grand Palace of Constantia, which would be built between 1793-1800). On September 6, the Court departed for Jakarta, site of Kublai Khan's disastrous defeat in 893. They arrived there the following day; the Empress celebrated her fifty-eighth birthday at the Tangernian Palace, which had been constructed by Rasdallan King Rama X (r. 255-31 BH) in the 3rd century BH. The Court stayed for three days; on September 9, simulations of the Battles of Jakarta in 893 (Kublai Khan vs the Mapjurhait Dynasty of Rasdalla) and 1744 (Laurasian Empire vs Celestial Kingdom of Scottria) were staged for the Empress's amusement. Then on September 10, she proceeded rapidly to Rasdalla Major, staying there for five days and observing the activity of the world's Crescent Volcano. From Rasdalla Major, the Court visited Kania, Sockroth, and Austarlis (September 15-19, 1791). Finally, on September 22, 1791, after touring the Barrier Badlands, the Empress began her progress back to the Core. She arrived at the Gilbertine Palace on Tudoria (September 25, 1791), utterly exhausted. Nevertheless, further events had taken place in her absence as regards to the war, and these will be explored below.
  • August 11-
    • As August 1791 opened, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Laurasian Government had themselves resolved on hastening the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War to an end. As previously explained, the Empress of Laurasia's anger about the events in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the blatant disregard of the Empire's interests by King Stanis Vorrust I and his supporters on the Diet, had grown to exponential proportions. Aurelia, however, had been told by Burghley, and had realized herself, that intervention could not take place until one of the Empire's military conflicts was ended. She now turned to ending the war with Marasharita. Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka, who had bickered with his Marasharite "allies" constantly, and never provided them effective support, was still too obstinate at this point to consider concluding peace. However, Marasharite Emperor Selim III was, according to several reports, far more amendable.
    • The Empress realized that he would be pushed only by a further string of Laurasian military victories. By now, Aurelia had come to accept that the Marasharite Plan was not to be, especially because of Austarlia's withdrawal from the war the year before. She therefore sought to force Marasharite concession of all their remaining territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, to obtain recognition of the independence of Morocco and Portugallia, and acknowledgement of Moroccan gains in Mauritania and Algiers. Thus, on August 3, 1791, the Empress ordered General Surovius to move with all speed against Chrisnau, and Admiral Ushavious to waste no effort in assaulting Marasharite naval positions in the Grecian Provinces. Surovius, on his part, stormed Halati and Kerin (August 4-9, 1791), and by August 14, had reached the outskirts of Chrisnau. Admiral Ushavious, moreover, advanced from Focasani and Rymnik into the Grecian Provinces.
    • At 12:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, August 11, 1791, Ushavious's fleet encountered the Marasharite-Tripolite forces of Admiral Hussein Pasha south of Kaliakra. Ushavious now decided to divide his fleet into three columns and to assault the Marasharites from the vantage of Kaliakra, in spite of the fact that the Marasharites had more corvettes and battleships with which to harry Laurasian moves. Hussein-Pasha's subordinate, Admiral Salid Ali (1740-1817), who commanded the Tripolite and Barbary corps, headed east, followed by Hussein Pasha with the bulk of the Marasharite xebecs, galleys, and destroyers. Ushavious then turned galactic-south to a parallel east-west course near Kaliakra and formed up mostly into one line, with Ushavious's flagship, the IMS Predetecha, in the third position. Salid Ali, who led his ships due north, attempted to double the Laurasian formation, but Ushavious moved out and assaulted him while the rest of the Laurasian force approached. The Marasharites were forced to begin retreating south, but soon found their escape line cut by faster, more mobile Laurasian starfighters. By the end of the day, the Battle of Kaliakra had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Admiral Salid Ali was himself captured, along with fifty of his sixty frigates and corsairs. Admiral Hussein-Pasha managed to escape, although he had to abandon his flagship, the Hejidia, and most of his xebecs and galleys. The Laurasians suffered only 4,000 casualties, compared to the Marasharite loss of more than 330,000.
    • The Marasharites, all total, lost 110 of their warships, either to enemy action or capture, out of a total force of 195. The Laurasians lost only three warships and none of their starfighters. As a result of the Battle of Kaliakra, Ushavious was able to storm Rhodes, Hiros, and Peragmum (August 12-19, 1791). On August 21, he destroyed a smaller Marasharite naval convoy in the Battle of Barezund, preventing any Marasharite units from attempting a move against the Gateway Provinces. For these victories, Ushavious would be awarded the Order of St. Seleucus the Victor in October 1791. Two days later, Surovius launched the decisive assault against Chrisnau. The Battle of Chrisnau lasted for two days, but on August 25, 1791, the world finally fell into the possession of the Laurasian Empire. These victories finally convinced Marasharite Emperor Selim III of the futility of continuing the war against Laurasia. On August 31, 1791, he announced to his Grand Council his intention to begin negotiations with his Laurasian counterpart to end the war.
    • On September 8, 1791, Grand Vizier Koca Yusuf Pasha (who had regained the position in February 1791 following the sudden death of his predecessor Celebizade Serif), sent a communique to the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs, requesting for a military armistice and for negotiations to commence between the two Empires. Empress Aurelia, then at Jakarta, leaped for joy in her private bedchambers when informed of the Marasharite request. She approved it immediately. On September 14, 1791, Admiral Ushavious and General Surovius (granted the power to negotiate armistice arrangements) met with Admiral Hussein Pasha and the Marasharite Pasha of the Grecian Provinces, Mehmed Emin (1743-1804), at Navarino. The Truce of Navarino was signed four days later (September 18, 1791), suspending all hostilities between the two Empires, both in the Great Amulak Spiral and in the Barbary States. Two days later, the Truce of El-Niger suspended hostilities between Morocco on the one hand, and the Barbary States (with the Marasharite Empire) on the other. As a result of these truces, Selim III agreed to treat with the former Marasharite vassal, Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur of Morocco, and to allow allied forces to retain the territories they now held until the final peace treaty was negotiated and concluded. Preparations for a diplomatic conference began in earnest.
  • August 30-
    • Whilst the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War was finally moving to its closing stages, events continued to transpire in the clash between Laurasia and Portugallia on the one hand, and the Holy Spamalkan Empire on the other. Following the Battle of the Berlengas Pulsars, and the consequent Spamalkan recovery of various Andalusian systems, Fleet Admiral Sir John Hawkius (overseeing all naval operations from Laurasia Prime), decided that a renewed offensive against Biscay, Lugo, Ourrense, and Flores would restore the initiative to the Laurasian Empire. On August 5, 1791, Ferrol and Corunna had both been recovered by Spamalkan forces under Admiral Coloma. Two days later, Coloma repelled a Laurasian-Portugallian offensive against Carblo and Riberia, inflicting severe losses upon the Laurasian starfighter squadrons. By August 17, however, Cumbria and Lord Thomasius Howardis (son of the late Duke of Norfolkius) had advanced to Corvo and Almeira. Two days later, however, Cumbria (who had temporarily parted ways with Howardis in his efforts to storm Galician strongholds), was ambushed by a Spamalkan task force under Martín de Padilla y Manrique, 1st Count of Santa Gadea (1740-1802), at the outskirts of Almeira. The ensuing Battle of Almeira (August 19-20, 1791), resulted in Cumbria being put to flight. Santa Gadea captured thirty Laurasian transports and more than 50,000 Imperial Marines. Cumbria himself managed to flee from the battlefield, but on August 22, was wounded in a confrontation with Spamalkan starfighters at Ames.
    • As a result of this, he was forced to retire to the medical headquarters on Ceuta, and to cede command of his units to Admiral Sir Rudomentus Grenvilla (1742-91). Grenvilla joined back with Lord Howardis at Azurna (August 24, 1791) and proceeded to move against Flores and Corvo. Emperor Philicus, on his part, had assigned Admiral de Bazan to command the 7th Spamalkan Naval Fleet; Generals Martin de Bertendona (1730-1804) and Marcos de Aramburu (1754-1829) were placed under his command (for the land corps attached to the fleet). Bazan soon learned that the Laurasians were planning an offensive towards Flores. On August 30, 1791, he intercepted and surprised Howardis's force (the 66th Imperial Fleet with detachments from the 68th and 69th) near Flores. Howardis had rendezvoused at Flores Garrison, and was intending to resupply his ships before proceeding further. Bazan now tried to disorient the Laurasian squadrons, but the flagship of his naval subordinate, Vice Admiral Sancho Pardo (1733-1802), suffered a computer systems failure, forcing the attack to be delayed. It was not until that afternoon before Bazan's forces bore down on the Garrison Straits. Howardis, alerted to the renewed Spamalkan advance, managed to flee with his leading battleships, but Grenvilla decided to fight and to proceed straight towards the advancing Spamalkan force. Howardis's flagship, the IMS Defiance, received heavy fire from Aramburu's flagship, San Cristobal, before veering off.
    • The IMS Defiance was then assaulted and boarded by General de Bertendona's troops, with the ship's defenses being effectively neutralized. Six other Laurasian frigates soon followed. The boarding party encountered serious resistance, and the IMS Gloriana launched a counteroffensive, forcing General de Bertendona to call off further landings at neighboring Laurasian frigates. The bridge of San Cristobal was soon shattered by Laurasian nylon torpedoes, and she was forced to call for reinforcements. The Ascunion and La Serena then appeared, with General Aramburu directing an thrust against the Defiance, Gloriana, and ten other Laurasian dreadnoughts. Grenvilla's flagship, the IMS Revenge, was subsequently surrounded by Spamalkan warships, and heavily bombarded.
    • He was seriously wounded in the ensuing confrontations, and it was not until the early hours of September 2, 1791, before the outnumbered and outgunned Laurasian force surrendered. In spite of the serious damage inflicted by Grenvilla upon the Spamalkan ships (thirty of which were either destroyed or crippled during the battle), he was treated honorably by his captors, and died on Bazan's flagship, the Santo Cruz, on September 10 from his injuries. As a result of the Battle of Flores, Laurasian and Portugallian forces were expelled from Salamander, Sebastian, and Alacantara (September 7-19, 1791). On September 24, Oliveres was stormed by a Spamalkan force, and four days later, Admiral Bazan repelled Laurasian moves against Cangas, Cambre, and Marin. Fuertaventura was recovered in October 1791. Admiral Dracius, however, maintained Laurasian control of Cartagena and Santo Domingo, ruining Spamalkan forces in the Battles of Compostela (October 2-5) and Lower Tehnacian (October 11). By the end of October, 1791, Spamalkan forces were besieging the Gibraltar Straits and had expelled Laurasian units from Minorca and the Northern Balearics. A stalemate now ensued, however, which lasted through the close of the year.
  • October 21-
    • On October 21, 1791, over a month after the conclusion of the Armistice of Navarino, delegations from the governments of the Laurasian Empire, Marasharite Empire, and Sultanate of Morocco convened at Jassy in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Following the conclusion of the Armistice of Navarino, Empress Aurelia had held numerous consultations with her Privy Council as to where the conference should be held. Burghley had at first suggested Idyll or even Laurasia Prime itself, but Husadarania and Lord Howardis of Effinga convinced the Empress to choose one of the star systems in the Great Tesmanian Cloud which had been overrun by the Empire's forces. This would impress upon the Marasharites the fact of their defeat and demonstrate the upper hand now held by Laurasia and her allies in the negotiations. Aurelia had selected Jassy, noted previously for its resorts, museums, and religious sites. On October 5, 1791, she appointed Lord Treasurer Burghley's son, Sir Robertius Cecilis, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, Lord Howardis of Effinga, Admiral Ushavious, and Sir Athanasius Heveria (1741-1806) as the plenipotentiaries for the Laurasian delegation. Marasharite Emperor Selim III, on his part, had designated Grand Vizier Koca Yusuf Pasha as the chief plenipotentiary of the Marasharite delegation. He was supported by Subordinate Viziers Yere-Pasha (1759-1822) and Gali-Pasha (1751-1823), Admiral Hussein, and General Merdi el-Perdi of Syria (1755-1814). Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur of Morocco, on his part, designated his Chief Secretary of Diplomacy, Abel el-Quahoud, as well as General Ahmed el Abbas (1754-1803), Governor of Tangiers al-Ghalib (1743-1810), and Vicar al-Mutaf of Kenitra (1751-1827) as the Moroccian plenipotentiaries.
    • The two delegations convened at the Classical Palace of Jassy, a 9th-century AH Bulganian edifice. Cecilis now proved his innate diplomatic skill, treating the Marasharite plenipotentiaries with much respect. He adhered to all Marasharite greetings and treated the Grand Vizier with great civility. The Grand Vizier, impressed by the good conduct and manners of the Laurasian delegation, proceeded quickly to business with them. Nevertheless, negotiations would continue for over two months, as the two delegations wrangled over the terms of territorial delineation, the restoration of commercial and diplomatic relations, and in particular, the independence of Morocco. El-Quahoud had with him demands that all of Algiers, Mauritania, and Tunis be conceded to the Sultanate of Morocco, besides acknowledgement of its acquisition of Sale, Ceuta, and Melilla. These were viewed as too extreme by the Marasharite Grand Vizier and his subordinates. Likewise, the Grand Vizier sought to regain control of the Tesmanian Gateway Provinces, but found that Cecilis and Buchamia were unwilling to compromise on that point. However, the Laurasian delegation proved adept at responding to Marasharite terms for commercial relations, protection of religious minorities, and transit privileges; Cecilis also assured the Grand Vizier that the Laurasian Empire had no intention of making territorial acquisitions of its own at the expense of the Barbary States or the Holy Spamalkan Empire. This served to calm Marasharite fears; the mutual desire to conclude peace also hastened negotiations along.
  • November 17-
    • Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court found much pleasure in the Accession Day festivities (November 17, 1791), marking the 33rd anniversary of her reign. The Earl of Estatius and Sir Nicanor Blountia, once rivals for the ear and patronage of the Empress, and now close friends, engaged in a friendly joust with each other at the Circus Maximus. Sir Cassidius Sidronius (1754-1831), the nephew of the late Sir Antigonus, and the new Empress's Champion (having succeeded Lesius upon his retirement the year before), staged a pageant of the Brethalian Goddesses for the benefit of Her Majesty and the Court. The Empress observed a debate among Hera, Juno, and Aphrodite (the Goddesses of the Universe, Wisdom, and Nature respectively) as they debated the merits of universal existence and the qualities necessary for a successful ruler. Hera declared that it was necessary for a monarch to "hold their authority in such a manner as to impress their subjects and to communicate to them their subordinate place"; Juno stressed the importance of benevolence and generosity by the ruler towards the ruled; Aphrodite, of the ruler's relationship with her subjects and her leading officials. Following this, the plays The Pompeys of Brethalia and All Time Has Come were staged for the Court. Then, the Empress paid visits (from this day through November 29) to the residences of some of her chief courtiers. She was entertained by Lord and Lady Montagius at Cowdray Mansion in Constantinople. Lady Montagius was so overcome by honor of having the Empress as her guest that she threw herself into Aurelia's arms and wept, declaring "O happy time! O joyful day!" The pageants and novelties which were staged by the Montagiuses during the Empress's visit reminded her of those at Kenilian Castle on Taurasia, sixteen years earlier. This, however, also evoked memories of the Earl of Leicesterius, and the Empress reiterated to her hosts that "never a more loyal or faithful subject lived than he."
    • Following this, she visited the residences of the Dukes of Christiania and Constantinople, Lords Cobhamia and Cranamia, and then, on November 24, the Earl of Heuthros's residence, Balting House, in Heliotrope. This was the same Earl who had eloped with Lady Katharina Greysius thirty years earlier, and had been imprisoned at the Fortress of Baureux for his actions. Heuthros, who had inherited all of the Seymouris estates following his mother's death in April 1787 (aged 79), put on a magnificent show for the Empress and the Imperial Court, in hopes of regaining her favor. During the preceding five years, a force of three thousand laborers and droids had enlarged his residence, erecting temporary buildings in the gardens to accommodate the members of the Imperial Court. A crescent-shaped lake had been specially dug in front of the House, with three ship-shaped islands with trees for masts, a fortress, and a Snail Mount, from which turbocannon fired a salute at the Empress's arrival.
    • It was besides this lake, seated under a green satin canopy, that Aurelia watched a water pageant, while musicians in boats played for her. The Empress stayed for four days, during which time there were banquets, dances, athletic competitions, fireworks, songs, and allegorical entertainments. At the end of her visit, she told Heuthros that she would never forget her visit. She saw musicians playing for her as she departed with her entourage, and gave them great thanks. On November 29, 1791, the Imperial Court returned back to the Quencilvanian Palace from this tour of Laurasia Prime's aristocratic circles. The Empress, however, received word that her beloved Hattonius was gravely ill. Hattonius had collapsed from a panic attack at a session of the Imperial Privy Council (November 15, 1791), and retreated to Ely Place, his residence in Christiania. Still unmarried and childless, his health declined rapidly, and the efforts of his physicians availed him nothing. On December 4, 1791, the Empress visited Hattonius at Ely Place, feeding him his medicines and herbial broths she had prepared herself.
    • Hattonius, in his last words to the Empress, declared that "I have dedicated life and limb to Your Majesty, and I beg Almitis will recognize all." Aurelia assured him that he would, and kissed him on his forehead. Hattonius died on December 11, 1791, at the age of only fifty-one. The Empress was plunged once more into grief. Everyone of importance to her was dying. Lady Clitonia, long one of the Empress's most faithful ladies in waiting, had died on April 14, 1791 at the age of 64, which had greatly saddened Aurelia. Hattonius was given a magnificent state funeral at the Westphalian Cathedral on December 16, with all of his colleagues at the Imperial Court and on the Privy Council in attendance. For a time, the Empress became melancholy, obsessed with fearful thoughts of death. In February 1792, she would actually forbid her courtiers from using the words "death", "demise", "decease", "funeral", or "burial" in her presence. The deaths of Hattonius, and of the Ministers of Education, Sentient Services, and Space and Transportation that year, saw Lord Treasurer Burghley enjoying, by December 1791, a position of pre-eminence in the Imperial Laurasian Government which matched that of his role during the early years of the reign. He held an extraordinary collection of offices, being Lord Treasurer, Imperial Privy Seal, President of the Privy Council, Master of the Imperial Court of Wards, Chancellor of the University of Laurasia Prime, acting Minister of the Imperial Chancellory, and Comptroller of the Imperial Household. Burghley was now acting very much as he had when he was Chancellor, authorizing many of the Privy Council's actions completely by himself. And indeed, at the end of 1791, he, the Earl of Hannah, Knollysis, and Lords Cobhamia and Husadarania were the last surviving members of the Empress's original Privy Council in November 1758.
  • December 24-
    • By December 1791, the situation in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia had deteriorated for King Hensios IV. Following the failure of the Siege of Parri in September, 1790, the Franconian League's forces had, with the assistance of the Holy Spamalkan Empire, made substantial gains in Brittany and Normandy against the King's forces. Dinan, Redon, and Rennes capitulated to the Duke of Nemours in October 1790. On November 3, the King of Franconia and Lord Willoughby launched a counteroffensive from Orleans, attempting to strike against Noyon, Caen, and Bayeux. This offensive, however, was brought to ruin in the Battle of Arst (November 8-11, 1790). By November 22, League and Spamalkan forces had overrun the garrisons of Rheims and Brugge, consolidating their position in the Northern Parri Provinces. Nantes surrendered to Parma and Nemours on December 2, 1790, and five days later, Willoughby suffered a humiliating defeat in the Battle of Guerande. On December 25, 1790, Spamalkan forces under the command of General Juan de Aguila seized Brest in a surprise offensive, which became the chief Spamalkan headquarters in Brittany. By the end of February 1791, Spamalkan and League units had stormed Blavet, Vannes, Vitre, Saint-Malo, and Treuger, effectively driving the royal garrisons from Brittany.
    • A series of royalist offensives against Rouen, Parri, and Calais (March-April 1791) failed to produce any results, and on May 4, 1791, Aguila stormed the Franconian military arsenal of Bretagne. The Battle of Dieppe (May 11-15, 1791) resulted in severe losses for the allied forces. By November 1791, Evereux, Fecamp, Vernon, and Etienne had all been stormed by Aguila's forces, who had erected a new command headquarters at Breuic. On November 21, 1791, Aguila obtained another victory in the Battle of Blain, capturing over 100,000 soldiers of the Royal Franconian Army. This succession of losses had driven the King of Franconia to the brink of desperation. In accordance with the Treaty of Carcassones, he sent numerous urgent appeals to Empress Aurelia. Finally, on December 3, 1791, the Empress responded to the pleas, and authorized for the diversion of vast reinforcements to Brittany and Normandy, in the form of the 51st Imperial Army, the 61st and 62nd Imperial Fleets, and the 9th Corps of Imperial Marines.
    • She also sought a new commander for the forces: Lord Willoughby seemed incompetent, from her view, and his health had entered a serious decline (which would lead to his untimely death ten years later). The Earl of Estatius, who had been among those urging her to act, had eagerly requested command of the forces. Since returning from the Portugallian campaigns in October 1789, he had been restrained by his courtly intrigues, and by the Empress's own instructions, from involving himself in the war further. On December 4, the Earl issued the first of his requests, but Aurelia refused. He then asked again four days later, but the answer was still no. On December 19, 1791, the Earl made his third plea, standing on his knees and pleading with her for more than two hours. Lord Treasurer Burghley supported his pleas, but the Empress remained adamant, considering him "too impetuous to be given the reins." Finally, on December 22, King Hensios himself intervened, advising the Empress to choose Estatius as the commander of her forces. He had a good point: Surovius, Greysius, Pellhamia, and Ushavious were all still engaged in the Marasharite and Durthian campaigns, and the Empress was planning for intervention in Dejanica; Rumanstevius was now retired from military service. On December 24, 1791, the Empress finally capitulated, and five days later, Estatius formally departed from Belkadan at the head of the first wave of reinforcements. He proceeded swiftly across the Galactic Void, but would not make his arrival in Franconia until the new year. As the year 1791 ended, the Empire's Fifth, and last, Marasharite War of that century was drawing to a close, but the First Spamalkan War continued at full steam.

1792

  • January 1-
    • 1792, the 92nd year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire in a position of both ascendancy and of vulnerability. In spite of the withdrawal of the Holy Austarlian Empire from the war in August 1790 (due to the conclusion of the Treaty of Sistova), Empress Aurelia's military forces, under the command of such officers as Surovius, Ushavious, and Seniavin, had continued to obtain success against the Marasharite Empire. During the preceding year, the Empire's forces had expelled the remaining Marasharite units from the Great Tesmanian Cloud; the Marasharite Ochanian and Gateway Provinces, which had been subdued by the Marasharite Empire from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries, were now under the military occupation of the Imperial Laurasian Government. The Marasharites had also lost ground in the Barbary States. The Sultanate of Morocco, under its vigorous and experienced Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur, had repelled all Marasharite counteroffensives and had occupied Mauritania, Sale, Tunis, and Algiers. And with the assistance of the Laurasian Empire, the Sultan of Morocco had also seized the Spamalkan garrisons of Ceuta and Melilla, consolidating his position in the Barbary Straits. The diplomatic conference at Jassy, which had convened from October 1791, was well advanced on its way to concluding a formal peace treaty among all the powers involved.
    • In regards to the First Spamalkan War, however, the success of the Empire's military had been more limited. The United Durthian States, whose military forces were under the expert direction of Prince Maurice of Nassau, had firmly entrenched itself in Brabant and Flanders, with the seizure of Zutphen, Breda, and Devanter having disrupted Spamalkan supply lines. Maurice definitely had the upper hand over his archenemy, the Duke of Parma, and this year would see further advances for the allied forces in that theater. At the same time, however, Spamalkan naval fleets under the command of General Aguila and Admiral Bazan had repelled Laurasian-Portugallian offensives into Galicia, the Canaries, and the Northern Balearics, maintaining their supply lines to Gran Colombia, New Spamalka, and the Rio de la Plata. This year would witness the forces of Laurasia and Portugallia experience both victories and defeats, as the odds between the opposing states became more even. Finally, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council continued to remain anxious about the situation in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In the immediate months following the promulgation of the Dejanican Constitution, a series of reactions had occurred at the courts of the Commonwealth's neighbors and of various foreign powers.
    • Emperor A'rua III of Pruthia, who was strongly opposed to the newly-implemented Constitution, feared that Dejanica would regain such military strength that it would rescind all commitments to the Court of Berliania III; revoke the free-trade privileges at Danzig and Torun; and resist all future efforts by foreign powers to influence the Commonwealth's internal affairs. Holy Austarlian Emperor Lea'dus II was likewise concerned. However, at first, both monarchs decided to recognize the new Dejanican Constitution. They were both distracted by the deteriorating relations with Haxonia and Vendragia (as will be further described below), and wished to focus on strengthening their own military and economic resources. A'rua III issued his formal recognition of the Constitution on May 17, 1791, being followed by his Austarlian counterpart seven days later. Throughout June and July 1791, the Pruthian Ambassador to the Court of Laurasia Prime, Count Sigmund von Vraud (1728-1811), attempted to persuade the Empress of Laurasia and her leading advisers to accept the constitutional arrangements in the Commonwealth, if only because of "pressing circumstances." The Empress refused, and instead now embarked on a course of persuasion. She sought to convince the Autocratic Pruthian and Holy Austarlian Governments to disavow their recognition and to support the restoration of traditional "constitutional arrangements" in the Commonwealth. Aurelia was especially fearful of how the governmental reforms in Dejanica might influence her own subjects, and even harbored a paranoia that the authority of the Laurasian autocracy was under threat if Dejanica was not restored to its earlier constitutional traditions. For months, this was the public facade which the Empress maintained to the Imperial Court.
    • In a private outburst to her Chancellory Secretary, Sir Aetius Murlius (1746-1809), on November 14, 1791, however, she revealed her real strategy: "I am breaking my head to push the courts of Vienna and Berliania III to involve themselves in the affairs of Haxonia and Germania. The Austarlian court is willing but the court of Berliania refuses to move. There are reasons which I cannot explain to them. I wish to engage them in these affairs in order to have more elbow room. I have in mind much unfinished business and it is necessary that they be kept busy so that they cannot hinder me." In December, the Empress informed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs that she would never agree to the new Dejanican political structure, and that she was determined to act as soon as negotiations with Marasharita were concluded. She predicted that Pruthia and Austarlia "will oppose us only with a pile of written paper." She anticipated protest, but Austarlia, facing war with Haxonia, would do nothing, and if Pruthia's agreement to ignore its treaty with Dejanica had to be bought with additional Dejanican territory, she would agree to another partition. She understood also that, once forces were released from action in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, she could effectively intervene to restore the 1775 Treaty of Partition and Government. All of this colored events as 1792 proceeded. In her New Year's proclamation, the Empress declared her intention to "halt the aims of the Spamalkan scoundrels; to restore peace to this Empire's territories; and to maintain our influence in Dejanica and elsewhere."
  • January 9-
    • On January 9, 1792, after nearly three months of negotiations, the Treaty of Jassy was signed by the diplomatic delegations of the Laurasian Empire, Marasharite Empire, and Sultanate of Morocco (with the Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia in agreement), thereby concluding the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War, the last conflict of the eighteenth century between the two Empires. In the preamble to the Treaty, it was declared that "the governments of Their Imperial Majesties of Laurasia and Marasharita, and of His Sultanic Majesty of Morocco, desire the restoration of peaceful relations among our states, the reestablishment of an equilibrium in diplomatic and economic affairs, and the elimination of all ties of hatred among us." The Treaty comprised of fifteen articles, dealing with relations between all the governments. Article I confirmed the cessation of military hostilities among the belligerents. All prisoners and fugitives of war captured by both sides in the military campaigns were to be exchanged and restored back to their freedom. As with the Treaty of Kuchuk Kaynarca in 1774, they were to be compensated for their experiences under imprisonment. Article II provided for the resolution of criminal and judicial cases among the powers involved. Articles III and IV specified that all Laurasian forces present in the Danubian Principalities, Upper Bulgania, and the Amulak Grecian Provinces were to be withdrawn back to the Laurasian Empire by no later than January 1, 1793.
    • Among the systems restored to the Marasharite Empire were the Sucreava Colonies, Bihor, Galasti, Chrisnau, Ploti, Silisburg, the Amulak Gateways, Bagadag, and Macin. Likewise, all Marasharite units in Tripoli and the outskirts of Tunis were to be withdrawn back to their prior garrisons. Article V, one of the most important articles of the Treaty, affirmed the absolute independence and sovereignty of the Sultanate of Morocco. The Sultan of Morocco was now formally released from all bonds of vassalage towards his former suzerain, the Emperor of Marasharita. He was now to be recognized as fully sovereign, with the ability to treat in all matters with foreign courts, to maintain his military forces, and to have sole jurisdiction over his subjects. The Marasharite Bureau of Moroccan Affairs was to be dissolved by no later than June 1792. As specified in Article VI, the Barbary States of Mauritania and Sale were now conceded in their entirety to the Sultanate of Morocco as its "perpetual and inviolate territory." Article VII provided for the concession of the Algerian systems of Oran, Blida, Batna, Setif, Annaba, Chlef, Ouragla, Tebessa, and Medea to the authority of the Sultanate of Morocco; Article VIII, for the concession of the Tunisian systems of Ariana, Gabes, Gafsa, Sousse, Bizarte, and Sfax to Morocco as well.
    • All other Tunisian and Algerian systems occupied by allied forces were to be restored to the respective Bays of Tunis and Algiers by no later than December 2, 1792, and all allied garrisons evacuated from the restored star systems. Articles IX and XI concerned the territorial acquisitions of the Laurasian Empire. By the terms of these articles, the Empire now acquired all remaining Marasharite territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. This included Chesma, Navarino, Chios, Lesbos, Aldoromeia, Athos, Ochania, Focasani, Rymnik, the Peldavian Gateways, Silistra, Ruse, Shumen, Varna, Kuchuk Kaynarca, Kolzuduzha, Akkerman, Izmail, Jassy, Duros, Del Valle, Bessarabia, the strongholds of the Danube Military Highway, Trans-Ruse, Ivirim, Pilidrim, Fidonsi, Anapa, and the Caucasian Colonies. The inhabitants of these regions were proclaimed subjects of the Laurasian Empire, and all territorial claims by the Marasharite Government were formally abolished. Article XII provided that the Marasharite Government would compensate its Laurasian and Moroccan counterparts for all military expenses incurred since January 1, 1790 (amounting to over $1.1 quadmillion bajaks for the Marasharite Treasury). As specified by Article XIII, the Emperor of Marasharita granted full and unprejudiced recognition of the Laurasian Empire's annexation of the Haynsian Despotate, thereby confirming the provisions of the Treaty of Topacia (1784).
    • Article XIV dealt with the restoration of economic and diplomatic relations among the three governments, with Laurasian and Moroccan subjects assured tariff-free commerce for a period of two years; religious toleration and administration; and free navigation throughout Marasharite territories, in adherence with Marasharite laws. Article XV, the last article of the Treaty, provided for the Marasharite termination of its military alliance with the Holy Spamalkan Empire, and for all of the treaty's terms to come into effect promptly, pending ratification by the three governments. Empress Aurelia was informed by Lord Treasurer Burghley of the Treaty's conclusion in her Private Throne Room. When she learned of it, the Empress fell to her knees, declaring that Almitis had blessed her realms and that one burden had been lifted off the Empire's shoulders. She got up, with Burghley reminding her that the war with Spamalka still continued. Nevertheless, the Empress ordered all of her subjects to celebrate the conclusion of the Treaty of Jassy. Chief Procurator Whitshiftus held a Te Deum service at the Westphalian Cathedral, and numerous festivities were held at the Imperial Court to mark the treaty's conclusion. The Treaty of Jassy was ratified by Empress Aurelia on January 11; by Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur on January 14; and by Marasharite Emperor Selim on January 17. Secretary Cecilis and Lord Buchamia returned to Laurasia Prime on January 19, 1792, being received by the Empress and the Imperial Court with much lavishness and praise. They would be conferred the Order of St. Crassus four days later as a reward for negotiating the Treaty.
  • January 29-
    • On January 2, 1792, the Earl of Estatius (who had been promoted to the rank of Major-General in the Imperial Laurasian Army by Empress Aurelia before his departure), and designated as commander-in-chief of the Empire's military forces in Franconia, arrived at Compeigne in the Pale of Calais. There, the Earl and his chief naval forces were greeted by King Hensios IV and his chief military commanders, including the General Aumale and the Baron de Biron. The King of Franconia, who was determined to impress his Laurasian allies, and flatter them with the splendor and wealth at his disposal, staged a series of magnificent ceremonies for the Earl's benefit. Estatius soon became enamored of the King of Franconia, and in his first report to the Imperial Privy Council, declared that the Empire possessed a worthy ally. At first, Estatius and his Franconian allies managed to obtain some victories in Normandy and the Pale of Calais against the forces of the Franconian League and Holy Spamalkan Empire.
    • On January 7, after the greeting ceremonies were concluded, the Earl proved his prowess in a confrontation with League units and troopers at Bryon, capturing a number of League starfighters and transports. During the next four days, Laurasian troops seized Jersey, Stephani, and Julianne, driving a wedge into the Franconian Channel Provinces. Estatius then approached Theobouranne, which had become a military headquarters and dockyards for the League Navy, and inflicted severe damage on it (January 15, 1792). By January 22, the Earl had also stormed Franconian command positions at Gournay, Maubeuge, and Le Cateau, advancing Laurasian forces closer to Rouen. Rouen itself, the most important system in Franconian Normandy, became a chief objective of King Hensios. Estatius, however, was now revealing that he regarded war as some superior sport, and he took more and more relish in his duties as the commander of the Laurasian forces. Estatius waited for three days at Gournay, believing that an offensive against Noyon could sever Rouen's supply lines. Hensios, however, deemed such a move rash, and decided to proceed directly against Rouen. On January 29, 1792, the King of Franconia's forces, comprising of nearly a million military personnel and some 200 warships, laid the garrison of Rouen under siege. Rouen's garrison was commanded by Andre de Bracas, Admiral de Villars (1744-95) and Spamalkan Admiral Carlos Coloma (1766-1837), who had brought reinforcements from Antwerp and Brussels.
    • The Duke of Parma, who was engaged in defending Namurs and Nijimejen against Maurice of Nassau, had a corps in place at Rouen to provide support to the garrison. Hensios now ordered Estatius to advance from Gournay and to sunder the Rouen Transit Line, by which Spamalkan supplies and troops flowed to the garrison. Estatius, however, wasted his time in entertaining his men and in touring the star systems in the vicinity of Gournay, placing himself in danger and earning a rebuke from the Privy Council. On February 9, 1792, he finally headed to the Transit Line, but by that time, Spamalkan forces had secured firm control of the Dial Maze, preventing a Laurasian cut-off. Empress Aurelia, who was now redirecting military units, released from the Marasharite War, from the Barbary States and the Gateway Provinces to the border with Dejanican Belusia, and the Great Wormhole of Pozhark in the Galactic Void, told her advisers that "Where he is, or what he doth, or what he is to do, we are ignorant."
    • She now regretted having sent Estatius. On February 17, the Empress ordered the Earl to retire from his post of command and to return back to the Caladarian Galaxy. Estatius raged and sulked to his subordinates, and on February 20, told his commanders that "Her Majesty is content to ruin me." Nevertheless, he complied, and began his journey back across the Void two days later, managing to gain "recognition" by scattering a Spamalkan naval convoy in the Mists of Argonaut. Estatius reached Belkadan on February 25, 1792, and Laurasia Prime the following day. He, however, had aroused the Empress's anger by conferring military decorations upon twenty-four of his subordinates, an action which she had explicitly forbidden. However, when Estatius actually arrived at the Quencilvanian Palace, peace was restored, and on March 1, 1792, he departed back to Franconia to rejoin his forces, thanks in largely part to Burghley's intervention. Estatius arrived back at the outskirts of the system on March 7.
  • March 1-
    • It was noted in the first entry of this year that the adoption of the Dejanican Constitution of May 3, 1791, had led to its temporary recognition by the courts of the Autocratic Pruthian and Holy Austarlian Empires. For A'rua III of Pruthia, it was a matter of appearing to be faithful to his "ally"; for Lea'dus II, it was a necessary measure. The Emperor's worries had intensified during the course of 1791. Although relieved of internal troubles following his Hungarian Settlement in November 1790, Lea'dus found the situation with Haxonia and Vendragia to be vexing. In January 1791, Haxonian authorities at Pianca and Picanza impounded fifty Austarlian commercial ships of the Krupps Works of Vienna, angering the Holy Austarlian Government. Four months later, Austarlian navigators were detained unlawfully at Tiestia, in spite of assurances by the Haxonian Government for free transit privileges. That same month, Austarlian Prince Max'ius of Varennes (1754-1823), the most prominent emigrant nobleman in the Haxonian Confederacy, attempted to return back to Salzburg, but was arrested and imprisoned by Haxonian authorities at Pisa, violating his rights of diplomatic immunity. All of these events irritated Emperor Lea'dus, who went so far as to state that the actions of the Doge and Senate "compromised the honor of all sovereigns, and the security of all governments." Pruthia, as well, was provoked by border clashes with Vendragian units in Cleves, Ravensberg, and Holstein. On August 25, 1791, the Emperor of Austarlia finally met with his Pruthian counterpart, A'rua III, at Pillnitz, a year after he had first proposed a conference between them.
    • There, the two sovereigns drafted the Declaration of Pillnitz, stating their readiness to declare war if further aggression were provoked by the governments of Haxonia and Vendragia. The Declaration however, served only to inflame tensions. By December 1791, Doge Pasqual Cicogina had ordered the Haxonian War Council to draft preparations for war with Austarlia; the month before, King Georg III began mobilizing the garrisons of Hanover, Celle, Heligoland, Irvania, the Sheriffian Colonies, and the Neo-Cyprian Colonies for action against Pruthia and Austarlia. Both powers had already concluded the Treaty of Bercester in November 1791, formalizing a military alliance between them. Emperor Lea'dus's health, on its part, entered a severe decline, and by January 1792, he was suffering from numerous physical ailments. His health declined further through the first two months of 1792, and by the middle of February, his eldest son and heir apparent, Archduke Fransios of Styria and Lower Austarlia, had effectively assumed the reins of oversight over the Holy Austarlian Government. On March 1, 1792, Lea'dus II died, aged only 44, and after having reigned over the Holy Austarlian Empire for only two years. Archduke Fransios, who was then twenty-four years old, assumed the throne as Fransios II. Condolences arrived from most foreign courts, with the exception of Haxonia and Vendragia. The new Emperor declared his intention to not give in to the provocations of the two Confederacies.
  • March 11-
    • Following his return to his command post at Rouen, in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, the Earl of Estatius again sought to involve himself in the tasks of military command. During the last days of February 1792, League and Spamalkan forces under the command of Admiral de Villars managed to reconquer a number of outposts and garrisons in the immediate vicinity of Rouen. De Villars stormed the royal arsenal of the Yser Comets (February 26, 1792), and two days later, drove Franconian and Laurasian units from Ypres and Neuve Chapelle, which had served as supply outposts for the Royal Franconian Navy. On March 4, Admiral de Villars obtained another victory in the Battle of Carency, with the Franconian League seizing more than $400 billion worth of Franconian banknotes. Loos fell to the Admiral two days later, and King Hensios was forced to reinforce Gournay and Compeigne in the face of the renewed League threat. He therefore "welcomed" Estatius's return, and believed that with the help of the Laurasian General, he would be able to recover his losses and storm the defenses of Rouen. On March 9, Estatius (who had defeated a Spamalkan starfighter squadron in a skirmish at Louviers), and had driven Spamalkan troops from Evereux, sent a communique to the Empress.
    • In it, he said: "Most fair, most dear, and most excellent sovereign, the two windows of your Privy Chamber shall be the poles of my sphere, where, as long as Your Majesty will deign to have me, I am fixed and immovable. While Your Majesty gives me leave to say I love you, my fortune is as my affection, unmatchable. If ever you deny me that liberty, you may end my life, but never shake my constancy, for it is not in your power, as great a Empress as you are, to make me love you less." Estatius then followed this with his assertion that he would subdue all of the enemies of Laurasia and Franconia alike, and that they would be made fully aware of the Empire's power. The Earl, however, failed to live up to these ideals. By March 15, although Estatius had stormed the League garrisons of Lens, Lievin, and Arras, he failed to prevent the Duke of Parma from reinforcing Rouen by juncture of Luxembourg, Limburg, and Cambrai. On March 22, 1792, Hensios launched a direct assault against the Rouen Trade Line, which ended in disastrous failure in the Battle of Roubaix. Two days later, Estatius successfully defended Gournay from a Spamalkan counteroffensive, but suffered humiliation when he failed to prevent Spamalkan troops from destroying the allied communications terminal at Champagne.
    • By the end of March 1792, Evereux was once again in League hands, and even Boulougone was threatened by a Spamalkan move. Then on April 6, 1792, Estatius, seeking to secure Valenciennes, dispatched his brother, Commodore Sir Antigonus Deverania, and detachments from the 62nd Imperial Fleet, to assault Spamalkan positions at Verdun. Commodore Deverania was skeptical about his brother's planned move, but proceeded nevertheless. The Commodore departed from Le Cateau the following day and began his advance towards Verdun. During the early hours of April 8, 1792, however, a Spamalkan convoy under Rear-Admiral Juan de Heures (1747-1825) ambushed the Laurasian force at Mirecourt, which was located five light years south of Verdun. The Battle of Mirecourt resulted in a decisive victory for the Franconian League and its Spamalkan allies. Commodore Deverania was himself killed in the confrontation, being mortally wounded when his flagship, the IMS Kaureliana, was bordered by Franconian and Spamalkan troops. Admiral de Heures captured ten Laurasian transports and five Indicator-class frigates, forcing Estatius to terminate the planned moves against Verdun and Rouen.
    • By April 14, Estatius had suffered further losses in confrontations with League and Spamalkan troops at Lievin, Douai, and Marc. And on April 19, 1792, Parma re-enforced Rouen yet again, with Admirals de Villars and Columa forcing Hensios to abandon his positions at Rouen Straits. Finally, on April 24, 1792, the Empress, who was angered by the Earl's overall incompetence and his lack of progress, and vexed by the constant communiques he sent her, complaining of illness, recalled him for the second and last time. Estatius, who was anxious to be back at the Imperial Court, and saddened by the death of his brother, obliged. He departed from Rouen on April 29, 1792, and arrived back at Laurasia Prime on May 7. The Empress received him coolly at the Diplomatic Palace, and expressed her condolences for his brother (whose corpse had been ejected by the Spamalkans in open space). Estatius, on his part, blamed Lord Treasurer Burghley and his son Secretary Cecilis for what had happened, believing they had poisoned Aurelia's mind against him. Hensios, in the meantime, realized that Rouen was too strong for his forces, and he finally withdrew from the siege on May 8, 1792. The King of Franconia, however, retained control of Valenciennes, Lille, and Boulougone in the face of renewed League offensives.
  • April 18-
    • By April 1792, Empress Aurelia had firmly resolved upon intervention in the affairs of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The conclusion of the Treaty of Jassy in January of that year finally allowed for the Empress to impose her will upon a recalcitrant Dejanica, and to restore the constitutional settlements which had been made two decades earlier, following the First Partition of Dejanica. The death of Lea'dus II, and the accession of his relatively inexperienced son Fransios II, enabled Aurelia to push forward her views to the Courts of Vienna and Berliania III. Emperor A'rua III of Pruthia, whose forces continued to clash with Vendragian units in the Germanian Principalities, and who feared the prospect of war with a Laurasian Empire pulsating with power and vigor (as a result of its victories over the Marasharites and Spamalkans), was by now seriously considering the abandonment of his Dejanican allies. On March 19, 1792, the newly-appointed Pruthian Ambassador to the Court of Laurasia Prime, Otto von Woxelholm (1735-1818), told the Empress and Lord Treasurer Burghley that "my master harbors no ill-intentions for your state, and hopes to find a cooperative relationship with Your Majesty."
    • Five days later, A'rua himself sent a communique to his Laurasian counterpart, declaring his willingness to set aside the Treaty of Warsaw and to recognize Laurasian rights at intervention, if Aurelia on her part pledged not to deal with Dejanican territorial integrity unless if in full consultation with his government. Aurelia, who was pleased at this, readily accepted; for the time being, this understanding between them remained secret. On March 24, 1792, Holy Austarlian Emperor Fransios II, persuaded by the ailing but still powerful Austarlian Chancellor Kaunitz (who had now served six Austarlian sovereigns over the preceding six decades, from Char'vak V through Fransios II himself), sent a communique to the Imperial Laurasian Government, expressing his solidarity for the aims of Empress Aurelia, towards "the maintenance of peace and stability among our powers and with Dejanica."
    • These assurances from foreign courts now allowed the Empress to exploit the tensions within the Commonwealth, and to find allies among the disgruntled traditionalist sects of the Dejanican nobility. These included magnates such as Stanis Potockia, Seweryn Rezuskia, and the former Grand Hetman of the Commonwealth, Branickia. On April 2, 1792, Ambassador Bulgania held a conference with the three noblemen at Vilinus in the Grand Duchy of Lithaunia, offering them the support of the Laurasian Empire in restoring their "traditional liberties and the constitutional structure of the Commonwealt." Branickia and Potockia in particular, who had already been assembling mercenaries, military supplies, and arms at their personal estates since January 1792, responded readily to the Laurasian assurances.
    • Now joined by the Kossawockia brothers, the pro-Laurasian magnates moved to Targowica, receiving a formal assurance of support from Empress Aurelia on April 9. Then, on April 18, 1792, they formally proclaimed themselves to be the Targowica Confederation, announcing their resistance to the Constitution of 1791 and their intention to restore the Cardinal Laws, those sacred privileges of the Dejanican nobility which had existed for nearly three centuries. In their proclamation, the Confederates criticized the Constitution for contributing to a "contagion of democratic ideas" in the territories of the Dejanican Crown. It asserted that "The Diet has broken all fundamental laws, swept away the liberties of the nobility, and on the third day of Aeweryn, of this year lately past [May 3, 1791, according to the Dejanican calendar] subjected this Commonwealth to a revolution and a conspiracy."
    • They then said that they "can do nothing but turn trustingly to Her Majesty, the Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, a distinguished and fair Empress, our neighboring friend and ally who respects the Commonwealth's need for well-being and always offers it a helping hand." They aligned with the Empress and asked for her military intervention. Aurelia, pleased by the Confederation's praise towards her, ordered Ambassador Bulgania, on April 24, 1792, to deliver a ultimatum to King Stanis Vorrust I and the Permanent Council. The ultimatum demanded that the King of Dejanica summon a Extraordinary Diet to officially repeal the Constitution of 1791; to restore the Cardinal Laws, including the right to confederation, the liberum veto, and the right of resistance; and to reconfirm the Partition Treaties of 1773. As the Empress had predicted, the ultimatum was rejected by the King on April 28, who declared that "this Commonwealth is not subject to the dictates of foreign powers." These were extraordinary words coming from the mouth of a sovereign who had been installed by that very same Empress as a puppet nearly three decades earlier. And it was exactly what Empress Aurelia wanted. By the beginning of May 1792, Laurasian forces were assembled at Navarino, Chesma, Athos, the Peldavian Gateways, Vimeshin, Hadjibey, Kaushany, Silistra, Bessarabia, and along the Danube Military Highway, ready for an advance into the Commonwealth.
  • May 18-
    • On May 4, 1792, Empress Aurelia officially informed the Pruthian and Austarlian Ambassadors, in an audience at the Quencilvanian Palace, of her intention to invade the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Empress had a good opportunity to do so; Austarlia and Pruthia were both now embroiled in military conflict in the Germanian Principalities and in the Swiss Territories. On April 20, 1792, the Haxonian Senate, after extensive pressure had been applied by Doge Cicogina, issued an official declaration of war against the Holy Austarlian and Autocratic Pruthian Empires; King Georg III of Vendragia, determined to maintain his interests in Hanover, and to seize Cleves and Holstein, followed two days later. The Empress of Laurasia could therefore now be certain that neither Austarlia nor Pruthia would intervene in favor of Dejanica (although Autocratic Pruthian Emperor A'rua III had not yet formally renounced the Treaty of Warsaw). Fourteen days later, on May 18, 1792, the Laurasian Empire's military forces launched a full-scale military invasion of Dejanica, while Ambassador Sir Yerevus Bulgania delivered a formal declaration of war to the Dejanican Foreign Affairs Minister, Joachim Chreptowicz. The Empire's military forces were under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir Demetrius Norria (who had been reassigned to duty in the Great Tesmanian Cloud in October 1791) and Field-Marshal Lord Greysius (who had likewise been reassigned to duty in the Cloud in December 1791).
    • These were among the most experienced and respected of the Empire's military commanders, and the Empress trusted them implicitly. The Laurasian offensive plans, drafted by the Imperial General Headquarters, now called for Lord Greysius to advance through Ukrainian Dejanica and into the Great Wormhole, to take Kamienec Podolski, Chelm, and Lublin, while approaching Dejanica Major from the south. Norria was to advance through Minsk, Vilna, Brezez Liewski, and Bialystok, approaching Dejanica from the north. He was to link with Greysius there and both commanders would then besiege the capital world of the Commonwealth. Whereas the forces of the Empire actually enjoyed superior intelligence capabilities in Dejanica (thanks to the Imperial Intelligence Agency and to the Targowica Confederation), being aware of Dejanican troop distribution and capabilities, the Dejanicans had far worse intelligence, receiving contradictory and often erroneous reports, and unsure whether there would be conflict to the moment the Laurasians invaded. King Stanis Vorrust was the commander-in-chief of the Commonwealth's military forces (as had been specified under the Dejanican Constitution of 1791).
    • In practice, however, he delegated this position to his nephew, Prince Josef Poniatowskia (1763-1813). Poniatowskia, theoretically, had at his disposal the military forces of the Crown of Dejanica (composed of 3,100 warships and 6.6 million military personnel) and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (composed of 2,000 warships and 3.2 million personnel) compared to the Laurasian Empire's invasion forces of nearly 7,000 warships with 11.3 million military personnel. In reality, the forces of Dejanica and Lithuania, which were still forming in accordance with the military provisions of the Dejanican Constitution, had only 2,000 warships with 5 million military personnel. The Dejanican Crown Army was in the midst of reorganization, with orders having been issued on unit numbers and composition only the previous month. The Army was also short on equipment, military arms, and experienced command officers. In the southerly regions of the Commonwealth (the Ukrainian and Gateway Voivodeships, encompassing Dejanican Ukraine and the Western Gateway Provinces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud), the Dejanican forces were initially concentrated separately in three regions of the expected front.
    • These were under the command of Generals Tadeusz Kosciusko (1746-1817) and Pavel Wielhorskia (1752-1804), as well as Prince Poniatowskia himself. The Dejanican Crown Army and Navy in Ukrainian Dejanica, commanded chiefly by Prince Poniatowskia and supported by Kosciusko, numbered about 1,300 warships with 2.5 million military personnel. They were faced on this war front by the forces of Field-Marshal Lord Greysius, who had under his command 4,000 warships and 6.2 million military personnel. Greysius's forces, in turn, were divided into four smaller groups: the 39th Imperial Army, under the command of Major-General Sir Caelius Kutzarania (1745-1813); the 42nd Imperial Army, under Major-General Sir Honorius Dunaria (1750-1831); the 45th Imperial Army, under the command of Major-General Sir Otto Derfelden (1740-1802), a Archleutan; and the 49th Imperial Army, under Brigadier-General Sir Andreus Levarania (1746-1821). The Targowica Confederation, on its part, did not possess a substantial military force, with the Imperial General Headquarters deciding that they should be withheld from combat. In Lithuania (whose Belaranian and Eastern Lithuanian Voivodeships fell in the Great Tesmanian Cloud), the Lithuanian Army and Navy numbered about 600 warships with 2.3 million personnel; there was also a Crown detachment which had about 200,000 personnel, the remainder of the force. They were commanded by Germanian Duke Louis of Wurttemberg (1756-1817). Wurttemberg did not make any military preparations, and his military forces were caught off guard.
    • The Empire's military forces in that theater under General Norria had 3,000 warships and 5 million military personnel. This force was also divided into four corps: the 51st Imperial Army, under the Marshal of the Targowica Confederation, Dejanican General Szymon Kossaria (1741-94); the 54th Imperial Army, under Major-General Sir Leonidas Meliaria (1737-1803); the 59th Imperial Army, under Lieutenant-General Arasces Dologruvkius, 3rd Baron Dologruvkius of Taurasia (1749-1824), a cousin of the late Laurasian military commander Sir Vessanius Dolorgruvkius, from the Fourth Laurasian-Marasharite War; and the 61st Imperial Army, under Brigadier-General Sir Honorius Feneria (1752-1810). King Stanis, on his part, concentrated his Royal Guards and Dejanica's planetary garrison as a central reserve force. Dejanican General Koscizusko proposed a offensive plan by which the entire Dejanican military would be concentrated and engage one of the Empire's invasion forces, in order to ensure numerical parity and boost the morale of mostly inexperienced Dejanican units with a quick victory; this plan was rejected by Prince Poniatowskia. Poniatowskia also sought to avoid any serious engagements in the first phase of the war, hoping to receive Pruthian reinforcements. Within hours of invading Dejanican territory, a fierce confrontation developed between the opposing forces of Empire and Commonwealth.
    • In the Tesmanian and Ukranian theaters, the 1st Imperial Expeditionary Force under Field-Marshal Lord Greysius encountered substantial opposition from the first, as they faced the chief Dejanican forces under the command of Prince Poniatowskia and General Kosciuszko. A series of confrontations ensued between Laurasian and Dejanican forces at Brovary, Boryspil, and Fastiv (May 18-22, 1792), as Generals Kosicuzsko and Wielhorskia harried the Laurasian supply lines and managed to inflict damage upon the advancing forces. On May 24, 1792, General Kutzarania launched an offensive against Slaytuvuch which was repelled by a Dejanican frontal attack. By May 29, when General Koscisuzko joined with Prince Poniatowskia near Janow, Laurasian forces had incurred substantial casualties in confrontations with Dejanican garrisons and offensive squadrons at Bila Tserevka, Kaniev, and Drabiev. Nevertheless, the Empire's forces had subdued the major Dejanican strongholds of Smila, Talne, Uman, Zhaskiv, Kolotchen, and Maltyn.
    • As a result of these successes, Prince Poniatowskia judged his forces to be too weak to directly oppose the four columns of the Imperial Laurasian Military in battle, and began a fighting withdrawal to the Bug Transit Highways along the Northern Straits and in the vicinity of the Great Wormhole, with a goal of fortifying Lubar and Polonne against Laurasian thrusts. Kosicusko, now acknowledged as the leading subordinate commander of the Commonwealth's military forces on this front, commanded the rear guard. Poniatowskia, who was promised conscripts and reinforcements by his uncle, the King, and aware of the numerical inferiority of his forces, believed that the fortification of the Volhynia would serve to maintain a firm line against Greysius's advance. Prince Michael Lubworskia (1735-1801) assumed responsibility for the supply lines of the Dejanican offensive forces. In the meantime, events on the Lithuanian frontier had changed to the worse for the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
    • On May 22, 1792, by which time Laurasian forces had already secured the Lithuanian worlds of Utena and Visaginas, Pruthian Emperor A'rua III, whose attention was now fully distracted by the wars with Vendragia and Haxonia, and who wished to stake out his own sphere of influence in the Commonwealth, announced that he no longer considered his obligations under the Treaty of Warsaw to be binding. The Emperor of Pruthia declared that the Commonwealth's "violations" of the rights of Pruthian Martialists were unacceptable, and that the Diet's refusal to consider the secession of Torun and Danzig "damaged the means of effective assistance between our two realms." Furthermore, A'rua declared, he was not bound to help enforce a Constitution which had been drafted without his foreknowledge or consent. All of this pleased Empress Aurelia greatly, who was now fully confident that the Commonwealth would be swiftly subdued to the power of the Empire's military forces.
    • The Duke of Wurttemberg, on his part, who had little understanding of the government and customs of the Commonwealth in which he served, and who had been offered a handsome financial compensation by the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs, neglected to assume his command duties over the Lithuanian Armies. He feigned sickness at his headquarters on Wolczyn, and issued contradictory orders to his immediate subordinates. As a consequence, Laurasian forces in Lithuania were able to advance effectively unopposed. By May 25, General Norria had occupied the Dejanican arsenals of Moletai, Ignalina, Pasvalays, and Birzai without resistance. On May 27, he destroyed a Dejanican supply convoy near Roksisis's Comet. A series of minor skirmishes with Dejanican fleets ensued at Drybin, Kilchaw, and Hrbosk, and on May 31, Minsk, capital of the Minsk Voivodeship and one of the most important Dejanican systems in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, capitulated to the Laurasian Empire without a fight. By the beginning of June 1792, Laurasian forces had also stormed Kupsiki, Skhlow, Slawharad, Chavusky, Slutsk, Bernadino, and Lahosk, inflicting a series of humiliating defeats upon overstretched Dejanican garrisons.
  • May 20-
    • Following his failure to conquer Rouen, King Hensios IV of Franconia, whose efforts had been engaged in repelling counteroffensives by Franconian League and Spamalkan forces into the Metzian Lordships, Poitiers, and the Pale of Calais, decided that he needed to secure his rear and his supply lines. The King now decided that Craon, which was located one hundred light years to the southeast of Rouen, needed to be taken so that he could effectively organize his reinforcements and prepare for a renewed counteroffensive against Evereux, Rouen, Douai, and Marc. On May 14, 1792, the King ordered his cousins, the Duke of Montpensier and Francois de Bourbon, Prince of Conti (1758-1814), to convene on Laval and organize their military formations for action against Craon. They did as ordered, and by May 18, having secured League bases on Orne and Maine-st-Loire, began their advance towards Craon.
    • By the early hours of May 20, 1792, Craon was completely surrounded by the Royal Franconian Forces, with contingents from the 51st Imperial Army and 62nd Imperial Fleets, commanded by Major-General Sir Antiochus Verus (1755-1816), providing auxiliary support. The King of Franconia, however, had not anticipated that League forces under the command of the Duke of Merceour and Urbain de Laovisseur, Marquis de Sable (1759-1816)< with auxiliary contingents commanded by the Spamalkan General Juan del Aguila (reassigned from duty in the Colonial Territories to the Durthian Duchies in March 1792), were already advancing from Douai and Cambrai to reinforce the garrison of Craon and to repel the Franconian-Laurasian offensive. The garrison of Craon, on its part, resisted the allied forces fiercely, repelling several frontal offensives launched by Conti and General Verus during the two days following the commencement of the siege.
    • Then at midday on May 22, 1792, Merceour and de Sable appeared at the northern outskirts of the Craon star system, and launched an immediate counteroffensive against the allied formations. They surprised the besieging force, penetrating through their left flank and capturing a number of Franconian transports, corvettes, and frigates. The right flank was then assaulted by the garrison forces of Craon, who now drove the Franconian warships before them and burst from the Craon Asteroid Belt. Montpensier, who found that his supply lines were under threat, and his potential escape routes were disappearing, was forced to flee from Craon on May 24, 1792. The Battle of Craon therefore ended in a decisive victory for the Franconian League and Holy Spamalkan Empire (which was still officially in a state of peace with the Serene Kingdom of Franconia). The Spamalkans under General del Aguila distinguished themselves in particular, capturing much of the enemy artillery, ammunition stocks, shield generators, firearms, armor, equipment, and military supplies. On May 28, 1792, Laval, which was left completely defenseless due to the rout at Craon, surrendered to the Duke of Merceour without a fight. The Prince of Conti was forced to retreat to Gontier. During the next two months, Merceour distinguished himself in a series of victories at Mayenne, Manche, Chalons, and Montmrail, posing a serious threat to King Hensios's forces in Poitiers, Southern Brittany, and in the vicinity of Orleans. These victories of the Franconian League, however, could not overshadow the events in Durthia or in the Colonial Territories, which saw the Laurasian Empire, as well as its Durthian and Portugallian allies, obtain further successes.
  • June 9-
    • By June 1792, Empress Aurelia, whose military forces were obtaining further victories in Durthia, the Colonial Territories, and in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, had experienced more turmoil at the Imperial Court. The wound which had been caused by the death of Sir Christopheus Hattonius remained open into the middle of 1792. As a consequence, both the Ministership of Justice and the Procurator-Generalship of the Governing Senate remained vacant for several months following his death. Finally, in May 1792, the Empress was persuaded by Lord Treasurer Burghley and his son Secretary Cecilis to fill the vacancies in these, the highest judicial positions in the Imperial Laurasian Government. On May 28, 1792, she formally appointed Sir Demetrius Puckerania (1744-96), who had graduated from the University of Constantinople Law School in 1764 with a J.D. in jurisprudence and civil law, and had then obtained his PhD in Judicial Sciences in 1769, to be Procurator-General of the Governing Senate and Minister of Justice. Puckerania, who had served with the Christiania Inns since 1767, become a honorary member of the Valedictorian Guards in 1782, and been knighted in 1787, was respected with many among the administrative and judicial officials of Laurasia Prime. Puckerania would serve in these positions for the next four years, until his death in April 1796. Empress Aurelia also had other, more personal concerns, again related to the Earl of Estatius, but also to her other favorite, Sir Walterius Raleghia. Estatius, following his return to Laurasia Prime in May 1792, had applied to become Chancellor of the University of Christiania, a position which Hattonius had held from 1787 and which had also become vacant upon his death.
    • On May 25, 1792, however, Empress Aurelia, who believed that she needed someone dependable and of "appropriate academic qualifications" to hold the post, appointed her Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lord Buchamia, to the position instead. Buchamia was an ally and friend of Lord Treasurer Burghley, and aligned with the Cecilis faction. Estatius complained bitterly, but this availed him nothing, and he now decided to belatedly take Bagonius's advice, angling for high political office so as to break the hold of power exerted by the Lord Treasurer. Sir Antoninus Bagonius returned from Parri on May 29, 1792, following another tour of duty there for the Imperial Intelligence Agency; Estatius promptly enlisted his support. Antoninus, who had a uncertain temper and was hard to cooperate with, nevertheless was willing to use his talents in Estatius's service. It was decided that he would help the Earl build his own intelligence network, hoping thereby to impress upon the Empress that, being so well-informed, Estatius deserved political credibility and to be taken seriously. Estatius also sought to gain influence at the Royal Franconian Court and curry the favor of King Hensios IV. By early June 1792, Estatius was ambling around the Imperial Court, with Franconius reminding him that he should continue to work towards political office, and hold off from his dreams of military glory. With so many of the Empress's advisers and ministers having died, Bagonius pointed out, there would be an opening for him. He would only have to be patient.
    • As regards to Raleghia, a series of events had occurred since the middle of the previous year which were now to bring his reputation crashing down. In May 1791, Raleghia, who as Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners was sworn to protect the Empress's ladies and maids in waiting, and consequently controlled access into their bedchambers, fell in love, and became involved in a secret affair with, Lady Aurelia Thorckmortonia, the daughter of Sir Nicholas and eldest among the Empress's maids of honor. As noted above, she was the cousin of that Sir Feresus who had, a decade earlier, been the chief instigator of the harebrained Thorckmortonia Plot. The affair between Raleghia and Lady Thorckmortonia progressed quickly, and in July, she became pregnant with his child. Lady Thorckmortonia was not like Raleghia's other sexual conquests, however. She now began to insist on marriage, although it was certain that the Empress would not have considered her a good enough match for him. Therefore, on October 2, 1791, in great secrecy, Raleghia and Lady Thorckmortonia were married on Americana. Lady Aurelia now returned to her duties at the Imperial Court, attending to her responsibilities and doing her best to conceal her pregnancy. By February 1792, however, this had become impossible. Her thickening figure had given rise to rumors among the personages of the Imperial Court, and some were now pinpointing with deadly accuracy the father of her child. Raleghia, on his part, denied the rumors, and declared that "There is none in the entire Universe that I would be fastened to."
    • On February 19, Lady Aurelia, whose period of pregnancy was reaching its close, invented a pretext to gain permission to take leave from the Court. Seeking refuge at Heshorne House, the Soriana mansion of her elder brother Sir Marius Thorckmortonia (1757-1826), she went into labor and on March 7, 1792, gave birth to her and Raleghia's first son, who was named Damasius (1792-1865). Entrusting her son to the care of her brother, she returned to the Court on April 9, where it was easily observed that she had dramatically lost weight. The rumors became more insistent, until finally, on May 4, word leaked out from her brother's household about the birth of her son and her secret union with Sir Walterius. The Empress was informed of her favorite's "brutish offense" by Knollysis two days later, and erupted into a fury about the fact. She now declared that she would tolerate no traitors within her realms, and that Raleghia would suffer the ultimate penalty. On May 27, 1792, the Empress summoned Raleghia back from his post in the Colonial Territories (description shall be provided below of the Empire's progress in that theater). Raleghia arrived back at Laurasia Prime on June 4; five days later, the Empress ordered for both him and his wife to be arrested and imprisoned at the Fortress of Baureux. The couple were now accused of marrying without the Empress's consent, of seduction, and of "tricking" Her Imperial Majesty. Worse than all of this was the Empress's bitter sense of betrayal, for Raleghia had been one of her chief favorites for ten years, and this marriage seemed to mock all of his protestations of devotion to her. At the Fortress of Baureux, Raleghia and his wife were lodged in separate apartments. He was not strictly kept, being allowed to walk in the Fortress Gardens and permitted to see his wife from a distance. He was desperate to be free, and was willing to do anything to achieve it.
  • June 14-
    • The Laurasian Empire's military forces continued to make gains in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth in both the Lithuanian and Ukrainian theaters. As regards to the former, King Stanis Vorrust, who was enraged by the Duke of Wurttemberg's defiance, and disturbed by the Pruthian abrogation of its military obligations, decided, on June 4, 1792, to replace Wurttemberg as commander of the Lithuanian Armies with General Josef Judycki (1736-97). General Judycki, who had been one of the supporters of the new Constitution, now sought to mobilize his men and military resources, belatedly, against the Laurasians under General Norria. He stormed a Laurasian offensive outpost on Larnopyl (June 5) and managed to defeat General Meliaria in the Battle of Cherven (June 6-9, 1792). On June 11, however, General Meliaria and the chief naval commander of the Empire's 2nd Group, Rear-Admiral Sir Theodosius Cassadaria (1743-1817), intercepted Judycki at Mir in the Belaranian Province.
    • Mir, one of the Commonwealth's chief military arsenals, had been previously seized by the Earl of Soria and General Sir Antiochus Rumanstevius in 1708. The ensuing Battle of Mir (June 11, 1792), resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. The Mir Military Complex fell into the possession of the Empire's forces, and Judycki lost nearly 50,000 of his troops. Following the fall of Mir, Laurasian forces quickly stormed the Belaranian strongholds of Kapyl, Myzadyel, and Kaplk. Then on June 14, 1792, after having penetrated through the defenses of Ukmerge and Trakai, Vilno, capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, fell to General Norria's forces after only a brief struggle with the planetary garrison. Thus humiliated the Dejanican High Command. By June 23, Niewiez and Kaunas, at the Great Wormhole, had both fallen to Laurasian forces, with Norria's units penetrating into the heartland of the Amulak Lithuanian Provinces. General Judycki, now in utter disgrace, was dismissed from his post on that date and replaced with General Michael Zabiello (1760-1815).
    • As regards to the Ukrainian theater, June 14 also saw Field-Marshal Lord Greysius obtain a decisive victory in the Battle of Borsuskwoce over Dejanican General Wielhorskia. By that date, Lord Greysius had also destroyed Dejanican forces in confrontations at Opsa (June 4-9) and Stolpce (June 12). On June 17, after Greysius had secured Malyn and Korosten, Prince Poniatowskia finally received reinforcements from Dejanica Major, under the command of Prince Lubormirskia. The 45th Imperial Army, under General Derfelden, now moved to Zielence, providing advance cover for General Kutzarania's 39th Imperial Army. Two days before the reinforcements arrived, Poniatowskia had established his chief headquarters on Polonne. After holding a meeting with his subordinates, however, the decision had been made to withdraw from the star system, which did not have adequate fortifications. Lubormiskia's forces, comprised of some 300,000 military personnel with 110 warships, included Generals Josef Zajacek (1748-1808) and Ludwig Trokin (1753-1806). It was on June 18, 1792, that General Derfelden's forces neared Zielence. Derfelden's goal was to assault the star system's defenses and to penetrate to Zaslaw, thereby disrupting the Dejanican left flank and permitting a further advance by Kutzarania. At 7:00 a.m. Galactic Standard Time, the Battle of Zielence commenced with the exchange of turbocannon fire between the opposing forces.
    • Within a few hours, the artillery exchanges ceased. General Derfelden's troops then landed on Zielence Station and began their advance towards the Dejanican center. Many of the Dejanican troops pulled back, with panic induced by Laurasian artillery fire and a series of coordinated attacks by Derfelden's troops and Imperial Marines. Prince Poniatowskia, however, now reviewed the Dejanican formations, reorganized his front-line naval and army forces, and launched a counterattack. Poniatowskia's first counterattack failed however, as Laurasian units secured Zielence City and pushed Dejanican battle formations back. Poniatowskia attempted to assault Laurasian transports and frigates above Zielence, but was driven back by starfighter squadrons. General Derfelden then launched a general offensive towards Southern Zielence, but the Dejanican mobile warfare corps rallied and punched a hole through the Laurasian frontline, ending Derfelden's moves.
    • Derfelden subsequently attempted to launch a offensive against Zielence Dockyards, but this was blunted due to Dejanican marines and corvettes penetrating from the Northern Skirts. Poniatowskia's forces then blunted a rash advance by Derfelden and pushed back into Zielence City, while Dejanican corvettes and fighters gradually pushed Laurasian warships away from the planetary orbit. At 5:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, Derfelden, who realized that his supply lines were in danger (due to the constant harrying of Dejanican units from Zislow and Upper Polonne), was forced to call a retreat. The Battle of Zielence therefore ended in a victory for the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. King Stanis Vorrust celebrated this victory, but the Dejanicans would find that it had no impact upon the course of the war. The Dejanican Crown Army, under the command of Prince Poniatowskia, found itself compelled to continue its retreat, yielding to the more powerful enemy in order to avoid annihilation. By June 24, Field-Marshal Greysius's forces had conquered the Ukrainian systems of Mykola, Hershad, Haisyn, Kolzayn, and Hadnirastia; on June 27, he obtained a crushing victory over General Koscisuzko in the Battle of Tomashpil, capturing a number of Dejanican troopers and armored transports. By the beginning of July 1792, Zelwa, Akme, and Silulai in Lithuania had fallen to the Empire's forces, and General Zabiello now withdrew his forces towards the direction of Brest, attempting to establish a defensive barrier along the Amulak Void.
  • June 25-
    • As mentioned previously, the Laurasian Empire's military forces, in conjunction with its Portugallian and Durthian allies, experienced both successes and reverses against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Corvo was stormed by Admiral Dracius (January 7, 1792), after a brief confrontation with a Spamalkan naval convoy near the Baharias. By January 15, Dracius's forces had stormed La Vega, Peravia, and Bani, consolidating Laurasian control of Santiago and San Domingo. On January 22, a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Les Noches and Augustine Colony, both of which had become major Laurasian supply bases, came to ruin at the hands of the Earl of Cumbria in the Battle of Les Odors. By the middle of February 1792, Cumbria and Dracius had managed to recover Alacantara and Oliveres, while Portugallian Prince Fernando repelled a series of Spamalkan moves against Vigo, Baiona, and the Eastern Azores. On March 3, 1792, Admiral de Bazan, who had established his chief operational headquarters at Barcelona, launched a major offensive to clear Laurasian and Portugallian troops from Sao Vicente, Ponta Delegada, and Terceira. Although Sao Vicente was briefly overrun by a Spamalkan fleet (March 3-9, 1792), and Bazan inflicted severe damage upon Laurasian fortifications at Biscay (March 14, 1792), the offensive came to a crashing halt as Dracius secured a decisive victory in the Battle of Casita (March 19, 1792), which forced Bazan to abandon his moves against Ponta Delegada.
    • By March 25, Dracius had recovered Sao Vicente, Ferrol, and Ourense, driving to the outskirts of Riberia, Granada, and Algercircas. At the same time, Prince Maurice of Orange and Lieutenant-General Sir Willanius Pellhamia advanced against Nijmegen, which had been threatened since September 1791. The Siege of Nijmegen commenced on March 28, 1792, and lasted until April 11, when the stronghold fell to allied forces. By the end of April 1792, by which time Dracius had stormed Durate and Puerto Plata in the vicinity of San Domingo, Groningen and Leuven had both been secured by Prince Maurice. Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council, in the meantime, had been engaged in vigorous preparations for an offensive to secure the allied hold over the Azores Star Cluster and to harry Spamalkan supply lines to the Spamalkan Main. The ultimate objective of this offensive, as formulated in a communique of the Imperial General Headquarters (April 11, 1792), was to seize Spamalkan merchantile convoys and to thereby threaten the resources available to the Holy Spamalkan Treasury, which was dependent upon the supply lines for bullion.
    • On April 19, 1792, the Empress was persuaded to appoint Sir Walterius Raleghia, who had now reached the rank of Major-General in the Imperial Laurasian Army (having fought with distinction against the Spamalkan Armada and in the United Durthian States), as the chief commander of this intended offensive. Raleghia was to ultimately remain subject to the oversight of Dracius (who was shortly to become Vice-Admiral), but would have control over the tactical and strategic operations of this enterprise. On April 22, Rear-Admiral Sir Antigonus Burroghia (1743-1809), previously commander of the IMS Herennia, the second-largest ship in Dracius's forces, was designated as the commander of the naval forces and as the second-in-command of the planned offensive. The Earl of Cumbria, who had returned to station at Vigo earlier that month, and had reached the rank of Admiral, became another of Raleghia's subordinates. Sir Martinius Frosbisherius, who had been promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral in January 1792, served as Raleghia's aide-de-camp. On May 6, 1792, Raleghia and his immediate subordinates departed on his flagship, the IMS Aemdallia, and arrived near Cape Finistierre four days later. Raleghia then proceeded to Vigo and held a command conference with Cumbria, who had been engaged in organizing detachments from the 51st, 62nd, and 64th Imperial Fleets for the offensives. It was on May 27 that he received his recall orders from the Empress (as had been described below). Frosbisherius now became the commander-in-chief of the forces, due to the Empress's greater trust in him over Burroghia and the Earl of Cumbria.
    • On May 29, 1792, as provided in the operation instructions issued by the General Headquarters, the Empire's forces separated at Cape St. Vincent. Burroghia now headed towards the Azores, intent on joining up with Prince Fernando and awaiting the approach of Spamalkan convoys. Frosbisherius, on his part, headed into the Galician Provinces, intent on harrying Spamalkan fortifications and colonies in that region. On May 29, 1792, Admiral Burroghia and his forces, having seized Spamalkan outposts on Bayamon and Ponce, intercepted a Spamalkan convoy near Cape St. Vincent. The lead ship of this convoy, the Santa Clara, carried a considerable amount of military arms, mineral goods, and bullion with an estimated value of more than €200 trillion dataries. In the ensuing Battle of the Straits of Cape St. Vincent, Burroghia disrupted the Spamalkan fleet formations and rushed his marines to the Santa Clara, whose crew put up a considerable resistance.
    • Ultimately, however, the flagship was captured, and more than third of the Spamalkan fleet personnel were killed or captured. Following the capture of the Santa Clara, Burroghia launched a raiding operation against the Spamalkan hypergates and dockyards at Sancular de Barrameda, inflicting serious damage on the star system's facilities and capturing more than 50,000 Spamalkan garrison troops. The Santa Clara, escorted by ten Laurasian destroyers, was hastened to the Galactic Void and thence, back to the Empire. On June 4, Admiral Burroghia seized another Spamalkan naval convoy at Caguas, having pursued the convoy across a distance of more than seventy light-years. He now learned that Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus, determined to maintain the supply lines, and to disrupt the Laurasian offensive, had prepared a fleet at Cadiz and Seville to move against the Laurasians. Admiral de Bazan assumed supreme command of Spamalkan naval operations, and was determined to give nothing to his Laurasian foes.
    • Frosbisherius, on his part, managed to storm the Spamalkan garrisons of Cienfuegos, Gramama, and Villa Clara (June 2-11, 1792), and on June 14, even threatened the defenses of Havana and Santiago de Cuba, impounding a number of Spamalkan naval and commercial vessels in the vicinity of the two star systems. Four days later, the Admiral seized fifteen Spamalkan transports, with more than 30,000 Spamalkan Marines being killed or captured by Laurasian boarding parties. On June 20, however, he suffered a reverse in the Battle of Bayamon, being forced to terminate plans for an offensive into San Juan. Burroghia, however, continued to press the offensive, and on June 25, was informed of the approach of Spamalkan forces near Corvo. The Santa Cruz, lead flagship of the Spamalkan force, was pursued by three Laurasian frigates under the command of the Earl of Cumbria. The Laurasians were soon forced to halt their pursuit due to the arrival of Spamalkan reinforcements, but the Santa Cruz experienced a navigation failure and crash-landed in the Corvo star system. The following day, its crew was reached by a Spamalkan courier; they destroyed the stranded vessel and carried away its cargo before attempting their departure.
    • Burroghia's units, however, penetrated to Outer Corvo, halting the Spamalkan rescue party, killing a third of their number, and in turn seizing the cargo. Burroghia now learned that the Spamalkan 7th Fleet, with the Madre de Deus, San Bernando, Buen Admiral, and San Christophoro had departed from Cadiz. Determined to intercept and destroy this force before it reached Bogota, he decided to secure the garrisons in the vicinity of San Domingo before making his move. July 1792 witnessed the Laurasian seizure (with Portugallian support) of the Spamalkan strongholds of Cienfugeos (June 29-July 3); Holguin (July 5); La Vega (July 8-11); Higuey (July 16-19); Guantanamo (July 22); Manzanillo (July 24-26); and La Romana (July 27). By the end of July 1792, Admiral Burroghia was fully prepared to intercept the Spamalkan force; his Spamalkan opponent, Admiral de Bazan, had made a grave miscalculation by directing his forces to proceed in the vicinity of Corvo and Cartamangua, confident they would be able to brush aside all Laurasian thrusts. This mistake soon becam apparent. In that same month (July 1792), Prince Maurice of Nassau destroyed a superior Spamalkan force under Parma in the Battle of Naarden (July 5-8). By the end of the month, Durthian-Laurasian forces had secured control of the Spamalkan strongholds of Nivelles, Hardenberg, and Tournai, thereby cutting deep into Spamalkan supply lines. Parma's counteroffensives against Breda, Axel, and Devanter (July 22-August 2, 1792), ended in failure.
  • July 27-
    • By July 1792, the military and political situation of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth was in dire straits. In spite of the efforts of King Stanis Vorrust and his Commissions of Foreign Affairs and Defense, the Commonwealth's military resources could not be mobilized effectively for action against the Laurasian Empire. The Targowica Confederates, who now controlled Hrodna, Masty, and Asimany, continued to harry the government's supply lines. Although they were not in direct combat with the Commonwealth's military forces (because of their lack of offensive power), they nevertheless provided valuable intelligence and communications information to the Imperial General Headquarters on Laurasia Prime and to the Empire's commanders in the field. Following the fall of Siluai, General Norria advanced through Masty and Iuje towards Grodno. Grodno was one of the most important star systems in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, with a population of nearly ten billion by the late eighteenth century. It was, however, weakly defended, and the Imperial Intelligence Agency had provoked major tensions on the world against the King and his subordinates.
    • On July 5, 1792, the Battle of Grodno occurred, with General Norria's subordinates, Generals Kossaria and Dologruvkius, launching a series of coordinated assaults against Dejanican positions in the star system. The commander of the Garrison of Grodno, Dejanican General Kanzes von Meriz (1748-1803), attempted to fight off the Laurasian landings, but his efforts proved to be in vain. By the end of the day, Grodno was in the possession of the Laurasian Empire. By July 10, Laurasian troops had also secured Samharon, Karelicy, and Voronava, establishing a direct communications and transit line with the Targowica Confederation. In the meantime, on July 3, Prince Lubormiskia, who had sympathies for the aims of the Targowica Confederation, and had come increasingly into conflict with the King and with Prince Poniatowskia, announced his defection to the Confederation and to the Laurasian Empire.
    • He now handed over control of the Dejanican strongholds of Kamanaria, Samanchyn, and Khlmeneystia to the Empire's military forces. The King quickly dismissed him from his military command and labeled him a traitor, but this did nothing to stem the renewed momentum gained by Laurasian forces. On July 7, General Kosciusko fought a delaying battle with the Laurasians at Wlodzimierz. Although he managed to destroy nearly a third of the Laurasian starfighters, and to disable several Laurasian frigates, Kosciusko was ultimately forced to retreat when Lord Greysius's automated transports disrupted the momentum of the Dejanican lines. Poniatowskia continued his retreat to the Bug Straits, surrendering Lida, Ostroh, Rine, and Korets to the Laurasian advance. On July 13, Major-General Dunaria captured a Dejanican convoy at Anne's Shaft, penetrating from the Great Wormhole to the outskirts of Krakow and Chocim.
    • Then on July 18, Lord Greysius reached Dubienka; within a few hours, his forces had overran the world's positions and were penetrating to the Outer Dubranian Highway. Koscisuzko, however, unleashed his mobile corps and troopers from Dubienka's Moon, repelling Laurasian assaults against the Moon Fortresses and landing on Northern Dubienka, forcing Greysius to halt his offensives at the outskirts of the star system. The Laurasians launched several frontal offensives against Dubienka's Moon, attempting to penetrate its shields with a heavy turbocannon and artillery bombardment. Kosicuszko's defenses, however, held, and more than 30,000 Laurasian military personnel were killed during the attempted bombardment. Three Laurasian frigates were destroyed, and ten of their corvettes were seriously damaged by Dejanican starfighters and defensive fire. By the end of the day, Greysius was forced to call off the offensive, with his forces now retreating from the Dubienka star system. Kosciusko, however, was forced to abandon the stronghold and to retreat towards Chelm (in the Great Amulak Spiral) to maintain his supply lines. In spite of this failure at Dubienka, Laurasian forces continued to make gains. On the same day of the Battle of Dubienka, Bialystok capitulated to General Norria, who thereby penetrated into Greater Dejanica from the Galactic Void.
    • Five days later, Brest in Belarania fell to Lord Dologruvkius, virtually completing the subjugation of the Tesmanian Voivodeships to Laurasian military occupation. On July 24, 1792, however, Lord Dologruvkius was defeated in the Battle of Krezmen-Wies, preventing a Dejanican counteroffensive towards Dejanica Minor and into Lower Pomerania. Despite this reverse, the Empire's forces were pressing ever closer to Dejanica Major. By this point, however, King Stanis Vorrust, who believed that he could reach a diplomatic settlement with the Laurasian Empire, had begun considering a military ceasefire. He overrode the protests of Prince Poniatowskia and General Kosciusko, who still considered the war to be open and had planned on uniting the Dejanican forces for a push against the Laurasian armadas. Kosciusko had even proposed that negotiations be conducted with the Holy Spamalkan Empire, in the hopes of obtaining the assistance of Aurelia's enemy, Philicus I, against her in the Commonwealth. On July 26, the day that a Laurasian assault against Markusow was repelled by Prince Poniatowskia, the King sent a formal request for a ceasefire to the Imperial Laurasian Government. Empress Aurelia, when she learned of the Dejanican request, was sent into a mood of elation.
    • The Empress was then at the Royal Palace of Horacia, and was on the verge of embarking for her progress that year (to the Arachosian and Vectorian Provinces in the Southern Galactic Borderlands). She immediately ordered Lord Buchamia to accept the Dejanican armistice request, but only on the condition that the King formally join the Targowica Confederation and renounce his adherence to the Dejanican Constitution of 1791. Stanis Vorrust, when he learned of this condition, attempted to beg the Empress of Laurasia to reconsider, even offering to abdicate his crown in favor of one of her courtiers (such as the Earl of Estatius). The Empress refused, and demanded that he adhere to her demands. With no choice left to him, Stanis Vorrust submitted during the late hours of July 27, 1792. Two days later, the Permanent Council, having been assured by Ambassador Bulgania (who had returned to his post on Dejanica Major two days earlier), that there would be no territorial changes, formally ratified the armistice request.
    • Prince Poniatowskia and General Kosicusko, who continued to protest at the decisions being made, were ordered to lay down their arms and to hold a formal conference with Lord Greysius and General Norria at Rawa. On August 5, 1792, the Terms of Rawa were signed, thereby terminating the War in Defense of the Constitution (as the nearly three-month conflict had become known). Four days later, the Dejanican military commanders returned to Dejanica. On August 14, 1792, the Targowica Confederation's chief magnates, including Princes Branickia and Potockia, arrived on Dejanica. With the assistance of Ambassador Bulgania, they now assumed the chairmanship of the Permanent Council, and were permitted to exercise "temporary" executive authority until the arrangements of the Cardinal Laws and 1775 Dejanican Constitution could be formally restored. The Constitution of 1791 was effectively declared inert; this ad hoc state of affairs in the Commonwealth would continue for more than a year. By September 1792, Laurasian forces had occupied Dejanica Major and the other chief strongholds of Greater Dejanica, Little Dejanica, and Amulak Lithuania.
  • August 3-On August 3, 1792, Admiral Burroghia received word that scouting probes had identified the location of Admiral de Bazan's convoy at Corvo Midpoint, which was located ten light years to the east of the Corvo star system. Burroghia, who already had his chief warships and armored corps stationed in the vicinity of the star system, now advanced rapidly against the Spamalkan positions, intent on using the element of surprise to overwhelm their positions. By 12:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, Burroghia had launched a flanking maneuver against Admiral de Bazan's convoy, with the Madre de Deus being surrounded by the Laurasian ships IMS Foresight, Golden Dragon, and Prudentia. Although the Laurasian destroyer IMS Dailaria was seriously damaged by Spamalkan corvettes and forced to retire from the battle, Burroghia nevertheless gained the advantage. By 3:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, the San Bernando and San Christophoro had both been destroyed by a series of Laurasian automated transport attacks; two hours later, Imperial Marines overwhelmed the defenses of Buen Admiral, and by 10:00 p.m., the Madre de Deus had been boarded and forced to surrender. Burroghia spared the lives of Captain Fernando de Menorca (1750-1809) and the rest of his crew, commending them for their bravery in the thick of battle. Admiral de Bazan himself managed to flee on his starfighter, and was forced to retire to Cadiz, having lost over 40% of his initial convoy. On August 9, the Imperial General Headquarters ordered Burroghia to transport the captured Spamalkan vessels back to the Empire. Burroghia departed from Cabiona two days later and proceeded quickly across the Galactic Void. His forces had impounded nearly €1.7 quadmillion dataries worth of Spamalkan assets and goods, and had secured a allied beachhead in the Cubian and Puerto Rican Sectors of the Colonial Territories.
  • August 12-
    • By August 1792, the Empress's attitude towards Sir Walterius Raleghia, although still one of anger, had mellowed due to "intervening circumstances." These circumstances were related to the arrival of the captured Spamalkan convoys at Charasia. Raleghia had, from the time of his initial imprisonment, continued to beg for mercy from the Empress for his "unlawful" marriage with Lady Aurelia Thorckmortonia. On July 1, informed of Aurelia's impending move to Horacia, he sent a lengthy communique to Secretary Cecilis. In this communique, Raleghia stated that "My heart was never broken until this day that I hear the Empress having embarked from here so far off, whom I have followed so many years with so great love and desire in so many journeys, and am now left behind in a dark prison all alone. While she was yet at hand, so that I might hear of her once in two or three days, my sorrows were less, but even now, my heart is cast into the depths of misery. I that was satisfied to behold her riding like Cliethus, riding like Diana, walking like Aphrodite, the gentle wind blowing her fair hair about her pure cheeks like a nymph; sometimes sitting in the shade like a goddess, sometimes singing like a angel, sometimes playing like Orpheus. Behold the sorrow of this universe! One error has deprived me of all. She is gone in whom I trusted, and for me has not one thought of mercy." Later, learning that the Empress would be proceeding by the Fortress of Baureux, he begged the Lieutenant, his cousin Sir Georgius Carania (1747-1803), to bring him out to the public stockades so that he could see her and possibly attract her attention, but the Lieutenant refused. Carania later reported to the Empress that Raleghia tried to kill himself at this point, and was only prevented from doing so by a Fortress guard, who wrenched a concealed dagger from his hand at injury to himself. Carania also told Aurelia that Raleghia's mind was troubled by thoughts of his unfaithfulness. Until August, however, the Empress was unmoved.
    • Thus, it was on August 12, 1792, that Admiral Burroghia arrived at Charasia with his captured Spamalkan convoy. Disorder soon broke out at the shipyards and on Charasia's moons, as the inhabitants went amock at the thought of obtaining access to the seized treasures. Empress Aurelia, determined to maintain order, and to prevent the outbreak of rebellion, agreed to release Raleghia, aware that his reputation among the Imperial Laurasian Navy would serve to chasten the star system's population. Raleghia arrived at Charasia two days after his release, and successfully managed the transfer of the convoy goods and currency to the Imperial Treasury. The Empress, hearing of his success at this, allowed Raleghia to remain at liberty, but barred him from the Imperial Court. On August 15, 1792, she also deprived him of his position as Captain of the Gentleman Pensioners (he was replaced with Sir Antigonus Besteria, 1755-1815) and revoked all loans and grants which had been given to him during the preceding four years. The Empress's overall anger remained high, and for the next five years, Raleghia would be obliged to remain at Sherbornian Estate on Aquilionia, which the Empress had granted him in January 1791. His wife, now Lady Aurelia Raleghia, would not be released from the Fortress until December 15, 1792; she quickly joined him on Aquilionia and proved to be domineering. The fall of Raleghia from imperial favor inspired much happiness and rejoicing among the magnates and notables of the Imperial Court. The Earl of Estatius, who had long considered Raleghia to be one of his greatest rivals, was among the many who now gloated over the former favorite's fall.
  • August 15-November 3-
    • On August 15, 1792, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court officially departed from the Royal Palace of Horacia to commence the imperial progress of 1792. The previous year, upon her return from the Rasdallan Provinces, the Empress had announced her intention to progress to the Arachosian and Vectorian Provinces. These regions, once the homeland region for the Arachosian Empire, had been conquered during the early century by Aurelia's grandfather and father, Neuchrus I and Antigonus III. From Horacia, the Empress paid brief visits to Cinnamon, Pandy, Louza, Bartello, Theresa, Donald, John, Levinston, Zennethia, Nosauria, Zutagia, Zesia, Denver, and the systems of the lower Horacian Run (August 16-22, 1792). By August 23, the Imperial Court had reached the Western Herglite Trade Route, which spanned for nearly thirty-five thousand light years from Herglia Minor in the Central Core to Roger Major, intersecting with the Metallasian Highway in the heart of the Galactic Borderlands. It was by this means that the Imperial Court rapidly progressed into the Galactic Borderlands. Upon reaching Roger Major, the Court transferred to the Metallasian Highway, traveling another 35,000 light years to the Southern Galactic Borderlands.
    • The Empress reached Aprilla (August 25, 1792), touring the Streams of Hospitality and residing at Sudlarian Chests, which had been constructed by King Offa the Great of Marcia (r. 1157-96) in 1192-96. The residence possessed more than two thousand rooms and was the largest surviving of the residences of the Amelianian monarchs. From Aprilla, the Imperial Court visited Verthegesso (August 26-27) and then, on August 29, reached the outskirts of the Gate Solarian Cluster. The Cluster, which had once been one of the chief territories of the Arachosian Empire, and was among the most densely populated globular clusters in the Caladarian Galaxy, possessed many worlds of historical, strategic, and cultural importance. Empress Aurelia first visited Ompus Septimia (August 29-September 3, 1792), where, in 342, Tikhara and Sargon the Conqueror's mother, Jezebel, had been decisively defeated by Tudiya and Naradius during the Wars of the Arachosian Diadochi. The Imperial Laurasian Navy staged a simulation of the Battle of Ompus Septimia, with Arachosian, Vectorian, Kalbachan, and Rogerian conscripts donning the garb and armor of soldiers and sailors of the Arachosian Empire, and with actors playing the roles of the major commanders and diadochi.
    • The Empress was much amused by this spectacle, and by the efforts of the Governor of Ompus Septimia, Sir Tiridates Meresies (1745-1812), a Laurasian of Arachosian descent, to ensure the historicity of the simulation. She then toured the Palace of Gorias and the grounds of the Arachosian Treasure Vaults, which had once been one of the chief reserve repositories for the Arachso-Supreman Empire. Following her departure from Ompus Septimia, the Empress visited Telos IV (September 5); Arthost (September 6); Sargossia (the namesake world of Sargon the Conqueror, September 7-10); Akhania (September 12); and Lellwehr (September 14). The Empress's fifty-ninth birthday, which occurred during her visit to Sargossia, was celebrated with a parade of Arachosian Martial Warriors conducted by the municipal and planetary authorities of Sargossia; by a series of jousts and athletic tournaments in the Arachosian Halls of the Kill; and by a formal salute by the Arachosian Assembly of Legates, one of the largest non-Laurasian noble associations in the Empire. On September 17, the Imperial Court reached Kennedy, which had been colonized in 1118 by Amelianian King Cearl of Marcia (r. 1116-26). The Empress was impressed by the Kennedy Academy of the Arts, which had been established by the famed art collector and business patron Sir Robah Konnaugh of Meredith (1588-1669) in 1643. The Academy possessed more than 500,000 individual works of art, and had been bequeathed to the Imperial Ministry of Culture and Communications by Sir Konnaugh's widow, Rasria (1590-1695), upon her death in 1695.
    • The Empress was able to observe the works of such renowned artists as the Arachosian Gunthes (299-385), who had been the chief court artist for Sargon the Conqueror and then the first Arachso-Supreman Emperor, Tudiya; Yeseverenes (3rd century BH), known for his incorporation of natural elements into his works; Rembrandt (1606-69), the most renowned immigrant artist in the history of the Caladarian Galaxy (from Durthia); Phidias (178-238), a renowned Laurasian sculptor of the First Laurasian Space Age; Orphelius (7th century BH); and Tay-Nagh (796-876), who served as Chief of the Artistry and Architectural Corps under Genghis Khan and his son Ogedei. The Empress departed from Kennedy two days later and visited the Amelianian colonies of Jadaurine, Kylnatha, and Essie in quick succession (September 19-24, 1792). On September 26, Aurelia visited Sir Antiochus Harringtia at his private estate on Corupedia, Kelstonian House. By now, she had forgiven her godson for his publication and circulation of Orlando Furioso; he presented her with a beautifully bound copy of his complete translation of Ariosto's poems. From Corupedia (where the Empress had visited the Hives of Malar), the Imperial Court proceeded through the Sargossia Asteroid Belts (September 27); Dolmes (September 28-October 2); Vector Minor (October 3); Ashurna's Star (October 4); Mercia (October 6); Nagi-raka (October 7-8); and Francia (October 11). On October 14, 1792, the Imperial Court reached Vector Prime, once a throne world for the Arachosian Empire, Arachaso-Supreman Empire, and Amelianian Kingdom of Marcia. This had also been the capital world of the Vectorian Empire, which had been subdued by the Laurasian Empire in 1711 (during the early years of the reign of Aurelia's father, Antigonus III).
    • With a population of over 72 billion, Vector Prime was the 6th most populous system in the Galactic Borderlands. By 1792, the star system had been under the rule of the Empire for eight decades, and, regardless of certain nationalist rumblings, had become adjusted to the jurisdiction of the Imperial Laurasian Government. The Empress was received by the Arachosian Houses of the Nobility and by the star system's authorities in a grand ceremony at the Vectorian Bases, and from there proceeded slowly into the inner star system. Aurelia then visited Vishnu's Moon and the Asteroids of Plieser, before descending into the world and to Asad City. The marvels of Asad City, and of the world in general, astounded the Imperial Court. The Empress declared to Estatius and Oxfadia (who were both escorting her on this journey), that such a city "was the realm of lords of martial valor." During the next four days, the Imperial Court stayed at the Himmalian Palace, which had been constructed by Goria's son, Ashurbanipal (r. 419-29), in 424-27. It had served as the chief residence of the Vectorian Emperors prior to 1711. The Empress attended a session of the Vectorian Honorary Council of the Houses; visited the Tombs of Salaah, the Der-Elaam Mortuary, and the Courts of Sly Mirth; and observed a Vectorian competition of spears in the Arena of Sargon. When the Imperial Court departed on October 18, the Empress received a honorary salute from her Vectorian subjects in Asad City, who launched Arachosian flares to mark the Court's departure. From Vector Prime, the Empress visited Victoriae, where Gorias had annihilated the Torfian forces under King Hulaugh in 382. Her Majesty visited the ruins of the Martial War Memorial and expressed her respect for the man who had ended "such a grievous threat to the stability and security of the Caladarian Galaxy."
    • From Victoriae, the Empress visited Camarania (October 22-24), before reaching Arachosia Prime the following day. With a population of 125 billion, Arachosia Prime was the most populous and important system in the Galactic Borderlands, and the tenth-most populous in the Empire (after Laurasia Prime, Homidinia Major, Istantius, Kimania, Hunt Major, Venasia Prime, Samarkand, Goldaria, and Robert). The Empress was welcomed by a vast assemblage of her Arachosian, Amelianian, and Vectorian subjects at the Gateways to Arachosia Prime. She visited the Straits of Antrim, the Five Pillars of the Arachosian Gods, the Comets of Tidanus, and Arachosia Prime's moons (Sargon the Great, Shamashi-Aadad the Discoverer, Exa'lard, and the Stations of the World) before reaching the planet itself. Upon arriving in Archalay, the Empress and her Court proceeded through the Historical Districts. They visited the Crypt of the Arachosian Sovereigns (where the Empress led a mass in honor of the souls of Sargon the Conqueror and his successors), the Mausoleum of Sargon the Conqueror (where his bones had been restored following their rediscovery at Claa in 1718, to which they had been dumped by Timur the Devastator), the Monument of the Arachosian Achievements, the Gallery of the Great Warriors, and the Crypt of the Marcian Kings, before reaching the Marcian Royal Palace. Here, she stayed during the next six days, making renewed visits to the above-mentioned sites and also to the Great Arachosian Temple of the Gods (the third incarnation, which had been constructed by Vectorian Emperor Ashurna in 1618-22); the Arachosian Classical Academy of War (which had been established in 1625 and rechartered as a Imperial Naval Academy in 1721); and the University of Arachosia Prime (established by Demetrius II in 1748).
    • The Empress's visit to the University of Arachosia Prime was particularly memorable. She replied in High Laurasian, Arachosian, and Vectorian to the loyal speeches made by the diverse scholars and professionals of the University; watched the presentations of honorary degrees by the Chancellor of the University, the Arachosian Sir Isharanna Marhapia (1749-1827); and attended debates, sermons, lectures, dinners, and two tragedies of the renowned Arachosian lyricist and playwright Sennacherib Carib (483-556), whose life witnessed the fall of the successor-states to Sargon the Conqueror's Empire. The two tragedies in question were The Sad Fates and The Death of Gods, both of which dealt, in a symbolic form, with the contraction of the Arachosian State. On the final day of her visit to Arachosia Prime (November 1, 1792), she delivered a parting address to the University scholars and facility personally, stating that "If I had a thousand tongues instead of one, I would not be able to express my thanks." The Court now toured the Galactic Barrier, visiting the outpost worlds of Harna (November 1); Arapkhaka (November 2-4); Carchemish (November 6); Ur (November 8); and Uruk (November 9) before beginning its journey back to Laurasia Prime.
    • The Empress made a brief stop at Carina on November 11, 1792, where she stayed at Rycarian House for two days with two of her long-time servants and friends, Lord and Lady Norria. During her visit, she praised them for having been the parents of "such a victorious military commander who has subdued this Empire's enemies under our heel." In this, she was referring to their son, Lieutenant-General Sir Demetrius Norria (who would be promoted to the rank of Field-Marshal in April 1793 for his success in the War in Defense of the Constitution and in the First Laurasian-Spamalkan War). Lord Treasurer Burghley, who had been a good friend of the Norrias for many years, was also present during the visit, and whilst the Empress was having a conversation with the Norrias, his legs gave out beneath him. She quickly noticed this and ordered that a chair be brought for him to sit in. She then told Burghley and the others present that "If I have always undertaken the care of your bodies, shall I neglect your minds? Almitis forbid!" Following her departure from Carina on November 13, the Empress proceeded direct to Laurasia Prime, finally arriving at her capital world a day later.
  • October 5-
    • Whilst Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court were on progress to the Arachosian and Vectorian Provinces, the Laurasian Empire's forces, in conjunction with its Portugallian and Durthian allies, continued to make further gains in the Colonial Territories and in the Southern Durthian Duchies. Admiral Burroghia, who had gained much prominence throughout the Empire for his victories over Bazan and his disruption of Spamalkan commercial lanes, became involved, on August 16, 1792, in a dispute with the Imperial General Headquarters. Lord Howardis of Effinga, who had issued detailed instructions concerning naval operations in the Cuban and Puerto Rican Sectors, now became convinced that a direct offensive against Caraccas and Bogota would be in order, thereby entrenching allied forces in the heart of the Spamalkan Main. Burroghia however, who considered himself to be insufficiently "rewarded" for his efforts in the Colonial Territories, and was eager for military glory and recognition of his own, pushed plans for an offensive against the de la Plata and the Central Peruvian Colonies, determined to gain access to the wealthy Spamalkan mining colonies at Lima, Quito, Paramaribo, and Manchu Pizzu. Howardis, however, was backed by the Empress and the Privy Council, who did not wish to launch into rash expeditions which would overextend allied supply lines and give Philicus the opportunity to launch a major counteroffensive. Therefore, when Howardis ordered Burroghia to begin preparing for departure back to San Domingo, and to take command of the forces being assembled for the moves into the Spamalkan Main, the Admiral refused. This caused a major conflict in the chain of command, which ultimately resulted, on August 21, 1792, in Burroghia being deprived of his military command and ordered to retire to his estates on Vetta. Vice-Admiral Dracius now assumed direct command of the planned offensives. Into early September, 1792, however, Laurasian and Portugallian forces suffered some reverses.
    • On August 19, 1792, Spamalkan Admiral Don Pedro de Zubiaur, who had established his command headquarters at Leticia, two hundred light-years north of Bogota, repelled a Laurasian offensive against Arauca in the Battle of the Straits of Saba. Two days later, he reconquered La Romana and Manzaillo, sending raiding expeditions as far as Cartagena, Santiago, and the Baharis Straits. On August 25, 1792, de Zubiaur encountered and destroyed a Laurasian naval convoy in the Battle of Saint Maarten, securing the stronghold from Laurasian reconnaissance expeditions. By September 3, he had stormed Ciengfuegos and Villa Clara, even raiding as far as Cape St. Vincent and impounding a number of Laurasian shield generators. Admiral Dracius, however, with support from a auxiliary force commanded by Portugallian Commodore Don Luis de Santos (1740-1813), was able to blunt a Spamalkan move against Holguin (September 4-9, 1792). By September 14, Dracius had reconquered La Romana, Manzaillo, and Villa Clara, thrashing a superior Spamalkan naval detachment in the Battle of Haleguin. On September 17, Commodore Santos, operating from Portugallian bases on Caeta and Camilla in the Brazillian Colonies, stormed the Spamalkan intelligence post of Skeldon.
    • By September 22, when Dracius had destroyed a opposing Spamalkan force in the Battle of Pasto, he had also secured Bartica, Anna Regina, Parika, and Vreed en Hoop, effectively expelling Spamalkan units from the Lower Guyana Straits and into Eastern Colombiana. On September 25, Dracius and Santos, who had reunited at Aruba, smashed the Spamalkan 8th Colonial Fleet in the Battle of Riohacha. The following day, the Spamalkan colony of Cucuta, known for its agricultural goods, foodstuffs, and raw materials, surrendered to Admiral Dracius without a fight. Admiral Zubiaur now mustered his units from the garrisons of Bonaire, Saventa, and Ricon, and positioned them at Tunja, hoping to bar a further allied advance. A series of confrontations at Barranquila and Inrida (September 26-October 1, 1792), alerted Dracius to his Spamalkan counterpart's actions. He decided to place Commodore Santo's squadrons in reserve at Inrida, intending on launching the first move against Zubiaur. Dracius anticipated that, when Zubiaur came to the point of believing he had the advantage, he would release Santos into the conflict and cut off the Spamalkan supply lines. This was a gamble, but it would pay off.
    • Four days later (October 5, 1792), the opposing forces clashed in the Battle of Tunja. Zubiaur managed to repel initial Laurasian moves against his front-lines; as Dracius anticipated, Zubiaur's minefields and barricades proved to be a substantial barrier to the direct assaults of his destroyers and corvettes. The Laurasian Admiral began a feigned retreat; Zubiaur, discarding the advise of his commanders to remain at Tunja and to fortify the Amazonian Colonies, now moved out against Dracius. At this point, Santos swept behind his rear, penetrating the defenses with his mobile corvettes and frigates, and issuing a series of rapid landings on Tunja's exposed northern quadrant. Zubiaur, finding himself squashed between the opposing forces, was forced to flee; Tunja was in allied hands by the end of the day. The fall of Tunja left other Spamalkan garrisons exposed to a swift Laurasian move. By October 14, the Empire's military forces had seized Yopal, Vallepudar, Mocoa, Cali, Puerto Carreno, and San Andres, penetrating to a range of thirty-light years from Bogota. On October 16, Admiral Zubiaur launched a counteroffensive from Mitu, crushing a Laurasian convoy in the Battle of Sinju (October 17-19) and on October 24, driving into Barranquila, forcing the Laurasian garrison to flee in an ignominious fashion. Dracius, however, halted the Spamalkan moves in the Skirmish at Pereira (October 27-29, 1792), and on November 2, captured Florencia in a surprise assault, forcing Zubiaur to retreat back to Bogota. By November 10, 1792, Laurasian and Portugallian forces had occupied Bucaramanga, Ibague, and Neiva; they now held nearly two-fifths of the Spamalkan Colombiana.
  • November 24-
    • At the same time of these events in the Colonial Territories, matters had begun to shift in Franconia. By early August 1792, the momentum of the Franconian League, and of its chief military commander, the Duke of Merceour, had come to a halt. The Imperial General Headquarters of the Laurasian Empire, which now found that it had greater flexibility in military deployments due to the end of the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War and the War in Defense of the Constitution, began, from July 29, to divert greater reinforcements to the Franconian theater of conflict. By August 14, 1792, Lieutenant-General Norria was once again in command of Laurasian forces in Franconia, having arrived at Orleans five days earlier. He had brought with him the 68th Imperial Fleet; the 39th, 42nd, 45th, and 59th Imperial Armies; and detachments from the 65th and 66th Imperial Fleets in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. All total, this amounted to the addition of nearly four thousand military warships and some 2.9 million personnel of the Imperial Laurasian Army to the allied strength in Franconia. The renewed Laurasian deployments now began to slowly, but surely, shift the course of affairs in Franconia. Already on August 5, 1792, King Hensios IV had obtained a decisive victory over Spamalkan Admiral Aguila and the Duke of Merceour in the Battle of Rochefort, keeping that important arsenal and base of the Royal Franconian Navy in his possession. He then repelled a series of Spamalkan-League offensives against Poitou, Orleans, Passchendale, Anglouemme, and Royan (August 6-15, 1792). On August 17, General Norria destroyed a force under the Marquis de Sable in the Battle of Hazezbrouck, driving League units from Chatellerault, Santes, and Niort.
    • By August 22, Norria had also stormed Mayenne, Mirecourt, Manche, and Chalons, pushing League units back from Orleans. Although Merceour and Sable repelled a Laurasian offensive against Caen (August 24-29, 1792), and captured a Laurasian transport group at Armentieres (September 5, 1792), they were nevertheless unable to halt the general thrust of the allied offensives. Norria moved swiftly to Montmrail, which was placed under siege by allied forces from September 8, 1792. Despite fierce resistance, the stronghold fell ten days later. On September 19, Norria captured Marc; on that same day, Prince Maurice of Nassau and General Pellhamia destroyed a Spamalkan-League force under the Duke of Parma in the Battle of Gravelines, seizing that important naval base from the Holy Spamalkan Empire. By the end of the month, by which time Douai and Rennes had both been cleared of League-Spamalkan units, Nassau had conquered the Spamalkan garrisons of Lannoy, Dahlen, Coevorden, and Kallo, penetrating to the very outskirts of Brussels, Luxembourg, and Nimburg. On October 8, 1792, Merceour suffered yet another defeat in the Battle of Valenciennes, with the King of Franconia decisively terminating the League threat to that stronghold. King Hensios then moved to Noyon, which had thus far defied his authority. Noyon was placed under siege from October 14, 1792.
    • Although General de Aguila managed to repel the first Franconian move into the star system (October 15-17) and even drove Franconian units from Gontier (October 18-24), humiliating the Prince of Conti, he was ultimately unable to prevent Noyon's fall to King Hensios on October 29, 1792. Two days later, Prince Maurice of Nassau defeated Parma yet again in the Battle of Steenwijk, securing that stronghold for the United Durthian States. On November 4, 1792, General Norria crushed Sable in the Battle of Soissons, forcing him to evacuate Reins. He recovered Gontier on November 9, and then combined with the Duke of Montpensier to mount an offensive against Laval and Evereux (November 11-15, 1792), which ultimately ended with a final allied victory in the Battle of Lievin, and the conquest of both strongholds. On November 17, 1792, the 34th anniversary of Laurasian Empress Aurelia's reign, Norria stormed Verdun, defeating del Aguila and Coloma through a series of decisive mobile strikes and feints. By this point, Emperor Philicus, who was alarmed by the allied advances, had ordered Admiral Zubiaur (who had himself lost out to Dracius and Portugallian Commodore Santos in the Colombiana Colonies), to Biscay. There, a Laurasian expedition under the Earl of Cumbria was attempting to resupply Bordeaux, which still remained in danger of falling to League units in Aquitaine and Northern Navarre.
    • Zubiaur, managing to parry Dracius's pursuit units at Cape St. Vincent and Bermuda, arrived at Biscay on November 22, 1792. Three days later, he launched a surprise offensive against Cumbria's formations. The ensuing Battle of Biscay resulted in a victory for the Holy Spamalkan Empire, with Cumbria's flagship, the IMS Victoriana, being boarded by Spamalkan troops after its defenses were disabled. Cumbria was forced to flee on a courier, and nearly a third of his warships were destroyed or captured. As a result of this battle, Bordeaux fell to the Duke of Nantes on November 28, 1792, and allied units were expelled from Burlada and Tarfalla, posing a brief threat to Hensios's temporary capital at Pamplona. On December 4, however, Norria and Admiral Frosbisherius defeated Zubiaur in the Battle of the Count, thereby stalling the Spamalkan advances. Although Del Agila stormed Lorient (December 9, 1792), he was blunted by General Melinia in the Battle of Ambrieres (December 14), retaining the allied hold over Stephani and Julianne. By the end of December 1792, allied forces had definitively secured Poitiers, Orleans, and Lower Parri from League-Spamalkan offensives, and were preparing for a renewed move into Brittany, Normandy, and the Pale of Calais. This period also witnessed a severe blow for Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus and his ambitions to reconquer the Durthian Duchies. Following his humiliating defeat to Prince Maurice of Nassau in the Battle of Steenwijk, the Duke of Parma entered a rapid, and alarming decline in health.
    • Throughout the early weeks of November 1792, the Duke complained of nausea, fatigue, physical weakness, and chronic bowel movements. By November 18, 1792, his condition had deteriorated to the extent that Emperor Philicus, who still held some regard for Parma's abilities, and regarded him as the only one capable of halting future Durthian offensives, ordered for Parma to be placed under medical treatment at Arras. Parma, who had throughout the year petitioned constantly to be retired to return to his dukedom and to resign from his position as Governor-General of the Durthian Duchies, was subjected to intensive treatments by Spamalkan and Flemish physicians. In spite of these efforts, however, his decline continued. On November 26, the Duke fell into a coma from which he never emerged. Six days later, on December 3, 1792, he died at the age of only forty-seven. Parma's death came as a severe blow to Spamalkan military plans and hopes in the Durthian Duchies. Until shortly before his final decline, Parma had been planning for a series of counteroffensives to recover Gravelines, Maastricht, Breda, Bergen op Zoom, Groningen, Devanter, and other strongholds which had fallen into the hands of Prince Maurice and his Laurasian allies during the preceding four years. His death, however, brought an abrupt end to this scheme. Emperor Philicus received word of his chief military commander's death with much lamentations, declaring that his father and great-grandparents would be appalled to see as to where the Spamalkan dominions had descended, and that Parma, such a loyal servant, had been stricken down by the unfortunate chances of fate.
    • The reaction of the allies to the death of their chief enemy, however, was very different. Prince Maurice of Nassau, in a speech to the States-General on December 7, declared that Parma's death relieved the United Durthian States of a great challenge, and that they would now push on forward, victoriously, until all Spamalkan units had been expelled from Durthian territory. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, still holding memories of how Parma had been involved with the activities of the Spamalkan Armada back in 1788, and how he had been one of the chief supporters of conspiracy against her throne, reacted with some relief when learning of his death. The Empress told Lord Treasurer Burghley that Parma's death now relieved her Empire and allies of such a great adversary, and that the Spamalkans would not be able to present a unified front. Parma was buried on Castro on December 14; two days later, Emperor Philicus appointed the Pruthian General Ernest von Mansfield, who had been one of Parma's loyal subordinates, as the new Governor-General of the Durthian Duchies and as commander-in-chief of Spamalkan forces in that theater. Mansfield would serve in the position for nearly two years.
  • December 17-
    • By December 1792, the political situation in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth had fallen further into shambles. From the time of their assumption of power in August 1792, the magnates of the Targowica Confederation had proven themselves to be arrogant, incompetent, and divided among themselves. Potockia and Branickia in particular, who had differing views about what course the Commonwealth should take, and who had long been rivals for political power and influence, argued vehemently. Potockia, who believed that the Constitution of 1791 was too "radical" and had pushed things too far, nevertheless still believed that a reform of the Dejanican Diet was essential to strengthen the Commonwealth against its foreign enemies. He sought to abolish the liberum veto; to reform the procedures of Diet legislation, election, and discipline; and to allow the Diet greater authority over commercial and financial concerns. Potockia also sought to confirm the privileges granted to the Commonwealth's municipalities and planetary governments the previous year, and to allow the King greater say in the introduction and enforcement of laws. Branickia, on the other hand, wished for an absolute restoration of the Commonwealth's pre-1791 constitutional state. He sought to confirm all of the Cardinal Laws; to preserve the liberum veto and the right to confederation against all intrusions; and to eliminate the privileges granted to commoners and the local governments. Branickia also sought reappointment to his old position as Grand Hetman of the Commonwealth, and to gain a firm assurance from the Imperial Laurasian Government for the Commonwealth's ancient constitutional form and its territorial integrity.
    • The Empress of Laurasia, however, their erstwhile ally, was not so willing. By November 1792, the Commonwealth had experienced outbursts of civil unrest on Brest, Praga, Bialystok, Chochim, Dejanica Major, Thorn, Wronclaw, Vilno, Kaunas, Lublin, and Katowice, directed against both the Targowica Confederation and against the Laurasian Empire's occupying forces. The Diet, on its part, remained in abeyance, and Branickia alienated the planetary elites through exacting traditional levies and grants of homage from them. Empress Aurelia, who realized that the Targowica Confederation was not the means to control Dejanica (for she viewed excessive anarchy as too-damaging to Laurasia's position and influence), now came to the conclusion that a second partition was necessary to address the situation. On November 18, 1792, she told Lord Treasurer Burghley that "this Commonwealth, a cancerous infestation in extra-galactic civilization, needs to be pared down to size so that it will not press on the other powers." She also found foreign affairs to her favor. By then, Pruthia and Austarlia had suffered numerous defeats against Haxonia and Vendragia.
    • On September 20, 1792, a Vendragian force under the Duke of Cumberland (1743-1805; Jarac Deshimshire, 1st Duke of Cumberland) destroyed a Pruthian-Austarlian force under the Duke of Brunswick in the Battle of Valmy. By the following month, Haxonian forces under the command of General Martini Pilizzano (1743-1806) had stormed Chioia, Lido, and Treviso, repelling Austarlian units from the Venetian Provinces and into Dalmatia. By November 6, the Pruthian systems of Mainz, Frankfurt, and Jemappes had fallen to superior Vendragian units, who were now pressing against Cleves, Gulderland, and the Pruthian Westphalian Colonies. Pruthian Emperor A'rua III, who was fully engaged in the war therefore, was thus willing to make a compromise with the Empress of Laurasia. He now abandoned all obligations towards Dejanica, formally withdrawing from the Treaty of Warsaw (November 21, 1792). Five days later, the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acting on Empress Aurelia's instructions, sent an communique to its Pruthian counterpart. In this communique, the Imperial Laurasian Government proposed for a conference in Christiania, Laurasia Prime, in order to conclude a treaty for a "second partition of the territories of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth."
    • The Empress herself then sent a further communique, addressed directly to A'rua III, assuring him that Pruthia would be able to acquire Greater Dejanica, the remainder of Dejanican Pomerania, Torun, and Danzig. A'rua responded positively to this, and on December 5, 1792, agreed to a diplomatic conference between the two governments over Dejanica. On December 17, 1792, delegations from the Imperial Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Governments convened at the Diplomatic Palace in Christiania, in order to craft the second treaty of partition. The Empress of Laurasia was represented by Secretary Cecilis, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, Lord Howardis of Effinga, Sir Willanius Caranius (1754-1820), Lieutenant-General Lord Surovius of Rymnik (who had experienced poor health throughout much of the year and had therefore been unable to serve in either Franconia or the Colonial Territories), and the ailing Vice-Chamberlain, Sir Tacitus Knollysis of Azatha II. The Emperor of Pruthia was represented by the Pruthian Ambassador Count Rohann von Versgrift (1750-1814); the Pruthian Secretary of Finance, Count Johann Christoph von Wollner (1758-1831); Count Carl von Halter of Darmstardt (1735-1801); and Pruthian Field-Marshal Hermann von Siegreven (1757-1820). Negotiations would continue, in absolute secrecy, for more than a month, before the final treaty would be concluded. As the year 1792 concluded, the Laurasian Empire was at peace with Marasharita; had made further gains against the Holy Spamalkan Empire; and was on the verge of expanding further at the expense of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

1793

  • January 1-
    • 1793, the 93rd year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire's military and political position considerably strengthened, as compared to a year earlier. The conclusion of the Treaty of Jassy, which had terminated the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War, had resulted in the Empire acquiring the Marasharite Ochanian and Gateway Provinces (that is, all of the remaining Marasharite territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud). More than 700,000 star systems with a population of over two trillion inhabitants had now come under the governance of the Imperial Laurasian Government. The Empire now shared a 40,000-light year boundary with the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth (including its protectorate, the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia), and controlled the Peldavian Gateways, Ochanian Wormhole, and the Trans-Void Highway, thereby allowing for Laurasian influence to penetrate more into the Great Amulak Spiral then it ever had before. The Marasharites had also conferred final recognition of the annexation of the Haynsian Despotate, which greatly relieved the Empress.
    • Empress Aurelia, whose jurisdiction now extended over sixty-five million star systems throughout the Caladarian Galaxy, Angelina Spiral, and Great Tesmanian Cloud, had been confirmed, without a doubt, as the most powerful sovereign of extra-galactic civilization. The Laurasian Empire was now the largest, most populous, and most extensive of any of the galactic powers. Other concerns, however, continued to hold the attention of the Empress and of the Imperial Privy Council. The War in Defense of the Constitution, which had lasted for only a little more than two months, had resulted in the consolidation of Laurasian influence over political and economic affairs in Dejanica; effectively dismantled the Constitution of May 3, 1791; and left the Commonwealth fully exposed to the predations of its greedy, more powerful neighbors. Indeed, the conference between the delegations of the Imperial Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Governments, concerning a second partition of the Commonwealth's territories between the two powers, was still ongoing at the commencement of the new year.
    • As regards to the First Spamalkan War, Laurasian forces, in conjunction with those of the Empire's allies Franconia, Durthia, and Portugallia, had made further gains against the Holy Spamalkan Empire during the preceding year. The Spamalkan Spice Colonies and the Colombiana Territories were largely under the control of allied forces. Lieutenant-General Sir Demetrius Norria, in command of the Laurasian forces in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, had gradually begun turning the tide of the military conflict in favor of King Hensios IV and the Royal Franconian Government. Although the Franconian League and its Spamalkan allies continued to dominate Brittany, Normandy, and the Pale of Calais, they no longer posed a serious threat to Poitiers and Orleans, with the King of Franconia now obtaining more and more support from his subjects. Many now considered the Franconian League to be threatening to the Kingdom's stability and prosperity. In Durthia, Prince Maurice of Nassau had secured Durthian supply lines and penetrated deep into the Southern Durthian Duchies, with his forces entrenched across much of Brabant and Flanders. The death of the Duke of Parma the previous month had removed Nassau's most formidable and effective enemy. As a result, this year would see Nassau's Durthian forces, in conjunction with its Laurasian allies, make further progress against the Holy Spamalkan Empire's garrisons and forces in the Southern Durthian Duchies. In her New Year's proclamation (January 1, 1793), Empress Aurelia declared that she would "seek to maintain, with the help of the Lord Almitis, this Empire's rightful dominion over its new found conquests and to continue to defeat the efforts of our mortal enemies to undermine our prosperity and stability."
  • January 23-
    • On January 23, 1793, after over a month of negotiations, the Treaty of Christiania was signed by the delegations of the Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Empires. This treaty, which by the agreement of the two governments was to remain secret until its official release, now constituted what became known as the Second Partition of Dejanica. Twenty-one years after the two powers had agreed on the first partition of the Commonwealth, they once again agreed to divide Dejanican territories between them. In the preamble to the Treaty, it was declared that the "political instability in the Commonwealth's territories, and the threat posed by such instability to the other powers of extra-galactic civilization, requires for a solution which will satisfy all and will serve to restrain the forces of rebellion and dissent." Consequently, the Treaty stated, it was necessary for the Commonwealth's outlying territories to be disposed of, so as to "reduce the tensions ongoing against the Royal Dejanican Government and to relieve it of territories which pose a serious financial, military, and diplomatic burden." By the terms of this agreement, the Autocratic Pruthian Empire acquired, by far, the lesser portion of territory and population once again.
    • However, these territories were of great strategic importance to Pruthian Emperor A'rua III and would serve to consolidate the Autocratic Pruthian Empire's rule over Ducal Pruthia, Pomerania, and the former territories of Dejanican Pruthia. Pruthia therefore now received the star systems of Danzig and Torun, where it had enjoyed free-trade and transit privileges for two decades; Greater Dejanica, including the Voivodeships of Gniezno, Poznan, Sieradz, Kalisz, Plock, Brezc Kujwaski, Inowroclaw, Rawa, and the Dobryzn Colonies; and parts of Lesser Dejanica, including Bedzin, Blahia, and Bochinia (from the Krakow Voivodeship), as well as Mlawa, Grozec, and Liw (from the Masovian Voivodeship). All total, the Autocratic Pruthian Empire acquired 58,000 star systems with a population of nearly two hundred billion inhabitants. The Laurasian Empire, on its part, was now to receive the majority of the Ukrainian and Belaranian Provinces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. To it fell the territories belonging to the Voivodeships of Kiev, Braclaw, Podolia, and Minsk, as well as Braslau, Utena, Smarhon, Kreva, and Vyzuonos (Vilinus Voivodeship); Slutsk and Mir (Nowogrodek Voivodeship); Pinsk, Wolcyzn, and Dubroyvistya (Brest Litovsk Voivodeship); and Volymdr (Volhynian Voivodeship).
    • Among the systems, disputed in the previous year during the War in Defense of the Constitution, to come into the possession of the Laurasian Empire were Brovary, Borospil, Fastiv, Bila Tserevka, Kaniev, Drabiev, Smila, Talne, Uman, Zhaskiv, Kolotchen, Maltyn, Ingalina, and Birzai, among others. All total, Laurasia acquired more than 150,000 star systems with a population of over 350 billion. As a result of the Treaty of Christiania, and of the subsequent Grodno Diet (which would occur later on in this year), Empress Aurelia had extended her authority over three-fourths of the Great Tesmanian Cloud. After November 1793, only the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia, Lithuania, and Tesmanian Dejanica would remain outside of the Empire's jurisdiction, confined to the northeastern portions of the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Empress herself, when she was informed by Lord Treasurer Burghley of the Treaty's successful conclusion, declared with glee that it would only be a matter of time before the Commonwealth succumbed completely to the power and influence of its neighboring states. As per the agreement, however, the Treaty of Partition was not yet publicly revealed, with the Empress, in February and March 1793, issuing a series of instructions to Field-Marshal Lord Greysius's forces in the Commonwealth to retire from the star systems allocated to Pruthia, and to make preparations for the formal occupation of the Tesmanian Provinces of Belarania and Ukraine by the Empire. A'rua III, on his part, stationed units at Konigsberg, Elbing, Balbork, Bromberg, Ortelsburg, Johannesburg, Lyck, and Marienburg in order to prepare for a formal move into the Commonwealth's territories. In the meantime, events continued to proceed with the First Spamalkan War and with the Imperial Court.
  • February 7-
    • Whilst the Second Partition of Dejanica was ongoing, allied forces in Franconia, the Durthian States, and the Colonial Territories continued to make gains against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Emperor Philicus, who found that many of his most valuable colonial possessions were now in the hands of the Laurasians and Portugallians, and who had been deprived of his most talented military commander (in the form of the Duke of Parma), experienced further misfortune as allied forces continued to advance. On January 3, 1793, General Norria held a strategy conference with the Dukes of Montpensier and Nice at Gournay, and it was decided that a renewed push would be made against Caen, Alencon, and Argentan, all of which had served as major supply bases for the Franconian League. King Hensios was particularly interested in recovering Alencon, which had once been the hereditary dukedom of his predecessor, King Hensios III. From these strongholds, allied forces were to advance against Liseux, Cherbourg, and Bayreux, with the intention of imposing pressure on the supply lines of Caen and of forcing the Duke of Merceour to strain his military resources.
    • Four days later after this conference, Montpensier, with the 7th Royal Franconian Army and detachments from the 45th and 59th Imperial Laurasian Armies, launched a massive assault against the League stronghold of Tourlaville. Despite the efforts of the Marquis de Sable and General del Aguila, Tourlaville fell on January 10, 1793. By January 14, Montpensier had stormed the Normandian systems of Avranches, St. Lo, and Herouville, inflicting severe damage upon Franconian communication and supply lines. On January 15, General Norria, who had repelled another series of League-Spamalkan offensives against Boulougone, Orleans, and Douai, defeated a Spamalkan force under General del Aguila's subordinate, the mercenary-General Johann von Frust of Pruthia (1738-1802), in the Battle of Ouistreham. Liseux, which found itself under serious threat from the combined forces of Norria and Montpensier, capitulated on January 19, 1793. The following day, Franjak de Lelond, 2nd Duke of Nice (1736-1805), drove Spamalkan troops from Dieppe and Vernon, securing the Franconian control of Louviers, Le Havre, and St. Etienne. On January 24, 1793, the Battle of Mont Aignan resulted in a decisive victory for Nice and Montpensier; Spamalkan General del Aguila lost nearly 50,000 troopers when he attempted to breach Franconian defensive positions.
    • By January 27, Fecamp and Sotteville had both been secured by Franconian-Laurasian troops, thereby forcing the Duke of Merceour to strengthen the garrisons of Rouen, Caen, and Dunkirk. On January 29, Prince Maurice of Nassau, who had repelled Spamalkan counteroffensives against Mons, Goes, and Zutphen (December 1792-January 1793), destroyed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Roermond. He then secured the defenses of Venlo (January 31) and two days later captured the Spamalkan trade entrepot of Schoonhoven, thereby opening a communication line from Gravelines to Stephani, Jersey, and Guernsey. This allowed for him to send reinforcements to King Hensios and to harry Spamalkan naval forces operating in the vicinity of Lilles, Calais, and Antwerp. On February 6, General Norria stormed the League outpost of Quevilly, thereby forcing League units to terminate their operations against the Channel Provinces. The following day (February 7, 1793), the Marquis de Sable and Admiral Coloma, attempting to halt the momentum of the allied forces, launched a sudden counteroffensive against Royan and Passchedale. Sable managed to land nearly 50,000 troops on the northern atmosphere of Royan, while Coloma blockaded the outskirts of that star system and sent raiding expeditions against Passchedale.
    • General Norria and the Prince de Conti, who had captured Flers two days earlier, advanced swiftly from that stronghold to Royan. Surprising de Sable and Coloma, Norria quickly drove Spamalkan troops from Northern Royan and halted any further attempted landings by Sable in the star system. At the same time, the Prince de Conti launched a series of offensive thrusts which disoriented Admiral Coloma's fighter corps and forced him to retreat from Royan in rapid order. The Battle of Royan therefore ended in a decisive victory for the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia. Norria and Prince de Conti subsequently secured the League garrisons of Abbeville (February 9-12); Beauvais (February 14); Laon (February 18); and Soissons (February 22), thereby securing Compeigne and Amiens from League forces and driving them in the direction of Dunkirk and Calais. On February 24, 1793, Norria and Admiral Frosbisherius secured a major victory in the Battle of Creil, allowing for supply lines to open for a potential siege of Dunkirk. By the end of February 1793, most of Lower Normandy and Picardy were in the hands of the allied forces.
    • At the same time all of this was ongoing, Admiral Dracius and Portugallian Commodore Santos continued their advance towards Bogota. On January 5, 1793, the Battle of Soledad resulted in a victory for Dracius over Spamalkan Admiral Zubiaur, who had once again returned from action in Franconia. Two days later, he and Commodore Santos stormed Neiva and Villavicencio, which were two of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's chief producers of industrial equipment and electronics. Although Zubiaur managed to storm a Portugallian intelligence outpost at Pacora (January 11, 1793) and briefly subdued the Laurasian garrison of Yopal (January 13), he was ultimately defeated in the Battle of Bonaire (January 17, 1793), in which Dracius's warships devastated the Spamalkan Command Headquarters. By January 23, Dracius had stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Saventa and Ricon, terminating any threat to Inrida and forcing Admiral Zubiaur to retreat towards Bello and Monteira.
    • On January 28, 1793, Commodore Santos distinguished himself when he launched a daring raid upon the Spamalkan shipyards of Tocumen, capturing more than forty Spamalkan warship models and smashing the Shipyard Construction Facilities before retreating. For this, he would be promoted to the rank of Vice-Admiral in the Portugallian Navy by King Antonio I on February 25, 1793. On January 30, Dracius conquered Soacha, thereby placing his forces at the junction of the Bogota-Andes Transit Highway. Bogota itself was now experiencing numerous raids from allied forces, and on February 9, 1793, a Laurasian-Portugallian corps seized Mito and Leticia, giving them a vantage point from which to launch an intelligence operation into Bogota's outskirts. Zubiaur's counteroffensives against Arauca, Tunja, Manziales, and Florencia (February 11-19, 1793), brought him nothing, and on February 24, Dracius's forces finally reached the outskirts of Bogota. After further confrontations with Spamalkan units at Armenia and San Migueltio (February 25-26, 1793), which ended in victories for the Laurasians, the Admiral proceeded to installing barricades around the Bogota star system, intent on using the strategy of circumvallation to defeat the garrison. By the end of February 1793, Bogota was completely isolated by the forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Portugallia. The siege would continue for over a month.
  • March 5-
    • By March 1793, the influence of the Earl of Estatius, who had remained at the Imperial Court and continued to curry favor with Empress Aurelia, had grown further. It had grown, at least in the sense that the Earl now had his own coterie of friends and supporters at the Imperial Court, and was able to keep himself informed of everything which transpired among the Court's elites. Estatius's intelligence service, which he maintained with the assistance of Sir Antoninus Bagonius, provided him sensitive information concerning potential conspiracies against the Imperial Laurasian Government, both within the Empire and overseas, and enabled him to keep track of the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs's diplomatic transactions. In his effort to ingratiate himself further with the Empress, Estatius shared with her all information that he acquired. As a result, Aurelia had finally come to consider Estatius, who was now twenty-seven years old, as being serious enough to merit political office. On March 5, 1793, she formally appointed the Earl to the Imperial Privy Council and named him as Minister of Regional and Provincial Administration, thereby giving him oversight over the Empire's local administrative divisions. Estatius also became Vice-Captain of the Gentleman Pensioners and a honorary member of the Valedictorian Guards. The Earl was delighted at these appointments, which would now allow for him to play the role of statesman. He did it diligently, and proved to be as effective a member of the Council as his stepfather, Leicesterius, had been. He attended every Council meeting; worked with his peers on matters of importance; and provided advice at intervals to the Empress and to Lord Treasurer Burghley.
    • One of the Earl's colleagues wrote that "His Lordship has become a new man, forsaking all of his former youthful tricks, carrying himself with much gravity, and making himself known for his speeches and judgment." As the youngest member of the Privy Council, Estatius stood out, representing the interests and the goals of the younger generation. He sought to promote more vigorous military campaigns against the Holy Spamalkan Empire and to orchestrate further interventions in the affairs of Dejanica. This brought him into conflict with his former guardian, Burghley, who was now beginning to explore avenues of peace with the Ho,ySpamalkan Government, but raised his own popularity among the young courtiers and with the Empress's subjects on Laurasia Prime. Estatius, however, soon discovered that not everything would go his way. On February 4, 1793, Sir Gilbertius Geradia (1723-93), Chief Justice of the Imperial Court of the Chancery (since 1781), Master of the Imperial Rolls, and Attorney-General of the Empire (since 1769), died at the age of sixty-nine. Geradia, who had graduated from the University of the Empire Law School as valedictorian of his class in 1742, and had earned his PhD in Jurisprudence four years afterwards, had served with the Christiania Inns from 1746 to 1759, gaining recognition for his vigor in casework, before becoming Vice Procurator-General in 1759, within a week of Empress Aurelia's coronation. Ten years later, he had been named Attorney-General. During his twenty-four years at the post, Geradia cooperated with Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod Amnystas Parrius in reformation of the ecclesiastical education system; sat on the investigative commissions which dealt with the Malarian Rebellion, Ridolfius Plot, and Pugachevia Rebellion; and presided over the hearing of Sir Willanius Daviadia (1787), when he was implicated in the debacle surrounding the execution of ex-Scottrian Queen Mariana. Knighted in 1779, Geradia had been made Chief Justice of the Chancery and Master of the Imperial Rolls two years later, becoming known for his calm presiding style and his consideration of all cases before him.
    • Geradia's death inflicted another blow on Empress Aurelia, who once again had to come to grips with the death of a long-serving adviser. Estatius, who now saw his chance to extend his patronage, urged the Empress to appoint Sir Franconius Bagonius to the Attorney-Generalship. Aurelia, however, considered Bagonius to be inexperienced and too young, refusing to appoint him to the position. On March 18, the Empress erupted in fury when Estatius mentioned Bagonius and once again espoused his qualifications for the office. Following this outburst, she barred Bagonius from her presence and asserted once again that he was not "worthy enough to hold the position." Six days later, however, the Empress appointed Sir Thomasius Egertonia (1740-1817), future Procurator-General of the Empire, to the positions of Chief Justice of the Imperial Court of Chancery and Master of the Rolls. Egertonia, who had graduated from the University of Darcia Law School in 1762, and had gained prominence for himself due to his private litigation for magnates of the Imperial Court, had joined the Christiania Inns in 1779, rising to become Master of the Bench six years later. He pleaded cases before the Chancery, Common Pleas, and Requests, and in 1787, was commended by the Empress for a legal oration delivered at the Senatorial Palace. Egertonia became Solicitor General in 1789, and in this position, gained much respect from Lord Treasurer Burghley and from others among the Empress's most senior advisers. Nevertheless, his appointment angered Estatius. During the succeeding months, Estatius would do all in his power to convince the Empress to appoint Bagonius to one of the positions, but she remained insistent. In April 1793, Estatius would tell Bagonius that "Her Majesty bade me to go to bed, as if a child, when I once again raised the subject of your appointment, but I shall continue until you have a position which is rightfully yours."
  • March 22-
    • On March 22, 1793, after several weeks of siege, Laurasian Vice-Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius and Portugallian Commodore Don Luis de Santos launched a final offensive against the defenses of the Bogota star system. The Bogota garrison, which had been isolated from its supplies, and which had come under severe pressure due to constant bombardment and artillery fire from Laurasian and Portugallian warships, proved to be unable to resist the allied forces. Within five hours, the Bogota Orbital Outposts had been penetrated, and allied troops commenced their transport to the planetary surface below. A series of confrontations ensued in the cities of Cajica, Chia, Cota, Soacha, Tabjo, and El Rosal which continued through March 26, but by that date, allied troops had reached the Central Citadel of Bogota, which served as the garrison and governmental headquarters of the star system. The Spamalkan Commander of the Garrison of Bogota, General Don Marquez Gabriel (1729-93), was killed in the final confrontation, as allied troops penetrated the inner defenses of the Citadel. By midday on March 27, 1793, the star system was finally fully secured by the forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Portugallia.
    • The fall of Bogota entrenched the allied forces in the middle of the Spamalkan Colombiana, inflicted serious damage upon Emperor Philicus's international reputation and dignity, and allowed for Dracius to advance southwards into the Peruvian Colonies. On March 29, the Spamalkan outposts of Funza, Tabio, and Masquera, located in the Amazonian Straits, surrendered to Admiral Dracius; two days later, he defeated Admiral Zubiaur in the Battle of Esmrealdas, thereby penetrating from the Colombian Defiles into the Ecaudorian Sector. On April 4, 1793, the Spamalkan garrison of Manabi was stormed by Laurasian detachments; five days later, Laurasian troops reached Santa Elena, which was located 55,000 light years from the Galactic Void, and stormed the stronghold within hours. By this point, Laurasian forces have penetrated farther from the Caladarian Galaxy than ever before, far surpassing General Sir Suris Vamaus's penetration to Rzalah in 1734. On April 8, Portugallian units captured the Spamalkan outposts of Napo and Orellana, and on April 11, Puyo. By April 14, 1793, Dracius had defeated Zubiaur again in the Battle of Machala, and had stormed the Spamalkan colonies of Riobamba, Tulcan, and Arogues.
  • April 15-
    • Throughout March 1793, King Hensios IV and Laurasian Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria (promoted to that rank in April 1793), had continued to push into Brittany and Upper Normandy against the forces of the Franconian League and Holy Spamalkan Empire. On March 2, 1793, Norria defeated a Spamalkan force under General del Aguila in the Battle of Auray. By March 7, he had stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Morlaix, Concarneau, and Vitre, posing a serious threat to the defenses of St. Malo. St. Briec fell to Norria and the Prince de Conti on March 11; two days later, they repelled a League counteroffensive from Bordeaux in the Battle of the Lower Anjou. On March 19, Rennes surrendered after a surprise assault by the Duke of Montpensier; two days later, Sable and del Aguila were defeated in the Battle of Finistere, preventing Spamalkan naval expeditions from providing reinforcements by means of the Upper Galactic Void. On March 25, 1793, Vannes came under siege from allied forces; its fall on April 1 brought them closer to Rennes and Quimper. Quimper itself fell two days later, and by April 6, Morbihan was being seriously threatened by Norria and Frosbisherius (who retained allied control over Biscay and Quiebron).
    • At the same time, Hensios IV repelled a League offensive against St. Germain (March 11-18, 1793) and captured Strasbourg (March 24), thereby ending any enemy threat to the Metzian Lordships. On April 6, 1793, Norria and the King of Franconia instigated a siege of Blaye, which was a major League naval base and operations headquarters in Brittany. The garrison of Blaye was commanded by Governor Jean-Paul d'Aubterre (1750-1813), who was one of the King's most ardent opponents. Likewise, Laurasian naval forces at Blaye were commanded by Rear-Admiral Sir Menelaus Hougtonia (1739-1806), and the Franconian units by Marshal Jacques d'Montainon (1747-93). Bec d'Ambes was secured by the allied forces within the first day of the siege, but Blaye's defenses proved to be resilient. By April 9, Admiral Coloma and General Joanes de Villavicosa (1737-1803) had moved from Craon and Brest, determined to end the siege and to reinforce the garrison of Blaye. In defiance of the expectations of both the Imperial and Franconian General Headquarters, Coloma and Villavicosa's counteroffensive proved to be successful.
    • Admiral Coloma launched a surprise attack against Hougtonia's force at the Blaye Outskirts (April 15, 1793). Utilizing a pincer maneuver, he cut off Hougtonia's starfighter squadrons and pushed them to the center of his force, compressing the chief Laurasian offensive warships into the central line. Admiral Hougtonia now launched a counteroffensive with his frigates and corvettes, attempting to break out to Blaye and to stretch the Spamalkan naval lines. This ploy failed, however, and the Laurasian armada, which was now reduced to effective impotence as a result of the Spamalkan maneuvers, experienced a catastrophic defeat. By the end of the day, Spamalkan warships had broken through the Laurasian fortifications at the Blaye Outskirts and had provided direct provisions to the planetary garrison, enabling them to escape the effects of the siege. On April 19, Admiral Hougtonia launched a series of attacks against Spamalkan convoys, attempting to strain the Spamalkan offensive and to force them to divert their efforts from the Blaye star system. This also failed, and on April 21, the Laurasian Admiral was compelled to retreat on his flagship, the IMS Diamarilla, and with several of his escort destroyers and dreadnoughts. Thirty Laurasian transports, with more than 60,000 soldiers of the Imperial Laurasian Army, in reserve, were captured by Admiral Columa, while Franconian Colonel d'Montanion was killed as Spamalkan Marines under General Villavicosa stormed the Franconian Command Mount on Blayis IV, the outermost planet of the Blaye star system. The Siege of Blaye had been completely lifted by April 22, 1793, with a decisive victory for the Franconian League and Holy Spamalkan Empire.
    • Admiral Hougtonia now retreated to Quimper, assembling the 68th Imperial Fleet for a move against the Spamalkan military base at Lannester. The ensuing Battle of Lannester (April 25-27, 1793), witnessed Admiral Hougtonia, supported by reinforcements sent by Admiral Frosbisherius (from the system of La Rochelle, which had been captured by allied forces two months earlier), attempting to sunder the system's supply lines and to drive Spamalkan warships towards Brest and Vannes. The battle was an unequal confrontation, for Hougtonia enjoyed a nearly 3-1 numerical advantage over the Spamalkan garrison and naval forces, under the command of Admiral Juan de Plaies. Eventually, however, Admiral Coloma launched a decisive move from Vannes against the Laurasian rear at Lannester, capturing Laurasian operational outposts on Gironde and Croac. Hougtonia was ultimately forced to retreat from Lannester on April 27, 1793, and to return to the operational headquarters at Quimper. Forty of the sixty Laurasian frigates engaged in the confrontation were destroyed or captured by the Spamalkans; nearly 150,000 Imperial Laurasian Navy personnel became Spamalkan prisoners of war. Following the Battle of Lannester, Spamalkan forces under Coloma and Villavicosa managed to recover several Brittanian strongholds lost to the allied forces. Morlaix fell on May 1, 1793, followed by St. Malo (May 5); St. Briec (May 6-9); and Vitre (May 11). On May 15, Villavicosa managed to defeat Field-Marshal Norria's subordinate, Major-General Sir Richardius Cressus (1752-1815), in the Battle of Rennes. Two days later, he stormed Auray, defeating a Laurasian assault against Auray's Prime City. By that point, however, the Spamalkan momentum had ran out, and on May 22, 1793, Field-Marshal Norria destroyed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Praganon. Within four days, he had recovered both Vitre and St. Briec, although on May 27, a Laurasian move against the defenses of Rennes was repelled by Admiral Coloma in the Battle of Bilarbachay. By the end of May 1793, nevertheless, Franconian-Laurasian forces had generally recovered from the failure of the Siege of Blaye, and were once again on the offensive in Brittany and Upper Normandy.
  • May 7-
    • On May 7, 1793, nearly five months after the conclusion of the Treaty of Christiania, the Imperial Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Governments formally announced the Treaty's provisions. Empress Aurelia and her Pruthian counterpart, Emperor A'rua III, both justified the conclusion of the Second Treaty of Partition in their respective proclamations to their subjects, and to foreign courts at large. In her proclamation, the Empress of Laurasia claimed that "revolutionary extremism in the Commonwealth's territories" compelled her to look after the safety and security of the Laurasian Empire's realms, and that this could only be done through acquisition of those provinces which "most directly threatened the tranquility of my realms." Emperor A'rua, on his part, asserted that the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth had violated its own obligations under the now-defunct Treaty of Warsaw; that the rights of Pruthian Martialists needed to be ensured; and that the Empire required absolute jurisdiction over Danzig and Torun, for the promotion of inter-galactic commerce and transportation. Within hours of issuing their proclamations, both sovereigns ordered their military forces to occupy the territories which they had agreed to partition among themselves.
    • Laurasian Field-Marshal Lord Greysius, who had already completed the withdrawal of the Empire's occupation forces from Greater Dejanica and Kuayvia in March 1793, now ordered for his units to formally dismantle the remaining Dejanican garrisons in the conceded Belaranian and Ukrainian Provinces and to announce the formal annexation of those star systems to the Laurasian Empire. Laurasian military might in these systems was virtually unchallenged, and within a week of the proclamation, the authorities and inhabitants of those territories had formally acknowledged the jurisdiction of the Imperial Laurasian Government. The nobles and government officials of Dejanica in those regions were also compelled to swear a direct oath of allegiance to Empress Aurelia as their new sovereign. For Pruthia, however, it was not so easy. Pruthian units swiftly occupied Poznan, Gnienzo, and Kalisz without much resistance (May 7-12, 1793), and by May 15, had assumed garrison duties throughout most of Greater Dejanica, Kuayvia, and Dejanican Pomerania. Torun and Danzig, however, posed the greatest challenge for the Pruthian forces of occupation, commanded by General Count Peter von Feheierr (1748-1825). On May 16, 1793, the Governor of Torun, the Dejanican nobleman Karl Wroncaz (1751-1835), refused to surrender garrison and governmental duties to the Autocratic Pruthian Empire's authorities, and ordered for his militia to strengthen the star system's defenses.
    • Two days later, he was joined in his defiance by the Municipal Council of Danzig, which had been granted additional privileges under the Constitution of 1791. General von Feheierr was therefore forced to place both systems under military blockade, from May 21, 1793. To the surprise of all, they resisted Pruthian military forces for over two months. It was not until August 2, 1793, before Torun and Danzig finally capitulated to the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. Emperor A'rua, angered at the insolence and the resistance of the Dejanican authorities of these systems, forbade the use of Dejanican among the governmental authorities; extended his uncle's administrative and legal regulations into the newly-acquired territories; and encouraged Pruthian colonists to take up residence in both star systems, to the detriment of the native populaces. At this stage, however, the Dejanican Diet had not yet been summoned to formally ratify the partition. On February 22, 1793, the magnates of the Targowica Confederation, led by Branickia (who had finally broken with Potockia), petitioned the Empress of Laurasia to affirm the territorial integrity of the Commonwealth. The Empress had issued them vague assurances, which all proved to be lies when the Partition Treaty was formally announced two months later. The Targowica Confederation now realized that it had been tricked, but with Laurasian military forces having already occupied the territories in question, and with Dejanica Major itself garrisoned by a Laurasian "diplomatic" corps, they found they could do nothing. Empress Aurelia now began to make preparations for exacting recognition of the Partition from a newly-convened Dejanican Diet. On May 28, 1793, King Stanis Vorrust issued a proclamation declaring he would not resist Laurasian or Pruthian actions, and indicating his willingness to summon a Diet as soon as possible. By June 1793, preparations for the Diet were fully underway.
  • May 25-
    • Following the Battle of Machala, Laurasian Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius continued to pursue decisive military campaigns into the heart of the Peruvian Colonies, occupying many of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's most important colonial strongholds and posing a serious threat to the Rio de la Plata. On April 17, 1793, the Battle of Guaranda resulted in a decisive victory for Dracius and his subordinate, Commodore Sir Titus Hawkius (1762-1822), the 31-year old son of Dracius's friend and superior, Fleet Admiral Sir John Hawkius. The younger Hawkius, who had graduated from the Imperial Naval Academy of Laura in 1782, had obtained distinction through his service in Durthia and in the Barbary States from 1785 to 1791. He participated in the Siege of Ceuta, the Battle of Bayona, and the First Battle of Gibraltar, among other confrontations. In December 1792, Hawkius had been promoted to the rank of Commodore, becoming the youngest officer with that rank in the Imperial Laurasian Navy.
    • He had been placed under Dracius's command in March 1793. Hawkius's exploits at Guranda, including the chase and capture of three Spamalkan dreadnoughts, earned him much notice from his superiors and at the Imperial Court. By April 22, Laurasian-Portugallian forces had overrun Ibarra, Loja, and Porotvejo. At Porotvejo, Dracius seized a haul of Spamalkan spices and mineral goods valued at more than €300 billion dataries. Repelling a series of Spamalkan feints against Manabi and Santa Elena, Dracius then captured the Spamalkan penal colony of Macas (April 26, 1793), freeing more than 200,000 captives and penal laborers. The fall of Macas was quickly followed by that of Puerto de Orellana (April 28-29, 1793), which was the third most populous system in the Ecaudorian Sector. By the beginning of May 1793, Laurasian expeditions were striking against Macchu Pizzu, Norte Chicho, and Ambato. On May 4, Commodore Hawkius led a daring expedition against Valparaiso, which was probably the most important commercial and trade terminal for the Holy Spamalkan Empire in the Peruvian Colonies.
    • The ensuing Raid on Valparaiso (May 4-6, 1793), resulted in Hawkius capturing more than sixty Spamalkan, colonial, and Milanian vessels at the Valparaiso Dockyards; the seizure of thirty models of the Holy Spamalkan Navy; and the penetration of the star system's shield defenses. Hawkius then destroyed a Spamalkan intercept force at Rio de la Hacha (May 11, 1793), forcing Spamalkan Admiral Beltran de Castro (1743-1805) to abandon his flagship and retreat towards San Mateo. On that same day, Portugallian Commodore Santos stormed Buena Vista, thereby granting Portugallia control over the Upper Aires Highway. By May 18, he had cooperated with Dracius in expelling Spamalkan units from Babahoyo, Zamora, and Ibarra. On May 21, 1793, the Battle of Esmeralda occurred, with Dracius overrunning Spamalkan tactical positions and storming the world's orbital defenses through use of automated transports. This star system, which was one of the chief mining colonies in the Peruvian Colonies, now fell into Laurasian hands. From Esmeralda, Laurasian units seized Alejhandra, Nicola, and America (May 22-24, 1793), driving Spamalkan units towards Quito and Guadyaquil. Guadyaquil itself fell on May 25, 1793, with the collapse of its shield generators opening the stronghold to a swift Laurasian occupation. Although Dracius's assault on Ayacucho (May 28, 1793) ended in failure, Laurasian forces nevertheless stormed Latachunga and Puerto Basaquario, consolidating their control of the Ecaudorian Sector. Only Quito now resisted the Laurasian forces. Isla del Ray and Contradora fell on June 6, 1793, completing the expulsion of Spamalkan units from the Colombiana Regions.
  • June 12-September 22-
    • On June 12, 1793, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court officially departed from Laurasia Prime to commence the progress of 1793. On March 15, 1793, the 600th anniversary of the murder of the King of Rudorita, Odoacer (destroyer of the Huntite Khanate), at the hands of his great enemy, King Theodoric the Great of Halegothica, the Empress had officially announced that she would visit the Huntite and Mereditan Provinces in this year, instead of the Nagai and Sassi-Ruukan Provinces, as had been previously intended. By this point, eighteen years had passed since the execution of the notorious rebel and pretender, Anastasius Pugachevia. Although memories of the Pugachevia Rebellion were still relatively fresh in the regions which were now to be visited, the Empress nevertheless considered this trip to be a demonstration of the Laurasian Empire's ascendancy, and as a sort of homage to the events which had occurred in those territories centuries earlier.
    • These territories, which had been under the rule of the Empire since 1517, had been home to many successive galactic powers. This included the Huntite Empires; the Robertian Empires; the Robertian Hegemony; the Huntite-Robertian Union; the Carolyne Khanate; the Timurid Empire; the Huntite Khanate; the Kingdom of Rudorita; the Kingdom of Halegothica; the Mereditan Despotate; the Kingdom of Jageronia; the Huntite Caliphate; and numerous other powers. The Empress's visit, on the occasion of what had been one of the most decisive events during the Barbarian Period, would cast the impression to all as to who ruled now. Proceeding from Laurasia Prime, the Empress paid brief visits to the Station of Dosch, Katie, Arias, Manil, Meaganian, Chandlier, Tommy, the strongholds of the Nexus Route, Ipsus V, Bolgrahay, and Robbay (June 12-15, 1793). On Robbay, she stayed at Parham Park, the private residence of Sir Demetrius Pophamia (1731-1807), Chief Justice of the Imperial Star Chamber (since June 1792).
    • Following her departure from Robby, the Empress and the Imperial Court proceeded rapidly up the Rebeccan Galactic Trade Route. She arrived at Elijahana during the late hours of June 15 and stayed there for a day, being entertained by her now former Empress's Champion, Sir Antigonus Lesius. From Eljahana, the Imperial Court proceeded through Whoppi (June 17-18); Goldberg (June 19); Beharis (June 20); Sheppard (June 21); Hasselbeck (June 22-23); and Walters (June 24). At Goldberg, the Empress was observant to a performance of Haakh Mimes, who were among the most renowned comedic acts in the Empire; at Hasselbeck, the Empress toured the Foundries of Duxum Corporation, one of the largest non-Laurasian industrial conglomerates in the Laurasian Empire; and at Walters, the Empress visited the Beaches of Hadar, a major tourist attraction in the Empire. From Walters, she proceeded to Iego (June 25, 1793), spending a fortnight at the Ice Palace, and then to Dickinson (June 26); Abuza (June 27); Abrianna (June 28); McEvlogue (June 29); Alamaia I (June 30); Brenda (July 1); and the OsonBoka Nebula (July 2-4). By July 5, the Imperial Court had reached Parsons, where the Empress officially dedicated the Imperial Crevllius-class Starfighter Construction Facility, which had been under construction from February 1790. The Facility possessed sixty berths and more than two hundred production lines, and would during the decade become vitally important to the Imperial Laurasian Navy. From Parsons, the Empress moved on to Meredith (July 6-8, 1793). She resided at the Glome Palace and observed numerous scientific experiments conducted by the scholars of the University of Xander, one of the Empire's prime experimental research institutions. She then passed through Jeanne and Izonza; at the later world, a simulation of the Battle of Izonza (1189), one of the earliest clashes between Theodoric and Odoacer, was staged for the benefit of the Empress and the Imperial Court. Izzia, Luveria, and Julianne were visited (July 9-11, 1793), and by July 14, Aurelia had reached Leah.
    • This world, renowned for its beautiful mountain ranges, its idyllic spas, and its massive entertainment facilities, kept the Court entranced for two days. From Leah, the Empress visited Lorna, Garnett, and Ber Bachman (July 15-19, 1793), with a corps of Zack-class Protocol Droids being presented to the Empress at the last of these star systems. Negro then became the next system graced by the Court's presence (July 20), with the Empress visiting the grounds of the Malachor Academy for Theology and Reflective Sciences, which had been established in the eighth century AH. On July 21, 1793, she proceeded to Akamaar, and there attended a ceremony held at the Freia Kallea Museum of Astronautics and Space Exploration, to mark the thousand-year anniversary of the charting of the Larkian Way by that famed Briannian navigator (763-825).
    • Kalla had retired to Akamaar and died there in February 825; the Museum had been established by Emperor Lysimachus I (that famed patron of education, the arts, and sciences) in 1537. From Akamaar, the Court toured Jabul, Clathbourne, and the Caroline Asteroid Belt (July 22-24, 1793), with the Empress visiting the grounds of the Kavin Space Installations, which dated to the 3rd century BH. At Clathbourne, the Empress toured the Rings of Naira. Then on July 25, 1793, the Court, after passing through Gargonia, reached Hunt Minor. This world, host to the Pugachevia rebels two decades earlier, had nevertheless recovered its prominence; by 1793, it had a population of more than sixty-five billion. The Empress stayed at the Clannic Palace of Pandra, which had been constructed by Emperor Huladuni (r. 740-62) of the Huntite-Robertian Union in the 8th century AH. She visited the massive Spaceport of Hunt Minor and observed the constant stream of traffic that went in and out of the star system.
    • The Court stayed on Hunt Minor until July 28, before moving to its sister star system, Hunt Major. This world, once capital to so many successive galactic powers, became the object of Aurelia's intense attention. The Empress toured its historical sites, including the Malabar Construct (one of the earliest Huntite settlements on record, dating back to the 9th millennium BH), the Syrivan Tower, the Secondary Palace of Halegothica, the Victory Row of Boontha the Conqueror, the Spoils of Herasia, and the Arboretum of Habath. The Court stayed at the Central Palace of Hunt Major, and the Empress was entertained by the Huntite Princes Kalintha (1753-1824) and Zeldo (1736-1811) of the House of Skarrg. On August 4, 1793, she departed from Hunt Major in a cheery mood, and proceeded towards the Sk'atha Cluster. Timur's Star, the namesake world of that devastating Dasian conqueror, was visited (August 5), as were Orenaria, Kleeva (known for its droid factories owned by the Huntite House of Yerevub); and Halattia (a world with many Laurasian and alien retreats of the Empire's nobility).
    • Then on August 9, 1793, the Court reached Samarkand, once capital world of the Timurid Empire. Samarkand had recovered much of its previous economic vitality and prosperity during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and by 1793, had a respectable population of more than 40 billion. The Empress was greeted at the outskirts of the star system by a massive procession of Dasian and Huntite model starships; a display of stimulated works at the Garrison of Ibilar; and then a reception by the assembled nobles of the world at the Chestary Mounds. The head of the nobility, Lord Temujin-Imjuin of Praedor (1739-1833), was one of the most prominent alien noblemen in the Empire, and claimed to be a descendant of the Carolyne Khan Duwa Temur (r. 929-30). He greeted the Empress with much ceremony and with respect; during her visit, she would create him as 1st Earl of Praedor in the Laurasian nobility. The Empress stayed for three days, visiting the Tombs of the Timurid Dynasty (which had been carefully restored in the late fifteenth century under the Huntite Caliphate).
    • The body of the conqueror himself was long since gone, having been lost in the thirteenth century, but the Empress was presented the Devastator's battlesword, which had been discovered by a archaeological expedition of the University of Hunt Major in 1767. The Court stayed at the Palace of the Pano, a fourteenth century edifice which had been utilized by the Huntite Caliphs extensively. On August 12, the Court once again departed, with the Empress thanking the Dasian and Huntite magnates of the system for their hospitality. From Samarkand, she proceeded across to Maurya, Gedrosia Max, and Gabriella (August 14-19, 1793). The Empress's stay on Gabriella was particularly notable, as she visited the Affavian Preserves, one of the largest environmental preserves in the Empire. Then on August 22, after proceeding through Downs, Upper Morsia, and the Lower Sheldonian Colonies, the Court reached Sheldonia. The Empress stayed at the Citadel of Don, officiated over ceremonies at the Sheldonian Stock Exchange, and received gifts from the Sheldonian Matrons, one of the largest private clubs in the Outer Borderlands. From Sheldonia, the Court, bypassing Veliky, visited Boontha, Estella, and Blasavania (August 24-27, 1793). There then followed visits to Iscar, Solay, Clarise, Horne, Lector, and Grumman's Star. Then, on September 6, 1793, the Imperial Court reached Jasonia, formerly capital of the Huntite Khanate, the Kingdom of Rudorita, and the Kingdom of Halegothica. During her visit which continued for the next five days, the Empress stayed at both the Great Palace of Jasonia and the Palace of King Theodoric the Great, paying her respects to the Halegothican ruler (who had now been dead for 566 years), at his private crypt. Jasonia, which had a population of 81 billion in 1793, impressed the Empress considerably, with the diversity of its historical and architectural sites, the polite manners of its chief figures of authority; and its great economic activity.
    • The day after her arrival, September 7, 1793, the Empress of Laurasia celebrated her sixtieth birthday. The Governor-General of Hunt, Sir Neuchrus Ruggalius, 2nd Viscount Ruggalius of Lector (1742-1819), staged a grand ceremony for the occasion of Her Majesty's birthday at the Auditorium of Malar; a series of jousts, athletic competitions, allegorical entertainments, and plays were conducted; and the Empress received a song of congratulations from the assembled nobles and magnates of the star system. She was also given, as a gift, the Banners of Theodemir, which had belonged to King Theodoric the Great's father and predecessor, King Theodemir. On September 11, the Empress's departure from Jasonia was marked with a grand parade of departure by Halegothican soldiers of the Honorary Guard of Jasonia, and a performance by the Silac Star Convoys in the outskirts of the star system. From Jasonia, the Court paid brief visits to Newman Victoria, Nikki Lowell, Constipex, Filorean, and Millard (September 12-18, 1793), which had already been visited by the Empress some years earlier. Finally, on September 20, 1793, the Empress began her progress back to Laurasia Prime, utilizing the Rebeccan Galactic Trade Route from Meris. She arrived at her capital world, exhausted, two days later, and declared her resolution to remain at the Quencilvanian Palace until the conclusion of the new year. Aurelia quickly emerged from her exhaustion, however, and in October 1793, she would translate the Historical Sciences of Boethius, the famed 5th century Laurasian historian from Caladaria, in just twelve days. It is now expedient to turn to further events with the First Spamalkan War and with the Second Partition of Dejanica.
  • June 11-On June 11, 1793, Field-Marshal Arthurius Greysius, 14th Baron Greysius of Wiltonia, one of the most prominent military commanders of Empress Aurelia the Great's reign, died at his estate, Tevalanian House, on Wiltonia, at the age of fifty-six. His death marked the beginning of an avalanche, for the vast majority of the Empire's most prominent military commanders would die during the remainder of the decade. Admiral Whyrtia had died on January 22, 1793, at Dumbarton, while Admiral Seniavin had died on February 13, at Vandross; Empress Aurelia was deeply affected by the deaths of both of these commanders as well.
  • June 24-
    • Commodore Hawkius, who was now determined to deal a severe blow to the Spamalkan supply lines extending to Quito, and to secure the Laurasian positions for a move against Santiaro and Atacantara, moved from Contradora on June 9, 1793. Within four days, Hawkius had stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Danli and Comayagua, inflicting a series of humiliating defeats upon Admiral Zubiaur and Spamalkan General Carlos de Gustar (1745-1813). By June 14, Laurasian units had penetrated to the Spamalkan hypergates at Arica and Iquique, defeating a Spamalkan convoy under Commodore Jose Helarios (1751-1822) in the Battle of Jose Sanmarga. Arica itself was now assaulted by detachments from the 67th Imperial Fleet; the ensuing Battle of Arica (June 16-17, 1793), resulted in a decisive victory for Hawkius, who captured twenty Spamalkan transports and nearly 30,000 Spamalkan Marines. By June 18, he had driven his units forth to Iquique, launching raids as far as Antofagasta and Copiado. Hawkius then ordered for his forces to halt at Atacames Point, but on June 23, he was informed by his subordinates that probes had identified the movement of a Spamalkan convoy towards San Mateo.
    • Hawkius, who reasoned that this convoy was preparing to reinforce the garrison of San Mateo, and to launch an offensive to secure the Spamalkan hold of Antofagasta, now decided to intercept the convoy before it could reach the star system. Two days later, June 25, 1793, he reached the San Francisco Point, four light-years east of San Maeto, and ordered his chief dreadnought, the IMS Inspire, to reconnoiter the approaching Spamalkan convoy. The Inspire, however, was driven back by Admiral Beltran de Castros's courier squadrons, who inflicted severe damage on its shields and ion batteries that compelled the warship into retreat. De Castros, alerted to the Laurasian force ahead, now shuffled his units, placing his heavy battleships and destroyers in the front. From his flagship, the San Francisco, he launched a ion charge against Hawkius's force, disabling a number of the Laurasian transports and frigates.
    • Hawkius, however, repelled the first Spamalkan assault against his strategic positions. He soon found himself encircled by the ships of Spamalkan Captain Fernando de Felipon (1759-1836), who moved out from San Mateo upon orders from Admiral De Castros. The Battle of San Mateo Straits, as the confrontation became known, lasted for four days. Finally, on June 29, 1793, Commodore Hawkius was forced to surrender when his flagship, the IMS Dasirana, was surrounded and boarded by Spamalkan troops. This battle therefore proved to be the first decisive loss for the Laurasian Empire in the Peruvian Campaigns, and it had repercussions. Fleet Admiral Hawkius, when he learned of his son's capture, was sent into an emotional flurry. Admiral Dracius, who had been engaged in besieging San Pedro Sula (which fell to him on June 30), decided to call off any offensive moves against Atacantra, Santiaro, and Antofagasta. On July 4, Spamalkan Admiral De Castros stormed Arica and Atacames Point, driving Laurasian units back towards Danli. Danli itself was recaptured on July 23, 1793, after a series of confrontations in the Hondurian Straits between De Castros and Dracius. By the end of July 1793, he had also expelled Laurasian units from Macas, Tena, Puyo, Portoviejo, and Babahoyo, thereby relieving the pressure on the supply lines of Quito. In August 1793, Dracius was forced to strengthen the defenses of Esmeralda, and he repelled Spamalkan moves against Alejhandra, Azogues, and Cuenca. By September 1793, Laurasian units had withdrawn from Southern Peruvia, and De Castros was now hailed as a hero by Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I.
  • July 25-
    • The middle months of 1793 witnessed substantial progress for the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia against the forces of the Franconian League and Holy Spamalkan Empire. On June 2, 1793, St. Malo was subjected to a renewed counteroffensive by the forces of the Prince de Conti and Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria. In spite of the efforts of Spamalkan Admiral Coloma, the world succumbed to the Empire and Franconians four days later. By June 19, 1793, allied forces had also stormed Fougeres, Plomeur, and Dournanenez, with General del Aguila being humiliated in the Battle of Sarkosy (June 16, 1793). On June 22, the King of Franconia himself led an attack on Auray; the world fell within hours. Morlaix had been recovered by June 30, and on July 4, 1793, the Prince de Conti smashed a Spamalkan-League force in the Battle of Lannion, definitively securing that stronghold for the Royal Franconian Government. On July 7, Vannes fell after a combined offensive by allied forces under Norria and the Duke of Montpensier; Rennes, cut off from its lines of support, fell three days later.
    • The Battle of Concarneau (July 16, 1793), ended in another decisive victory for Norria, whose use of encircling tactics annihilated four League regiments on the planetary surface. Lorient was then secured by allied forces (July 19-21, 1793), and on July 25, 1793, Nantes fell to the Duke of Montpensier. The King of Franconia, on his part, had begun to effect a reconciliation with many of his Franconian subjects. The Franconian League, which had over the preceding three and a half years continued to vigorously oppose King Hensios and his reign over the Franconian realms, had done so in large part because the King had continued to adhere to the Huguenot faith. Many Franconian patriots considered Huguenotism to be the practice of "enemies of this realm and defilers of this Kingdom's honor." They therefore were not able to tolerate the rule of a King who adhered to a sect which was utterly foreign to the prior beliefs and practices of the Franconian Catholic Order.
    • By April 1793, King Hensios himself had come to realize that continuing adherence to Huguenotism would prevent him from being able to finally occupy Parri and to assert his position as King of Franconia. He now finally, and belatedly, took into account the advice of his predecessor Hensios III, who on his deathbed had told him that the inhabitants of Parri, and the leaders of the Franconian League, would never tolerate a King of Huguenot persuasions. On June 29, 1793, the King had announced to his Royal Council (the Conseil royal) that he had begun seriously considering the possibility of converting to the Franconian Catholic Order, in order to earn the allegiance and support of his subjects on Parri and elsewhere, and to demonstrate that he was not working against Franconia's interests. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, when she learned of Hensios's announcement, instructed her Ambassador to the Court of Orleans, Sir Thomasius Edmondia (1763-1829), who had become Ambassador in June 1792, to inform the King of Franconia that the Imperial Laurasian Government would consider it "damaging" to the internal tranquility of the Franconian realms, and the suppression of the Franconian League, if Hensios decided to change his faith. Hensios, however, who was now being urged by his mistress, Gabrielle d'Estrees (1773-99), to convert to the official faith of the Franconian State, decided to proceed forth with his plans.
    • On July 25, 1793, the King formally issued a proclamation at Orleans, renouncing all connections to the Huguenot Congregations and declaring his official conversion to the Franconian Catholic Order. In his proclamation, the King declared that he was undertaking this action to "bring an end to the ruinous divisions and struggles within these realms" and to begin the process of reconciling the subjects of Franconia towards their government. Hensios even told the Duke of Montpensier that "Parri is well worth a Rite", referring to the Franconian rites of communion and supplicance, an essential part of the Catholic Order's ceremonies. Hensios's proclamation reverberated throughout the Franconian Dominions, and news of it soon spread from Franconia to the courts of foreign powers throughout extra-galactic civilization. The Holy Spamalkan Emperor, Philicus I, was angered when he learned of Hensios's declaration. He informed his chief ministers that the King of Franconia's action would unify his subjects more than ever before, and thereby make it more difficult for the Holy Spamalkan Empire to keep Franconia weak and disunited. The Durthian Stadholder, Prince Philip William of Orange, and his brother, Prince Maurice of Nassau, both welcomed the news of Hensios's conversion, hoping that it would inspire the Franconian League to lay down its arms and to combine with Hensios in defeating Spamalkan forces, both in the Pale of Calais and in Parri, as well as within the Southern Durthian Duchies.
    • King Antonio I of Portugallia expressed similar sentiments. Hensios's chief ally, Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, had a far more negative reception. She actually erupted into a fury of discontent, informing Lord Treasurer Burghley and Secretary Cecilis that "His Majesty of Franconia has succumbed to the pressures imposed upon him by the rebellious segments of his kingdom's population." On July 31, 1793, the Empress, in a personal communique to Hensios himself, shared with him that she felt "grief, regret, and groaning within my soul as the result of Your Majesty's announcement. It is dangerous to do ill that good may come of it, yet I hope that sounder inspiration shall come to you." Within a few days, however, Aurelia's view had changed. The Empress eventually realized that this was actually a very wise decision on Hensios's part, and that it would serve to disunite and weaken the Franconian League. And indeed, this is what occurred in the weeks and months following Hensios's announcement. The King of Franconia now found that his conversion had secured him the allegiance of the vast majority of his subjects.
    • By August 7, 1793, the nobles and gentry of Poitou, Rochelle, Nantes, Orleans, Evereux, St. Quentin, Valenciennes, Douai, and the Metzian Lordships had all announced their unconditional support for King Hensios, rejecting the efforts of the Franconian League and of the Holy Spamalkan Empire to promote "dissension and disunion within the realms of this state." Four days later, Field-Marshal Norria and the Prince de Conti, who had destroyed a Spamalkan military outpost on Dournanenez, secured the surrender of the garrison of St. Nazaire, commanded by Philip August, Duke of Marseilles (1751-1804). The fall of St. Nazaire now opened the way for a concentrated offensive by Laurasian-Franconian forces against Bordeaux, Pau, and Bayonne. On August 15, 1793, the same day that the Duke of Bayeux and the Autarch of Dunkirk both capitulated to King Hensios, Norria and the Prince de Conti launched a major offensive against the League garrison of Agen. Agen had a garrison of more than 100,000 troops and a substantial store of military arms, equipment, and shield generators. The ensuing Battle of Agen ended in a decisive victory for the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia. By August 19, Norria and Conti had secured the League outposts of Talence, Anglet, and Mont-de-Marsan, thereby entrenching themselves in the outskirts of Pau. Pau was blockaded from August 22, 1793. The garrison of Pau, who had been sent further instructions by the Marquis de Sable and the Duke of Mayenne, was resilient, but it was ultimately the star system's inhabitants, now demonstrating an unparalleled loyalty to King Hensios, who proved pivotal in the star system's fall (August 24, 1793).
    • A number of Pau's most influential residents, led by the Head Master of the Pau Merchantile Academy, Jean de Gimbaud (1734-1820), disabled the world's shield generators, thereby permitting allied troops unrestricted landing rights on the world. Pau's garrison, not supported by the planetary population, was crushed within hours. The fall of Pau encouraged Bayonne to surrender quickly to Conti (August 26, 1793). By August 30, Norria and Conti had also driven League units from Talence, Merginac, and Passec, again capitalizing on the support of the population and chief magnates of those star systems. By September 3, 1793, the combined allied forces, comprised of the 67th Imperial Fleet, detachments from the 49th and 55th Imperial Armies, and the 8th Franconian Expeditionary Force, had placed Bordeaux under siege. Spamalkan Admiral Coloma, who had managed to repel allied raids against Craon and Blain, attempted to relieve the beleaguered garrison of Bordeaux. On September 7, 1793, however, he was encountered by Admirals Frosbisherius and Hougotonia in the Battle of the Straits of Lagos.
    • Frosbisherius, now employing his superior mobile corps and starfighter squadrons, launched a maneuvering thrust against the Spamalkan-League formations of Coloma's fleet. Laurasian warships, sundering his escape routes, knifed into the center of the Spamalkan force, while the Valdicator-class starfighters inflicted serious damage upon the unwieldy, bulky Spamalkan battleships and armored transports. By 6:00 p.m. that afternoon, Admiral Coloma had been forced into retreat, and the Battle of the Straits of Lagos ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Bordeaux continued under siege until September 14, when Norria, receiving naval support from Frosbisherius, launched the decisive offensive against the world's defenses. Bordeaux fell as Laurasian and Franconian troops breached the world's shields and launched a massive operation which drove League units into the Citadel of Naupart. With Bordeaux now in the possession of the allies, the process of clearing League units from Navarre and Aquitaine proceeded rapidly. On September 17, Field-Marshal Norria smashed a League force under Jacques de Aulier, Count d'Ambrac (1743-1806) in the Battle of Occitaire; by September 22, Burlada and Tarfalla had both fallen to the Prince of Conti, and on September 27, the Duke of Nantes was defeated in the Battle of Attarabia. Two days later, he was captured by Laurasian units at Ansoain, and brought before Conti and Norria in chains. On their orders, Nantes would be imprisoned at the Armory of Salo-de-Male on October 3, 1793. By the beginning of October 1793, the forces of King Hensios and the Duke of Montepensier had advanced to Caen and Rouen; both strongholds were now under serious threat.
  • October 19-
    • On October 2, 1793, the day before the Duke of Nantes was imprisoned on the orders of Field-Marshal Norria and Prince Conti, the Siege of Caen by the allied forces of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and the Laurasian Empire commenced. King Hensios IV of Franconia, who was determined to secure this major stronghold, and who viewed its seizure as a necessary means to expel Spamalkan forces from the Pale of Calais, himself personally directed the Franconian-Laurasian forces (numbering nearly a million personnel with over five hundred warships) which instigated the siege. The Duke of Montpensier acted as the King of Franconia's second-in-command and as the chief tactician of the siege efforts, while Norria's third-in-command, Major General Sir Seleucus Anthoria (1748-1826), acted as the commander of Laurasian units and as third-in-command of the overall siege. Caen's garrison was commanded by the Duke of Mayenne and by Franconian Admiral Andre de Bracas (1755-1804).
    • Spamalkan Admiral Coloma, from his headquarters on Calais, attempted to provide supply support to the garrison of Caen. In a series of confrontations at the Ille-de Franconia, Sedan, and Velues-de Roses (October 3-8, 1793), however, he would be blunted by Admiral Frosbisherius, who impounded a number of Franconian blockade runners and supply frigates at the Ardennes Nebula. On October 11, Mayenne, vainly attempting to break out from the stranglehold imposed on the star system by the King's forces, launched an assault against royal positions at the Maginot Asteroid Belts; this was bloodily repulsed by a coordinated counteroffensive from Montpensier's starfighter squadrons. Admiral de Brancas then attempted to use his defensive corvettes and frigates to penetrate through to Louvain, but was repelled on October 12. On October 14, Caen's shields failed, a result of sabotage by elements on the world now loyal to King Hensios, and the following day, he formally launched an invasion of the planetary surface.
    • It took four days to overcome the League's resistance, but on October 19, 1793, Mayenne, realizing that further resistance was hopeless, surrendered. Admiral de Brancas managed to flee to Rouen, determined to continue the fight from there. Hensios, however, had secured a great victory. On October 22, Mayenne formally signed the Armistice of Villette, thereby agreeing to terminate his rebellion against the King of Franconia; to surrender the strongholds of Montcornet, Chalons-sur-Saone, and Seurre to the possession of the Royal Franconian Government; and to provide intelligence information about League forces and military strongholds. In return, King Hensios formally pardoned Mayenne. Mayenne's defection proved a great blow to the Franconian League; by October 27, Doullens, Carvin, and Percenne had all been secured by the King. On October 29, 1793, Field-Marshal Norria and Prince de Conti, returning galactic-north from Navarre, besieged Fort Crozon, a Spamalkan military outpost located thirty light years east of Brest. The Siege of Fort Crozon, as it became known, continued until November 6, when the Garrison Commander, General Tomas des Praxdes (1754-1813), was finally forced to surrender. Blain, Blavet, and Ambrieres fell in quick succession to allied forces (November 8-14, 1793), and on November 15, Craon, now isolated by the 68th Imperial Fleet, was finally forced to surrender. Three days later, King Hensios captured Angers, and from thence penetrated northwards to Dunkirk. The Battle of Dunkirk (November 22-28, 1793), resulted in a decisive victory for Hensios, and this major naval base, utilized by the Franconian League, finally fell into his possession. By the end of November, 1793 the League held on tenaciously to Calais, Rouen, Parri, Brest, and the Ardennian Worlds.
  • November 23-
    • Whilst progress was made in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia by King Hensios IV and his Laurasian allies, the Second Partition of Dejanica came to its culmination. On June 17, 1793, King Stanis Vorrust, who was now viewed as weak and as impotent by the vast majority of his Dejanican subjects, and hoping that continued cooperation with the demands of Laurasian Empress Aurelia would spare the rest of his Commonwealth from outright partition and destruction, formally issued the summons for the Dejanican Diet to convene. On the insistence of the newly-appointed Laurasian Ambassador, the Schauerian Sir Jacob Sievers (1731-1808), who had assumed his post on February 16, 1793, the King ordered for the Diet to convene at Grodno, which was now just one hundred light-years north of the border with the Laurasian Empire in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Diet, elected according to procedures defined by the Ambassador and his allies on the Targowica Confederation (basically resembling those used for the Repanian Diet of 1767-68), formally assembled at the New Castle of Grodno on July 22, 1793. Immediately, the Diet Chambers were surrounded by troops of the Imperial Laurasian Army, wielding blasters and under instructions to control all access and communications in the Diet sessions. The Ambassador, acting upon instructions issued to him by the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs, announced that "the loyal soldiers of Her Imperial Majesty's armies will occupy the properties of any deputy opposed to the will of the Commonwealth."
    • This threat intimidated many of the members of the Diet, and when they began their formal discussions on August 2, they rapidly approved measures "introduced" by the Ambassador, which had been crafted by Empress Aurelia herself. The first of these concerned the conclusion of an "Eternal Alliance between the Laurasian Empire and Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth", presented to the Diet as the "request of the Dejanican people" by those who supported friendly relations with the Imperial Laurasian Government. This proposal, passed by the Diet on August 9, 1793, mandated that the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth establish a formal military and diplomatic "alliance" with the Laurasian Empire. Empress Aurelia was once again acknowledged as the protector of the Commonwealth's interests, with the rights to protect it against "foreign invasion and domestic insurrection." In effect, in the words of a disgruntled Dejanican deputy, the Commonwealth became a "Laurasian protectorate." The Empire was now granted the right to unlimited military access through the Commonwealth's territories, and to install garrisons in such star systems as "Her Majesty of Laurasia shall deem necessary for the preservation of the alliance." The Royal Dejanican Government was not to conclude any treaties or alliances with other foreign powers without the explicit approval of the Empress of Laurasia, and such agreements were not to contradict the "fundamental aims of the alliance." Also, the King of Dejanica was forbidden to accredit ambassadors and ministers to foreign courts unless if they had been pre-approved by his protector, the Empress. This was meant to forestall Dejanican efforts at gaining assistance or sympathy from foreign powers.
    • Then on September 2, 1793, the Diet formally abolished the Constitution of May 3, 1791, effectively restoring the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the constitutional arrangements of 1773 and 1775. The free election of the Dejanican king, the right to form confederations, the right of resistance by the nobility, and the liberum veto were all confirmed by the Diet. The Permanent Council was now to be chaired by the Ambassador of the Laurasian Empire to the Court of Dejanica, who gained the right to approve and to modify all motions introduced on the Council; confirm the King's appointments before they were presented to the Diet; and to veto the King's executive orders, as he deemed necessary. The Ambassador also gained the right to withhold the execution of laws passed by the Diet. Ten days later, the Diet agreed to a Treaty of Commerce with the Laurasian Empire, granting Laurasian merchants, navigators, and corporations unlimited rights of tax-free transit, commercial activity, and transport in Dejanican realms.
    • And then on October 7, the Diet agreed to limit the size of the Commonwealth Military Forces to one-fiftieth of those of the Laurasian Empire (no more than 2.2 million military personnel and 1,400 military warships). It then confirmed the freedom of religion privileges granted to all foreign faiths and minorities. The Virtui Militari, a military order which had been created by King Stanis Vorrust in June 1792 to reward heroism (during the War in Defense of the Constitution), was abolished on October 24, 1793 (an abolition confirmed on January 4, 1794). Then, on October 23, 1793, the Diet agreed to acknowledge the annexation of the Belaranian and Ukrainian Provinces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud by the Laurasian Empire, thereby acceding to those terms of the Treaty of Christiania. At this stage, however, the Diet suddenly made a display of insubordination, refusing to recognize the loss of Torun, Danzig, and Greater Dejanica to the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. At this, Empress Aurelia was enraged. Ambassador Sievers now attempted to coerce the members of the Diet into compliance.
    • On November 4, 1793, he arrested several of the more recalcitrant deputies, including Szymon Szydlowskia (1725-1800), Dionizy Mikoreskia (1746-1805), Antoni Karskia (1747-1803), and Szymon Skarniskia (1740-1802); exiled and sequestered the estates of thirty others; and even threatened many Senators with stimulated torture. By November 14, he had also increased the number of Laurasian troops deployed at the Diet Chambers, from 5,000 to over 10,000. They now prevented anyone from leaving the Chambers, isolating the Diet totally from outside contact. Finally, on November 17, 1793 (the day of Empress Aurelia's 35th anniversary on the throne), the Marshal of the Diet, Josef Anwickz (1743-1823), who had been bribed by Sievers repeatedly during the past three months, asked the deputies three times if they approved the terms of the Treaty of Christiania. None responded, and afterwards, the Marshal declared that "Silence means consent." Therefore, by the method of acclamation, the Second Partition of Dejanica was fully accepted by the Dejanican Diet. The Diet finally adjourned on November 23, 1793, formalizing the reorganization of the Commonwealth's remaining territories into nineteen new voivodeships before doing so. Empress Aurelia, when she learned of the restoration of the old constitutional settlements, and of the Dejanican acknowledgement of the Second Partition, declared again to her ministers that the Empire's realms had been "extraordinarily blessed by the Lord Almitis with the opportunity for continued expansion, and for greater glory, at the expense of our enemies." On November 27, 1793, the Empress issued the formal notification for the Empire's annexation of the Belaranian and Ukrainian Provinces. By the decrees of December 7, 1793 and January 7, 1794, these territories would be organized into the Ukrainian, Belaranian, and Western Gateway Governorates.
  • December 16-
    • By December 1793, events in Southern Durthia, Franconia, and in the Colonial Territories, had overall, come to trend against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Note is to be made now of the events in the Durthian States and in the Colonial Territories, leading to the end of the year. Following the conquest of Schoonhoven in early February 1793, Prince Maurice of Nassau and Lieutenant-General Sir Willanius Pellhamia (who would be promoted to Field-Marshal in January 1794 for his successes against the Spamalkans), proceeded promptly to launching offensives into Luxembourg and Nimburg, determined to expel the Spamalkan units there and to open further supply lines to the Pale of Calais. Repelling a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Coedvorden and Bergen op Zoom (February 9-14, 1793), Nassau had besieged the Spamalkan garrison of Arnemuiden. Arnemuiden's fall on March 2, 1793, was a humiliating disaster for Supreme Governor von Mansfield, who was unable to relieve the garrison and suffered losses to allied harrying parties in the vicinity of Cambrai and Flushing. On March 11, the Battle of the Outer Gravelines resulted in another victory, this time for Laurasian forces under General Pellhamia, who repelled three frontal assaults by Spamalkan marines against his forward positions and then delivered a shock blow to the field headquarters.
    • Seven days later, Pellhamia drove to Middelburg, expelling Spamalkan units from that military base in a swift offensive move. Charolais, which had served as the chief Spamalkan military arsenal in the Pale of Calais, was stormed by a Durthian expedition in April 1793. On May 4, Prince Maurice of Nassau crushed Spamalkan General Alonso de Ferreres (1745-1817) in the Battle of Muiden; by May 11, he had expelled Spamalkan garrisons from Burren, Vaklenburg, and Lillo, thereby consolidating the Durthian hold over those star systems. Geertuidenburg, which had become transformed into a major arsenal for the Imperial Laurasian Navy's operations in the Durthian Duchies, was assaulted by a Spamalkan expedition under Admiral del Margiaur (May 7-11, 1793). Although del Margiaur briefly succeeded in disrupting Geertuidenburg's supply lines, he was ultimately compelled to retreat by a Laurasian starfighter squadron under Commodore Sir Craterus Verres, 1st Baronet Verres of Brill (1747-1830). By May 17, Prince Maurice of Nassau had isolated the Spamalkan garrisons of Zicherin and Jodogine; the latter ultimately fell to him on June 5.
    • Then on June 11, 1793, Groningen, which had been harried by Durthian expeditions for over two years, finally came within the range of Nassau's offensive. The garrison of the star system, commanded by Admiral Jesus de Puerta (1753-93), arranged its defensive lines around a circular minefield, and sought to use their ion cannon fire to disable any Durthian or Laurasian warships which reached their range. This effort failed, however, when Nassau sent in his experimental cloaked transports, who penetrated the Spamalkan lines and sabotaged the batteries before they could inflict any more damage. On June 17, Groningen was subjected to a formal land offensive by Durthian and Laurasian troops, with the regiments of the 55th Imperial Army under General Sir Elagabalus Rumveria (1745-1822) distinguishing itself in particular. The world, however, did not fall until July 5, 1793, with Admiral de Puerta being executed on Prince Nassau's orders. Saarjburg and Dietrich, Spamalkan military bases commanding the Limbian Approaches, were conquered by the end of July 1793; the Limbian Approaches themselves were stormed by August 14, and on August 22, 1793, Nimburg fell under assault from Prince Maurice's forces.
    • Although Spamalkan Governor-General Mansfield managed to reinforce Antwerp (August 27, 1793), and on September 3, even defeated a Laurasian supply convoy in the Battle of Dendermonde, his efforts ultimately proved in vain. Nimburg fell on September 11, 1793, thereby entrenching the Durthians firmly in the Luxemborgian Province. Roermond and Bastogne fell in October 1793 to General Pellhamia; by November 4, Brussels was completely isolated by Durthian and Laurasian squadrons. On November 11, 1793, Governor-General Mansfield launched a counteroffensive from Antwerp, Grave, and Grol, briefly managing to storm Axel (November 14); Neuss (November 18); Venlo (November 22); and Maastricht (November 24). On November 29, 1793, however, Prince Maurice defeated him decisively in the Battle of Wiltz, thereby halting the Spamalkan thrusts. He then pushed further into Luxemborg, and on December 9, 1793, captured Differdange, located just thirty light-years west of Luxemborg Prime. On December 15, the garrison of Petange surrendered, virtually without a fight, and on December 19, Mertert fell after a sabatoge effort staged by Durthian agents. By the end of December 1793, all of the above strongholds had been recaptured, and allied forces were in range of attacking Luxemborg Prime.
    • As regards to the Colonial Territories, the last months of 1793 saw a stabilization in the front. On September 29, 1793, the Battle of Iquique resulted in a tactical victory for the Holy Spamalkan Empire, as Admiral Dracius was forced to withdraw from the stronghold as a result of simultaneous Spamalkan thrusts and the loss of ten Laurasian automated transports. By October 4, he had been forced to abandon Cuenca, Azogues, and Ibarra, thereby allowing for Spamalkan Admiral De Castros to send reconnaissance expeditions into the Colombiana. On October 11, a Laurasian counteroffensive from Esmeralda and Alejhandra resulted in failure in the Battle of Tulcan, with more than half of the Laurasian starfighter corps being destroyed. On October 17, De Castros was able to storm Nueva Loja due to the destruction of the Laurasian defensive battleships in a stellar storm. By October 24, he had completely secured the supply lines of Quito, and threatened to overrun Esmeralda. On November 5, however, Admiral Dracius defeated a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Margarita, and during that month repelled Spamalkan offensives against Cartagena, Baranquilla, and Soledad. On December 11, 1793, he managed to recover Puyo, capturing nearly a third of the Spamalkan garrison and most of their military supplies. La Guaira and Maracaribo, which had served as major Spamalkan bases for reconnaissance expeditions, fell on December 17. And on December 24, 1793, Dracius defeated Admiral De Castros in the Battle of Ternandio, ending a Spamalkan threat to the Laurasian hold over Esmeralda. On New Year's Eve, 1793, Portugallian Commodore Santos destroyed a Spamalkan supply base at El Gran Roque, hampering the lines to Quito and Guadanquil. As the year 1793 ended, Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I was therefore under serious pressure, and was now leaning towards peace, if only to rebuild his resources for action in Durthia.

1794

  • January 1-
    • 1794, the 94th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire and its allies having definitively gained the upper hand in the First Spamalkan War. The previous year had seen King Hensios IV of Franconia, with the assistance of Laurasian forces under Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, make substantial gains in Normandy, Aquitaine, Navarre, the Pale of Calais, and Brittany against the forces of the Franconian League and Holy Spamalkan Empire. By early 1794, the League held on tenaciously to Rouen, Brest, Calais, Parri, and a string of minor strongholds throughout the Pale of Calais, Lower Normandy, and Picardy. As regards to the Durthian theater, Prince Maurice of Nassau had, with the aid of Field-Marshal Sir Willanius Pellhamia, advanced into the heart of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's territories in Southern Durthia. Antwerp and Brussels were now under direct threat from the allied forces, while Prince Maurice was preparing for a coordinated offensive towards Luxembourg. As regards to the Colonial Territories, Laurasia and Portugallia had experienced some recent reverses against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Spamalkan Admiral Beltran de Castros had distinguished himself in a series of victories against the allied forces, forcing Vice-Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius to pull back from the Ecaudorian Sector and from Spamalkan Peru. In spite of this, however, Dracius had maintained the Laurasian grip over the Spamalkan Spice Colonies, the Spamalkan Colombiana, and the Trans-Colonial Highways. On all theaters, the Holy Spamalkan Empire's forces were on the defensive; Emperor Philicus, as previously mentioned, now sought to bring a temporary cessation to hostilities, and to permanently withdraw the Empire from the wars with Portugallia and Morocco.
    • Empress Aurelia, on her part, felt confident that the Spamalkans would soon be forced to acknowledge the independence of the United Durthian States, and that the restriction of Spamalkan power, through the restoration of Portugallia and the concession of certain Spamalkan territories to that power and to the Sultanate of Morocco, would be essential to prevent Philicus from attempting to over-extend his power. In this view, the Empress was supported by Lord Treasurer Burghley and by most of her ministers and advisers on the Imperial Privy Council. This year would see the termination of the First Spamalkan War, a termination which would eventually prove to be only temporary. It would also see the explosion of a final uprising in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, directed against the dominance and influence of the Commonwealth's powerful foreign neighbors (Laurasia, Pruthia, and Austarlia), and in protest at the Second Partition of Dejanica, whose failure would be the Commonwealth's last grasp at independence. In her New Year's proclamation, the Empress declared that "with the graciousness of the Lord Almitis we have triumphed over our foreign enemies and have secured our realms; with his graciousness, we will restore tranquility and ensure that a proper balance endures among all powers of the Universe."
  • January 5-
    • As 1794 commenced, allied forces, as previously stated, had entrenched themselves firmly in Picardy and in the Pale of Calais, and were now on the way to completing the destruction of the Franconian League. On January 2, 1794, King Hensios IV of Franconia held a conference with his chief subordinates, the Dukes of Montpensier and Nice, the Marquis de Bertrand (1743-1809; Antoine Franjak, 2nd Marquis de Bertrand), and the Prince de Conti, to formulate plans for the decisive thrust against League garrisons and forces in the Pale and in Upper Normandy. The King now decided that the Prince de Conti and the Marquis de Bertrand, in cooperation with Laurasian Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, would make the final move against Rouen, the capture of which would permit the King's occupation of Parri. Likewise, the Duke of Nice was to assault the Spamalkan Duchy of Franche-Comte, and to launch offensives against Bescanon and Montbeliard, to prevent a move by Spamalkan forces under the command of General Jorge de Havilla (1744-1813). Finally, the King himself and the Duke of Montpensier were to invest Calais. Two days after the conference ended, the Franconian Royal Forces commenced its various offensives, in coordination with the Laurasian Empire's units.
    • On January 4, 1794, the Battle of Vernon resulted in a decisive victory for the Prince de Conti and Field-Marshal Norria, who destroyed three League regiments through use of the "hook" maneuver. That same day, the Duke of Nice crushed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Praxburg, thereby preventing a Spamalkan move into the Metzian Lordships. The following day (January 5, 1794), after having ruined Spamalkan forces in confrontations at Troyes, Pecequencourt, and Tourcoing, King Hensios and the Duke of Montpensier, with support from the 49th Imperial Army under Major-General Sir Avidius Landaius (1748-1823), approached the outskirts of Calais. The Duke of Merceour, who still refused to acknowledge King Hensios's authority, himself commanded the garrison of Calais. The Siege of Calais commenced in earnest during the early hours of the following day; within hours, King Hensios's naval forces had imposed a complete naval blockade of the star system, suppressing League supply lines to Lilles, Antwerp, and Cambrai.
    • Although a royalist offensive against Freuthen Nielles (January 7, 1794), failed, Hensios did secure Sangate, with more than 15,000 League troops and officers becoming prisoners of war. By January 11, Franconian naval forces had cleared League units from Montreuil-sur-Meir, and had advanced from thence to the Northern Vectors of Calais, harrying League supply lines and launching a series of reconnaissance expeditions. The following day, Spamalkan Admiral Coloma, who had established his headquarters at Namurs, attempted to launch a counteroffensive into the Pale, driving as far as Boulougone, St. Quentin, and Hames before being forced to retreat on January 17. On that same day, Prince de Conti captured Vassy, moving perilously close to the outskirts of Rouen. Finally, on January 23, 1794, the shields of Calais failed following a ion volley bombardment from the Franconian battleship HMS Mercador, and the allied forces quickly descended onto Calais's surface. It was not until January 26 before Freuthen Nielles was stormed, and the Duke of Merceour forced to flee from the star system. The Governor of Calais, Jacques Brazzaville, Count de Plessy (1750-1816), formally surrendered on January 27, 1794. The fall of Calais was a major blow to the Franconian League. In the meantime, allied forces under Norria and Prince de Conti had stormed League garrisons on Tourcoing (January 19-22); Waterloo (January 24); Epernay (January 27); and Charmont (January 28-29), thereby completing the expulsion of the League from Picardy and most of Upper Normandy. On January 30, 1794, the Duke of Nice defeated Spamalkan Admiral Coloma in the Battle of Dole, storming that stronghold and then Belfort the next day. By the end of January 1794, allied forces were preparing for a final assault on Rouen and to the outskirts of Parri.
  • January 25-
    • On New Year's Day 1794, the Empress had, as part of the celebrations for the New Year, watched a play and a series of dances from a "high throne of glory", attended by her chief favorite, the Earl of Estatius. Sir Antoninus Standria (1718-97), who had been a courtier of the Imperial Household since the reign of Antigonus III himself, noted that the Empress often spoke to the Earl and caressed him in a "swift and favorable manner", remarking that "she was as beautiful to my old sight as ever I saw her." This, however, was a deceiving appearance. Throughout the last weeks of December 1793, both Burghley and Estatius had pressured the Empress to designate a successor to the Attorney-Generalship. Estatius, on his part, continued to promote Bagonius's claims. The Empress, however, was determined to make her own choice on the matter, ignored his outbursts of frustration, and even paid him no attention when he stayed away from the Imperial Court on Ascentmas Day, in an attempt to make her change her mind. On New Year's Eve, the Empress had berated Estatius with tirades; there had then followed a swift reconciliation.
    • When on January 2, 1794, Burghley raised the subject of the Attorney-Generalship again at a session of the Imperial Privy Council, Estatius was angered, declaring that he would "spend all my power, might, authority, and amity, and with tooth and nail defend and procure the same for Bagonius." Matters moved swiftly to another circumstance: that of affairs surrounding the Empress's physician, Dr. Roderigo Lopacia (1725-94). Lopacia was a Portugallian, having been born on January 22, 1725 at Lisbon. He had immigrated to the Laurasian Empire in 1759, converted from Portugallian Ardentialism to Imperial Almitism, and established a medical practice in Christiania which had flourished. By 1779, Dr. Lopacia had become the Chief Doctorian of St. Bartholomew's Hospital, one of the largest and most renowned state hospitals in the Caladarian Galaxy, with men like Leicesterius, Walsingis, and even Estatius himself becoming his patients. In February 1786, Empress Aurelia, who had come to know Lopacia personally, and regarded him highly, appointed him as the chief physician of the Imperial Household. Three years later, he was granted use of a gentry coat of arms and awarded properties on Laurasia Prime, Hepudermia, Jadia, Janesia, and Dearton's Gateway. Lopacia, however, was not popular: rumor credited him with having provided Leicesterius with poisons, and jealous rivals denigrated his skill as a physician. He had many enemies, among them his own patient Estatius, whose spy he had refused to become.
    • It was also alleged that Lopacia had knowledge of the Earl's physical "shortcomings". Aurelia paid no attention to this, and for several years, thanks to her favor and his mounting wealth, Lopacia could afford to ignore it also. Estatius, on his part, was now the leader of the anti-Spamalkan, pro-imperialist party at the Imperial Court. Sir Antoninus Bagonius, his ally, discovered that Esteban Ferreira (1746-94), an attaché with the Portugallian Embassy on Laurasia Prime, was living at Lopacia's house and was a spy in the service of Emperor Philicus, with instructions to provide the Spamalkan Council of State with information about affairs in the Imperial Household. Estatius had informed the Empress of this on December 30, 1793, and she ordered Ferreira's arrest. Dr. Lopacia pleaded for his release, declaring that Ferreira was a firm supporter of the alliance between Laurasia and Portugallia, and that he had been in fact working for the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs towards the commencement of peace negotiations. The Empress, however, refused to hear of this, and soon terminated her interview with Lopacia. Then on January 15, 1794, another Portugallian connected with Dr. Lopacia, Gomez d'Avila (1753-94), was arrested as a suspected spy on Tyson.
    • Ferreira had warned Lopacia in a communique that d'Avila would incriminate them were he to be arrested; Lopacia had replied that he had tried three times to prevent d'Avila from arriving in the Empire. These messages had been intercepted by Estatius's spies. On January 18, Ferreira and d'Avila were both interrogated by Estatius, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, and Procurator-General Sir Puckerania at the Fortress of Baureux. Ferreira now swore that Lopacia had been in the pay of Spamalka for years. D'Avila, who was threatened with torture, declared that they had all been involved in a plot against King Antonio I of Portugallia. Another Portugallian, Tinoco (1760-94), who had been arrested on January 14, revealed to the interrogators that the Spamalkan Council of State had dispatched him to the Empire to help Ferreira persuade Lopacia to work for Emperor Philicus. Estatius, who had developed an excessive paranoia about Spamalka, suspected that there was a plot against the Empress's life. On January 25, 1794, Dr. Lopacia was arrested by Estatius and a delegation of Privy Councilors, being confined at Estatius House while his own house in Christiania, and his official apartments at the Quencilvanian Palace, were searched.
    • Nothing incriminating was found, and when he was examined by Burghley, Cecilis, and Estatius, he firmly asserted his innocence and declared that he had never, under his honor, engaged in any conspiracy against the Imperial Laurasian Government. Burghley and Cecilis told the Empress that they were certain that the man who had served her devotedly for years was innocent, and that the whole episode had been blown up out of proportion by Estatius in an attempt to continue the war against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Estatius was convinced otherwise, but when he went to the Empress, she accused him of acting out of malice, calling him a "rash and foolish youth to accuse this poor man of treason, whose guilt cannot be proved, but whose innocence I know well enough." She then silenced and dismissed him with a gesture. Estatius spent the next two days wallowing in fury and humiliation. He soon rallied, determined to prove he was right and defeat the Cecilises on this matter. On January 27, 1794, he ordered for Lopacia to be moved to the Fortress of Baureux, and interrogated the other suspects a second time. Threatened with torture, they insisted that the Doctor was involved with the plot, and had agreed to poison the Empress for €50 billion dataries.
    • On January 28, Estatius, convinced that he had Lopacia within his grasp, told Sir Antoninus Bagonius that "I have discovered a most dangerous and desperate treason. The point of conspiracy was Her Majesty's death. The executioner should have been Dr. Lopacia; the manner poison." Tinoco, on his part, had stated that three years before, Emperor Philicus had sent Dr. Lopacia a diamond and ruby ring. The Empress recalled that the Doctor had offered her such a ring at that time, which she had refused. Lopacia had firmly denied everything, but when faced with the Empress's testimony about the ring, said that Chancellor Walsingis, in 1787, had himself orchestrated the ring's delivery, in order to deceive Emperor Philicus. Walsingis was dead, and could not corroborate this explanation. Lord Treasurer Burghley and his son still believed that Lopacia was being compelled, out of fear for his own life, to make such statements, but found that that they could not control the direction of the winds. Worn down and terrified, Lopacia (who was sixty-nine years old), gave in, confessing to all kinds of improbable plots and thereby sealing his fate. On February 7, 1794, he, Ferreira, and Tinoco were arraigned for treason by the Imperial Court of the Star Chamber, convicted, and sentenced to death. Many at the Imperial Court, and on Laurasia Prime, convinced themselves that Lopacia and his accomplices were guilty. The Empress, however, was troubled, believing that Lopacia was an innocent man and had been convicted on the grounds of flimsy evidence. Four months were now to pass before she would sign the Doctor's death warrant.
  • January 29-
    • On January 29, 1794, King Georg III of Vendragia and Irvania, who had reigned since the death of his father, Frederickus I, in 1773, died on Londarania. The King of Vendragia was fifty-five years old at the time of his death. During the last several years of his reign, Georg's mental and physical health both had entered a serious decline. As early as 1775, the King had experienced routine attacks of paranoia and of "mental paralysis." At times, he was convinced that the spirits of his predecessors were assaulting him; that no one could be trusted; and that he had to secure himself against unknown dangers. The King's mental paranoia became more pronounced with the passage of the years, and in 1788, he experienced a severe mental relapse. Georg constantly talked to himself; erupted into outbursts of hysteria and of anger; and refused to allow for anyone to come near him. He also refused to partake in his food, and this worried his family considerably.
    • His son, Prince Georg of Wales, took severe measures to ensure his father's recovery and maintain the stability of the government. He assumed chairmanship of the Royal Council; had his father placed in confinement; and ordered the physicians of the royal household to administer him a series of experimental treatments. This routine worked, at least apparently, and by April of that year, the King returned to his duties of governance. By 1791, however, he had begun to experience yet another relapse, and in September 1792, had been confined to his personal quarters. Georg spent his last months raving about his enemies, and lamenting about the state of his realms, in spite of the fact that the Confederacy continued to gain victories in the Germanian Principalities over its Pruthian and Austarlian adversaries. Georg was now succeeded as King of Vendragia by his son, the Prince, who became Georg IV. The new King was gluttonous, extravagant, and self-centered, qualities which would not endear him to his subjects during his brief reign. Condolences from all foreign courts arrived at Londarania for the King. Georg's funeral was conducted on February 7 at Windsor Crypt on Frogmore.
  • February 16-
    • By February 1794, the course of the First Spamalkan War had proceeded far in the favor of the allied forces. Following the fall of Belfort and Dole, the Duke of Nice had continued his offensive push into Franche-Comte, determined to prevent Spamalkan General de Havilla from providing support to the beleaguered garrison of Rouen. On February 1, 1794, he defeated de Havilla in the Battle of Fort de Joux. Lods fell the following day, and by February 5, Nice had cut off supply lines from Bescanon, thereby preventing any Spamalkan moves of reinforcement towards Rouen. Rouen itself was now under direct assault from the forces of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and Laurasian Empire. The siege commenced on February 4, 1794, with Field-Marshal Norria and Prince de Conti, in command of the 55th and 67th Imperial Fleets, the 49th and 55th Imperial Armies, and the 1st and 2nd Franconian Expeditionary Forces, imposing a blockade of the star system. Thrusts by the Duke of Merceour and Spamalkan General del Avila from Arromanches and Beny-sur-Mer (February 4-8, 1794), failed, and by February 11, allied forces had cleared Franconian units from the Rouen Straits. On February 13, 1794, Field-Marshal Norria destroyed a Spamalkan-League patrol in the Battle of the Senans, securing the outpost of Sedan later that same day. Then, on February 15, the final offensive against Rouen commenced.
    • After just eleven days of siege, the star system's defenses failed, and Norria was able to exploit a gap in the Rouen Defensive Ramparts to instigate four coordinated landings on the planetary surface. The following day (February 16, 1794), Rouen was completely secured by the forces of Laurasia and Franconia upon the surrender of the Garrison Commander, Enzo de Gard, Count de Bastires (1732-1801), who realized that further resistance was futile. The fall of Rouen, which was accompanied by the allied conquest of the League garrisons of Villers-Bocage, Tilly sur Seuilles, Pincon's Nebular, and the Falaise Colonies (February 17-22, 1794), completed the reconquest of Normandy by King Hensios IV's forces. The King of Franconia himself had now further consolidated his position. League Admiral de Brancas, who had departed from Rouen shortly before the commencement of the siege and was now commanding the garrison of Guines, decided to ingratiate himself with the King. On January 19, 1794, King Hensios had issued a proclamation from Orleans, offering a full and unconditional pardon to any members of the Franconian League who laid down their arms and surrendered all garrisons and troops under their control. De Brancas now took advantage of this, and on February 23, he formally capitulated to King Hensios at Poitou, surrendering control of Guines, Risban, and Upper Cannes to the Royal Franconian Government. Then on February 27, 1794, Hensios was finally crowned King of Franconia at Chartres, with the Duke of Montpensier and the Autarch of Lorraine presiding over the ceremony. Two days later, Rheims surrendered to the King. On March 7, 1794, Field-Marshal Norria and Commodore Frosbisherius advanced from Craon, Blaye, and Vannes against Brest, the last remaining stronghold of note held by the Franconian League in Brittany.
    • The Battle of Brest (March 8-11, 1794), ended in a decisive victory for Norria and Frosbisherius. The conquest of Brest now destroyed any remaining hopes for the Franconian League. On March 14, 1794, the Parlement of Parri sent a note to King Hensios, declaring its willingness to acknowledge his authority and to admit him to Parri on three conditions: one, that he confirm his pardon of all members of the Franconian League who surrendered peacefully; two, that he reaffirm the prerogatives of the Franconian Catholic Order; and three, that no Laurasian units be present at Parri's reoccupation. Hensios accepted these terms, on the urging of Field-Marshal Norria, four days later. Finally, on March 22, 1794, the garrison of Parri admitted the King and his Franconian forces. Hensios conducted a victorious procession through the Royal City, receiving the tributes of his subjects and of the assembled nobles, gentry, and notables of the star system. At this stage, the Council of the Franconian League formally submitted to the King of Franconia, and the Parlement confirmed his title in a magisterial decree. Hensios adhered to the conditions, and on March 22, issued the Edict of Parri, confirming his pardon of the Franconian League's submitted members and the status of Franconian Catholicism. By the end of March 1794, only the Ardennian strongholds remained under the control of the Duke of Merceour and his Spamalkan allies, and the King had now consolidated his control over the vast majority of Franconia's territories.
  • March 16-
    • Whereas the allied forces of King Hensios IV and the Laurasian Empire were making such substantial gains against the Holy Spamalkan Empire and Franconian League, advances were also made in the Colonial Territories and in the Southern Durthian Duchies, which finally led Emperor Philicus to the inevitable. On January 6, 1794, Prince Maurice of Nassau destroyed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Artloi, thereby preventing a Spamalkan move against Limburg, Differdange, and Petange. Four days later, he captured Diekirch after an offensive through the Sune Straits. By January 15, the Spamalkan strongholds of Dudeldange, Esch, and Vaduz had fallen into Durthian hands, sundering the Lilles-Luxembourg Prime Transit Corridor. Luxembourg Prime itself was finally approached on January 22, 1794. The Siege of Luxembourg Prime commenced in earnest, as Prince Maurice placed thirteen Diffel-class dreadnoughts on the farther side of the star system, and Durthian troops seized the Luxembourg Approaches. The Siege dragged on for nearly a month, as Spamalkan Governor-General Mansfield launched repeated thrusts against Gravelines, Breda, Maastricht, Utrecht, Roosevelt, and Tournai, attempting in vain to draw off Prince Maurice's forces and to open a supply route to Luxembourg Prime. Eventually, however, on February 10, 1794, Luxembourg Prime finally surrendered to the United Durthian States and Laurasian Empire. Following the fall of this, the third-most populous system still controlled by the Holy Spamalkan Empire in the Durthian Duchies, Triesenburg, Schaan, and Batzers were stormed by Prince Maurice (February 15-27, 1794), consolidating allied control over the southern regions of the Luxemborgian Sector.
    • Lilles was subsequently assaulted by Field-Marshal Pellhamia; its fall on March 14, 1794, disrupted Spamalkan supply routes to the Ardennian Worlds. Cambrai followed on March 22, and by the end of March 1794, Antwerp was facing a direct threat from allied forces. At the same time, Admiral Dracius had succeeded in restoring initiative and vigor to Laurasian-Portugallian campaigns in the Colonial Territories. On January 3, 1794, Dracius defeated De Castros in the Battle of Ambata. He then pushed onwards to Guadanquil, recapturing the stronghold on January 7. By January 15, Quito had been virtually isolated by Laurasian units. Ayacucho became subject to another Laurasian offensive move on January 18, 1794; the world finally fell to Dracius on January 22, permitting a renewed Laurasian advance into the Chilian Territories. Babahoyo had been firmly recovered by January 27, and on February 2, 1794, Dracius assaulted Antofagasta. The Siege of Antofagasta lasted for thirteen days, but when the stronghold fell on February 15, it opened the way to an offensive against Arica, Valparaiso, and Tamuca. Arica fell on February 24, 1794; two days later, Dracius defeated Admiral De Castros and General Hernando de Verran in the Battle of Soto. On March 1, 1794, Tamuca surrendered to the forces of the Laurasian Empire; that same day, Buenos Aires fell victim to a Portugallian raiding expedition, which then harried Montevideo and the Plata Straits Colonies. In the meantime, Laurasian Rear-Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia had stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Petapa, Mixco, and Antigua (February 1794), preventing Spamalkan moves against the Spice Colonies.
    • On March 2, 1794, Admiral Langatonia defeated a Spamalkan naval convoy in the Battle of Pedernales, capturing thirty Spamalkan frigates and utilizing them for his force. By March 14, he had stormed the Soco Mineral Outposts, impounding Spamalkan mining equipment, minerals, and industrial goods. The following day, Langatonia decided to head towards Puerto Caballos, a major Spamalkan shipyard and hyperspace terminal in the Guatemalan Sector. Using a captured Spamalkan frigate, Langatonia seized a piloting vessel and demanded the surrender of seven Spamalkan commercial freighters under the command of Admiral Diego Ramirez (1740-1824). The demand was immediately refused, and Langatonia now proceeded to a long-range bombardment of the star system's docking facilities, inflicting serious damage. The following day (March 16, 1794), he launched a automated transport against Ramirez's flagship, the Cagamrania.
    • The Spamalkan fleet panicked, and were forced to abandon the Cagamrania when Langatonia launched three more automated transports into the midst of the fleet. He took the chance, with Imperial Marines quickly seizing the Cagamrania and Ramirez's second command ship, the San Diego, with Captain Luis de Sevilla (1752-94) being killed in the ensuing confrontation with the Laurasian forces. Spamalkan ships, surrounded by superior Laurasian dreadnoughts, and harried ceaselessly by Laurasian starfighters, were now boarded by Imperial Marines; by midday, the Espritu Santo, the San Anton de Magadalena, the Presentacion, and four Spamalkan frigates had all been captured, their crews seized. Langatonia subsequently destroyed the Puerto Caballos Dockyards and razed the planetary surface, with more than 300,000 Spamalkan colonists dying from Laurasian turbolaser and ion fire in Caracas City. Admiral Ramirez himself was captured, and by the end of the day, Laurasian forces had retreated from Puerto Caballos, having deprived the Spamalkans of any use of that star system.
  • March 25-
    • The Raid of Puerto Caballos, as the preceding assault became known, had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. It was this, which, on March 19, finally compelled Emperor Philicus to order the Council of State to seek an end to hostilities. The Emperor was determined to recover his Spamalkan Colonial Territories through negotiation, aware that Empress Aurelia of Laurasia would not demand cession to the Empire, for fear of provoking renewed Marasharite aggression. He also sought to maintain what he could in Southern Durthia, and to end the threat posed to his rear by the Sultanate of Morocco, which had utilized Ceuta, Melilla, and Gibraltar to harass Granada, Valencia, Andalusia, and the Balearics. Then on March 25, 1794, the Spamalkan Secretariat of Foreign Affairs, under Alvaro de Bazan, 2nd Marquess of Santa Cruz (1771-1846), sent a communique to the foreign ministries of the Laurasian Empire, Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia, United Durthian States, Sultanate of Morocco, and Serene Kingdom of Franconia, proposing for a general peace conference to settle all outstanding matters. The same communique also requested for an immediate military armistice among all the varied powers. Reactions were swift.
    • Prince Philip William of Orange and the Durthian States-General were ecstatic when they received the communique, especially as the Holy Spamalkan Government now acknowledged Durthia as a sovereign state with the power of diplomacy for the first time. On March 28, the States-General formally accepted the Spamalkan request. That same day, King Hensios IV of Franconia, who was already conceiving ambitions for extending Franconian power, but at this stage wished to consolidate his rule on Parri and to obtain rule over the Ardennian Worlds, accepted. Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur I of Morocco, whose goals had been achieved years earlier with the expulsion of Spamalkan forces from the Barbaries, and wishing to extricate himself from this now "sterile" war, accepted on March 29. On April 2, 1794, King Antonio I of Portugallia also provided his acceptance, angling for acquisitions in Peru, Guyana, and the Rio de la Plata. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, on her part, was now confronted with new, and severe problems in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth (as will be outlined below). Despite the vehement protests of the Earl of Estatius, who even withdrew from the Imperial Court for a time in April 1794, the Empress accepted the Spamalkan peace offer on April 6. On April 11, 1794, the Truce of Pereda was signed, thereby suspending all active hostilities and allowing for all sides to maintain the territories they then held until formal negotiations could begin. In the meantime, the Laurasian Empire found itself plunged into another military conflict, again in Dejanica.
  • March 27-
    • By March 1794, many Dejanicans had concluded that the further mutilation of their country and the humiliating constitutional settlements imposed upon them were intolerable. Following the Second Partition, patriotic, independence-minded forces within the Commonwealth were left only with the option of organizing a broadly-based national uprising against the Laurasian occupiers. The Second Partition, on its part, had brought both political and economic disaster to Dejanica's remaining territories. Territorial reductions disrupted the economy, undercut the industries, and, in January 1794, caused a crash of the Dejanican banking system. The state treasury of Dejanica had become depleted, leading to a chain economic reaction and social unrest. Furthermore, the Dejanican military was widely dissatisfied with King Stanis Vorrust's capitulation to the demands of the "she-wolf" Empress Aurelia of Laurasia.
    • As noted before, General Kosciusko and Prince Josef Poniatowskia were vehement in their criticisms of the King's actions. Tensions were further provoked when on January 11, 1794, the Ambassador of the Empire to the Court of Warsaw, Josef Iglestrom, 1st Baron Iglestrom of Nystadia (1737-97), who had replaced Sievers in December 1793, demanded that the Permanent Council impose a cap of not more than 1.9 million military personnel and 900 warships upon the Dejanican Armed Forces, even lower than the limitations imposed from the previous year. The Council surrendered four days later, ordering King Stanis Vorrust to demobilize the excess military forces. This aroused further outrage among the commanders of the Dejanican military. Kosicusko, on his part, had already departed from Dejanica on October 7, 1793. He moved to Lepizig in the Electorate of Saxony, where he formed an emigre community with other disgruntled Dejanican commanders and politicians. Soon, he and others began preparing an uprising against Laurasian rule in Dejanica.
    • Ignacy Potockia (1750-1809) and Hugo Kollajia, sought contacts with other opposition politicians in the Commonwealth, and by late 1793, had been joined by Ignacy Dizalynskia (1754-97) and other "revolutionaries" opposed to Laurasian rule. This uprising had to be prepared without prematurely provoking the partitioning powers into preemptive action, but also without waiting too long. Besides the moderates led by Dizalynskia, who aimed for a restoration of the Constitution of May 3, 1791, there was a radical conspiracy wing, which advocated for the removal of the King and the establishment of a true republic. Kosciusko's own goal was to utilize his prior military experience, combine operations by a regular army with those of informal and irregular popular forces, based on the municipal and common populations of the star systems, in hopes of substituting their great numbers and motivation for deficiencies in equipment and training. On March 7, 1794, however, Ambassador Igelstrom was alerted about conspiracy plans on Dejanica. He now ordered the arrest of various conspiracy activists and moved to accelerate the reduction in the Commonwealth's military forces. On March 10, the Permanent Council was compelled to reduce military forces down to the even-lower level of 1.1 million military personnel and 700 warships, thereby giving Dejanica the barest minimum of a military force.
    • They were now outnumbered ten-to-one by Laurasian forces in the Commonwealth's territory. Brigadier General Antoni Madalinskia (1739-1805), who was stationed at Ostroleka in Masovia, refused to cooperate with the Council's orders and went towards Krakow, seeking to join Kosciusko, who was already present there. Igelstrom ordered a pursuit, withdrawing units from Krakow in the process, in order to concentrate forces in the vicinity of Dejanica Major. Kosciusko now moved quickly to exploit the situation. He arrived at Krakow on March 19. Then on March 24, 1794, he formally issued the official declaration of what now became known as the Kosciusko Revolt. Assuming dictatorial powers as Nacelzink (Dictator and Commander-in-Chief) of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, he declared his intention to "end the ravages imposed upon our Motherland by the foreign invaders" and to use his powers to restore national self-sufficiency, defend the Commonwealth's territorial integrity and promote general freedom, with a ultimate goal towards restoration of the 1791 Constitution. He sought to fight in the name of "freedom, territorial integrity, and independence." Three days later (March 27, 1794), he issued the general act of mobilization, requiring that for every 1,000 subjects, at least five be equipped with military arms for self-defense and conscripted into the Commonwealth Forces. Kosciusko then established a Commission for Order on Krakow, in order to supervise military mobilization efforts.
    • This commission impressed a fifth of all males on Krakow, and in other systems, between the ages of 18 and 28; imposed an income tax on all noble, gentry, and business properties; and impounded the resources of factories, shipyards, and facilities to provide ships, shield generators, and turbocannon for the Royal Dejanican Navy. Within a week, Kosciusko had more than doubled the size of the legitimate Dejanican forces. From Krakow, Kosciusko now attempted an advance to Dejanica Major, but found himself blocked by a strong Laurasian force led by Major-General Sir Theodosius Denisaria (1746-1802). Attempting to circumvent that force, he then encountered the 71st Imperial Army under the command of Brigadier-General Sir Alexander Tormasvia (1752-1829). The Battle of Raclawice (April 4, 1794), then ensued between the opposing forces. It ended in a decisive victory for the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as General Kosicuszko was able to unleash his mobile charge regiments to break Laurasian lines. General Tormasvia lost more than half of his artillery and was forced to withdraw from Raclawice. The route to Dejanica Major, however, remained closed for the rebels. Nevertheless, the rebellion continued to spread. By early April 1794, the Dejanican garrisons of Lublin, Lutsk, Wolym, Sanok, and Prezmysl had all defected to Kosciusko; and by April 11, Laurasian units had been driven from Litsk and Rywel. A major outbreak now occurred on Dejanica Major.
  • April 17-
    • Following Kosciusko's proclamation at Krakow, and then the Battle of Raclawice, tension on Dejanica Major had grown rapidly. King Stanis Vorrust I opposed Kosicuszko's uprising, condemning it in a proclamation on April 2. The King dispatched the Grand Hetman, Pitor Ozarowski (1725-94), Commander-in-Chief of the Dejanican Armed Forces, and the Marshal of the Permanent Council, Josef Anwickz, to Ambassador Igelstrom, with a proposal to evacuate both the Laurasian troops and the Dejanican garrison loyal to the King to a military encampment at Nowy Dwor. Iglestrom rejected the plan, seeing no need for the Empire to abandon Dejanica Major. He sent a corps under Brigadier-General Sir Alexander Khurisevia (1749-1801) to intercept Kosciusko and prevent him from approaching Dejanica Major. He ordered increased surveillance of suspected members of the uprising, and imposed censorship on all communications at Dejanica Major.
    • Moreover, the Ambassador issued further orders for the arrest of those he suspected of having any connection with the uprising. These included some of the more prominent political leaders, among them Generals Antoni Madalinskia, Kazimerz Nestor Sapieha (1757-98), and Ignancy Dialzynskia; the King's Chamberlain Jan Walenty Weiger (1755-96); the newly-appointed Marshal of the Sejm, General Stanis Malacowskia; the Potockia brothers; and Hugo Kollajia. At the same time, Laurasian forces started preparations to disarm the weak Dejanican garrison under General Stanis Mokrownskia (1761-1821) by seizing the Warsaw Municipal Arsenal. These orders made the situation worse as they were leaked to the Dejanicans. The Laurasian forces prepared a plan to seize the most important installations to secure the star system until reinforcements arrived from the Empire. The Dejanicans, weakened by the arrests of some of their leadership, now prepared an all-out assault to drive the Laurasians from Dejanica Major, theoretically still the capital of an independent Commonwealth.
    • Kosciusko had a large number of supporters on Dejanica Major, headed by Tomasz Maureswskia (1769-1834). General Jan August Cichowkia (1750-95) was among the chief supporters of the uprising, commanding the Dejanican garrison. He convinced the Laurasians to leave the Arsenal, the Royal Castle, and the Turbocannon Depot defended by Dejanian units, and undermined the Laurasian plan to reduce the number of soldiers serving with the Dejanican garrison. Jan Kilinskia (1760-1819), one of the world's most prominent entrepreneurs, began mobilizing support for an uprising among his peers. The Dejanican regular forces included 75,000 military personnel at arms with 56 warships, while the Laurasian garrison of Dejanica Major had a nominal strength of 125,000 men with 90 warships. Although Laurasian forces were far more numerous than their Dejanican counterparts, they were dispersed across the planet's major cities and installations, guarding the Dockyards and the residences of the Ambassador and of other Laurasian officers.
    • In addition, their orders in case of an armed uprising were contradictory and did not take into account the possibility of fighting against regular Dejanican units. On April 17, 1794, the uprising commenced with a charge against a Laurasian force at the Dejanican Iron Gates by a Dejanican squadron. Dejanican Guards then headed towards the Warsaw Gates, and the Arsenal. At 5:00 a.m. the Laurasians launched an offensive against the Arsenal, but were repelled by unexpected resistance from the Dejanicans. Civilian volunteers soon received arms from the garrison of the Arsenal and joined the confrontation against the Laurasians. The arsenal was secured, but Dejanican plans to capture the Laurasian troops in its immediate vicinity failed. The uprising now began to spread to all parts of Warsaw City, as Laurasian forces penetrated to the Old Town.
    • By 6:30 a.m., confrontations had also commenced in Nalewki, Klopka, and Leszno, thereby spreading the Uprising across the surface of Dejanica Major. The initial clashes caused much confusion; Laurasian forces, pushed back after their initial failure at the Arsenal, massed in front of the Laurasian Embassy. They were shelled by a smaller Dejanican force, but managed to successfully reorganize their formations. Igelstrom's headquarters were now isolated from the remainder of the city, and chaos continued. By 7:00 a.m. a great battle had ensued, as both sides struggled to secure the Arsenal and the Laurasian Embassy. Three Laurasian assault groups assaulted the Arsenal from three sides; all Laurasian assaults were repelled with heavy losses on both sides. The Dejanicans started a counterattack towards Midoowa, Senatorska, and Podawle, but this was with little success. Laurasian forces were forced to retreat to the Carmelite Church, and within hours, most of them had been wiped out.
    • By the early afternoon, Laurasian troops retreated from the Holy Quarters towards Warsaw's western outskirts. A 8:00 assault on Laurasian positions at the Rectorate of Kazierz and the Branickia Palace resulted in severe casualties for the Dejanicans, but Laurasian units under Major-General Nero Garanius, 9th Baron de Garanius of Avaskar (1741-94) and Colonel Anastasius Milaewskia (1762-1824) were surrounded. Colonel Milaewskia was seriously wounded, while Baron de Garanius and his troops were ambushed and slaughtered by civilians at the Saxonian Gardens. The victories obtained by the Dejanican 10th Regiment broke the morale of the Laurasian forces. The fighting at the Arsenal and the Laurasian Embassy continued as both sides drew reinforcements from throughout Warsaw City; heavy combat occurred on Dejanica Maoria, and throughout the planetary countryside. Laurasian units, although forced to retreat, were able to capture the Kranskia Palace and demolish a number of Dejanican offensive batteries.
    • The Palatial Garden remained in Dejanican hands, and heavy fighting occurred there as well. At various pockets throughout Warsaw City, now-isolated Laurasian regiments defended themselves vigorously against Dejanican and civilian assaults for many hours, suffering catastrophic losses and inflicting much damage in the neighboring regions. The King, on his part, along with members of the Targowica Confederation (including Ankwickz, Great Crown Marshal Frederick Josef Mozynskia (1738-1817), and his own brother Kazimerz Poniatowskia), took refuge at Warsaw Castle. They tried in vain to restore peace, but Poniatowskia's nominees as military commanders, Mayor Ignacy Zarweskia (1745-1802) and General Mokronwskia both defected to the rebel forces. Laurasian forces under Lieutenant-Colonel Honorius Novrakia (1756-1811) then amassed at Jerulian Straits and advanced to Saxon Square, encountering civilian and Dejanican militia under Captain of Artillery Jacek Dzerania (1750-1803). The Dejanicans opened fire with their turbocannon and retreated towards Bruhl Palace, the residence of the late, and hated, chief minister of King Vorrus II. The Laurasian forces stopped, and soon mutinied, breaking into the Saxon Palace and plundering the residence. The Dejanicans shelled them for nearly three hours, not coming under assault themselves. The Laurasians then started a disorganized retreat, allowing the Dejanicans to maintain their position. Repeated assaults on the Arsenal from Miodowa continued to be repelled. Laurasian Colonel Antiochus Tiuschenia (1748-94) died in yet another vain assault against the Arsenal. The Dejanicans launched a massive offensive against the Embassy and the positions of Laurasian troops around them. A deep stalemate ensued by the late hours, with additional Dejanican assaults being repelled by Laurasian turbocannon fire.
    • The Dejanicans then assaulted the Capurian Treasury and the Almitian Monastery of St. James, storming both facilities after hours of hand-to-hand fighting. Kransiskia Palace was subsequently looted by Laurasian troops. Isolated Laurasian units continued to defend themselves into the early hours of April 18, 1794. Dejanican General Mokronowskia, who had now secured the majority of Dejanica Prime's smaller settlements, concentrated on the main remaining Laurasian stronghold in Warsaw City: the Embassy. Dejanican units continued the repeated assaults on the installation, being repelled bloodily. The Laurasians suffered significant losses as well. By 10:00, Igelstrom, who now received word that Kosicuszko's units were harrying the outskirts of the star system, realized that all was lost and retreated to Powazki with his chief military subordinates. The Dejanican troops finally broke through the Embassy's defenses: by 7:00 p.m., they had seized the Diplomatic Archive, released all political prisoners held by the Laurasians in the Embassy grounds, and captured the Ambassador's treasury, with more than €295.6 billion dataries in store. This Dejanican victory marked the completion of Dejanica Major's seizure, with the last Laurasian units routed, captured, or in retreat. By the end of the day, the entire star system was in rebel hands. The Laurasians lost more than 100,000 troops, with nearly 25,000 prisoners being executed by the Dejanicans in a fury of vengeance, and virtually all of their garrison ships. Igelstrom, who was now in utter disgrace as a result of the Uprising of Dejanica Major, was recalled by an angry Empress Aurelia on April 25, 1794; deprived of all his properties and titles; and, on May 5, imprisoned at the Military Prison of Kherson. He would die there on June 22, 1797, at the age of 59.
  • May 7-
    • Following the fall of Dejanica Major to the forces of the Kosicuszko Revolt, rebel forces made further, and rapid gains, in the Commonwealth's territories. On April 22, 1794, Dejanican General Jakub Jasnikia (1761-94) instigated a uprising on Vilinus, capital world of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, against the Laurasian garrison, taking inspiration from the events at Dejanica Major. Lithuanian Hetman Herman Kossaworkia, who collaborated with the Laurasians, had urged the Laurasians to assault rebel forces concentrated near Vilinus, but had been ignored. Therefore, they were caught off guard when Jasinkia combined a uprising on Vilinus with an offensive against Laurasian positions from the Arenian Straits. Within hours, the Laurasian Empire had been hurled from the star system, which welcomed the General as a liberator. On April 24, the "Act of Rebellion of the Lithuanian Nation" was issued, with the rebels declaring their solidarity with the aims of Kosciusko and renouncing the protectorship of the Imperial Laurasian Government. Hetman Kossaworkia, who had been captured at Kaunas on April 26, was subsequently executed as a traitor to the Commonwealth. On May 7, 1794, Kosciuzko issued the Proclamation of Polaniec, by which he granted civil liberty to all inhabitants of the Commonwealth. Although this new law never came into full effect, and was fiercely resisted by the Dejanican nobility, it nevertheless brought many Dejanican commoners to the side of the Rebellion.
    • The Dejanican situation however, would remain critical, especially in light of future developments. Empress Aurelia, who was determined to crush this new outbreak against the Laurasian Empire's influence and control over the affairs of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, now decided to extend an offer to the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. On May 11, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia sent a communique to the Pruthian Bureau of Foreign Affairs, proposing for a joint Pruthian-Laurasian offensive into Lesser Dejanica, towards the purpose of "suppressing this outbreak of dissent against our two governments and the rise of anarchy in those realms." Autocratic Pruthian Emperor A'rua III, who was angered by the insults which had been hurled at him by the rebels (who considered him to be a vile "fiend" for having disengaged from his obligations towards the Commonwealth), proved receptive to the Empress's offer. Already, he had stationed his forces at Torun, Danzig, Marienburg, Konigsberg, Balbork, Elbing, and Lyck for a move into the Commonwealth's territories. On May 15, 1794, the two governments formally agreed to cooperate with each other in offensives against the Kosciuszko Revolt. Three days later, the Pruthian 2nd and 9th Legionary Forces, under the command of General Francis Fravat (1747-1814), violated the Commonwealth's territorial integrity and crossed the border, soon joining with Laurasian forces in the northern regions of Lesser Dejanica. By May 28, Laurasian and Pruthian units had secured Szubin, Barcin, Nowin, Korowowno, and Dejanica Minor, thereby preventing Koscuszko from advancing his supply lines north of Dejanica Major.
  • May 14-
    • On May 14, 1794, after over a month of preparations, delegations from the Laurasian Empire, Holy Spamalkan Empire, Serene Kingdom of Franconia, Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia, United Durthian States, and Sultanate of Morocco convened at Alacantara in Spamalkan Galicia, which was occupied by Laurasian forces, commencing the diplomatic conference to end the First Spamalkan War. The Laurasian Empire was represented by Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia; the Secretary of the Privy Council, Sir Robertius Cecilis; Vice-Chamberlain Sir Tacitus Knollysis; Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria; and Sir Antigonus Wrydius (1740-1805), Minister of Space and Transportation. The Holy Spamalkan Empire was represented by the 2nd Marquess of Santa Cruz; the newly-appointed Governor-General of Durthia, Ernest, Duke of Franche-Comte (1753-95); Spamalkan Secretary of State and War, Don Juan de Mancidior (1738-1810); General Juan del Aguila; and the President of the Spamalkan Durthian Council, Jean Richardot (1745-1822). The Serene Kingdom of Franconia was represented by Adel de Maran, Count of Marne (1749-1833); Prince de Conti; the Dukes of Nice and Boulougone; Claude de Sourain, Autarch of Lorraine (1755-1831); and the President of the Parlement of Parri, Monsieur Pierre de Rives (1748-1823). The Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia was represented by Friar Joao de Canto of Seville (1735-1815); Portugallian Prince Fernando; Secretary of Diplomacy Juan de Jacques (1739-1806); and the Duke of Braganza.
    • The United Durthian States was represented by Prince William Louis of Nassau, Stadholder of Frisia (1760-1820); Johann van Oldenbarnevelt, Advocate of the States (1747-1819); Pensioner Jan Neyen of Amsterdam (1750-1812); and Grand Pensionary Frannik Jader of the Hague (1736-1818). Finally, the Sultanate of Morocco was represented by Aben el-Quahoud, the Sultan's Chief Secretary of Diplomacy; General Abduk-el Narir of Fez (1755-1806); and Viceroy Al-Qasim of Mauritania (1759-1838). The delegations convened at the Grand Palace of Alacantara, one of the largest private residences in extra-galactic civilization, and were entertained by the Governor-General of Spamalkan Galicia, Felipe Hurjanos (1741-1802). Each of the delegations had their own goals. For Franconia, it was Spamalkan recognition of King Hensios IV's authority over the League and the Ardennian Worlds. For Laurasia, it was the independence of Portugallia and its colonial territories, as well as of Durthia, and the concession of commercial privileges to Laurasian merchants. Durthia, besides seeking recognition of its independence, also aimed for the acquisition of Northern Flanders, Brabant, and parts of Luxembourg. Spamalka sought to retain its colonial territories and to gain acknowledgement of its continued rule over Brabant, Flanders, and Franche-Comte. Morocco sought recognition of its control of Ceuta, Mellila, and Gibraltar. All of these varied aims would be reconciled during the conference, which was to continue for the next two months.
  • June 7-
    • Empress Aurelia, who continued to struggle with her conscience concerning her imperial physician, Dr. Lopacia, and was soon confronted with the outbreak of the Kosciusko Revolt in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, grew restless at the Quencilvanian Palace. Several times during February and March 1794, the Empress gave orders to her household and personal transport fleet to ready for a move from Laurasia Prime to one of her other residences in the Core Worlds, and each time changed her mind, deciding to stay on her capital world. This behavior exasperated all of her household and government officials, with Lord Treasurer Burghley complaining of "Her Majesty's fleeting state of mind." Finally, however, on March 24, 1794, just three days before Kosciusko's proclamation of rebellion at Krakow, the Empress decided to move to Nonsuchia Palace on Americana. This time she stayed to the course, and the Court was finally relieved that her vacillation was at an end. Then on March 26, she finally brought the anxieties over the Attorney-Generalship to an end, formally appointing Sir Demetrius Coxius (1752-1834) to the position. Coxius had been born in Herkorim on February 1, 1752, the fourth of eight children. His father, Sir Antiochus Coxius (1708-61), was a noted businessman, sitting on the Board of Directors of Christiania Pharmaceuticals, and his mother, Tibronia (1720-95), owned numerous properties on Laurasia Prime and throughout the Laurasia Prime Purse Region.
    • Coxius's father died on November 15, 1761, and his widow married Sir Argaeus Bozaria (1717-90), who was owner of Camanite Realtors, one of the largest property-trading and real-estate businesses on Laurasia Prime. Coxius's stepfather had a tremendous influence on him, instilling in him virtues of hard work, thrift, and loyalty. Coxius attended the Master Norwanian High School in Herkorim, and in 1767, matriculated at the University of Herkorim. Graduating early with a degree in pre-law and political sciences in 1770, Coxius then joined the practice of Cliffordia and Malagies the following year as an intern. In April 1772, he transferred to the Imperial Jurisprudence Academy, graduating from the Academy Academia School in 1776 as valedictorian of his class, and then obtaining his J.D. in Jurisprudence in April 1778, from the Academy Legal School. Later that same month, he was accepted to the Christiania Inns, the most prominent law firm and lawyers pool on Laurasia Prime. Coxius then distinguished himself in a series of cases through the 1780s, and became intimately connected to Empress Aurelia's Howardis cousins. He became Solicitor General in June 1793, upon Sir Thomasius Egertonia's promotion to the Chief Justiceship of the Imperial Court of the Chancery.
    • Empress Aurelia's appointment of him to the Attorney-Generalship marked a further rise in the career of the man destined to become Procurator-General of the Governing Senate under Lysimachus II and Archaleus I. Estatius, however, was much displeased by it, interpreting his appointment as a victory for the Cecilises. However, he immediately suggested that Sir Franconius Bagonius be given the vacated post of Solicitor-General. The Empress refused, and for the next eighteen months, the position would remain vacant. Estatius engaged in a series of quarrels with her throughout this time: the context now became a "battle of wills" between the two contenders. This was also complicated by the Earl's previously mentioned distaste of the negotiations ongoing with the Holy Spamalkan Empire. As regards to Dr. Lopacia, however, matters continued to proceed in the Earl's favor. Empress Aurelia finally signed the death warrants of Lopacia, Ferreira, d'Avila, and ten of their accomplices on May 25. On June 7, 1794, they were all executed at the Tyburnian Stockards. Estatius himself, escorted by the young Earl of Southerton (who was still in his teens) and by the Bagonius brothers, witnessed the execution. Lopacia, who suffered the full horrors of a traitor's death, protested his innocence to the end, declaring the whole episode the conspiracy of "the Earl of Estatius and his friends." He asserted that he loved his mistress better than the Lord Paul of Almitis.
    • And soon, the truth of Lopacia's confession spilled out. On June 12, 1794, Lord Treasurer Burghley, still unconvinced of the Doctor's guilt, discovered that Lopacia had been tortured by Estatius at intervals, and that the Earl had threatened the lives of the Doctor's family if he did not confess. He also conducted a thorough search of the Doctor's correspondence, and found nothing that suggested any complicity in any conspiracy against the Empress or the Portugallians. Burghley now revealed all of this at a session of the Imperial Privy Council on June 15. Empress Aurelia, who was in attendance, realized what had happened and was sent into a flurry of anger. She dismissed the Privy Council from her presence, with the exception of Estatius (who had returned to Court from one of his protesting "ventures"). Aurelia lambasted him for his arrogance and his ruthlessness, and resolved to set matters right. On June 18, she issued a manifesto announcing the results of the Lord Treasurer's investigation; lamenting her failure at recognizing Dr. Lopacia's innocence; and posthumously exonerating him and his accomplices. The Empress returned Lopacia's confiscated property to his widow and children; provided them a imperial annuity of €1.2 billion dataries per year for their troubles; and had Lopacia's body buried at the Chapel of St. Peter ad Vicula, within the confines of the Fortress of Baureux. However, she kept Emperor Philicus's ring, wearing it for the remainder of her life. Estatius was angered at all of this, and once again withdrew from the Court to sulk, but was eventually persuaded by Bagonius to recognize that Lopacia was dead and that he had gained the ultimate victory.
  • June 8-
    • Throughout June and July 1794, the forces of the Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Empires, under Pruthian General Francis Fravat and Laurasian Major-General Sir Theodosius Denisaria, made substantial gains against Kosciusko's rebel units in Lesser Dejanica. On June 2, 1794, General Denisaria defeated Dejanican General Josef Zajackia (1752-1826) in the Battle of Drobin. During the next three days, he stormed the rebel garrisons of Gabin, Mordy, and Biezun, inflicting serious damage on Dejanican supply lines from Dejanica Major to Kaunas, Tilsit, and Vilnius. Then on June 6, 1794, he and General Fravat combined their forces together to assault Kosciusko at Szceckociny, which was located two hundred light-years west of Dejanica Major. The Battle of Szceckociny resulted in a decisive victory for the allied forces, with Dejanican General Wilowach Gilowackia (1750-94), instrumental in mobilizing support for the rebellion in Masovia and the Lublin Voivodeship, dying from wounds sustained in the confrontation.
    • Kosciusko was forced to terminate his offensives against Plonsk and Ginojeck, which now became major Laurasian supply bases. Then on June 8, 1794, the Battle of Chelm was fought between Laurasian forces under Major-General Lord Dologrurkvius, with Pruthian detachments under General Wilhelm Derfelden (1754-1812), and Dejanican forces under General Zajackia. The Laurasian-Pruthian forces, who enjoyed a three-to-one numerical advantage over their enemies, cut off their escape routes and stormed the Dombranian Outposts. General Zajackia was forced to abandon Chelm and to retreat towards Lublin. Biala Podlaska, which had served as a Dejanican base for espionage operations towards the border regions with the Empire, was stormed on June 11. Laurasian forces captured Tyrpchewa and Berepol on June 13, thereby depriving the rebels of two of their chief military arsenals.
    • On June 15, 1794, Krakow, where the Kosciusko Revolt had been started, fell to General Denisaria without resistance, with the garrison having been deprived of its supply routes and defensive shields. By June 21, Denisaria, having defeated Kosciusko again in the Battle of Deblin, had stormed the rebel garrisons of Pilaski, Annopol, and Plaestk. On June 24, Pruthian General Fravat isolated Dejanican units at Lochow; the world fell to him five days later. By the beginning of July 1794, Pruthian-Laurasian forces had occupied Tulcluz, Kosow Locki, Lomanki, Blonie, and Piastow, thereby securing control over the Masovian Borderlands. Kosicuszko and his immediate military subordinates now found themselves to be in more desperate straits than they had been before. The Nacelzink imposed martial law in the garrisons and star systems which he controlled on July 4, 1794, ordering all Dejanican residents and governmental authorities to immediately report any signs of espionage by the "foreign invaders." He imposed curfew restrictions upon the movement and professional occupations of Dejanican civilians; had all ships and dockyards searched by military vessels; and strictly monitored traffic to Dejanica Major. At the same time, the rebel sought to keep up the morale and the strength of the varied Dejanican regular and irregular forces. He promised them that with effort, they would be able to defeat the foreigners and restore the Commonwealth's full independence. Through his Supreme National Council, which he had established at the end of May 1794, Kosicuszko sought to control all affairs of the Royal Dejanican Government. And indeed, on July 10, 1794, the Battle of Rajgrod ended in a victory for rebel forces, as they managed to repel a Pruthian offensive against the star system. By this point, however, Dejanica Major itself was under threat.
  • July 17-
    • After over two months of arduous negotiations, the Treaty of Alacantara was finally signed by the diplomatic delegations of the Laurasian Empire, Holy Spamalkan Empire, Serene Kingdom of Franconia, Stellar Kingdom of Portugallia, Sultanate of Morocco, and United Durthian States on July 17, 1794, ending the First Spamalkan War and the first stage of the Durthian Revolt. This treaty, which contained a very comprehensive general settlement on all matters among the related powers, would, however, be destined to last (among some of the contending powers) for less than a year. In the preamble to the Treaty, the universal commitment to "peace and tranquility", which had been so espoused in other peace and diplomatic treaties of the eighteenth century, was again affirmed. The Treaty contained twenty articles. Article I provided for the restoration of general tranquility and peace among all the galactic powers. As specified in Article II, all prisoners of war were to be released, both civilian and military; any goods, equipment, or starship models confiscated by allied or Spamalkan forces before January 1, 1791, were to be returned to their varied owners; Article III provided for the restoration of diplomatic and economic relations; Laurasia, Franconia, Durthia, and Portugallia were now assured rights of duty-free commerce, transport, and navigation through the Spamalkan Colonial Territories and Kingdom of Naparia for a period of not more than six years (until July 14, 1800). However, all merchants and navigators from these powers were to oblige by Spamalkan laws and regulations. Article IV dealt with navigation and transit disputes. As specified in Article V, all Laurasian and Portugallian military forces were to be evacuated from the Spamalkan Spice Colonies (including the Sectors of Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Antilles, and Panama) by no later than March 1, 1795. Article VI provided for the withdrawal of all Spamalkan forces and financial support to the Franconian League, by no later than January 1, 1795.
    • Article VII obliged the United Durthian States to restore Nimburg, Luxembourg Prime, Petange, Differdange, Esch, and the Lichenstein Colonies to the Holy Spamalkan Empire by no later than the same deadline as provided in Article V. As per the terms of Article VIII, the Holy Spamalkan Empire acknowledged Franconian rule of the Ardennian Worlds, Nice, and the Savorian Provinces. Article IX and X were the most important articles of the Treaty. By the terms of these articles, the Holy Spamalkan Empire agreed to recognize the full independence and sovereignty of the United Durthian States (which now acquired Breda, Bergen op Zoom, Nijmegen, Geertuidenberg, Groningen, Axel, Devanter, Zutphen, Gravelines, Maastricht, and the Farther Straits Passes), and of the Serene Kingdom of Portugallia. Article XII provided for Portugallian retention of all of its colonial territories, as existed prior to 1780. This included the Malaccas, Singapore, Brazil, the Azores Star Cluster, and the Afro Colonies.
    • As per Article XIII, Portugallia acquired Bueno Vista, Bueno Aires, Montevideo, and the Guyana Territories, thereby consolidating its control over Brazil. Article XIV absolved the Laurasian Empire and of its allies of any obligation to compensate Spamalka for damage inflicted on commercial ports and systems in the Spice Territories during the past two years. Article XV provided for the cession of Melila, Ceuta, Gibraltar, and Fuertaventura to the Sultanate of Morocco, and recognition by the Holy Spamalkan Government of Moroccan gains in the Barbary States (such as Mauritania, Sale, and in Algiers). Article XVI provided for recognition by all powers of Laurasian rights of intervention and protectorship over the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth; Article XVIII, of the Laurasian acquisitions in the Great Tesmanian Cloud (1792-1793). Article XIX settled all outstanding matters, and Article XX provided that the Treaty would come into effect promptly, pending ratification by the varied sovereigns.
    • The Treaty of Alacantara was ratified by the Durthian States-General on July 16; by King Antonio I of Portugallia on July 18; by Sultan Ahmad-al Mansur I of Morocco and King Hensios IV of Franconia on July 20; by Empress Aurelia I of Laurasia on July 22; and finally, by Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka on August 3. Between August 1794 and March 1795, therefore, a period of peace prevailed among Laurasia, Durthia, Franconia, and Spamalka. Commerce resumed among these powers; the evacuation of military forces from the Colonial Territories and from the Ardennian Worlds proceeded; and the Imperial Laurasian Government began preparing for the exchange of restored embassies with the Holy Spamalkan Empire. From the moment that the Treaty was signed, however, ulterior tensions persisted. Emperor Philicus I, who was now relieved of the conflict against Portugallia and Morocco, was determined to concentrate his forces in Southern Durthia. A noticeable military buildup began in September 1794 and continued through the beginning of the new year. King Hensios IV of Franconia, on his part, was now under extensive pressure by the Parlement of Parri, his own Royal Council, and former members of the Franconian League to seize Franche-Comte from the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, moreover, urged by the Earl of Estatius, sought to secure the complete expulsion of Spamalkan forces from Southern Durthia. She considered the Treaty a stop-gap agreement, and would act upon crushing the Kosicuszko Revolt. Tensions were also provoked by the allied prevarication in restoring captured goods and prisoners to the Holy Spamalkan Empire.
  • July 28-
    • As previously stated, Dejanica Major now came under serious threat from the combined forces of the Laurasian and Autocratic Pruthian Empires. Upon the conclusion and ratification of the Treaty of Alacantara, Empress Aurelia began reassigning military units and squadrons to action in Dejanica, determined to use her Empire's military might to suppress the Kosciusko Revolt. On July 10, 1794, General Zajackia was defeated in the Battle of Golkow; the stronghold now fell into the hands of the Laurasian Empire, thereby permitting for renewed operations from Krakow in the Lublin Voivodeship. Durin the next several days, Laurasian forces occupied Tarnogrod, Nalezcow, and Kock,further weakening the Dejanican position in the vicinity of Lublin. By July 17, General Denisaria's forces, in cooperation with Pruthian units under General Fravat, were reaching the outskirts of Dejanica Major.
    • Koscisuzko, who sought to delay the allied advance, and to give time to the garrison of Dejanica Major to prepare, intercepted them at Raszyn (July 19, 1794), a battle which resulted in heavy casualties for both sides. This did nothing to halt the allied offensives, however, and on July 28, 1794, the Siege of Dejanica Major formally commenced when the star system was circumvallated by Generals Denisaria and Fravat. Koscisuzko, however, did manage to strengthen the garrison of Dejanica Major before the siege began. He installed turbocannon at the world's outskirts; divided his forces into the field corps, garrison, and Warsaw City Militia (a total of 800,000 troops); and installed a line of field fortifications and trenches along Warsaw City. Dejanica Major itself was protected by a series of shield generators. The besieging forces under the command of General Denisaria (supported by the Pruthians), comprised more than 1.3 million troops with 150 warships and 3,000 starfighters.
    • Then, on August 4, 1794, Emperor A'rua III of Pruthia himself, who had moved to Marienburg and watched the progress of allied forces in the Commonwealth intently, took command of the siege forces. This had been arranged with the Imperial Laurasian Government. The first allied assault against the defenses of Dejanica Major was repelled on August 7, due to a diversion by Prince Josef Poniatowskia at Wola. The Prince, disgruntled with his brother, and embracing the aims of the Revolt, had proclaimed his support for it in June 1794 and been assigned command by Koscisuzko of rebel units at Dejanica Major. Whilst the siege got underway and continued, other events were occurring in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. There, events proceeded rapidly to the favor of the Laurasian Empire. On June 4, 1794, Koscisuzko had replaced General Jasinkia as commander-in-chief of the Grand Duchy's forces with General Wielhorskia. Throughout month, Laurasian forces under General Melinia made gradual progress in the Duchy.
    • By June 11, Melinia had stormed Alytus, Varena, and Drunskinhai, terminating the threat posed by rebel forces to the Tesmanian Gateways. On June 17, he defeated Jasinkia (now a subordinate force commander) in the Battle of Liedhorden; two days later, the Lithuanian colony of Jonava capitulated to the Laurasian forces. On June 22, Jasinkia was defeated again in the Battle of Birstonas, and by the end of the month, rebel forces had been expelled from Raseinai and Preinai. The Battle of Kedainai then followed (July 2-4, 1794), resulting in another decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. On July 6, the garrisons of Kazlu and Kalvarjia both capitulated to General Melinia. Elkentrenai fell on July 10, and on July 19, the Battle of Vilinus began. General Melinia was at first successful in overrunning the star system's outskirts, with Commodore Sir Demetrius Gregrania, 2nd Baronet Gregrania (1748-1804) distinguishing himself in action against the Dejanican warships.
    • Ultimately, however, a counteroffensive launched by General Antoni Cherinwkia (1742-1809) resulted in Melinia being forced to retreat on July 21. Despite this setback, Laurasian forces now secured Sirventos, Ukmerge, Salinchiki, and Svencionys (July 22-August 5, 1794), thereby virtually surrounding Vilinus. On August 8, the Battle of Marijampole resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire, and three days later, a second offensive was launched against Vilinus. This time, Laurasian forces were commanded by Archleutan Lieutenant-General Gottard Johann von Knorring (1744-1825), a protege of the late Field-Marshal Burkhard von Munnich. He had fought in Queen Mariana's War, the War of the Bar Confederation, the Marianian Civil War, the Desmonian Rebellion, and the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War. Within the day, the stronghold was subdued. By August 19, 1794, General von Knorring had also stormed Taurage, Silae, and Pagegiai, thereby securing Laurasian control over the Siaulai and Panzeveys Voivodeships. Telsai and Plunge surrendered on August 22; and on August 27, General von Knorring stormed Mazelikai. Dejanican General Cherinwkia was pursued to Klaipeda, and was captured there on September 2, 1794. He would be transported back to the Secret Prison of Ipsus V in the Caladarian Galaxy as a prisoner of war in October 1794. On September 4, General von Knorring stormed Kretinga and Neringa. By that time, most rebel forces had been expelled from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Other concerns, however, had arisen for the Empire.
  • September 7-
    • By late August 1794, Dejanican Nacelzink Kosciusko had become convinced that the means by which to terminate the allied siege of Dejanica Major was to encourage rebel tensions in Greater Dejanica, which was now part of the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. At first, Kosciusko had been reluctant to encourage these tensions, for he feared that they would cause the Pruthians to divert all of their military resources to crushing the Revolt, and thereby embroil rebel forces in a two-front war. Emperor A'rua III's participation in the Siege of Dejanica Major, however, and his declared support for the aims of the Imperial Laurasian Government, provoked the rebel commander-in-chief to action. On August 20, 1794, the Supreme National Council of Dejanica issued an appeal to the authorities and denizens of the Greater Dejanica, urging them to rise up against their "Pruthian oppressors". Within days, a fierce nationalist movement arose, and General Josef Niemwoskia (1769-1839) took charge of rebel forces in Greater Dejanica against the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. By August 22, the Pruthian garrison of Gniezno had been expelled, and the stronghold fell into the possession of rebel forces. Within days, Dejanican General Pawel Skorewskia (1744-1819) had joined the uprising. On August 26, 1794, he defeated a Pruthian force under General Jonaha von Kreplt (1746-1811) in the Battle of Ostrow Wielkpolski.
    • On that same day, and continuing through August 28, allied forces at Dejanica Major launched a renewed offensive against the defenses of the Commonwealth's capital star system. This move, however, was repulsed by Kosicuszko himself, who inflicted severe losses upon allied units. On September 3, 1794, the Pruthian stronghold of Kolin surrendered to General Skorewskia. He subsequently stormed the Pruthian garrisons of Pila, Srem, and Swardedz, inflicting severe losses on overstretched enemy units. A'rua III, whose forces had suffered further reverses in Cleves and Hanover against Vendragia and who was concerned about this threat posed to his rear by the rebel forces, now decided to withdraw from the Siege of Dejanica Major. Pruthian units ceased their blockade of the star system on September 7, 1794, Laurasian Empress Aurelia's sixty-first birthday.
    • The Imperial General Headquarters, realizing that Laurasian forces needed to be reorganized for future moves against Dejanica Major, ordered for General Denisaria to withdraw from the Siege the following day. And over the remainder of the month, rebel forces under Skorewskia and Niemwoskia made further gains against the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. By September 15, Pruthian units had been expelled from Jastrowie, Whrzyk, Buk, and Srem, suffering a series of humiliating defeats against smaller and irregular Dejanican units. On September 20, 1794, a Laurasian-Pruthian counteroffensive against Kolin was repelled in the Battle of Gostyn. Two days later, General Skorewskia drove Pruthian units from Oborniki, and on September 24, he stormed onto Leszno, inflicting a serious defeat upon the Pruthian garrison there. Emperor A'rua, himself far from a formidable military commander, now retreated to Ducal Pruthia (September 28, 1794), and ordered General Fravat to assume command of operations against rebel units in the Greater Dejanica. At first, however, Fravat was unable to change the tide. Zlotow fell to General Skorewskia on September 30, 1794; two days later, Polonian General Jan Henryk Dabrowskia (1755-1818) captured Bydgoszcz, posing a serious threat to Pruthian Pomerania. He now planned for an offensive against Torun, but by this point, the advantage had already shifted to the Laurasian Empire.
  • October 10-
    • Empress Aurelia, aware of the tensions which continued to persist in Durthia and in Franconia, and wishing to crush the Kosciusko Revolt so as to devote her attention to more important, "pressing" matters, now organized a vigorous counter-response to the turmoil in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. On September 8, 1794, following the termination of the First Siege of Dejanica Major, the Empress summoned Lieutenant-General Lord Surovius to an audience at the Palace of Placenta on Darcia. The Empress, deciding to forego a formal progress this year, in light of events in Dejanica, and also because of her anger and frustration over the Dr. Lopacia affair, had moved there in July 1794, following a short tour through the Laurasia Prime Purse Region. Surovius, who, although still in feeble health, had devoted his services to the consolidation of the Empire's rule over the formerly Marasharite Tesmanian Provinces, was now eager to assume military command. Angry that he could not fight in the First Spamalkan War, he instead sought to gain further military glory through service in Dejanica, where he had first made his military reputation. Thus, when the Empress announced to Surovius that she was designating him as commander-in-chief of the Empire's forces in the Commonwealth, he fell on his knees, praised the Lord Almitis, and declared that he would not fail her. Surovius departed from Belkadan five days later, and by September 19, had arrived at Nowogrodek. He brought with him substantial reinforcements from the 49th and 55th Imperial Armies, the 67th Imperial Fleet, and the Colonial Expeditionary Force, freed (temporarily) from conflict with the Holy Spamalkan Empire.
    • On September 24, 1794, Surovius launched a massive offensive against Brest, which had become the chief center of rebel operations in Tesmanian Dejanica. The garrison of Brest was commanded by General Karol Sierawoskia (1752-1820), who was one of Kosciusko's most trusted subordinates. The ensuing Battle of Brest was hard fought and involved hand-to-hand combat. The Laurasian military forces, however, finally managed to gain the upper hand, destroying the opposing Dejanican 7th Royal Army. General Sierwoskia fled to Siedlce with the remainder of his units, and Brest fell into the possession of the Laurasian Empire. Surovius inflicted casualties of more than 110,000 upon the Dejanicans, losing 35,000 of his own troops. Nevertheless, the Battle of Brest severely impacted Dejanican morale. Koscisuzko had been hoping that the Marasharite Empire (which had been somewhat alarmed by Laurasian advances), would declare war against Laurasia. However, this confrontation put paid to all such hopes, for Marasharite Emperor Selim III was determined not to put his treasury, and his position in the Barbary States, in jeopardy for the sake of such a revolt. By the end of September 1794, Surovius had stormed Biaylstok, Terespol, Bychawa, Kransytaw, Lecnza, and Htubieszow, penetrating from the Gateways into Lesser Dejanica. Kosciusko, who was now alerted to the advance of this, the Laurasian Empire's sole undefeated military commander, sought to intercept him at Maciejowice. His intelligence agents had informed him that Surovius appeared to be planning a junction with General Denisaria at Poniatowa, and from there to launch a strike against Dejanica Major. This he could not allow to happen. Kosciusko requested the support of General Adam Poinskia, who had distinguished himself fighting in Ukraine during the War in Defense of the Constitution.
    • On October 3, however, Poinskia's headquarters at Parckew was blockaded by a Laurasian task force, preventing any junction with Kosciusko. Then on October 10, 1794, the Battle of Maciejowice commenced with a massive Laurasian naval assault, commanded by Admiral Sir Athanasius Serharin (1736-1804), against the star system's defenses. Within three hours, Laurasian warships had penetrated throuh Maciejowice's shields, allowing for Surovius to conduct a series of planetary landings. Surovius now employed the strategies of encirclement and point-by-point breach to overwhelm the positions of the 9th and 11th Dejanican Armies in the Maciejowice Heights and Garowlin City. By the late day, with the star system completely blockaded by Laurasian naval forces, and Surovius's armies having gained the definite upper hand, Kosciusko's fate was sealed. The Dejanican commander-in-chief was wounded three times by blaster fire and was surrounded by Laurasian troops as he attempted to flee to his starfighter. He attempted to commit suicide, but his blaster malfunctioned. By 11:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, the Battle of Maciejowice had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Kosciusko was captured at that time, and the remaining resistance in the star system was stamped out.
    • General Surovius, who was now receiving accolades at the Imperial Court, and from his Empress, advanced swiftly in the direction of Dejanica Major. On the orders of Empress Aurelia, Kosciusko was bound in chains, placed on a prison transport, and taken back to the Caladarian Galaxy. On October 24, 1794, he was imprisoned at Schusselburg Fortress on Gdov, and would remain there until his death in October 1799. By the end of October 1794, Surovius had secured Krupcyze, Lublin, Biloraj, Lukow, Tomaszow Lubelski, Opole Lubelskie, and Janow Lubleski, thereby consolidating Laurasian control over the Lublin and Biaylstok Voivodeships. On October 28, 1794, Parckew fell to the Laurasian Empire, with General Meninia taking his Dejanican counterpart, Potockia, into custody. At the same time, the Pruthians, emboldened by Kosciusko's capture at Maciejowice, made substantial gains against rebel forces in Greater Dejanica. General Dabrowskia was forced to terminate his planned offensives into Pomerania as a result of Kosicuzko's defeat and capture. On October 13, 1794, he suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of General Fervet (with support from General Dologruvkius) in the Battle of Koblyn. Two days later, Bydgoszcz was reconquered by Pruthian forces, followed in turn by Ostrow Wielkpolski (October 18); Zlotow (October 21-24); Jastrowie (October 29); and Kolin (November 1). By November 3, 1794, Gnienzo had surrendered to Pruthian forces, who were now besieging Gostyn, Pila, and Srem.
  • November 4-
    • On October 31, Lieutenant-General Lord Surovius made his junction with General Denisaria and Admiral Serharin at Poloniec, which had been stormed by Laurasian units thirteen days earlier. From Poloniec, Surovius resumed his advance against Dejanica Major. The garrison of Dejanica Major itself was now severely demoralized, as a result of the Battle of Maciejowice. General Josef Zajackia, who was now the Commander-in-Chief of the Garrison of Dejanica Major, made attempts to strengthen the star system's defenses in the face of the expected Laurasian onslaught. He was assisted in these efforts by General Berek Joselwicz (1764-95), who had become Mayor of Warsaw City and Commandant of the Arsenal the month prior, and by the instigator of the Vilinus Uprising, General Jakub Jasinkia. The Dejanican forces, as they were on the eve of the confrontation, consisted of the tattered remnants of Kosicuszko's forces which had been annihilated at Maciejowice and throughout Lesser Dejanica (50,000 troops); a large number of untrained militia from Dejanica Major, Praga, and Vilinus (230,000 troops); the Garrison of Dejanica Major (300,000 troops); and a number of civilian conscripts and mercenaries (80,000 troops). They also possessed sixty defensive warships and a number of shield generators. Praga, which was located on the outskirts of Dejanica Major, now became the focus for the battle. Zajackia organized the Dejanican military forces into three lines, each devoted to protecting a particular part of the star system. He himself commanded the Central Approaches and the defenses of Praga Military Outpost. General Jasinkia commanded the Northern Defenses, while General Wladyslaw Jabinoskia (1769-1802) commanded the Southern Defenses. Laurasian forces, on the other hand, consisted of the 49th and 66th Imperial Armies under Generals Surovius and Denisaria, and 55th Imperial Fleet under the command of Admiral Serharin. Both military commanders were battle-hardened; Denisaria on his part, combined his battle-hardened veterans with fresh reinforcements sent by means of the Ochanian Wormhole.
    • All total, the Laurasian Empire's forces at Praga numbered over 700,000 troops with nearly two hundred military warships. Surovius reached the outskirts of Dejanica Major on November 3, 1794. Immediately upon their arrival, the Laurasian warships started a massive barrage of the Dejanican shields and orbital defenses. Dejanican General Zajackia wrongly presumed that the Laurasians would commence a siege. Surovius, however, envisioned a swift and effective assault upon the Dejanican defenses. At 3:00 a.m. Galactic Standard Time, the morning of November 4, 1794, Laurasian troops landed in the Praga Vector and within two hours, commenced an all-out assault against the Command Headquarters and the Colonized Valleys. The Dejanican defenders, who were not expecting Laurasian assaults from the Vector, were completely surprised, and soon the Dejanican lines on Praga's surface were broken into several isolated pockets of resistance, bombarded by Laurasian troops with artillery and by the Empire's warships from above with turbocannon fire. Admiral Serharin had quickly surrounded and destroyed the small Dejanican orbital force in a swift confrontation at Praga Point, with more than 70,000 Dejanican naval personnel becoming Laurasian prisoners of war. General Zajackia was then wounded in a confrontation with Laurasian troops, leaving his troops without a central command. This forced the Dejanican troops to retreat into the Praga Citadel, and for Dejanican transports to attempt a move to the Vistulan Nebula. Within four hours, the Battle of Praga ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Dejanican General Josewicz, severely wounded as he tried to repel Laurasian moves into the Praga Headquarters, was captured by Laurasian soldiers of the 77th Regiment, 4th Infantry Division; he was bound in chains and placed on a transport, being imprisoned at Kherson on November 9. He ultimately succumbed to his battle wounds on May 5, 1795. General Jasinkia was killed in combat with Laurasian troops, while General Jabinoskia managed to flee on his personal starfighter (he would ultimately be captured at Klodawa in January 1795 and imprisoned on Minsk, dying there in September 1802).
    • Following the end of the Battle of Praga, Laurasian troops, enraged by what had happened to the Diplomatic Garrison of Dejanica Major back in April 1794, began plundering and looting Praga businesses, homes, and properties. During the course of the next month, more than €60.3 trillion dataries worth of property and goods were destroyed or seized by the Imperial Laurasian Army, while more than 3 million inhabitants of the star system were evicted. The Imperial Laurasian Government later claimed that Surovius was unable to restrain his troops for taking the revenge on the Dejanicans, but this explanation satisfied few. The highest-ranking commander of the remaining Dejanican rebel forces, General Tomez Wawreckia (1753-1816), wishing to spare Dejanica Major the fate of Praga, withdrew his forces to Radozyce. The following day, November 5, 1794, Dejanica Major was occupied by the forces of the Laurasian Empire with little opposition. The inhabitants of the capital star system, overawed by the power and numbers of the Laurasian force, and fearful of the consequences for direct resistance, were cowed. King Stanis Vorrust, who had effectively become a prisoner of Kosicuszko's Supreme National Council, himself greeted General Surovius at Bruhl Palace. Surovius now established his command headquarters at the former Laurasian Embassy and imposed martial law on Dejanica Major. Dejanican General Wawreckia, in the meantime, realizing further resistance was futile, surrendered all of his forces on November 16, 1794, to General Denisaria, thereby handing Radozyce, Wysowka, Poniec, and the Lower Colonies into the possession of the Laurasian Empire.
    • The following day, November 17, 1794, the day of Empress Aurelia's 36th anniversary on the throne, Generals Dabrowskia and Niemwoskia surrendered to Pruthian General Fervet at Kalisz, thereby ending the Greater Dejanican Uprising, and with it, the Kosicuzko Revolt. Indeed, by that date, Surovius had in custody all of the major leaders of the Revolt, including Ignancy Diazlynskia, the Potockia brothers, General Wielhorskia, General Stanis Mokronwskia, General Jan Zajackia (captured on November 14), Sejm Marshal Stanis Malackhowia, General Jan August Cicowskia, Hugo Kollajia, and Prince Josef Poniatowskia. When word reached Laurasia Prime first of the Battle of Praga, then of the swift occupation of Dejanica Major, and finally, of the surrenders in Greater Dejanica and at Radozyce, celebrations erupted there, and throughout the Empire. Empress Aurelia jumped up with joy when informed by the Privy Council of the Battle of Praga, declaring that the Lord Almitis had stayed behind the Empire and that the Dejanican perfidy had been crushed. Chief Procurator Whitshiftus presided over a Te Deum service at the Westphalian Cathedral.
    • On November 7, 1794, Surovius himself sent a report to the Empress containing only three words: PRAGA IS OURS! SUROVIUS. The Empress of Laurasia responded equally briefly, BRAVO, FIELD MARSHAL. AURELIA. She thereby promoted Surovius, who had been in the Imperial Laurasian Army for forty-seven years, and had fought in numerous conflicts (War of the Rough Wooing, Didymeian War of Franconia, Huguenot Expedition, War of the Bar Confederation, Fourth and Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite Wars, Kosicuszko Revolt), to the rank of Field-Marshal. On December 3, 1794, Surovius would be further rewarded with the Order of St. Honorius the Liberator, the highest military decoration in the Laurasian Empire. And he was not the only one rewarded. On November 24, the Empress promoted Sir Franconius Dracius to the rank of Fleet Admiral and conferred upon him the prestigious Order of St. Honorius. General Denisaria would be promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General and given the Order of St. Antiochus the Great. And on December 7, 1794, Vice-Admiral Ushavious would also be promoted to the rank of Fleet Admiral. Vice-Admiral Frosbisherius (promoted to that rank in September 1794), died on November 22, 1794, before the Empress could confer upon him the Order of St. Seleucus the Victor. She did so posthumously however, and on November 28, he would be buried at the Westphalian Cathedral in a great ceremony.
  • December 13-
    • By December 1794, Empress Aurelia the Great truly straddled the international stage. The suppression of the Kosicuzko Revolt had confirmed the Laurasian Empire's reputation as the most formidable and effective of all the powers of extra-galactic civilization; it had extended its influence further into the Great Amulak Spiral; and had displayed the Empire's military capabilities. Now, however, the Empress and the Imperial Privy Council had to consider what was now to be done to a prostrate Dejanica. They agreed that because the Commonwealth's territories were so unstable, and there continued to be such unrest against the Imperial Laurasian Government, it would be unwise to allow any Dejanican government to exist. Secretary Cecilis, in particular, insisted that two centuries of experience (since the time of the Borderlands Wars) had shown that it was impossible to make friends with the Dejanicans; they would always support any future enemy of Laurasia, be this Marasharita, Spamalka, or even Pruthia. Furthermore, the buffer state concept, upon which the Empire had relied throughout most of the century, did not apply to ideas that could cross frontiers. Therefore, on December 13, 1794, the Privy Council decided to treat Dejanica as a conquered enemy: all Dejanican regalia, banners, and state insignia, along with the Commonwealth's archives and intelligence files, were seized, collected, and dispatched to the Empire, from December 1794 to March 1795. The newly-promoted Field-Marshal Surovius was now designated as Viceroy of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth by the Empress, entrusted with absolute authority over all affairs in the Commonwealth for the interim.
    • Surovius declared martial law in all Dejanican star systems; ordered the abolition of all remaining Dejanican military units and squadrons; and effectively dissolved the Permanent Council, entrusting its duties to a commission of Laurasian-appointed civil officials, the Council of State. Following this now came the inevitable question of partition. The Empress would have preferred outright Laurasian annexation of all that remained of Dejanica. This would have given the Empire a substantial base in the Great Amulak Spiral, and greater ease when conducting campaigns there in the future. However, Lord Treasurer Burghley pointed out to her that such a annexation would be unacceptable to Pruthia and Austarlia: both powers would work together then to expel the Empire's forces from the Commonwealth, and might even align with Spamalka. Therefore, the Empress decided to propose a third and final partition of the Commonwealth's territories, including the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia (whose Duke, Peter von Bironia, now found Talinin and Mitau to be garrisoned by Laurasian "diplomatic corps").
    • On December 22, 1794, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs raised the idea to its Pruthian and Austarlian counterparts. Pruthian Foreign Affairs Minister, Count Vogeholrt, responded positively, and declared his master's readiness for either total partition or one in which Dejanica Major, Praga, and parts of Lesser Dejanica were left behind as a rump puppet state. The newly-appointed Austarlian Foreign Affairs Minister, Johann Amadeus von Thugut, Baron Thugut (1736-1818), who had become the chief influence in the Holy Austarlian Government following Chancellor Kaunitz's death in June 1794, suggested a return to the status quo, but with total control of Dejanican government resources by the three powers. Aurelia's proposal, however, was the most extreme: she wanted to subdivide the entire remaining territory of Dejanica and thereby simply erase this dangerous neighbor from the map. Her proposal would ultimately be accepted by A'rua III on December 25, and by Fransios II on New Year's Eve 1794. Preparations now began in earnest for the negotiations leading to the Third Partition of Dejanica, which would take place in two stages. As the year 1794 ended, the Laurasian Empire was on the verge of its last territorial expansion of the century, while matters ramped up again in the Amulak Spiral.

1795

  • January 1-
    • 1795, the 95th year of the eighteenth century, began with the Laurasian Empire, as was previously stated, enjoying the ascendant position in extra-galactic civilization. The previous year had seen the termination of the First Spamalkan War. As a result of that conflict, which had probably been the most extensive for the Empire throughout the entire eighteenth century, the power of its Amulak rival, the Holy Spamalkan Empire, had been greatly restricted. The Serene Kingdom of Portugallia and the United Durthian States had both been restored to their independence; both had also made territorial acquisitions at the expense of Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I. Tranquility had been restored in the Franconian realms, which had been ravaged by internal civil war for more than three decades by this point. King Hensios IV of Franconia, who was now a correspondent of Empress Aurelia's, had finally consolidated his authority over his realms and occupied Parri as his capital star system, thereby confirming him as the successor to the Valois Dynasty. The Sultanate of Morocco on its part, now enjoyed firm diplomatic and economic relations with the Laurasian Empire. As regards to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the suppression of the Kosciusko Revolt had confirmed the influence of foreign powers over that state's affairs. Empress Aurelia, as previously stated, was concerned about the continued existence of the Commonwealth, and was determined to extend her Empire's authority over all remaining Dejanican territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Beneath all of this, however, other tensions were brewing.
    • The King of Franconia was seeking to convince his Franconian subjects that he was not a puppet of Spamalka or any foreign power. Furthermore, he entertained ambitions of expelling the Spamalkans from the Duchy of Franche-Comte and of consolidating Franconia's diplomatic position in regards to its long-time adversaries. Prince Philip William of Orange and the Durthian States-General, on their part, sought to expel all remaining Spamalkan garrisons from the Southern Durthian Duchies, and to thereby bring all of those territories of Char'vak the Bold back under one jurisdiction. Finally, Philicus I himself still sought to reimpose his authority in the Durthian Duchies, and to punish the Laurasian Empire for its constant interventions in "his" affairs. All of these matters were to erupt in this year, marking the commencement of the Second Spamalkan War, the last military conflict for the Laurasian Empire in the eighteenth century, and the Third Partition of Dejanica, by which the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth would be eliminated. In her New Year's proclamation, Empress Aurelia again asserted her goal of maintaining the "Empire's military and diplomatic position" and of terminating the threat posed to the Empire by the "perfidious Dejanican government and people."
  • January 7-
    • Empress Aurelia, at the commencement of the new year, continued to grapple with the affairs surrounding her favorite, the Earl of Estatius, and also with a uncomfortable and unsettling question: that of the succession. Her relationship with Estatius, which had been damaged due to the Dr. Lopacia affair and the Treaty of Alacantara with the Holy Spamalkan Empire, had begun to recover by July 1794. The Empress could not bear to see her favorite in distress, and she desired his company, as a reminder of youthful vitality and of the Earl of Leicesterius, who had been the most important man in her life. On August 8, 1794, the Empress reconciled with Estatius in a private audience at the Private Throne Room of the Quencilvanian Palace; she told the Earl that all past differences between them should be ignored, and that in spite of the fact that she considered political appointments to be of "a important nature and one within the context of my prerogatives", she would not ignore Estatius's advice merely out of spite. Estatius choose to accept this, and he returned to his diligent attendance at sessions of the Imperial Privy Council, in spite of the fact that his efforts to secure the Solicitor-Generalship to Bagonius consistently failed.
    • The following month, the Empress granted Estatius a loan of €72.2 billion dataries to defray his debts, telling him: "Look to yourself, good Estatius, and be wise to help yourself without giving your enemies the advantage, and my hand shall be readier to help you than any other." Estatius, on his part, had now grown in prestige as a statesman, and had increased his popularity with the Empress's subjects. He employed four secretaries to deal with his correspondence; remained in close contact with the Empire's ambassadors at foreign courts; and used his intelligence network to keep himself abreast of confidential information. In one field of affairs, however, Estatius knew not to intervene: the succession. By 1794, with the Empress long past her childbearing years, this had become a very sensitive topic. Aurelia herself, who as the last representative of the mainline Neuchrian Dynasty, was aware of the consequences of her death, nevertheless sought not to grapple with the question directly.
    • By that time, there had emerged three potential heirs to the Imperial Laurasian Crown. The first of these was the Earl of Hannah's eldest grandnephew (the Earl himself was childless), Lysimachus Harringtia, 2nd Baron Harringtia of Teth (1777-1825), a descendant of Emperor Antoninus Pius and through his mother, Lady Dorothea Harringtia (1754-97), of Emperor Probus. Lord Harringtia, who had been born in 1777, and was now attending the Cadet Corps, was respected by many at the Imperial Court for his intelligence, vigor, and vitality. He displayed an absolute loyalty to the Empress, involving himself in no scheme or other conspiracy among the Court's circles. Empress Aurelia, however, was concerned about his age, believing him not to be experienced enough to assume burdens of office. The teenager was only in the early stages of his professional education, and she feared the prospect of such a young man being invested with the throne. Only during the following years would her views change. The second possible heir to the Crown was one of the Empress's Greysius cousins: Lady Margarina Stanleis, Countess of Duana (1740-96), the only surviving child of the Empress's second first cousin, Lady Eleanora Brandeis, younger daughter of Grand Princess Octavia.
    • Her husband had been Antigonus Stanleis, 4th Earl of Duana (1731-93), who had been a member of the Privy Council and Lord Lieutenant of the Tyburnian Stockards, and had died on September 21, 1793 at Strongstine. Lady Stanelis was fifty-four years old in 1794; she had two sons of her own, Feresus Stanleis, 5th Earl of Duana (1759-94), who had died on April 16, 1794, and Willanius Stanleis, 6th Earl of Duana (1761-1842). For many, including Knollysis and Husadarania, this was the most solid line of succession: the younger Earl was, in the eyes of many, the one who should be designated as the successor. The Empress, however, raised objections to this, declaring that if she favored one over the other, she would be breeding faction and division. The third and final potential heir was the late Dowager Countess of Lennaxia's granddaughter, Lady Anastasia Stuart (1775-1815), a second cousin to the Empress (her great-grandmother was Aurelia's first aunt, Queen Consort Constantia of Scottria). Lady Stuart had, since the death of her mother in 1782, been raised by her maternal grandmother, the powerful Dowager Countess of Aretha.
    • The Countess herself, as well as Estatius's mother, the Dowager Countess of Leicesterius, Chief Procurator Whitshiftus, Procurator-General Sir Puckerania, and the Earl of Aretha all supported Anastasia's claim. In the face of all these competing claims, the Empress sought to stay above, and would not permit any talk of these succession possibilities in her presence, or among the Privy Council. Consequently, any work which urged her to resolve the question and to designate one of these three individuals as her heir was met with a swift official response. This had already been seen in February 1793, when a member of the Christiania City Council, Sir Peter Wentwarthia (1722-97), had published a holonet tract entitled A Exhortation to Her Imperial Majesty for Establishing the Succession. In this work, Wentwarthia had urged the Empress to formally designate her successor and to not leave the Imperial State in want of an heir. Empress Aurelia had been enraged when she read his work, and on March 7, 1793, Wentwarthia had been arrested at Calaxis II; tried and convicted by the Court of the Imperial Chancery on charges of sedition, conspiracy, and civil disobedience; and consigned to the Post Settlement Prison. He remained there until his death on July 4, 1797 at the age of seventy-five. The Imperial Ministry of Culture and Communications, acting on the Empress's instructions, had confiscated all physical and electronic copies of the tract; banned its further publication; and forbidden any further mention of the succession. Thus, the next work, when it appeared, originated from outside the Empire.
    • On January 7, 1795, at Antwerp in the Spamalkan Durthian Duchies, a inflammatory work entitled A Conference about the Next Succession to the Crown of Laurasia was published, and quickly distributed over the Galactic Holonet. Its author, the Laurasian Traditionalist emigre Pausanias Parsonia (1758-1802), dedicated it to the "Most Noble Earl of Estatius, for that no man is in more high and eminent dignity at this day in our realm." The work discussed the claims of all Aurelia's possible successors, and called on Estatius to play the role of Emperor-maker upon her death. Estatius, fully aware of Aurelia's commands concerning discussion of the succession, was embarrassed to have his name associated with such a subversive work. He was troubled by the suggestion that he should determine a matter which was strictly a question of imperial prerogative. The Empress quickly obtained a copy of the work, and was enraged by what it contained. She went to Estatius and showed it to him. He greatly feared her reaction, but was relieved to find that she made little of it, realizing that he had been the victim of a foreign attempt to discredit him. The Ministry of Culture and Communications once again confiscated all copies, and a strict surveillance was imposed on the Holonet. Parsonia himself was attained and convicted, in absentia, on charges of conspiracy and sedition, and all of his accounts on Christiania and throughout the Empire were closed. The whole affair also served to worsen relations with the Holy Spamalkan Empire, and to convince the Empress of the necessity of re-intervention to expel them from the Durthian Duchies entirely.
  • February 23-
    • By February 1795, discussions among the Imperial Laurasian, Autocratic Pruthian, and Holy Austarlian Governments concerning the Third, and final, Partition of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth had proceeded quickly. Difficulties were, from the first, encountered by the three governments. On January 3, 1795, the Empress had, in a communique addressed personally to her colleagues, the Emperors of Pruthia and Austarlia, declared once again that "the time has come for the three Courts to take effective measures, not only to extinguish the last remaining sparks of dissent in the neighboring monarchy [Dejanica], but also to prevent it from ever flaming up again from the ashes." The Empress now proposed that the "liquidation of the affairs of the Commonwealth" would be best effected by negotiations in Christiania, Laurasia Prime. This further proposal was accepted by A'rua III and Fransios II, even though the Autocratic Pruthian Government was still uneasy about what Austarlia would demand. And indeed, a major source of contention arose: that concerning Krakow and the Lublin Voivodeship.
    • Chancellor Kaunitz, before his retirement in August 1793, had indicated in his personal correspondence that the acquisition of this, the former capital system of Dejanica, was necessary to consolidate Austarlian rule over Galicia and Lodomeria. In January 1794, Empress Aurelia herself had promised the Court of Vienna to procure for it the right of garrisoning Krakow. The Pruthians, however, had occupied the stronghold in July 1794, in the midst of the Kosciusko Revolt, and whilst Austarlian authorities in Galicia had been studying means by which to occupy Krakow without arousing the hostility of their neighbors. The Holy Austarlian Government, angry that the Laurasian Empress's assurances had fallen flat, was now determined not to be forestalled again, and to occupy as much of Dejanica as its resources and opportunities permitted. Minister Thugut, on his part, told the Laurasian Ambassador to the Court of Vienna, Sir Cassander Athapas (1742-1821), that his government would not renounce its claims to Krakow and the Lublin Voivodeship. He stated that "regardless of the cost, the Court of Vienna must some day possess that region, even if war results from it."
    • On January 1, 1795, shortly after Austarlian agreement to a Third Partition, he sent to Christiania a statement of Austarlia's total claims in the impending partition. He demanded the systems of Krakow and Sandomierz, with their associated outposts; the Lublin Voivodeship, including Chelm; the regions between the Vistula and Bug Highways; and beyond, the remainder of Dejanican Volhynia, Brest, Bialystok, and even the Pinsk Region, in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. These demands showed Austarlian determination to make up for its non-participation in the Second Partition of 1793. Emperor A'rua III of Pruthia, on his part, had already drawn up a potential region of partition (which had been formulated as early as July 1794). He sought to gain the Masovian Voivodeship, including Dejanica Major and Krakow; the Western Vistula Colonies; Warmia; Lodz; the Swietokyrszkie Voivodeship; and the Windwawa Barrier Regions of Northania and Semigallia. The Emperor's advisers, however, were aware of Austarlia's claim to Krakow and most of the Western Vistula Colonies, and that parts of Lodz, besides all of Swietokyrszkie and the Windwawa Barrier Regions, fell within the zone of Laurasian ambitions. Moreover, relations between Laurasia and Austarlia seemed to be getting closer, suggesting that they would connive to deprive Pruthia of any share in the partition. Therefore, the Pruthian Cabinet followed a policy of extreme caution. They assured the Laurasian Ambassador to the Court of Berliania III, Sir Alopehus Carunna, 1st Baronet Carunna (1753-1824), that they were opposed to Austarlian acquisition of Krakow.
    • However, they did not disclose their own ambitions. Empress Aurelia, who following the suppression of the Kosicuszko Revolt in November 1794, viewed herself as mistress of the situation (her forces occupied all of the Commonwealth except for Krakow), and therefore sought to force through a partition, whether the Empire's neighbors wished it or not, and in accordance with her demands. Already, before making the formal proposals of partition in December 1794, the Empress had decided what she wanted: the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia (including the Windwawa Barrier Regions); the Northern Wormhole of Barbarossa; Tesmanian Dejanica, including Podlaskie, Swietokryzkie, Brest, Bialystok, and parts of Eastern Lublin; the whole of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, including Vilinus and Kaunas; and the Bug Highways of the Galactic Void. Her view therefore was that if Austarlia agreed to this, and renounced all claims to Chelm, Volhynia, Podlaskie, and the Pinsk Region, then she would be willing to support their acquisition of Krakow and Sandomierz. Pruthia, on its part, would have to content herself with Masovia, Warmia, and Lodz, and to abandon any claims in Lithuania or Northania. On January 8, therefore, Lord Buchamia sent a response communique to Thugut, demanding categorically that Austarlia abandon her pretensions in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. If she did, she would be assured of Laurasia's unconditional support in the dispute with the Court of Berliania III. If she did not, as it was suggested, then the Empress would be obliged to seek a separate agreement with Pruthia.
    • In the meantime, on January 11, 1795, the Chair of the Pruthian War Council, General Bogislav Taurentzien (1760-1824), held a conference with Ambassador Carunna and finally presented his master's territorial demands. In this memorandum, Pruthia laid claim not only to Masovia, Warmia, and Lodz, but also to the Vistualian Colonies, most of the Lublin Voivodeship, and the Barrier Regions. At this, the Laurasians responded, in a diplomatic note of January 15, with a peremptory "invitation" to Pruthia to cut down her claims by half. Lord Buchamia declared that Krakow and Sandomierz were properly within the "sphere" of Austarlia; and that the Empress of Laurasia herself could not dispense with any part of Northania and Semigallia. Austarlia, aware of her Laurasian neighbor's considerable military strength, and of the fact that Laurasian forces occupied virtually all of the regions in question, yielded. Through a preliminary response on January 17, and then a full communique on January 22, Minister Thugut directed the Austarlian Ambassador to the Court of Laurasia Prime, Count Louis Cobenzl (1753-1809), to accept in full the Empress's territorial plan, while using every effort to cut down the Pruthian partition to the smallest possible bounds, and seizing the opportunity to conclude secret arrangements with the Empire. The Pruthian Cabinet, however, decided to work towards peace with Haxonia and Vendragia, and the maintenance of the Empire's claims in Dejanica. Taurentizen and others entertained delusional thoughts that the Pruthians, if they deployed military forces in the Commonwealth's border regions, would compel Laurasia and Austarlia to defer to Pruthian territorial demands.
    • However, no one thought of what could happen if the two Empires combined to stand against Pruthia's pretensions. Furthermore, none of A'rua III's advisers seriously thought of going to war over Krakow and Semigallia. Pruthia sought to succeed by bluff, but this would not work. Taurentzien, instructed by the Bureau of Foreign Affairs to hold fast to Pruthian demands, was told to declare that Pruthia would prefer there to be no partition if no deal could be obtained. Between Laurasia and Austarlia, however, negotiations proceeded quickly. On January 25, 1795, Cobenzl issued the assurances provided to him by Thugut to the Imperial Laurasian Government. Six days later, in an audience with Empress Aurelia, he indicated his willingness to confer with the officials of Her Majesty's government to settle all of the arrangements. The Empress now designated Lord Buchamia, Secretary Cecilis, and, to much surprise, her favorite, the Earl of Estatius, as the Laurasian plenipotentiaries for the conference. Cobenzl on his part, assisted by the Austarlian diplomats Ludwig von Holtz, Baron von Holtz (1738-1802) and Ferdinand Aushlucz, Count of Bacs (1751-1805), made ready for the conference. The conference for the Preliminary Treaty of Partition convened at the Diplomatic Palace, between the delegations of the Imperial Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Governments, on February 13, 1795. Negotiations quickly proceeded, and it would take only a month for agreement to be reached.
  • March 16-
    • By March 1795, while the Laurasian Empire was engaged in the affairs surrounding the suppression of the Kosicuzko Revolt and the impending Third Partition of Dejanica, affairs in Franconia and in the Durthian Duchies had reached fever-pitch. As mentioned previously, the only powers satisfied totally by the Treaty of Alacantara had been Portugallia and Morocco. Both powers had obtained territories from the Holy Spamalkan Empire which were of vital strategic importance to them: in the case of the former, the war had seen a restoration of a state of national independence. With Durthia and Franconia, however, matters were different. In November 1794, the Dukes of Mayenne and Merceour, both of whom had managed to evade capture by King Hensios during the campaigns of that year, had been received by Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I at Madrid. Both, who had been such prominent leaders of the Franconian League, were unwilling to acknowledge Hensios's authority, even after his conversion to Franconian Catholicism. King Hensios himself, when he learned of how these traitors had escaped to the Holy Spamalkan Empire, his realm's greatest enemy in the Great Amulak Spiral, was enraged.
    • The King of Franconia believed that unless these two rebels were back in his custody and executed, then there would be no halt to the threats which faced him. Several times, in December 1794 and January 1795, the King had petitioned the Court of Madrid to hand Mayenne and Merceour over into his custody. Emperor Philicus, however, seeing them as useful pawns for extending Spamalkan influence into Franconia, refused. This interacted with clashes between Franconian and Spamalkan forces in Navarre, Nice, and the Ardennian Worlds which continued into the early months of 1795. Spamalka, in violation of the Treaty of Alacantara, had continued to suppress Franconian commerce into Franche-Comte, and had increased the number of garrisons stationed on Franconia's borders. Finally, the United Durthian States, whose Prince Philip William was now in declining health, was determined to rid itself of the Spamalkan presence in Southern Durthia, and thereby to secure its own frontiers. For both Durthia and Franconia then, preemptive action was necessary to prevent Spamalka from overreaching further. On February 29, 1795, the King of Franconia declared to his Conseil royal that he would make it known to his subjects that he stood for Franconia's interests.
    • He also sought to gain Franche-Comte and to force the Spamalkans to hand over Mayenne and Merceour. Then on March 5, 1795, the King of Franconia, through his foreign minister, Bastien de Saour, Count de Baslo (1746-1807), sent a communique to his Spamalkan counterpart. In this communique, Hensios lamented that only a "short time has passed since the conclusion of treaty arrangements between our two powers", and yet, the Holy Spamalkan Empire continued to display overt aggression. He demanded the evacuation of all Spamalkan forces from Brabant, Flanders, and Franche-Comte; the surrender of Mayenne and Merceour to appropriate Franconian authorities; and the recognition of Franconian commercial rights into Franche-Comte and throughout Naparia. Four days later, the Durthian States-General tendered its own ultimatum to the Spamalkan Council of State (diplomatic embassies had not yet been exchanged between the two powers).
    • Emperor Philicus, on his part, was "offended" by these ultimatums, and on March 11, rejected them utterly, declaring that he would not subject himself to such humiliations. Thus, on March 16, 1795, King Hensios IV issued a formal declaration of war against the Holy Spamalkan Empire, barely six months after the conclusion of the Treaty of Alacantara. He was followed by the Durthian States-General four days later. The Second Spamalkan War had commenced. On March 22, 1795, however, King Antonio I of Portugallia, himself in declining health, officially announced his neutrality in a proclamation from Lisbon. He was followed by Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur I of Morocco just two days later. These declarations of neutrality encouraged Philicus. The Laurasian Empire on its part, under Aurelia I, still grappling with the Dejanican question, found itself alarmed by the outbreak of a renewed military conflict. Nevertheless, the Empress of Laurasia found herself bound to support her allies. On March 28, 1795, the Laurasian Empire declared war on the Holy Spamalkan Empire, bringing itself into the Second Spamalkan War after only six months of peace. Consequently, however, Laurasian forces were still deployed in Franconia, Durthia, and in the outskirts of the Colonial Territories. Most of Colombiana, Peru, and Chile had been evacuated by late 1794, but the Empire's military forces turned their attention once again to the Spamalkan Spice Colonies.
  • March 22-
    • On March 22, 1795, after a month of negotiations, the Preliminary Treaty of Christiania was signed by the delegations of the Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Empires, thereby constituting their formal agreement concerning the Third Partition of Dejanica. As a result of this treaty, which was officially termed by the chancellories of both governments as a "ministerial declaration", the apportionment of the Commonwealth's territories between the two powers was now formally regulated. In the preamble, the Partition was justified with the assertion that the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth had become infected with "the most perverse principles" and with "views most pernicious and most dangerous to the tranquility of the neighboring Powers." This, the Treaty declared, had been proven by the recent "insurrection" (the Kosciusko Revolt). Furthermore, nothing could prevent the recurrence of such turbulence except a firm and vigorous government.
    • The Empress of Laurasia and Emperor of Austarlia had therefore resolved by "experience" that there existed an "absolute incapacity on the part of the Commonwealth of Dejanica to give itself such a government and to live peaceably under law." Therefore, they had "recognized in their wisdom and in their love of peace and of the happiness of their subjects that it was an indispensable necessity to have recourse to a total partition of this Commonwealth among the neighboring Powers." By the following thirteen articles, the Imperial Courts guaranteed to each other the territories previously agreed. The Laurasian Empire was to acquire all remaining Dejanican territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud: the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia (in its whole); Tesmanian Dejanica (with Podlaskie, Swietokyrzkie, and Eastern Lublin with Chelm); the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (with the Vilinus, Kaunas, Marijampole, Siaulai, Alytus, Utena, Panezeveys, Taurage, Klapieda, and Telsai Voivodeships); and the Bug Highways of the Galactic Void.
    • The Holy Austarlian Empire was to receive the remainder of the Lublin Voivodeship; Krakow and Sandomierz; Subcarpathia; the remaining enclaves of Lesser Dejanica; and the Western Vistula Colonies. Furthermore, following the ratification of the Treaty, the two governments promised to communicate their agreement to the Court of Berliania III with a request for its adherence; and if this invitation were accepted, they would acquiesce in the annexation by Pruthia of the remaining Dejanican territory in the Great Amulak Spiral. In any case, however, once this communication had been made to Pruthia, the two sovereigns would proceed to take formal possession of the territories assigned to them by that treaty. The Treaty also provided for Austarlia's recognition of all territories seized by Laurasia and Pruthia in the Second Partition (1793); for mutual assistance for each other in case Pruthia attempted any acts of aggression; and for the Empress of Laurasia to use all diplomatic means for the Holy Austarlian Government to gain compensation for its losses in the Germanian War.
    • Such "compensation" would come in the form of territorial acquisitions at the expense of the Electorates of Baden, Bavaria, or Saxony. Empress Aurelia was elated at the conclusion of the Preliminary Treaty, having dictated the settlement in accordance with her wishes, and having seized the greater share of territory. Holy Austarlian Emperor Fransios II was also satisfied, having gained almost the whole of the territories which Austarlia had desired. The Treaty of Christiania was ratified by Empress Aurelia on March 25 and by Emperor Fransios on April 1. The months following the Treaty's conclusion, however, proved to be quiet. Neither Aurelia and Fransios, nor A'rua III, made any further moves until the outcome of the Pruthian negotiations with Haxonia and Vendragia was known. That will be explored below.
  • April 3-
    • Following the declaration of war by the Laurasian Empire, military campaigns in the Second Spamalkan War commenced in earnest. On April 3, 1795, the Imperial General Headquarters issued instructions to Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, ordering him to assist King Hensios in his campaigns at the Ardennes and in Franche-Comte. At the same time, the General Headquarters ordered Rear-Admiral Sir Sosthenes Lancastaria (1754-1818), who commanded Laurasian units near the Azores Star Cluster, to proceed immediately against Recife, a major Spamalkan naval base and agricultural colony located 8,000 light-years west of Galicia. Lancastaria approached the Capibaribe Straits on April 6, 1795. The Garrison of Recife, with more than 80,000 troops and 30 defensive warships, was commanded by Governor-General Jorge de Albuerquerque (1746-1810), a Portugallian who remained in the Spamalkan service following the conclusion of the Treaty of Alacantara.
    • Recife, however, had not fully prepared its shield defenses, and was therefore exposed to a swift Laurasian offensive. During the early hours of April 7, 1795, Admiral Lancastaria launched a preliminary naval bombardment of Recife's defenses and outposts, which were quickly overwhelmed by the superior turbolaser fire of the Laurasian warships. Following this bombardment, he landed his Marines and Imperial Army Corps on the planetary surface. The Laurasians assaulted Fort Sao Jorge and the Valleys of Frulria, overwhelming the Spamalkan garrison in short order. They suffered only 2,000 casualties (out of an invasion force of 95,000), compared to more than 30,000 casualties for the Spamalkans. Within hours, Recife was in the hands of the Laurasian Empire. Governor-General Albuerquerque managed to flee to Spamalkan Olinda, but found that stronghold blockaded by Laurasian naval units, so that he could not move out from it.
    • Admiral Lancastaria now strengthened Ft. Sao Jorge, and during the next four days, repelled a series of Spamalkan counteroffensives against the star system. Then on April 12, 1795, he launched a full-scale offensive against Olinda. Within a day, that stronghold was secured also, and Governor-General Albuerquerque became a Laurasian prisoner of war. Lancastaria systematically plundered the agricultural plants, shipyards, and treasuries of Recife, impounding more than €50.5 trillion worth of goods. Among the products seized were cinnamon, mace, Benzoin resin, frankincense, gum-lac, aloes, calicoes, silks, pepper, cloves, indigo, and rutile quartz. During the remainder of the month, Laurasian forces secured a run of further successes in the Colonial Territories. By April 18, Lancastaria himself had stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Oranjested, Bonaire, Kralerndjik, and Phillipsburg, thereby entrenching the Empire within the Spamalkan Antilles. Three days later, Caracas was raided by a Laurasian task force under the Earl of Cumbria. Then on April 25, 1795, Cumbria and Lancastaria combined their forces to confront Spamalkan units under Admiral de Blanca in the Battle of Trinidad. This confrontation was fought for more than two days, but was ultimately decided by the mobility of the Laurasian starfighters and couriers. By the end of April 1795, Laurasian units had also secured Saba, Aruba, and St. Eustatius, thereby posing a severe threat to Spamalkan commercial lanes through the Antilles.
  • April 17-
    • While the Laurasian offensives in the Colonial Territories recommenced, after the temporary period of peace, events in Durthia and in Franche-Comte proceeded swiftly. Immediately following the declaration of war, Prince Maurice of Nassau, whose forces had been stationed at Wiltz, Breda, Maastricht, Devanter, and Zutphen, proceeded once again into the Luxembourgian Sector, determined to re-subdue those strongholds and to thereby sunder Spamalkan supply lines to Franche-Comte. On March 21, 1795, Prince Maurice launched a swift offensive against the Spamalkan stronghold of Mertert. Mertert, whose garrison was still being reassembled following the world's restoration to the Holy Spamalkan Empire in January 1795, was unable to pose a serious resistance. The stronghold capitulated to Prince Maurice within three hours of his first assault. By March 24, Alscheid, Budellange, and Petange had all been stormed by Durthian units. Esch, however, proved to be more of a problem for Prince Maurice, and did not fall until April 2, 1795. At the same time, King Hensios made gains in the Ardennian Worlds against the remaining cells of those Franconian League members who had refused to surrender.
    • On March 23, he defeated the Marquis de Sable in the Battle of Vise. Frasnes and Dinat were in his possession by March 27, and on April 1, 1795, Hensios conquered the Spamalkan border outpost of Famenne, thereby completing the Royalist subjection of the Ardennes. On April 5, Hensios repelled a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Valenciennes, and from there stormed Lons-le-Saunier and Jura (April 6-11, 1795), thereby entrenching himself in the outskirts of Franche-Comte. In Durthia, however, the Spamalkan response was already stirring. On February 20, 1795, the Governor-General of the Durthian Duchies, Duke Ernest of Franche-Comte, died at the age of only forty-one in Brussels. He had been succeeded as Governor-General by Pedro Acevedo, Count of Fuentes (1725-1810). Fuentes had served as a page at the Court of Madrid during the early years of Philicus I's reign; he had subsequently served under the Duke of Alba, who had been successively Governor of Miliania, Viceroy of Naparia, Governor-General of the Durthian Duchies, and Viceroy of Portugallia.
    • He took part in the War of the Portugallian Succession in 1780; became Captain General of Portugallia in 1789; and from 1791 to 1794, served as a subordinate to the Duke of Parma, Governor-General Mansfield, and Duke Ernest of Franche-Comte. Fuentes was therefore an experienced Spamalkan military commander and statesman, and Emperor Philicus hoped that he would turn the tide against the allied powers. And indeed he did for a time. On April 4, 1795, Fuentes had already defeated a Durthian force in the Battle of Leuven, recovering that stronghold. By April 14, he had also stormed Ypres, Liege, and Roosevelt, thereby posing a threat to the Durthian rear in the Luxembourgian Sector. Then on April 20, 1795, Fuentes moved to assault Huy, occupied by a Durthian garrison commanded by General Char'vak de Heraugiere (1740-1801). With his naval forces commanded by Don Valentin Pardieu de la Motte (1741-1806), Fuentes was able to besiege and storm the star system within two days.
    • By April 23, Heraugiere himself had been captured and forced to capitulate to Fuentes. Fuentes placed the Citadel of Huy under the command of Captain Juan de Zornosa (1755-1812), and from this stronghold captured the Durthian bases of Gross, Neuss, Verviers, and Bassenge (April 23-May 4, 1795), thereby consolidating Spamalkan control over the Huy Region. Repelling Durthian counteroffensives against Tournai, Cambrai, and Mons (May 5-14, 1795), Fuentes then secured Tiel and Doetichem (May 19, 1795), securing Brussels. By the end of May 1795, Spamalkan forces were harrying Gravelines, Dunkirk, and Nijmegen. During that same month, King Hensios found his advance into Franche-Comtes blunted. On April 16, 1795, he had launched a major offensive towards Bescanon, storming the Spamalkan garrisons of Joux, Montbeliard, and Arc-et-Senans. By April 28, his forces were approaching the outskirts of Bescanon. The ensuing Siege of Bescanon (May 2-14, 1795), was ultimately broken by the arrival of General del Avila, who had been reassigned to duty in Miliania in September 1794 and had hastily returned to Franche-Comte upon the declaration of war. Del Avila then expelled the Franconians from Joux (May 19, 1795), and on May 24, destroyed a Franconian-Laurasian force in the Battle of Peugeot. By the beginning of June 1795, Spamalkan forces had also expelled the Franconians from Arc-et-Senans, Jura, and Dinat, penetrating into the Ardennian Worlds.
  • April 26-On April 26, 1795, Doge Pasqual Cicogna of the Haxonian Confederacy, who had reigned for nearly a decade since succeeding Nicolo da Ponte in August 1785, died at the age of 70 on Haxonia Prime. Cicogna's reign had seen the Confederacy's position in the Italanian Regions, vis-à-vis both the Holy Austarlian and Holy Spamalkan Empires, being considerably strengthened. As a result of the still ongoing Germanian War, Cicogna had been able to extend Haxonian authority over Florence, Pisa, and Sardinia, besides consolidating the Confederacy's hold on the Venetian and Farther Dalmatian Provinces. He had also promoted commerce throughout the Haxonian realms; a policy of religious toleration; and a flourishing of the arts, science, and architecture. Following Cicogna's death, there ensued a complicated election process. Seventy ballots followed during the next several days. Ultimately, on May 7, 1795, Haxonian Senator and Civiatore Marino Grimani was elected as the next Doge of the Haxonian Confederacy. Born on July 21, 1732, on Haxonia Prime, he was of the same generation as the Laurasian Empress Aurelia. Grimani was formally crowned as Doge on May 13, 1795.
  • May 5-
    • On May 5, 1795, the Treaty of Basel was signed by the Autocratic Pruthian Empire on the one hand, and by the Vendragian and Haxonian Confederacies on the other. As a result of this treaty, Pruthian involvement in the Germanian War, which had been ongoing since April 1792, was formally terminated. By the terms of the Treaty, Pruthia recognized the acquisition, by the Vendragian Confederacy, of Luneburg, Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Oldenburg, and Jutland, thereby consolidating Vendragian control over the Electorates of Hanover and Celle. Autocratic Pruthian Emperor A'rua III also acknowledged Haxonian rule of the Venetian Provinces, Haxonian garrison rights at the Jura Colonies, and the acquisition, by Haxonia, of Sardinia, Pisa, and Florence. In return, the two Confederacies agreed to recognize Pruthian interests in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and to restore Frankfurt, Jemappes, and Mainz to the authority of the Autocratic Pruthian Empire. The Treaty of Basel was ratified by A'rua III on May 9, 1795; by King Georg IV of Vendragia on May 14; and by the newly-elected Doge of Haxonia, Marino Grimani, on May 22. Its conclusion and ratification alarmed the Imperial Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Governments to some extent. Both Aurelia and Fransios believed at first that this peace was only the prelude to a potential Pruthian attack on Austarlia or an alliance with Haxonia, Spamalka, and Marasharita to prevent the Partition of Dejanica. For a time, the Courts of Vienna and Christiania considered alternatives. Thugut proposed that a puppet Dejanican protectorate be left in existence, and even suggested that they assist Dejanica in recovering all territories seized by Pruthia since 1771. This last proposal, was, however, rejected by Empress Aurelia on May 21, 1795.
    • Aurelia herself made a suggestion to the Vendragian Ambassador, the Earl of Nottingham (1752-1826; Georg Hadratia, 9th Earl of Nottingham), that she assist the Confederacy in restraining the territorial ambitions of Pruthia. The Ambassador however, rejected this out of hand, informing the Empress of Laurasia that he could not afford for "His Majesty's realms to be tied down in matters of no concern to him." Therefore, at the beginning of June 1795, both Aurelia and Fransios decided to strengthen their military garrisons in the Commonwealth's borderland territories. Throughout that month, Austarlia assembled its forces in Bohemia, Moravia, and Galicia, while Empress Aurelia placed all occupation forces in the Commonwealth on yellow alert and entrusted Surovius with the task of preparing for any possible Pruthian moves. The two governments even cooperated on preliminary plans for an invasion of Pruthian Silania and Ducal Pruthia. In this instance, the Empress of Laurasia and her ministers were exaggerating the extent of the danger. They were predicting Pruthia's decision on the basis of her prior history: one of swift, sudden, and unprovoked action. However, the Pruthian Cabinet was at this stage desperate for peace, and to rebuild Pruthia's military resources following the humiliations in the Germanian Principalities. The Emperor of Pruthia, on his part, was now in declining health, a process which would drag on for over two years until his death. He knew that opposing Laurasian and Austarlian aims in Dejanica would bring upon Pruthia a struggle almost as dangerous as the Seven Year's War had been. Moreover, Pruthia's financial and political vulnerabilities precluded any aggressive war of conquest. Pruthia therefore became resolved to deal with the situation in another manner.
  • June 20-As explained above, the Holy Spamalkan Empire's forces under General Juan del Avila and the new Governor-General of the Southern Durthian Duchies, the Count of Fuentes, had by June 1795, begun to make gains against the forces of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and the United Durthian States. Events in Franconia now shifted to the favor of the Spamalkans. On June 3, 1795, the Second Battle of Vise was fought between the Count of Fuentes (who had assumed command of military campaigns against Franconia) and the Duke of Montpensier; the result was a Spamalkan victory. By June 7, Fuentes had stormed the Franconian strongholds of Maubeuge, Neuve Chapelle, and Artois, thereby threatening Douai, Noyon, Dunkirk, and Champigne. On June 12, Fuentes defeated Field-Marshal Norria's subordinate, Major-General Sir Thomasius Baskrania (1744-97), in the Battle of Hulluch, thereby opening the way to a Spamalkan seizure of Chateau Thierry, Meaux, and Chantily (June 14-16, 1795). At the same time, General del Avila defeated Prince de Conti in the Battle of Vitry Le Francois (June 12, 1795) and expelled Franconian units from Montbeliard and Lons-le-Sauiner. Then on June 20, 1795, the Count of Fuentes reached Le Catelet, which was one of the chief assembly bases for the Royal Franconian Navy in Picardy. The ensuing Siege of Le Catelet lasted for six days, with efforts by Field-Marshal Norria, Prince de Conti, and the Duke of Montpensier to relieve the stronghold ending in failure. Le Catelet capitulated on June 26, 1795. By June 28, Fuentes had stormed La Capelle, Morchain, and Creil, entrenching Spamalkan garrisons in Picardy. On July 2, 1795, Field-Marshal Norria managed to repel a Spamalkan offensive against Beauvais, and on July 4, he destroyed a Spamalkan landing corps in the Battle of Amiens, preserving that system for Franconian control. In that same battle, however, the Duke of Nice, who was now serving as commander of the Franconian corps attached to Field-Marshal Norria's command, suffered serious injuries; he died shortly after word of the victory was won. This was the first of two losses in military command which the allies would experience during that month.
  • July 21-
    • On July 7, King Hensios, saddened by the death of Nice, launched a counteroffensive, placing his forces under the command of Hensios de La Tour d'Auvergne, Duke of Bouillion (1755-1823), who now assumed the Duke of Nice's position of command as Legate-General and Francais d'Orleans Longueville, Duke of Chateau-Thierry (1770-99). The two commanders repelled Spamalkan units from Orleans (July 8-11, 1795); stormed the garrisons of Lens and Maubeuge (July 12-14); and on July 17, destroyed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Ham. The Duke of Bouillion was ruthless, and ordered for the execution of all the Spamalkan officers. They were mounted on spikes and ejected into outer space, an outrage which greatly offended the Holy Spamalkan Empire. The Count of Fuentes, who now had Admiral Coloma under his command (from July 11), therefore determined to continue the offensive. With reinforcements arriving from Hainaut and Artois, he pushed towards Doullens, one thousand light years northeast of Parri. On July 21, 1795, he arrived at the outskirts of Doullens and instigated a siege. When receiving word of the siege, Bouillon and Francois d'Orleans, Governor of Picardy (1754-1825), joined with the former League commander, Admiral Andre de Brancas (now loyally serving King Hensios) and Laurasian General Baskrania; with these combined forces, they sought to relieve the stronghold of the Spamalkan siege. The Franconian garrison of Doullens, on its part, prepared its defenses, hoping for reinforcements. Allied forces reached the outskirts of Doullens on July 24, 1795.
    • Admiral de Brancas, deciding not to wait for reinforcements under Louis Gonzanga, Duke of Nevers (1739-95), decided to launch an immediate assault against the star system, overruling Baskrania's objections. Fuentes placed thirty of his warships, under Admiral Coloma, to intercept the allied forces. Brancas launched a reckless frontal assault against the Spamalkan formations, creating confusion among them, but was ultimately repelled with heavy losses for allied forces. Fuentes then ordered his warships to surround the Franconian squadrons, with the Franconians being deprived of their turbocannon, ion batteries, munitions, and equipment. Brancas himself was captured by a Spamalkan boarding party, and despite offering to pay a ransom for his life, was executed on the spot: Emperor Philicus considered him almost a traitor for having become the King of Franconia's servant. As a result of the Battle of Doullens, the Duke of Bouillon was forced to retreat to Amiens with the remainder of his forces. Doullens, on its part, finally fell to Spamalkan forces on July 31, 1795. Fuentes was ruthless, and all of the garrison commanders and officers were executed. The Spamalkans plundered the star system's businesses, homes, and properties, impounding more than $33.9 trillion crowns worth of goods and funds. With Doullens secured, Fuentes was able to reinforce Cambrai and to advance further into Picardy. On August 6, 1795, Abbeville surrendered to the Holy Spamalkan Empire, followed by Laon two days later. By the middle of August 1795, Soissons and Boulougone were both under threat from Spamalkan units.
  • August 5-
    • Whilst these events were ongoing in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, Laurasian forces continued to make gains in the Colonial Territories. The same period of time, however, also witnessed a daring Spamalkan expedition to the Great Tesmanian Cloud, which for a short time alarmed Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council. Following the conquest of St. Eustatius at the end of April 1795, Admiral Sir Soesthenes Lancasataria and the Earl of Cumbria pursued a series of offensives to expel the Spamalkans from the other Antilles. On May 7, 1795, after the failure of a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Bonaire and Philippsburg, Cumbria assaulted Tobago, which served as a major Spamalkan spice production outpost and transport outlet in the Spice Colonies. The Siege of Tobago lasted for four days, ultimately ending in Laurasian victory on May 11. Following the conquest of Tobago, Laurasian units stormed Bermuda, Bahia, Barbados, and Anguilla (May 15-24, 1795); on May 28, Cumbria destroyed a Spamalkan convoy in the Battle of Montserrat, securing more than €5.5 trillion dataries worth of goods. Although a subsequent Laurasian assault upon Neuva Esparta (June 3-5, 1795), failed with a counteroffensive launched by Spamalkan Admiral Zubiaur, and Laurasian forces were driven from Saba (June 10, 1795), Cumbria nevertheless continued the successful harassment of Spamalkan commercial lanes across the Colonial Territories. On June 13, 1795, however, after storming St. Martin, Cumbria suffered serious injuries in a combustive explosion on his flagship, the IMS Readdrant.
    • As a result of these injuries, he was forced to step down from his command, beginning his journey back to the Laurasian Empire on June 18. Admiral Lancasataria took over command, but on June 23, 1795, was informed by the Imperial General Headquarters of his reassignment to duty in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Empress Aurelia, who was now engaged in all of the associated preparations with the Third Partition of Dejanica, desired a trusted military commander to ensure that there would be no outbreaks of dissent in the Barrier Regions or in Lithuania. He was now to be replaced by perhaps the most famous naval commander of the Empire: Fleet Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius. Dracius had returned to Laurasia Prime in December 1794, having overseen the withdrawal of Laurasian units and naval garrisons from the Colonial Territories. He had become Superintendent of the Imperial Naval Academy of Laura, and was considering retirement from active military service. Empress Aurelia, however, relied upon him as the commander with the most experience in fighting the Spamalkans. He accepted his commission willingly and without qualm. Departing from Belkadan on June 28, 1795, he arrived at Recife four days later and immediately took command of a series of offensives against Marigot, Brades, and Ft. de Spamalka (June 29-July 7, 1795), by which all of these strongholds were subdued.
    • On July 10, Santo Domingo surrendered to Laurasian forces once again, and on July 15, Dracius ruined Admiral Zubiaur in the Battle of Sao Juan. By this point, however, the Emperor of Spamalka had been throwing his resources into a daring expeditionary raid against the Laurasian Empire itself, to demonstrate that Empress Aurelia's dominions were not beyond range of retribution. On June 8, 1795, the Emperor of Spamalka granted his approval to a proposed expedition by the Spamalkan Naval Command geared against the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Marquess of Santa Cruz was aware of the need for Spamalkan reinforcements in the Colombiana and in Durthia; he was also aware of the danger that existed to Naparia and Milania, in the form of the Haxonian Confederacy. Therefore, considering the Empire's focus on so many fronts, and the need to maintain garrisons throughout its territories, he proposed for only a raiding expedition, as a intended "revenge" against the Imperial Laurasian Government. The intended goal of this expedition was to seize strongholds in the Southern Ochanian Provinces; to raid to the Trans-Angelina Transit Route; and to capture prisoners, ships, and goods before retreating. On July 9, 1795, the Emperor designated General Carlos de Amesquita (1737-98), a veteran of the Durthian Revolt and War of Portugallian Succession, as the commander of the expedition. Admiral de Zubiaur was reassigned to the expedition on July 19, and by July 26, a Spamalkan force of nearly four hundred warships, 800,000 troops, and a support force of Marines and transports had been prepared at Port Louis in Spamalkan Navarre. Amesquita departed from Port Louis on July 28, 1795, and proceeded rapidly with his force across the Galactic Void.
    • Along the way, they captured a number of Laurasian commerce vessels in transit from the Caladarian Galaxy to the Haxonian Confederacy. On August 5, 1795, Ameqsuita reached the outskirts of Kars. The star system, which had a garrison of less than 20,000 troops, was quickly overwhelmed. During the next eight days, Spamalkan units seized Eruzrum, Shamkhal, Ardahan, Poti, Karbada, Duros, and Akhaltsikhe, killing nearly twenty million civilians; exterminating most of the Laurasian garrisons in those star systems; inflicting severe damage on their shipyards and facilities; and impounding more than €136.7 trillion dataries worth of goods and services. Lieutenant-General Sir Honorius Gudovia, who had established his command headquarters on Anapa, now moved to intercept the Spamalkan force. General de Amesquita and Admiral Zubiaur proved to be too elusive, and they launched expeditions against Sitovo, Turakan, and Navarino (August 24-29, 1795), inflicting further damage and harrying the garrisons before beginning their retreat back to the Great Amulak Spiral. By September 6, 1795, all star systems which had been seized or plundered by the Spamalkans were back in Laurasian hands, but the expedition had demonstrated the apparent vulnerability of the Empire's territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Empress Aurelia, who was then on progress, ordered for a thorough investigation of the readiness of all garrisons in the Caucasian Colonies; commanded General Gudovia to impose regular patrols in the Galactic Void; and diverted units from the still-occupied Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the Lower Danube Military Highway. She soon realized, however, that Amesquita's expedition had little impact on the war overall.
  • July 29-November 10-
    • On July 29, 1795, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court formally departed from Laurasia Prime to officially commence the imperial progress of 1795. The Empress had deferred her progress the previous year, but now, with the situation in Dejanica secure, affairs at the Imperial Court stabilized, and progress being made in the Second Spamalkan War, she decided to make her long-awaited visit to the Sassk-Rukkian, Hospallian, Rhedite, and Nagai Provinces in the Southern Galactic Borderlands. The Imperial Court proceeded to the Clancian Trunk Line, paying brief visits to Janesia, Dearton's Gateway, Azatha II, Apathama Vixius, Maroni, Reoyania, Conservan, Condtella, Dramis, Clancia, and Goss Beacon (July 29-August 8, 1795). From Goss Beacon, she then went to the Central Core Diplomatic Highway, proceeding from there to the Murphian Trade Spine. It was this route which allowed the Imperial Court to make a rapid progress to the southwestern Barsar Regions. On August 14, the Empress reached Sejucia, and stayed there for two days. She visited the Grand Palace of the Sejucian Sultans, marveling at the treasures of the residence, and received salutes from Sejucian Handriatas (Ladies) of the Sanctum of Topali. From Sejucia, the Empress paid visits to Redia and Nicole (August 15-18, 1795).
    • These worlds, which had been at the very frontier of the Laurasian Empire's territories at the beginning of the century, now served as patrol garrisons into the Galactic Borderlands. Nicole, which was shrouded by fog, and had a population of less than one billion, was nevertheless one of the most historic worlds in the Barsar Regions, the site of numerous battles in galactic history and one which contained numerous seaside resorts, aquariums, and observation facilities. The Empress professed herself to be impressed by what the world offered. Redia, on the other hand, dominated by swirls of electromagnetic lights in its atmosphere, was a major resort colony: it generated most of its income from tourism, gambling, and trade. From Redia, the Empress paid a renewed visit to Teutonica (August 23, 1795) and then progressed through Hakura, Ruumlist, and Helen (August 24-28, 1795); Ruumlist in particular, known for its textile manufactures and massive warehouses, proved to be a economic showcase for the Imperial Court.
    • She then proceeded to Tong (August 30, 1795), which was dotted with a number of spaceports, neuranium mines, and navigation terminals. This was the site of a major victory by Timur the Devastator over the Nagai in 1002. Pompus and Milking subsequently became objects of the Court's visit (August 31-September 3, 1795), and on September 4, Aurelia visited the former Tashian fortress-world of Both. She stayed at the Varonian Fortress for the next four days, celebrating her 62nd birthday there (September 7, 1795). It was on this occasion that the Empress's Sergeant-Painter, Sir Antiochus Goweria (1740-96), executed the official Anniversary Portrait. From Both, she progressed through Killing, Jacksonian Backory, Bree, Tatiana, and Curtis (September 8-19, 1795). Killing, as its name implied, was known for its massive gladiatorial arenas and competition alleys; Bree, for its central Commerce District; Tatiana for its pleasant countryside; and Curtis for its extensive agricultural ranges. On September 23, Rhedita, formerly capital world of the Rhedite Consortium, was reached. The Empress stayed there for three days, touring the grounds of the Cloudian Cities of Chumah; the Figgerian Industrial Complex, which had been constructed by the eccentric Sir Eccletus Figrania (1398-1469) in the fifteenth century AH; and the Spire of Kuna, which dated to the 2nd millennium BH. Upon departing from Rhedita on September 26, Aurelia proceeded to Lwheek, the former capital world of the Sassi-Ruuk Imperium. This world, which had more than twenty billion inhabitants by the late eighteenth century, was a mostly desert world, with domed cities separated from each other by hundreds of miles.
    • The Empress, however, enthused over its merits, and attended a dinner held in her honor by the Houses of Savalites, a Sassi-ruukian hereditary noble organization which had existed since the twelfth century. Departing from Lwheek on September 30, she then traveled through Natalia Wood, Chathania, So'thrita, Dedantia, Ivar's Star, and Velsaquez (September 30-October 12, 1795). On October 14, she reached Nagosh, homeworld of the Nagai, more impressed with this world's massive forest reserves and its cavern cities. Staying for four days, Aurelia moved on to Bernicia, once a Nordanian and Marcian throne-world (October 19-21, 1795), and then to Kaley, Inspirata V, Ida, Agester, and then finally, Deira, formally capital world of the Amelianian Kingdom of Nordania (October 28, 1795). King Edwin's Palace, which had more than seven thousand rooms, and was one of the finest examples of Amelianian architecture in the Caladarian Galaxy, became host to the Imperial Court during the next five days. The Empress of Laurasia was entertained in the Great Dining Chambers; received tributes and accolades from her Amelianian subjects; and watched a series of Amelianian odes, bard recitals, and contests of valor. She visited the Chest of Nordanian Kings, the Valley of the Kilore, and the Saynassan Reservations. On November 3, 1795, after paying a brief visit to the Montassara Nebula and the Francian Outposts, the Empress began her journey back to Laurasia Prime. She arrived at her capital world on November 10.
  • September 3-
    • In the United Durthian States, while the Spamalkan forces (under the Count of Fuentes) pushed into Picardy and the Pale of Calais, the advantage shifted back and forth between the two opposing sides. On June 6, 1795, Spamalkan forces under Fuentes's command subordinate, General Cristobal de Mondragon, Governor of Antwerp (1714-96), who had served in the Holy Spamalkan Army for sixty-three years and was now 81 years old, launched an offensive against Axel. This stronghold, now a major Durthian intelligence and relay outpost, fell into Spamalkan possession just four days later. Devanter was under constant threat from Spamalkan expeditions, and on June 14, General de Mondragon scored another victory in the Battle of Naarden, driving the Durthian-Laurasian forces from this important garrison. Prince Maurice of Nassau, who had strengthened the garrisons of Bergen op Zoom, Breda, Haarlem, and Maastricht, was determined to halt any further Spamalkan threat. The ailing Field-Marshal Sir Willanius Pellhamia (promoted to that rank in January 1795), distinguished himself in action at Zutphen (June 18, 1795), and on June 22, had secured the defenses of Brill by blunting a Spamalkan move from Mons and Brussels. On June 24, Roosevelt was recovered by Prince Maurice, who then expelled Spamalkan units from Ypres and Graveline Outskirts. On July 1, 1795, Pellhamia and Prince Maurice (assisted by his cousin Prince Philip of Nassau), defeated General Mondragon in the Second Battle of Leuven, thereby recovering that stronghold. Maurice now sought to subdue Groenlo, from which Spamalkan expeditions harried the Durthian strongholds in Gelderland and Holland. By July 10, allied forces had stormed Oosterwool, Dahlen, and Jemmingen, pushing in front of Brielle and to the outskirts of Groenlo.
    • The Siege of Groenlo actually commenced on July 14, 1795, and continued for ten days. The Garrison of Groenlo was commanded by Durthian General Jan van Sirlum (1745-1810). Here, however, Maurice suffered a major reverse. General Mondragon, who had pulled back to Antwerp, prepared for a counteroffensive to relieve Groenlo and to seize Borgerhout, allowing for a breach into Durthian supply lines. On July 24, 1795, he launched his planned moves, with Spamalkan thrusts catching the besiegers off surprise and storming into Borgerhout. Prince Maurice, who could not afford to be cut off, was forced to lift the siege and to withdraw. Borgerhout fell to the Spamalkans on July 27; by August 2, they had once again occupied the Graveline Straits and Jemmingen. On August 9, 1795, General Mondragon, with support from Admiral Coloma, stormed Durthian positions at Hardenberg, forcing Prince Maurice to terminate his raids against Antwerp and Tournai. Nimburg, however, fell to a Durthian force under the Stadholder of Fresia, Count William Louis, on August 14; by August 19, he had also secured Schaan and Triesen, entrenching the Durthians once again in the Lichenstein Sector. Field-Marshal Pellhamia, on his part, defeated Spamalkan General Ambrose Spinola (1769-1830) in the Battle of Rijnberk (August 24, 1795), securing that stronghold for the Durthians.
    • Pellhamia, however, suffered a violent heart attack at the outskirts of Lilles just two days later, and was forced to retire to Rotterdam. He died there on September 2, 1795, at the age of 70, depriving the allies of a talented military commander. Prince Maurice was now confronted with renewed actions against Mondragon. On August 24, 1795, General Mondragon headed to Rheinberg, in order to protect the star system from a Durthian offensive. He established his headquarters at Dinskalen, fourteen light years east of Wesel. Prince Maurice followed him with his combined military forces and established his own position at Bislich. Both forces were separated by the Lippe Straits. For several days, they engaged in a series of running naval and tertiary skirmishes. Prince Maurice now took the opportunity to plan a mock ambush, by which he hoped to lure Mondragon into general action on Bislich and to destroy his forces.
    • On September 1, he gave the command of the ambush to his favorite commander, Prince Philip of Nassau (1766-95). He instructed him to cross the Lippe Straits with a number of warships, ambush the Spamalkan convoy, and board its ships. The goal was to seize the convoy, separate it from the armored Spamalkan escort, and lead it to the Durthian camp, thereby forcing Mondragon to intervene with a larger force. Then, after the appearance of Mondragon with his main armada, Nassau was to retreat to Bislich, luring the Spamalkans into an ambush. Nassau received the command of 200,000 Durthian-Laurasian troops, accompanied by his brothers Ernest Casimir (1773-1832) and Ludwig Gunther (1775-1804), and by Laurasian Commodore Sir Lepidus Verus (1750-95). Mondragon, however, learned of the planned Durthian moves through the interception of allied communications and reinforced the convoy, placing it under the command of his lieutenant, Admiral Juan de Cordoba (1733-1805).
    • He now intended to turn Nassau's surprise into a trap. During the early hours of September 2, 1795, Durthian forces crossed the Lippe Straits. Maurice awaited with his force of some 500,000 troops and seventy naval warships near Wesel. Philip of Nassau divided his naval corps into four squadrons; one under Captain Jean Sallandt (1758-95); one under Hendrik Johann, Count of Kinsky (1756-95); one under Lieutenant Klaus van Balen (1761-1835); and the last under Commodore Verus. At Krudenberg Outpost, Nassau sent several of his ships under Balen to surprise the convoy. Upon finding a force much larger than expected, Balen sent a report back to Nassau. Nassau, however, believed it to be only the convoy's escort and moved with his forces to launch an attack against the Spamalkan mobile corps. Mondragon, anticipating the Spamalkans, had deployed his forces behind a hyperspace relay, with Admiral de Cordoba commanding seven Marine Companies. Nassau, with a detachment of his frigates, corvettes, and armored transports, was surprised by the Spamalkan forces under Captains Hendrik van Bergh (1773-1838) and Carlo Carricalo (1763-1841). Van de Bergh clashed with the Durthian scouts.
    • The Battle of the Lippe Straits commenced, with the Durthian ships finding their long-range volleys to be useless, and themselves compacted into a narrow stray of space. Spamalkan ships quickly cut off Nassau's flagship, the Blach, and instigated a boarding action. Prince Philip, his brothers, and their cousin, Durthian Rear-Admiral Ernest von Solms (1736-95), were seriously wounded at the beginning of the battle, as Spamalkan turbolaser fire and boarding parties combined to inflict much havoc on the Blach's bridge. Kinsky and Balen's corps were unable to reach the center of the Durthian force, and some of the Durthian ships, themselves boarded by Spamalkan troopers, began to flee. Commodore Verus managed to put disorder into the Spamalkan mobile corps with his starfighters, but Captain Paulo de Martinengo (1755-1816) launched a enveloping maneuver, allowing Cordoba to regroup his warships and vigorously pursue the attack, overrunning Krudenburg Outpost. Despite the stubborn resistance offered by the Durthian-Laurasian forces, they were soon broken and were forced to begin a general retreat. Cordoba pressed the offensive, recapturing five Durthian prison transports and several Laurasian frigates. By the end of the day, the Battle of the Lippe Straits had ended in a decisive victory for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Prince Philip was captured by the Spamalkan troopers, and was in serious condition.
    • Commodore Verus was also wounded in the last assault and would die at Hulst on September 20. Captain Sallandt and Count Kinsky both died during the final stages of the battle; Count Ernst of Solms was seriously wounded and captured. He and Philip were both taken to Rheinberg, being visited by Mondragon and the van den Berghs, and treated by Spamalkan surgeons. Despite all the attentions, both Durthian commanders died of the wounds they had sustained: Nassau during the late hours of September 4, and Solms on September 7. On September 21, 1795, Count Ernest Casmir, eldest of Prince Philip's brothers, was released from captivity by Mondragon and given the bodies of Philip and Solms. They would be buried at Arnhem on September 29, 1795, in a ceremony attended by Prince Maurice. Following the Battle, Prince Maurice was forced to terminate his planned moves against the Spamalkan forces. On October 11, 1795, he moved against Meurs, but was repelled by a Spamalkan task force. Four days later, he dispatched Count William Louis of Nassau-Dillenberg to intercept a Spamalkan force at Twente, but the Spamalkans evaded him and reached Enschede, leaving only three abandoned transports in Durthian hands. Then on October 18, Mondragon moved back towards Mechelen, with Maurice's attempt to intercept him being defeated in the Battle of the Meusse Straits (October 24, 1795). By the end of October 1795, Spamalkan units had secured Sluis, Aaylst, and Kollum, bringing them to their maximum territorial extent. At this point, however, Spamalkan fortunes would change for the worse.
  • October 24-
    • As regards to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, affairs proceeded rapidly. On August 10, 1795, the Laurasian Ambassador to the Court of Berliania III, Baronet Carunna, and his Austarlian counterpart, Karl von Alterstadia, Count von Ulterdet (1740-1815), formally presented the Preliminary Treaty of Partition to Emperor A'rua III and the Pruthian Cabinet. Included with this formal presentation was a "request" that the Autocratic Pruthian Empire should accede to the territorial arrangements exactly as they had been defined. The Pruthian Cabinet debated over the matter for several days, but ultimately on August 21, Emperor A'rua himself intervened, instructing Taurentizen to communicate his approval of the arrangements to the Imperial Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Courts. A'rua, however, sought to gain a modification in the territorial shares thus allocated to the Holy Austarlian Empire, although he agreed to recognize Laurasia's territorial interests in full.
    • This therefore required a final round of negotiations among the three governments, to conclude the second, "preliminary", treaty of partition. On September 6, 1795, Empress Aurelia formally proposed for a second diplomatic conference in Christiania, in order to solve the territorial delineation matters and to provide arrangements for the immediate abolition of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth's institutions. This was accepted by A'rua and Fransios four days later. Formal negotiations opened once again at the Diplomatic Palace on September 16, 1795, with Lord Buchamia, Secretary Cecilis, and the Earl of Estatius representing the interests of the Imperial Laurasian Government; General Taurentizen, the Pruthian Ambassador to the Court of Christiania, Hermann Schnidermann, Baron Von Hartz (1756-1834), and Count Simon von Volherhort of Augsburg (1749-1821) those of the Autocratic Pruthian Government; and Austarlian Ambassador Cobenzl, the Count of Bacs, and Baron von Holtz those of the Holy Austarlian Government. Negotiations continued for over a month, as the Pruthian and Austarlian delegations wrangled bitterly over the fate of Sandomierz and the Western Vistula Colonies.
    • Ultimately, however, the three powers finally came to an agreement, and on October 24, 1795, the Second Treaty of Christiania was signed, constituting a formal territorial settlement among the Laurasian, Autocratic Pruthian, and Holy Austarlian Empires. By the terms of this treaty, the final shares of Dejanican territory to be allocated to the three Empires was decided. The Laurasian Empire was to acquire all remaining Dejanican territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud (vis, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia, Tesmanian Dejanica, Chelm (in the Amulak Wormhole), and the Bug Void Highways). This amounted to a gain of nearly 775,000 star systems with a population of over 700 billion inhabitants. The Autocratic Pruthian Empire was to now acquire Warmia, Masovia, Podlachia, Lodz, Dejanica Major, and the Northern Vistulan Colonies, constituting an acquisition of more than 300,000 star systems with a population of over 600 billion inhabitants. Finally, the Holy Austarlian Empire received Western Galicia, the Lublin Voivodeship (except Chelm), Krakow, Sandomierz, Subcarpathia, and the Southern Vistula Colonies, an acquisition of 550,000 star systems with 450 billion inhabitants. It was agreed that all powers would occupy the territories they claimed by no later than March 1, 1796; that the Imperial Laurasian Government would assume the responsibility of securing the abdications of King Stanis Vorrust I of Dejanica and Duke Peter von Bironia of Northania & Semigallia by no later than December 1, 1795; and that a final convention would be called to deal with the Commonwealth's debts, finances, nobility, governmental institutions, remaining military assets, and diplomatic relations. The Second Treaty was ratified by Empress Aurelia on October 29; by Emperor A'rua on November 1; and by Emperor Fransios on November 4.
  • November 8-
    • Following the Battle of Sao Juan, Fleet Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius had, on the instructions of the Imperial General Headquarters, shifted his focus to reconquering the Holy Spamalkan Empire's strongholds and garrisons in the Cuban, Hispaniolan, and Puerto Rican Sectors. On July 18, 1795, the Battle of Cubagua resulted in a decisive victory for the forces of the Laurasian Empire, as Dracius, organizing his offensive warships into an arch, blockaded and then pounded into submission a smaller Spamalkan force under the command of Commodore Mario Jargos (1744-1803), who had operated from his naval headquarters at Barranquilla. During the next several days, Dracius's forces stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Nevis, St. Kitts, Coche, La Tortuga, and La Desirade (July 19-25, 1795). On July 26, Grande Anse, which served as a Spamalkan patrol outpost for expeditions into the Galactic Void, was stormed by detachments under the command of Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia (who had been promoted to that rank in April 1795 and was once again under Dracius's command). From Grande Anse, Langatonia secured the Spamalkan colonies of Baie-Mahault, St. Louis, and Basse-Terre (July 27-August 3, 1795). Then on August 4, Dracius launched a two-pronged offensive into the Cuban Sector. He divided his forces into two complements.
    • One, comprised of the 67th and 69th Imperial Fleets with the 55th Imperial Army, now placed under the command of Admiral Langatonia (who had established a command headquarters on Basse-Terre), was entrusted with securing Cartagena, St. Augustine, San Mateo, and Sao Vicente. The second, under the command of Dracius himself, with the 68th Imperial Fleet and detachments from the 48th Imperial Fleet, and the 52nd Imperial Army, was to secure the Spamalkan garrisons of Guantanamo, Holguin, Camuguey, and Cienfuegos, with the intention of preventing Spamalkan transport between Havana and the Panamanian Colonies, thereby sundering one of the major transportation routes in the Colonial Territories. The Laurasian offensives obtained a string of both victories and reverses. Dracius was the more successful in his thrust. The Battle of Guantanamo (August 5-8, 1795), resulted in a decisive victory for the 68th Imperial Fleet, with the planetary defenses being disabled by Elgin-class destroyers. The Governor-General of Guantanamo, Raul Perilldes of Santiago (1751-1819), surrendered without offering any resistance on the planetary surface. From Guantanamo, Dracius stormed Holguin (August 11): Cienfuegos (August 14); and the Spamalkan transport relay at Granma (August 15-19, 1795), before isolating Holguin from outside reinforcements.
    • He did not actually lay the stronghold under siege until August 28, 1795. Holguin, which had a garrison of more than 150,000 troops and nearly sixty defensive warships, posed a serious challenge to Dracius's invading forces. Confrontations at Villa Clara, Aguaras, and La Caba (August 30-September 5, 1795), inflicted serious damage on the Laurasian mobile offensive squadrons, with Dracius losing nearly three hundred starfighters to a surprise Spamalkan thrust. On September 9, Spamalkan Admiral Jorge de Thuegos (1752-1820), attempting to reinforce the garrison of Holguin, launched a surprise offensive against the Laurasian Command Headquarters at Unitas. Theugos at first managed to drive the enemy before him, and for a time, Dracius considered shoring up his supply lines and calling in reinforcements from Santiago, Bermuda, and St. Lucia. Ultimately, however, he was able to exploit a Spamalkan tactical weakness and send his starfighters to enclose a gap in Thuegos's assault lines, forcing the Spamalkan ships to turn back. By the end of the day, the Battle of Unitas Outpost had ended in victory for Dracius. Holguin, however, did not fall until September 14, and Theugos subsequently retreated to Bayamo, from where he continued his resistance against Laurasian forces into the middle of October 1795. By October 3, Dracius had defeated Spamalkan units in confrontations at Atremisa, Manzanzas, and Ciego de Avila, but was unable to sunder all the supply lines leading to Havanna. As regards to Admiral Langatonia's thrust, the Laurasian success was more limited.
    • Langatonia defeated a Spamalkan commercial convoy in the Battle of Miami (August 7-11, 1795), destroying the Spamalkan fortifications in that star system and forcing more than 70,000 Spamalkan colonists to flee. His moves against Orlando and Daytona, however, came to a ruin in the Battle of the Keys (August 20, 1795). On August 24, Spamalkan Admiral Medro de Quallios (1760-1836) defeated Langatonia in the Battle of Lethinen, thereby maintaining a Spamalkan communications line to Havana from St. Augustine. He could, not, however, prevent the fall of Sao Mateo to Laurasian units (September 2, 1795), nor Langatonia's raiding operation against Visquilla (September 7-14), in which the Admiral freed more than 30,000 Laurasian prisoners of war from the Cambulstio Fortress. On September 19, 1795, Langatonia moved against Sao Vicente. Despite storming the Esprito Santo Outposts (September 20-24), he faced tough resistance from Spamalkan General Jaganes la Cassides (1759-1829), whose units repelled all attempted Laurasian landings on the planetary surface. Ultimately, Langatonia was forced to place the star system under siege; Sao Vicente did not fall until October 8, 1795. By that time, Langatonia had managed to secure St. Augustine, defeating Admiral de Quaillos in the Battle of the Antilles Nebula (October 1-3, 1795) and taking the stronghold two days later. By the middle of October 1795, Orlando was again being threatened by Laurasian units; Admiral Dracius now launched a thrust from Guantanamo, bypassing Havana and joining with Langatonia near Tampa. On October 20, 1795, they launched a combined offensive against Orlando.
    • The Battle of Orlando continued for four days, and although Admiral de Quallios repelled a Laurasian assault on the Patrol Station, the stronghold ultimately fell on October 24. Daytona capitulated on October 30, and on November 3, Dracius secured Miami permanently, using it to launch raiding expeditions throughout the outskirts of the Colonial Territories. The following day, however, he was forced to proceed directly back to Fort St. Louis, for a Spamalkan expedition under Admiral Pedro Tello de Guzman (1755-1803) was threatening to recapture the stronghold. On November 8, 1795, Dracius intercepted Guzman at Las Palmas, located seventy light-years southwest of Fort St. Louis. The ensuing Battle of Las Palmas resulted in a strategic stalemate, for the Fleet Admiral impounded a number of Guzman's transports and managed to prevent him from proceeding forward to St. Louis, Guzman, however, also inflicted substantial casualties upon the Laurasian forces, and he was now able to halt Laurasian raiding expeditions against Cayman Brac and Grand Cayman (November 9-14, 1795). Dracius then pulled back to St. Lucia, and from there, on November 22, 1795, moved against San Juan, seeking to isolate the stronghold. The ensuing Battle of San Juan Straits (November 22-24, 1795), resulted in a tactical victory for Spamalkan forces under Admiral Gonzalo de Cancio (1745-1801) and Commodore Sancho Donlebun (1758-1837). Dracius lost twelve of his frigates, although he did manage to inflict heavy casualties upon the Spamalkans. Despite the recent stalemates at Las Palmas, the Caymans, and San Juan Straits, Dracius was nevertheless able to threaten Portobello and in December 1795, orchestrated an offensive which seized the Spamalkan relays at Ponce and Caguas. At the same time, Admiral Langatonia stormed Spamalkan outposts on Perhillo (December 4) and at the Georgian Alleys (December 13, 1795), consolidating the Laurasian hold of St. Augustine. Cartagena surrendered on December 21, 1795, after being blockaded by Laurasian units for more than two months.
  • November 25-
    • Immediately following the conclusion of the Second Treaty of Christiania, the respective partitioning powers wasted no time in formally asserting their rule over the territories of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth which they had each claimed for themselves. The Laurasian and Holy Austarlian Empires had already taken action from August 1795. On August 22, 1795, following the formal notification to the Court of Berliania III concerning the First Preliminary Treaty, and the "request" to Pruthia to accede to the agreements, Empress Aurelia had instructed Field-Marshal Surovius, still serving as Viceroy of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, to complete the withdrawal of all Laurasian garrisons and fleets from Lesser Dejanica, the Lublin Voivodeship (except for Chelm), Masovia, Lodz, and Warmia. Surovius was also instructed to formally "suspend" all financial accounts and reserves of the Dejanican Treasury; to make "arrangements" with the King of Dejanica for his security and protection; and to notify Laurasian occupation authorities in the Great Tesmanian Cloud to begin taking control of Dejanican governmental and diplomatic resources. Surovius followed his instructions to the letter. The withdrawal of Laurasian forces from the regions to be allocated to Pruthia and Austarlia had been completed by the beginning of September 1795. Then on September 7, Empress Aurelia's birthday, King Stanis Vorrust I received a "request" from the Viceroy that he depart from his residences on Dejanica Major immediately and retire to Grodno. The King of Dejanica, who had been deprived of his own personal guards, and well aware that this "request" was actually an order, obliged without delay. On September 11, he formally departed from Dejanica Major, being escorted by detachments from the 66th Imperial Fleet of the Laurasian Empire, and by a corps of Valedictorian Guards. He reached Grodno two days later, and took up residence at the Grand Chambers. This was now only the preliminary to the formal abdication.
    • On September 25, 1795, Empress Aurelia issued instructions to the Laurasian Consul at the Court of Mitau, Sir Cicero Rehermia, 2nd Baron Rehermia (1743-1811), and ordered for him to hold a formal conference of "intentions" with the Duke of Northania and Semigallia, Peter von Bironia. Mitau, Talinin, Windau, Pilten, Dunauberg, Goldingen, Jakobstadt, and Libau had all been occupied by Laurasian garrisons, and the Duchy's governmental operations were already being dismantled. Lord Rehermia, when he held his conference with the Duke six days later, informed him of "Her Imperial Majesty of Laurasia's sincere desire for friendship and amity with you." Furthermore, he told His Highness, the Empress was willing to grant him an annual imperial annuity of €550 billion dataries per year; an honorary commission in the Imperial Military as Field-Marshal and Fleet Admiral; the title, and precedence, of Duke Emeritus of Northania and Semigallia; and estates throughout the Empire, if he in turn acknowledged her "rights" to the possession of Northania and Semigallia. Duke von Bironia, who had been placed on his throne with the support of the Imperial Laurasian Government, and who knew that resistance was futile, acquiesced. On October 18, 1795, six days before the Second Treaty of Christiania was signed, he formally abdicated from the Northanian throne; surrendered all of his rights, titles, and possessions to the Empress of Laurasia; and recommended to the Northanian Diet that it recognize the Imperial Laurasian Government's absolute jurisdiction over the Dukedom's territories. The Diet, itself intimidated and controlled by Laurasian agents, confirmed the Duke's abdication two days later; declared the formal abolition of all the governmental functions of the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia; and tendered an oath of allegiance to the Empress of Laurasia. The body then formally dissolved itself from existence.
    • Aurelia subsequently issued the official decree of annexation for the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia (November 3, 1795). The governmental authorities of all Northanian and Semigallian star systems swore allegiance to the Empress; Laurasian garrisons formally assumed their duties in their respective star systems; and all institutions of the Duchy were formally abolished. By the decrees of December 21, 1795 and January 17, 1796, the former territories of the Duchy would be organized into the Northanian, Semigallian, and Eastern Vector Governorates. Now there remained one last matter: the abdication of King Stanis Vorrust I of Dejanica. On November 16, 1795, the King of Dejanica received a formal communique from the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In this, he was officially notified of the territorial disposition of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and informed that all institutions of the Royal Dejanican Government were to be henceforth "transferred" to the jurisdiction of the respective partitioning powers. The King of Dejanica got the message easily. Three days later, he announced his intentions to his remaining household to abdicate, declaring that it would be for the "greater security and prosperity of the Commonwealth and of her inhabitants."
    • On November 25, 1795, Stanis Vorrust I, who had "reigned" for thirty-one years, signed a formal declaration of abdication as King of Dejanica and Grand Duke of Lithuania. In his declaration, Stanis Vorrust declared that the "events of the Universe have determined for the peaceful cessation to the Commonwealth's operations, in the favor of monarchies which will bring tranquility and stability to my subjects." Therefore, he was compelled, under his conscience and "under the laws of Our Gods to surrender all claim to the Dejanican and Lithuanian thrones; to recognize the absolute authority of Their Majesties of Laurasia, Austarlia, and Pruthia over the territories which they have been given; and to absolve any ties between myself and the cares of rulership." He announced his recognition of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth's cessation of existence; urged his subjects to accommodate their new sovereigns and authorities; and prayed for "there always to be stability and security among the powers of extra-galactic civilization."
    • Two days later, in a formal ceremony at the Grand Chambers, the King formally surrendered his crown, coats of office, coronation mail, and copies of his pacta conventa to Field-Marshal Surovius and a delegation of representatives from the Autocratic Pruthian and Holy Austarlian Empires. On November 29, the Empress, absolutely delighted at the "news" of the King's abdication, formally issued a decree by which she conferred upon him the title of King-Emeritus of Dejanica and Lithuania; proclaimed him to be a honorary subject of the Laurasian Empire; conferred upon him the titles of Duke of Dejanica Major and Marquess of Vorrust in the Laurasian nobility; an annual imperial pension of €1.7 trillion dataries a year; and estates on Laurasia Prime, as well as the rest of the Laurasia Prime Purse Region. Stanis, now effectively a pensioner and dependent of Laurasian Empress Aurelia, secured an assurance, on December 13, that all his debts incurred during his time as sovereign would be dealt with by the partitioning powers. Absolved of this burden, he was now allowed to move to Biaylstok, and would remain there until receiving a formal "invitation" from the Empress early in the following year. As for the former Duke of Northania and Semigallia, Peter von Bironia, he would be permitted to retire to Gellenau. Himself now a dependent of Empress Aurelia (having been proclaimed an "honorary subject" on November 7), he would remain there until his death nearly five years later. With the abdications of King Stanis Vorrust I of Dejanica-Lithuania and his "vassal", Duke Peter von Bironia of Northania and Semigallia, the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth had effectively ceased to exist.
  • December 22-
    • In the wake of his victory at the Siege of Doullens, and his conquest of Abbeville and Laon, the Count of Fuentes had continued to pursue offensives into Picardy, confident that he now enjoyed the advantage over the forces of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and the Laurasian Empire. On August 21, 1795, Fuentes and Admiral Coloma defeated the Duke of Chateau-Thierry again in the Battle of Fontoise; two days later, Barcy surrendered to Spamalkan units, and by September 7, Spamalkan units were actively harrying the outskirts of Champeigne. Hames fell to Admiral Coloma on September 11, followed by Guines three days later. On September 24, 1795, the Battle of Cantiny was fought between the Duke of Bouillon and the Count of Fuentes; the result was another Spamalkan victory. Soissons, threatened constantly by Spamalkan raiding expeditions, surrendered on October 3, 1795.
    • By this point, however, the Spamalkan momentum was already being exhausted. Spamalkan moves against Dunkirk, Amiens, and Boulougone were blunted, and on October 12, General Baskrania captured a Spamalkan operations center at Bar Le Duc, thereby preventing a move into the Metzian Lordships. Two days later, King Hensios IV himself, determined to prevent Spamalkan units from reaching Orleans, launched a series of counteroffensives from Lens and Maubeuge, directed against Spamalkan units at Morchain and Neuve Chapelle. The former stronghold fell on October 16. Neuve Chapelle, however, proved to be a harder nut to crack, and on October 22, General del Avila even drove Franconian units from Nogent, briefly causing alarm at Orleans. Despite this move, the King of Franconia, with the assistance of the Duke of Montpensier and Field-Marshal Norria, kept up the pressure, and Neuve Chapelle finally fell on the last day of October 1795. Field-Marshal Norria then defeated the Spamalkans in the Battle of Fontainebleau (November 3, 1795), and four days later, drove them from Arcis Sur Arbe. Meaux was recovered on November 11, and on November 20, Fuentes was repelled in the Battle of Evereux, preventing him from attempting a move into Lower Normandy.
    • On November 24, King Hensios was informed that the 3rd Spamalkan Army of Milania, under the command of Don Juan Fernandez de Velasco (1750-1813), Governor of Milania and Lieutenant of Castile, had traversed the Alpian Barriers and was advancing on Dijon, intent on threatening Franconian positions in Burgundy, Provence, and Nice. The King now moved swiftly to Troyes, where he learned further that the Duke of Mayenne had stormed Giron and was providing active reconnaissance support to the Spamalkan forces. On November 29, 1795, the King of Franconia intercepted de Velasco and the Duke of Mayenne at Fontaine-Francaise, which was located ten light years east of Dijon. Hensios assaulted Spamalkan troops with his light convoys and forced the vanguard to retreat temporarily. After this, he reorganized the defenses of Fontaine-Francaise, leaking out communications to fool de Velasco and Mayenne into believing that he had a larger force. Velasco became convinced that Hensios was awaiting for reinforcements, and observing the activity on the planetary surface, came to believe that Hensios had larger forces. He now decided to retreat, overriding Mayenne's fervent protests. As a result of the Battle of Fontaine-Francaise, the Spamalkan offensive against Dijon was terminated. Hensios subsequently stormed the Spamalkan border garrisons of Herisau, Listel, and Frabourg (December 3-19, 1795), thereby preventing any further Spamalkan moves from Milania. On December 22, 1795, he and the Duke of Nevers secured a major victory in the Battle of Merindol, paving the way for a move against Creil. Creil was besieged from December 27, 1795, and despite the best efforts of Fuentes and del Avila, fell to the King of Franconia on New Year's Eve 1795. Thus, as the year 1795 came to an end, allied forces had regained the advantage in Franconia.

1796

  • January 1-
    • 1796, the 96th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire in a position of ascendancy among the powers of extra-galactic civilization. The preceding year had seen one of the most important diplomatic events of the eighteenth century: the final dissolution of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Commonwealth, which had been a major power of extra-galactic civilization for more than four centuries, was by the last quarter of that century merely a shadow of its former self. The humiliations which had been suffered since the "Tarnograd" Diet of 1717, including the Wars of the Dejanican Succession, Bar Confederation, and Defense of the Constitution; the Kosciusko Revolt; the Partitions of Dejanica; and the Austarlian reoccupation of Zips County, had all revealed the Commonwealth's vulnerabilities when compared to its more powerful neighbors: the Laurasian, Holy Austarlian, and Autocratic Pruthian Empires. Stanis Vorrust I, who had reigned over the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth for thirty-one years, as well as the former Duke of Northania and Semigallia, Peter von Bironia, were now both dependents of Empress Aurelia. The Empress of Laurasia herself, through her diplomatic parleys with her fellow sovereigns, A'rua III of Pruthia and Fransios II of Austarlia; through her ruthless actions in regards to the Commonwealth; and most importantly, through her continued territorial ambitions, had demonstrated the power and reach of her Empire. The Imperial Laurasian Government had now extended its jurisdiction over the whole of the Great Tesmanian Cloud. By 1796, the Laurasian Empire encompassed nearly seventy million inhabited star systems with a population in excess of one hundred quadrillion sentient individuals. It was, as previously explained, the most powerful and extensive state of extra-galactic civilization. Yet at the same time, the Laurasian Empire was once again involved in conflict in the Great Amulak Spiral.
    • The Second Spamalkan War had erupted in March 1795, only six months following the conclusion of the Treaty of Alacantara. In spite of the fact that the Serene Kingdom of Portugallia and the Sultanate of Morocco had both excused themselves from involvement in a renewed conflict with their Spamalkan neighbors, the Laurasian Empire and its allies had, nevertheless, inflicted a series of reverses upon the Holy Spamalkan Emperor, Philicus I. Despite recent Spamalkan successes in Southern Durthia and in Picardy, the Empire's forces, under the command of the renowned Fleet Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius, had humiliated overstretched Spamalkan garrisons in the Colonial Territories. Many of the more important Spice Colonies, including Trinidad, Tobago, the Antilles, and major portions of the Cuban and Puerto Rican Sectors, were once again under the occupation of Laurasian forces. This year would see the allied forces gain the absolute upper hand over the Spamalkans in the Durthian and Franconian theaters, helped by the arrival of some of the Empress's most respected military commanders. The Empress herself, however, would experience severe personal tragedy in this year, as the scythe of the Grim Reaper continued to strike down those close to her. At the opening of 1796, only Knollysis, Husadarania, Burghley, and Cobhamia remained from her original Privy Council in 1758. Many of her most trusted ladies, servants, and officials were already gone: more were to join them in this year. Nevertheless, in her New Year's proclamation, the Empress of Laurasia declared her "satisfaction at the successes which our forces have obtained in war" and the "triumph of our diplomatic policy over the instability and the chaos in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth." In spite of the fact that the final convention on the dissolution of the Commonwealth and its institutions would not be signed for another year, the Empress considered its disbandment to now be a "established fact."
  • January 17-
    • As mentioned above, Empress Aurelia had entered 1796 in both an uplifted and melancholy mood. She was, as explained above, triumphant in that her military forces had continued to humiliate the Spamalkans in the Colonial Territories, and that the Empire had effectively completed the destruction of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. At the same time, however, the Empress was coming to terms with three more deaths among her circles at the Imperial Court, and with all of the attendant festivities and the like with which she had to endure. On November 12, 1795, Fleet Admiral Sir John Hawkius, the famed victor of the Battle of Chesma, and who had been serving as Head of Imperial Naval Command since 1787, died at his private residence, Hawkius Place, in Christiania at the age of sixty-three. The Admiral, who had become a trusted military adviser of the Empress, and had gained much respect from his peers on the Privy Council and at the Imperial Court, was much lamented. Empress Aurelia declared that his death was the "loss of such a commander who has devoted his entire life to the service of this Empire, and who has never neglected anything when chastising our enemies."
    • She ordered the Court into a day of mourning for Hawkius; expressed her condolences to his son, the Commodore (who had returned to the Caladarian Galaxy the year before and had accepted a position at the Imperial Naval Academy of Laura); and on December 1, ordered for him to be given a ceremonial funeral at the Westphalian Cathedral. In accordance with his wishes, he would be buried in space five days later. No sooner had Hawkius died than there was another. On December 14, 1795, Antigonus Harrintia, 3rd Earl of Hannah, who had been considered a potential heir apparent during the early years of the reign, and whose grandnephew, Lord Lysimachus Harringtia, was gaining more and more support at the Imperial Court, died at Almastead at the age of 65. Hannah had been intending to return to the Imperial Court on Laurasia Prime, but his health had taken a turn to the worse. The Empress, who considered Hannah to be one of her most loyal councilors, and whose wife, Katharina Dudley, Countess of Hannah (1738-96), the only surviving sibling of her beloved Earl of Leicesterius, was one of her chief Ladies of the Privy Chamber, again plunged into grief.
    • She comforted the Countess, who bewailed vigorously and who expressed much lamentation for her husband, whom she had not seen in some weeks. Hannah would be buried at St. Helen's Church on Ruthania, on April 29, 1796. Matters were complicated on December 17, when the Earl's eldest nephew and successor, Franconius Harringtia, 4th Earl of Hannah, died on Evelyn. He was succeeded in turn by the Earl's grandnephew, Lord Lysimachus Harringtia of Teth, already mentioned previously as a potential successor to the Empress. Matters were now considerably dark at the Imperial Court, and the Dowager Countess of Hannah found herself unable to mentally recover from these series of deaths in her family. Empress Aurelia would formally release her from her service in January 1796, and she would retire to Hannah, to die on August 10 of that year. Furthermore, on October 19, 1795, the Duke of Norfolkius's elder son, Lord Philip Howardis, 1st Earl of Americana (who had succeeded to that position in 1780), had died at his cell in the Fortress of Baureux. He had been imprisoned there for six years, due to his alleged involvement in a Traditionalist conspiracy on Caladaria, aimed towards the removal of Chief Procurator Whitshiftus and of other officials from the Holy Synod.
    • The Empress of Laurasia, remembering Norfolkius's sad fate, had always regretted his son's imprisonment, and even though she had been under pressure to order his execution, regarded his death with some sadness. Thus, all of this was on the Empress's mind as she observed the New Year's ceremonies at the Imperial Court. The Earl of Estatius, on his part, had endeared himself further to the Empress and to her subjects. At the Accession Day ceremonies on November 17, 1795, Estatius had staged a elaborate allegorical entertainment devised by Sir Franconius Bagonius. In this entertainment, three actors representing a soldier (Raleghia); a solemn secretary (Cecilis); and an elderly man (Burghley) asked him to leave his "vain following of love" for a goddess and choose a life either of experience, fame, or contemplation. Then an actor, dressed as the Earl's squire, declared that "this knight will never forsake his mistress's love, whose virtues have made all of his thoughts divine, whose wisdom taught him true policy, whose beauty and worth were at all times able to make him fit to serve her."
    • The entertainment had ended with Estatius forsaking the goddess to devote himself to Love, by serving his Empress. In his final speech, he asserted his loyalty to her and declared that he would not suffer anything otherwise. Although Aurelia ignored Estatius's messages concerning his willingness to devote himself to military service, she did take kindly of his protestations of loyalty. This had, however, been tested on January 3, 1796, when the Empress, ignoring Bagonius, finally appointed Governing Senator Sir Thomasius Flemeria (1744-1813), as the new Solicitor General. Flemeria, who had been appointed to the Governing Senate in 1792, had graduated from the University of Laurasia Prime Law School in 1768 and had since distinguished himself in legal service with the Court of Imperial Requests, the Regional Court of Assizes of the Laurasia Prime Governorate, and the Christiania Inns, before becoming Recorder of the Court of Wards in 1791 and then a Senator. His appointment, however, upset Estatius, and he unfairly blamed the Cecilises for it. By January 12, however, Estatius had come to realize that it was useless to make any further argument about the point. On January 17, 1796, Estatius awarded property with a value of €3.2 billion dataries to Bagonius, as compensation for failing to secure him a position of importance in the Imperial Laurasian Government. That same day, he distinguished himself in another joust at the Circus Maximus, again intimating to the Empress that she should allow him to obtain a active military commission. Aurelia ignored that message again, but continued to praise Estatius for his merits.
  • January 23-On January 23, 1796, King Antonio I "the Prior" of Portugallia, who had, with the assistance of Laurasian Empress Aurelia the Great, expelled the Holy Spamalkan Empire from the Portugallian realms and claimed his place as King of Portugallia, died at the Belem Tower on Lisbon, at the age of 63. He had reigned for seven years since his accession to the Portugallian throne in October 1789, following the expulsion of the Spamalkan forces from Lisbon. Although remaining neutral in the Second Spamalkan War, the King of Portugallia had continued to maintain friendly relations with the Empress of Laurasia, permitting for free transit by Laurasian merchants and navigators in his dominions, and never forgetting who he owed the restored independence of his realms to. Antonio was now succeeded as King of Portugallia by his nephew, Prince Fernando (r. 1796-1816), who had distinguished himself in the campaigns of the First Spamalkan War in Portugallian Brazil and in the Homeland Territories. He was aged twenty-seven at the time of his accession to the Portugallian throne. Condolences arrived from most foreign courts on the death of King Antonio (including from Empress Aurelia of Laurasia), with the exception of Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I. The Emperor of Spamalka, however, had no intention of provoking conflict with Portugallia, aware that this would weaken his military forces further and of the financial vulnerability of his treasury. Antonio was buried at the Cembrium of Lauria on February 7, in a ceremony attended by the ambassadors of all foreign powers accredited to Portugallia.
  • January 29-
    • By the beginning of January 1796, the health of Fleet Admiral Sir Franconius Dracius had entered an alarming decline. Following the conquest of Cartagena, Dracius pursued a renewed series of offensives into the Panamanian Colonies. La Palma and Yaviza were stormed by Laurasian units (December 29, 1795-January 3, 1796). On January 5, 1796, Dracius defeated Spamalkan Admiral Felipe de Menendez, Count de Huatros (1745-1806) in the Battle of La Chorrera, storming the Chorrera Naval Base and capturing a number of terminal generators. By January 8, Admiral Langatonia had secured Bocas del Toro and the Lower Guatemala Straits, repelling Spamalkan counteroffensives from Havana and the Cayman Stars. On January 14, 1796, however, while leading a Laurasian assault against the fortifications of Chiva, Dracius suffered a serious panic attack. He was forced to retire to his personal bedchambers and to call a halt to the assault. As a result, Count de Huatros was able to recover Yaviza, defeating a Laurasian patrol fleet at David (January 16-19). By January 21, Dracius had ordered for his fleets to rendezvous at Portobello. In spite of the efforts of his physicians, the Fleet Admiral's health declined further. On January 26, Dracius was given the Last Rites by his chaplain of the fleet, Andriscus Palahia (1754-1818). Three days later (January 29, 1796), Dracius, who was one of the Laurasian Empire's most renowned and respected military commanders of the eighteenth century, died at the age of 55. Word of his death was immediately dispatched to Laurasia Prime.
    • Empress Aurelia was in attendance at a performance of the Solarian Opera, at the Galactic Exchange, when a messenger approached her with word of the Fleet Admiral's death. At this, the Empress broke down into tears, dismissing all of her courtiers from her presence. She retreated to her chambers and wailed bitterly. During the next two days, no one would be allowed to enter her chambers, not even Estatius or Lord Treasurer Burghley. When the Empress finally emerged, on January 31, she ordered the Court into a day of mourning; donned black for some time; and issued a proclamation to her subjects, announcing the death of "such a respected and revered figure of valor in the annals of our history." Dracius's body was placed on a transport at Santiago on February 4, and immediately sent back across the Galactic Void. A Spamalkan attempt to intercept the funerary convoy was blunted by Admiral Langatonia in the Battle of the Cast on February 8. The convoy finally reached Belkadan on February 12, being escorted by a military escort dispatched by the Empress, and under the command of Admiral Ushavious. Dracius's body arrived at Laurasia Prime on February 14, 1796, and was, on the orders of the Empress, given a formal lying-in-state at the Westphalian Cathedral. He was buried there on February 22, in a formal ceremony attended by all of the magnates of the Imperial Court. During February 1796, Laurasian forces secured Penenomome, Vendrugas, and Chite, posing a serious threat to Portobello.
  • February 21-
    • Whilst the last campaigns of Fleet-Admiral Dracius were ongoing in the Colonial Territories, allied forces in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia began making renewed advances against the Count of Fuentes, General del Avila, and the other Spamalkan commanders. Following the conquest of Creil, King Hensios and Field-Marshal Norria advanced against La Capelle, determined to expel Spamalkan units from this stronghold. On January 6, 1796, the King of Franconia held a strategic conference with Norria, the Dukes of Chateau-Thierry and Bouillon, and Prince de Conti at Beauvais. Here, they made the decision to secure La Capelle; harry Spamalkan positions at Douai; and to launch a surprise strike, from Metz and Strasbourg, against Gamprin, Ruggell, and Schellenburg. Four days later, the Duke of Bouillon repelled a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Ham, driving Spamalkan warships to Lievin. A further move by the Count of Fuentes against Lens and Maubeuge managed to briefly reconquer those strongholds (January 7-14, 1796), but on January 21, he suffered a disastrous reverse in the Skirmish of Amboine, by which Bouillon and de Conti captured more than 20,000 Spamalkan tercios in a surprise thrust.
    • By January 25, Lens and Maubeuge had both been recovered, and on February 2, the King of Franconia himself directed an allied offensive against the Spamalkan supply base of St. Omer. The world fell within hours. Repelling moves against Marc and Amiens (February 3-9, 1796), the King then advanced to the outskirts of La Capelle. La Capelle was besieged from February 12, 1796. The stronghold resisted for nine days, as Admiral Coloma was able to inflict severe damage on Franconian strategic positions near Noyon, Abbeville, and Calais. Its fall on February 21, permitted for an advance against Douai. The Skirmishes of Douai (February 23-29, 1796), conducted by the Duke of Chateau-Thierry and Field-Marshal Norria, prevented the Count of Fuentes from drawing reinforcements from that stronghold. Chateau-Thierry subsequently launched a surprise move against Planken (March 2, 1796), which permitted for Field-Marshal Norria to isolate, and force the surrender of, Morchain. By March 12, the King of Franconia's forces were penetrating to Gampin, launching diversionary moves to Jours and Vitry Le Francois to keep Spamalkan units off balance.
    • At the same time that these Franconian and Laurasian counteroffensives were ongoing, events had transpired in the Durthian Duchies. On January 6, 1796, the same day of King Hensios's strategic conference at Beauvais with his subordinates, Spamalkan General Cristobal de Mondragon, Governor of Antwerp and victor of the Battle of the Lippe Straits, died at the Citadel of Antwerp, aged 81. Mondragon's death therefore deprived Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I of yet another military commander who had proved his worth. Prince Maurice of Nassau, consequently, was able to step up the offensive in the Luxemborgian Sectors and to recover from the disaster at the Straits. On January 9, 1796, he defeated Admiral de Cordoba in the Battle of Haarlemeeer, securing that vital hyperspace terminal for the Durthian States. Four days later, he launched a direct assault upon Wesel, which permitted Spamalkan units to transit to Luxembourg Prime, the Spamalkan Electorate of Cologne, and Franche-Comte. Wesel fell on January 17, and this was compounded by the Durthian conquest of Twente and Kollum (January 22-28, 1796). On February 3, Maurice defeated Admiral Cordoba again in the Battle of Julich, thereby giving Durthia a foothold in Cologne.
    • By February 17, Cordoba had been forced to withdraw from Aaylst, which was once again secured by Durthian forces, and on February 24, Maurice blockaded the Spamalkan outpost of Playo-Honda, frustrating Spamalkan plans for a counteroffensive against Groningen, Zutphen, and Utrecht. Emperor Philicus, learning of these recent defeats, and seeking to shore up Spamalka's faltering position in the Southern Durthian Duchies, now, on March 7, 1796, appointed the younger brother of the late Duke Ernest of Franche-Comte, Duke Albert of Caria (1759-1821), who had served in Milania and with the Holy Austarlian Empire as a foreign auxiliary during the Austarlian-Marasharite War of 1788-90, as the new Governor-General of the Durthian Duchies. Philicus instructed the Duke to offer the allies nothing; to strengthen the garrisons of Brussels and Antwerp; and to prepare for renewed offensives in the Pale of Calais. Albert departed from Madrid on March 18, 1796, and arrived at Brussels on March 25. He therefore relegated the Count of Fuentes to be subordinate commander of his military forces, and immediately began preparing for counteroffensives in Franconia. By the end of March 1796, Gampin was under siege by Franconian forces, while Hensios had blockaded the garrison of Jours.
  • March 22-
    • Empress Aurelia, who was determined to demonstrate the triumph of her Empire as regards to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and to showcase to her allies the leading role which she had taken in the partition process, announced to the Imperial Privy Council her intention (session of March 5, 1796), to have the former King of Dejanica, Stanis Vorrust, "escorted" to Laurasia Prime and presented to her at the Imperial Court. Although Lord Treasurer Burghley expressed some qualms at the Empress's plan, he nevertheless decided to raise no further objection. The Earl of Estatius, on his part, enthusiastically supported it, and now offered to be the one to escort the former King of Dejanica himself. Empress Aurelia, in this instance succumbing to her feelings for her favorite, accepted, and on March 9, ordered Estatius to make preparations for the convoy of the Imperial Household that was to form the escort. On March 14, 1796, Stanis Vorrust, who had been living quietly at Chelm since the close of the previous year, and found himself under constant surveillance by the newly-installed Laurasian authorities of that star system, received a formal communique from the Imperial Privy Council.
    • This communique, drafted by Secretary Cecilis (whom the Empress was now preparing to formally grant the Chancellorate), declared that Her Majesty "desired for a personal audience with His Lordship, formerly King of Dejanica, and for His Lordship to make his residence on Laurasia Prime." Stanis Vorrust, whose household had begun preparations for the move on the orders of Lord Treasurer Burghley, found that he had no choice, and on March 17, he "accepted" the Empress's "invitation", declaring himself satisfied to have gained such confidence from her. He formally departed from Chelm the following day. On March 19, his escort reached Belkadan, and he was received by the Earl of Estatius with the 2nd Imperial Household Fleet. Estatius, who assumed the role of both guard and escort for the ex-King of Dejanica, treated him with much dignity, all the while flaunting his own role in the enterprise. From Belkadan, the convoy proceeded promptly to Laurasia Prime, as the Empress could not contain her patience to see this man whom her authority had vanquished. Stanis Vorrust reached Laurasia Prime on March 22, 1796.
    • The former King of Dejanica, now a dependent of the Laurasian Empire, got to the Quencilvanian Palace in short order, and was presented to the Empress and the Imperial Court in a grand ceremony. The Empress extended her hand to the Dejanican sovereign; he fell to it and kissed it, thanking "Her Majesty for her kindness and generosity." The charade continued for the following three days, during which time Aurelia and her household officials made every effort to emphasize the former King's subordination to her. They even staged a masque in which the defunct Commonwealth was mocked, and reference made to the "passage of old powers." Finally, on March 25, the former King was permitted to retire to the Marbliante Mansion in Christiania, and was directed to remain there "at Her Majesty's leisure." The show now ended, and the Empress had him placed under vigorous guard. Stanis Vorrust somehow maintained his dignity through this whole insulting spectacle, and bore all of the insults with decorum. From this point, however, his health would enter a decline, which would lead to his death less than two years later. On March 29, 1796, after the Dejanican "spectacle" had ended, the Empress erupted in fury at a sermon delivered by the Bishop of Floridais, Antoninus Ruddrita (1749-99). In this sermon, Ruddrita urged the Empress to deal with the succession, and made reference to her "great, and matronly age." He implied that unless if she chose someone such as the Earl of Hannah or the Earl of Duana as her heir, the "realms of the Empire will wallow in the darkness of the Anti-Almitis." The Empress, at the end of the sermon, shouted at Ruddrita that he should have kept his "tongue tied." She then ordered for his arrest. Ruddrita was confined at the Fortress of Baureux two days later; subjected to an extensive interrogation by the Holy Synod; and on April 3, formally censured for his statements. He would remain at the Fortress until November 1796, when the Empress had him released, but banned him from the Imperial Court. Ruddrita would never recover from the spectacle, and died in 1799 at the age of fifty.
  • April 24-
    • At the beginning of April 1796, the forces of King Hensios IV of Franconia and of the Laurasian Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria were on the offensive against the Holy Spamalkan Empire in Picardy, the Pale of Calais, and the Lichtenstein Sector. Gampin, which had been under siege from March 26, fell to King Hensios's forces (April 3, 1796). During the next two days, Balzers and Schellenburg were stormed by Franconian units, who were now pressing perilously close to the outskirts of Ruggell. By this point, however, the newly-appointed Governor-General of Durthia, Duke Philip of Caria, had fully prepared his intended counteroffensive into the Pale of Calais. On April 8, 1796, the Duke departed from Brussels, collecting reinforcements at Tournai, Frasnes, and Famenne along the way. Two days later, he made a junction with Spamalkan Admiral Coloma and with General Luis de Velasco (1759-1825) at Tubize. From there, the Spamalkans advanced to the outskirts of Valenciennes. The Duke now allowed for the release of communications to the allied forces, with the intention of fooling them into believing that he was about to launch an offensive against Valenciennes, Chartleroi, and Champagne. This ploy worked, for King Hensios, who was then engaged in besieging the Spamalkan military base of St. Cale, eighty light-years southwest of Vaduz, ordered for the Duke of Bouillon to reinforce the defenses of Orleans and to prepare for a possible Spamalkan move in that region. Consequently, Albert was able to proceed with his true intention: an offensive against Calais. He reached the outskirts of that star system on April 12, 1796. The garrison of Calais, commanded by Jean-Pascal, Count of Widessan (1731-96), was surprised by the appearance of the Duke's forces. He had at his disposal 75,000 Franconian and 20,000 Laurasian troops, with a force of sixty defensive warships, drawn from both the Royal Franconian and Imperial Laurasian Navies. This was no match to the Spamalkan forces which now faced him. Albert had under his direction a force of more than 150,000 troops, with one hundred warships. The offensive corps were commanded by General Velasco; the naval fleet, by Admiral Coloma.
    • King Hensios, now fully engaged in his siege of St. Cale, could not afford to divert any troops or ships to the defense of Calais. Empress Aurelia of Laurasia, on her part, when she learned of the Spamalkan siege, offered, on April 14, to provide an expeditionary force from the Channel Systems to relieve the garrison of Calais and to repel the Spamalkan forces. The Empress, however, demanded that Calais and Boulougone be given to the Laurasian Empire as "garrison outposts." This had been the situation with Brill and Flushing for a decade. King Hensios was reluctant to concede to this, and argument now descended between the two monarchs. As a result of this, the Spamalkans were able to secure absolute control over all of Calais's communication and transportation lines. Durthian Prince Maurice of Nassau, on his part, whose forces were now besieging Vaduz, learned of the Spamalkan siege and on April 15, hastened back to the Province of Zeeland. He now sought to assemble a force at Hulst and Graveline's Mist to repel the Spamalkan forces. General Cordoba, however, launched a series of harrying operations against Durthian units at Middleburg, Goes, and Mons, thereby forcing Prince Maurice to keep his defenses in those star systems shored. Consequently, Durthian reinforcements could not be sent to Calais. On April 22, 1796, the shields of Calais were penetrated by the Duke's forces, which now landed on the planetary surface. All but the outpost of Sangate and the Calais Citadel fell into their hands. The Duke of Chateau-Thierry attempted to relieve the siege, sending his naval units from Stephani, Julianne, and Dunkirk. This ploy failed however, and on April 24, Coloma repelled a Franconian move from the Channel Straits, directly opposite to the Calais star system. That same day, Spamalkan troops under General Velasco stormed the Calais Citadel. Although the Laurasian and Franconian troops resisted bravely and effectively, they proved no match to the superior numbers and organization of the Spamalkan tercios. Governor Widessan of Calais and several of his subordinates were captured and promptly executed on the Duke's orders.
    • The Franconians lost more than 15,000 troops in the final assault, with another 20,000 being taken prisoner; the Spamalkans suffered only a fraction of these losses. By April 28, the whole of the Calais star system was under the control of Spamalkan forces. King Hensios IV of Franconia, realizing the importance of maintaining this stronghold, hastened from St. Cale to launch a counteroffensive on Spamalkan forces. His efforts proved to be in vain, and he was halted at Abbeville by a Spamalkan force under General del Avila (April 30, 1796). On May 5, Duke Albert and his forces assaulted Ardres, which was located directly south of Calais. Despite the resistance of that star system's garrison, the Spamalkans stormed Ardres within two days, taking more than 40,000 soldiers of the Royal Franconian Army as prisoners. Duke Albert then pursued a series of operations throughout the remainder of the month. By the end of May 1796, he had captured Bouillon, Longwy, Verdun, Roubaix, Tourcoing, St. Omer, and Arras, inflicting a series of humiliating losses upon Franconian forces in the Pale of Calais and in the Ardennian Worlds. From Chateau-Thierry, Spamalkan expeditions commanded by Admiral Coloma harassed Noyon, Nancy, Montmirail, Epernay, and Meaux. Barcy was also in Spamalkan hands. Prince Maurice also suffered reverses in the face of the Spamalkan success at Calais. On May 15, 1796, he was defeated by Admiral Cordoba in the Battle of Ternuzen. Hulst fell into Spamalkan hands six days later, and by June 7, Maurice had also lost control of the garrisons of Veere, Tholen, and Kapelle. This string of Spamalkan successes, however, would prove to be only temporary.
  • May 12-
    • On April 30, 1796, Sir Demetrius Puckerania, Procurator-General of the Governing Senate and Minister of Justice of the Laurasian Empire, died at Chelmnian House, his personal estate on Osama, at the age of only fifty-two. For the past several months, Puckerania's health had been in a severe decline. The Empress Aurelia had visited the Procurator-General at Chelmnian House on December 19, 1795. He had endured much expense for the visit, and had made sure that the entertainments for Her Majesty were grand. His decline in health was noted by the Empress, however, and she advised him to partake of the spas of Idyll, which had once been perused by the Earl of Leicesterius. Later, she ordered for him to be administered a series of herbal and medicinal treatments. Puckerania had followed her orders, and had received constant visits from the physicians of the Imperial Household. In spite of all this, however, his health had declined further, ultimately culminating in his untimely death. The Empress, when she received word of Puckerania's demise, declared it a "sad, joyless occasion" and sent a communique of condolences to his widow, Lady Minerva Puckerania (1753-1829). She also ordered the Imperial Court into a day of mourning and had the Council issue a proclamation praising the late Procurator-General's merits, loyal service to her, and dedication to the Empire. Puckerania would be buried at St. Didymeia's Chapel on Sarah, in accordance with his final wishes, on May 15. The Empress now had to turn to the question of designating his successor as Procurator-General and Minister of Justice. She was urged by Lord Treasurer Burghley not to allow a recurrence of what had happened with the Attorney-Generalship and the Solicitor-Generalship.
    • On May 9, 1796, the Empress formally appointed the Chief Justice of the Imperial Court of Chancery and Master of the Rolls, Sir Thomasius Egertonia, as her new Procurator-General and Minister of Justice. At the formal ceremony of elevation, in the Public Throne Room, three days later, the Empress appeared in a gold satin gown edged with silver, and stood beneath her canopy of estate on a rich Solidaritan carpet. She observed to Egertonia that she had gone through four Procurator-Generals already. The first of these, Bagonius, was a "wise and experienced man, I tell you." She now said that she would be pleased to end with him. Lord Treasurer Burghley, who was now seventy-five years old and was confined to a hoverchair (due to his recurrent fecal gout), interjected at this, declaring: "Almitis forbid, Madam! I hope that you shall bury four or five more." The Empress responded to this in a "saddened" manner, declaring "No, this shall be the last!" She then suddenly burst into tears, pained with the thoughts of advancing mortality. Egertonia, who was embarrassed by this, hastily agreed with Aurelia that Bagonius had been a wise man, but she cried only more loudly, placing her hand on her chest. She turned to retreat back to her private chambers, but paused and remembered that Burghley would have to be carried from the audience in his hoverchair. She then said: "None of the Lord Treasurer's men will come to fetch him so long as I am here. Therefore, I will be gone." When she reached the hall, however, she remembered that Egertonia had not taken the oath of allegiance required for his office. Still weeping, she now cried: "He will never be an honest man until he be sworn. Swear him! Swear him!" Then she made her exit. Egertonia's successor to his positions as Chief Justice and Master of the Rolls, Sir Zosimus Cauldria, 4th Baron Cauldria of Penania (1751-1816), was formally appointed on May 28. The Empress was far calmer at that ceremony.
  • May 18-
    • On March 3, 1796, Empress Aurelia formally designated now Vice-Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia as the commander-in-chief of the Laurasian Empire's military forces in the Spamalkan Spice Colonies. Admiral Langatonia, who had continued to maintain the operational headquarters near the outskirts of Portobello, as established by his predecessor Dracius, decided to launch an offensive against Cabo Corrientes. In the meantime, however, Emperor Philicus had received intelligence reports of Dracius's death; of the Laurasian fleet movements; and of the recent raid, on February 27, against Gran Canaria, which had inflicted much damage to the defenses of the star system. He now ordered for an immediate counteroffensive. On March 5, a Spamalkan force under the command of Captain General Don Bernardino de Avellaneda (1744-1829), with his subordinates Admiral Juan de Garibay (1751-1814) and Flag Captain Juan de Villavicosa (1755-1817), departed from Seville to the Cuban Sector. Two days later, they arrived at Havana, and were determined to intercept Langatonia before he could make his next move. On March 9, part of Avellaneda's force intercepted a Laurasian reconnaissance convoy immediately south of Cienfuegos. This convoy was commanded by Fleet Captain Sir Thomasius Maynardia (1760-1827). They were engaged by the Spamalkans, and received extensive damage. Captain Maynardia, however, was able to take advantage of a cosmic drift to flee to Pinar del Rio, thereby evading the Spamalkan forces. Two days later, Avellaneda encountered the main Laurasian forces under Admiral Langatonia himself. He now ordered for an immediate offensive, counting on the element of surprise to overwhelm his foes. Langatonia, however, managed to evade combat, and made a successful jump to Cape Antonio.
    • Most of the Laurasian vessels followed, although Admiral de Garibay was able to capture a number of the slower couriers and corvettes, killing more than 7,000 Imperial Laurasian naval personnel and incarcerating another 12,000 others. Avellaneda decided to continue the pursuit, and for the next several days, a game of cat and mouse occurred along the Bahaman Highway. From March 24 to April 2, 1796, a series of skirmishes took place between the opposing Laurasian and Spamalkan forces at Sanlucar de Barrameda, which suffered severe damage as a result. By early April 1796, Spamalkan forces began recovering territory lost in the Panamanian Colonies. On April 8, Avellaneda defeated Laurasian Commodore Sir Thomasius Bakrilla (1758-1808) in the Battle of Nuevo Arrajan. Laurasian units were subsequently expelled from Chitre, Cativa, and Penonome (April 11-17, 1796). On April 22, Avellaneda secured another victory in the Battle of El Espave, disrupting the Laurasian starfighter squadrons with concentrated fire from his dreadnoughts. He then launched a move to clear Laurasian units from Aillgandi (April 26, 1796), forcing Langatonia to abandon any plans for an offensive against Portobello. On May 3, 1796, however, Langatonia halted a further Spamalkan move in the Battle of Las Cumbres. By May 14, he had repelled Spamalkan offensives against Tobago, Trinidad, and Fort St. Louis, although Nevis was recovered by a Spamalkan corps on May 18. Langatonia then fortified Tocumen, San Miguelito, and Pacora. On May 28, 1796, he stormed onto Vista Alegre, forcing Avellaneda to abandon his positions in the star system. By the middle of June 1796, Laurasian forces had seized La Cabima, Puerto Armuelles, and El Girai, although suffering further reverses at Montserrat, Castries, and Basseterre to Spamalkan corps.
  • June 13-
    • By June 1796, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council had resolved upon a series of renewed military campaigns against Galicia and Andalusia. On April 29, the Imperial Intelligence Agency had officially notified the Empress and the Council that the treasury of the Holy Spamalkan Empire, exhausted by constant warfare over the preceding four decades (in particular the Durthian Revolt), and by the economic ravages inflicted by Laurasian and Portugallian forces in the Colonial Territories, the Canaries, and the Balearics during the preceding decade, was on the verge of bankruptcy. Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I, who at the beginning of his reign had enjoyed the third-strongest credit of any monarch in the Great Amulak Spiral (after the King of Vendragia and the Doge of Haxonia), was now struggling to pay his debts. By 1796, the Holy Spamalkan Empire had accumulated a deficit of more than $5.5 quadmillion ducats (€3.2 quadmillion dataries), which was now larger than even that of the Marasharite Empire. In spite of this, Philicus had continued to fight on, entertaining hopes of securing the United Durthian States, humiliating Franconia, and restricting Laurasian influence in the Great Amulak Spiral.
    • The Empress of Laurasia, when confronted with these reports, believed that an offensive in Galicia would bring the pressures home to the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions, and hasten the collapse of the Spamalkan economy. On May 4, she ordered the Imperial General Headquarters to begin making plans for military offensives in Galicia. The Headquarters, which already had a preliminary draft in place, completed its work swiftly, and on May 11, presented the Council with a comprehensive military operations scheme. As envisioned in this scheme, Laurasian units, preferably with assistance from the United Durthian States, would operate from Biscay, Bordeaux, and Pamplona to Galicia and Andalusia. The chief goal of the expedition would be the systematic devastation of Cadiz, long one of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's chief commercial ports; the occupation of the Galician Worlds; and penetrating expeditions to the Balearics. It was hoped that this series of operations would compress Spamalkan commercial lanes and force Philicus to declare bankruptcy.
    • This would prevent Spamalkan units in the Durthian Duchies from being paid, and would allow the allies to press the offensive home. Aurelia, who was enthused by this plan, approved it without qualm on May 16. Two days later, the Durthian States-General, persuaded by Prince Maurice of Nassau, offered to place a Durthian expeditionary force, under the command of Admiral Jacob de Duvyenvoorde, Lord of Warmond (1774-1823), at the disposal of the Imperial Laurasian Navy. The Empress accepted this on May 22, and preparations were by this stage fully underway. The 49th, 55th, and 64th Imperial Fleets were assembled at Quiebron, Bordeaux, Nantes, Biscay, Brest, Craon, and Blaye for the planned offensives against the Galician Worlds and Andalusia. By the end of May 1796, Admiral Duvyenvoorde had departed from Gravelines and rendezvoused with Laurasian units under the Earl of Cumbria near Stephani.
    • The Empress now turned to the matter of who would command the expedition. She was by this point considering the dispatch of Field-Marshal Surovius, vanquisher of the Marasharites and Dejanicans, to the Durthian theater. This was something which the Spamalkan Council of War had long feared, well aware of the talents and command style of this, the only undefeated military commander of extra-galactic civilization. Admiral Ushavious, on his part, was tied down commanding "pacification" operations in the Windwawa Barrier Regions against recalcitrant Northanian elements who still defied the authority of the Imperial Laurasian Government. Therefore, she now turned to her cousin, Fleet Admiral Lord Howardis of Effinga. Effinga, who had become the Head of Imperial Naval Command in January 1796, following the death of Fleet Admiral Sir Hawkius, was for many the obvious choice for command. Although he had not fought in active military service for some years, Lord Howardis was recognized for his tactical skill, his analytical brilliance, and his ability to exploit the weaknesses of the Empire's enemies. The Earl of Estatius, however, was now eager to gain glory for himself in military service.
    • Throughout the early months of 1796, he had petitioned the Empress, Lord Treasurer Burghley, and others among the Empress's chief ministers and commanders for the opportunity to again serve with the Imperial Forces. For the longest time, Aurelia held out, even declaring, in a conversation with her ailing cousin Lord Husadarania on May 18, that "the boy cannot be seen to flaunt about his own." By June 4, however, she had relented, and two days later, she appointed the Earl of Estatius and Lord Howardis of Effinga as joint commanders. Estatius now badgered the Empress to appoint Sir Walterius Raleghia, Lord Thomasius Howardis, and Sir Franconius Verus (1760-1809; brother of the Commodore who had died in Durthia the previous year) as the subordinate commanders. Aurelia had no qualms with the latter two, but, still angry with Raleghia (who was still not permitted to show his face at the Imperial Court), she made numerous complaints.
    • On June 7, the Empress conceded on that point too, when Estatius began to make claims that he was ill and could not depart for the expedition. The Earl recovered soon enough, and on June 13, 1796, he, Howardis, and the subordinate commanders formally departed from Laurasia Prime. They had reached Belkadan by June 17, and from there proceeded across the Galactic Void to Biscay, arriving there on June 24, 1796, to take command of the assembling allied forces. In the meantime, on June 20, 1796, Empress Aurelia, recognizing the skills of Secretary Sir Robertius Cecilis, and acquiescing to the requests of his father, finally appointed him as Chancellor of the Laurasian Empire, a position which he had effectively carried out the duties of for the past six years. Cecilis would become Minister of the Chancellory in June 1797. Lord Treasurer Burghley, however, remained the chief minister of the Imperial Laurasian Government (that title conferred upon him by the Empress back in 1775) and President of the Privy Council. Now officially Chancellor, Cecilis continued to demonstrate the same work ethic and loyalty as he had before.
  • June 30-
    • Following four days of preparation, the assembled military forces of the Laurasian Empire and the United Durthian States departed from Biscay on June 28, 1796. Lord Howardis of Effinga, who as Fleet Admiral and Head of Imperial Naval Command, was the highest-ranking military commander of the expedition, took charge of the 49th Imperial Fleet and the 12th Imperial Marine Corps, which comprised the bulk of the offensive force. The Earl of Estatius, who had been promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General by the Empress shortly before his departure for the Great Amulak Spiral, commanded the 13th and 14th Imperial Marine Corps and had ultimate jurisdiction over the 55th Imperial Fleet. Sir Walterius Raleghia, now a Rear-Admiral, actually commanded that Fleet; Admiral Lord Thomasius Howardis commanded the 64th Imperial Fleet; and Major-General Sir Franconius Verus commanded the 69th Imperial Army, 4th Imperial Marine Corps, and 1st Transit Fleet. Finally, Durthian Admiral Duvyenvoorde commanded the 6th Durthian Expeditionary Force, which provided auxiliary support to the offensive. The first goal of the campaigns was Cadiz. By 1796, Cadiz was one of the most populous and economically important worlds in the Great Amulak Spiral.
    • With a population of nearly one hundred billion, it matched many of the worlds within the Laurasian Empire (such as Arachosia Prime or Kalbacha). Cadiz served as a major headquarters for the Holy Spamalkan Navy; a chief departure point for Spamalkan convoys and commercial fleets to the Spice Colonies and the Colombiana Territories; and a patrol garrison, controlling access to the Balearics, Grenada, and Spamalkan Naparia. The Spamalkan garrison of Cadiz, commanded by General Juan Portocerro (1752-96) and Admiral Alsonso de Bazan (1742-1816), possessed a force of three hundred defensive warships; 400,000 troops; and a series of turbocannon, defensive barricades, and shields, which encompassed Cadiz's surface. During the late hours of June 29, the Spamalkan garrison received the first indications of a potential Laurasian assault. The intelligence was sketchy, however, and Admiral de Bazan, unsure of whether Laurasian units would assault Vigo and Baiona first, ordered more than forty of his frigates and couriers to Puerto Real, to be stationed as a reserve force to move against Laurasian units operating from Biscay and the Galactic Void.
    • This ploy, however, proved to be unsuccessful, as Howardis of Effinga and Estatius had sent deliberately false signals to the Cadiz garrison, luring them into believing that the Empire's forces would assault Galicia first. The folly of this was revealed during the early hours of June 30, when detachments from the 49th and 55th Imperial Fleets suddenly appeared at the outskirts of the Cadiz star system, commencing an intensive artillery and turbocannon bombardment of its defenses. In the ensuing confrontation, Admiral de Bazan, who had anchored his dreadnoughts and destroyers at the outskirts of Cadiz, was forced to pull back into the inner sectors of the star system. The Spamalkan galleys San Andres and San Mateo were captured by boarding parties of Imperial Marines, while the San Felipe and Santo Tomas, two of the largest destroyers in the Holy Spamalkan Navy, were destroyed. Their captains, in an effort to prevent a possible capture by allied forces, destroyed all of the artillery and arms stocks and had all of the computer files erased. By the late hours of that day, Laurasian-Durthian forces had secured the whole western front of the Cadiz star system.
    • During the early hours of June 31, 1796, reinforcements for the garrison of Cadiz, which had been dispatched by the Duke of Medina Sidonia (who had served as Governor of Andalusia since 1792, having managed to recover favor with Emperor Philicus), arrived in the star system. Numbering well over 120,000 troops and thirty additional warships, they were soon joined by a smaller Tercios Corps deployed from Santa Catalina and San Felipe. Ultimately, however, it would turn out that these reinforcements would make no additional contribution to the Spamalkan defenses. That afternoon, El Puntal came under direct assault from Laurasian units under the Earl of Estatius and Lord Thomasius Howardis; by 6:00 p.m., the stronghold had been secured by the Imperial Laurasian Army and Marine Corps. At the same time, Point Zuzazo, which commanded the approaches to the farther side of Cadiz, fell under assault from Laurasian forces under General Verus and Durthian Admiral Dunyvenvoorde. In the skirmishes which ensued, the allied forces inflicted more than 40,000 casualties upon the overstretched and outmatched Spamalkan forces. By the early hours of the following day, Point Zuazo and San Felipe had both been secured by Laurasian units. Captain Pedro de Guia (1744-1802) and the Governor of Cadiz, Antonio Giron (1748-1819)< now attempted a counteroffensive in the Cadiz Straits against the allied forces, intent on throwing in all Spamalkan warships of the garrison.
    • The ensuing Battle of the Cadiz Straits (July 2-4, 1796), which was subsidiary to the overall Siege of Cadiz, resulted in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Howardis of Effinga achieved victory through dividing his forces into two columns, directed perpendicularly against the assaulting Spamalkan force, obtaining decisive results from this strategy. Admiral Sir Walterius Raleghia distinguished himself in this naval confrontation; his exploits in the succeeding campaigns against Spamalkan forces in Galicia and Andalusia would go some ways to repairing his standing with the Empress. In the end, Captain de Guia and Admiral de Bazan (who had joined the vain offensive in its final stages), lost more than half of their warships and nearly 300,000 Spamalkan naval personnel. Howardis, on his part, lost only six destroyers, two battleships, and 50,000 of his own men. The Battle of Cadiz Straits demolished any remaining hope for the garrison of the star system.
    • On July 5, Cadiz's shield defenses, now with no cohesive fleet to defend them, were breached by Howardis and Estatius. Within hours, Laurasian and Durthian troops had overrun most of the planetary surface, defeating Spamalkan troops in confrontations at Rota, El Puerto de Santa Maria, and the Pylons of Cadiz. The following day, Spamalkan General Portocerro, who commanded the defenses of the Tavira Tower and the Admiral's House, died in a confrontation with Laurasian troops near the Palace de Congressos. By July 9, the Customs House and the Garrison of Carranza had surrendered, and the entire world fell under the occupation of Laurasian forces. Captain de Guia was captured by Laurasian starfighters on that very day, although Admiral de Bazan was able to make his escape with the remainder of the Spamalkan naval and armored units. The Siege of Cadiz had therefore ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. When the Empress received the first reports of the victory, she wrote to Estatius: "You have made me famous, dreadful, and renowned, not more for your victory than for your courage. Let the forces know I care not so much for being Empress, as that I am sovereign of such subjects."
    • Not all proceeded exactly according to plan, however. Estatius botched the seizure of the Cadiz Treasury and the Communications Files. Governor Giron, before he finally surrendered to Laurasian troops, was able to order the destruction of the Spamalkan currency at hand, and to erase Cadiz's financial files, thereby denying the Empire's commanders the chance of seizing more than €265.5 trillion dataries worth of funds. This would later prove to be a major point of contention with the Empress, but at this point, Estatius found himself hailed as a hero of the Laurasian Empire. And indeed, the weeks immediately following the Siege of Cadiz would see a string of decisive Laurasian victories. El Puerto de Santa Maria, which was located eight light-years to the north of Cadiz, was stormed by Howardis of Effinga and Admiral Raleghia (July 11, 1796), with Admiral de Bazan suffering the loss of another twenty Spamalkan frigates. During the next seven days, Laurasian forces stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Utera, Dos Hermanas, Guadix, Loja, and Motril. Then on July 22, 1796, Howardis and Raleghia launched a decisive offensive move against Jerez, which had served as the Duke of Medinia Sidonia's command headquarters.
    • Sidonia himself, who had retreated to Grenada, was not present, but the ensuing Battle of Jerez resulted in a smashing victory for the Laurasian Empire. Admiral de Bazan himself barely evaded capture, but was forced to abandon his flagship, the Santa Laja. More than sixty Spamalkan frigates and galleys were destroyed or captured by the Imperial Laurasian Navy in this confrontation. Jerez was then quickly overrun by Laurasian troops, with the Circuito de Jerez being subjected to a massive onslaught by General Verus. The fall of Jerez now opened the way to Vejer de la Frontera; that star system was occupied on July 25, after resisting Laurasian and Durthian units for two days. By the end of July 1796, Howardis of Effinga and Raleghia had also secured the Spamalkan bases of Arcos, La Linea de la Concepcion, and Baeza, thereby opening a direct communications line to the garrison of Sancular de la Barrameda, which now served as a base for Laurasian raiding expeditions into the Spice Colonies. Howardis himself established Cadiz as a supply and provisioning base, while the Earl of Estatius distinguished himself in confrontations with Spamalkan tercios at San Fernando and Osuna (July 31-August 5, 1796).
  • July 14-
    • Following the Spamalkan conquest of Kapelle (June 7, 1796), the Holy Spamalkan Empire's string of successes, in the wake of its surprise victory in the Siege of Calais, gradually came to a halt. On June 9, the Count of Fuentes stormed the Franconian bases of Sedan, Funay, and Stenay, but suffered extensive casualties in doing so. The seizure of Stenay, in fact, resulted in nearly a third of the Spamalkan tercios employed (50,000 troops) being killed in confrontation with Franconian and Laurasian troops. Following his conquest of Stenay, Fuentes had then stormed the Durthian border garrison of Florennes (June 11-14, 1796) and repelled a offensive move by Laurasian General Sir Avronius Merethia (1739-1815) against Gembloux and Huy (June 16, 1796). On June 18, however, St. Cale, which had resisted Franconian forces for over two months, finally succumbed to King Hensios. From St. Cale, Hensios was able to renew his drive into the Lichenstein Sector. Ruggell, which had long been threatened by Franconian units, fell to the King on June 22, 1796; two days later, Field-Marshal Norria distinguished himself in the Battle of Sarrebrucken, storming thirty Spamalkan operational outposts within a span of just six hours.
    • Vaduz, besieged since April 1796, was finally stormed by Prince Maurice's blockade forces on June 24, and by June 29, Durthian and Franconian units had cooperated in expelling the Spamalkans from Schelgen, Eschen, and Mauren, thereby completing the conquest of the Lichenstein Sector. On July 2, 1796, Stenay was recovered by the Duke of Bouillon in a surprise offensive. He then drove to his hereditary star system, expelling Spamalkan units from his estates two days later and capturing Spamalkan General Don Luis de Mada (1743-1801). General del Avila, who had been commanding operations against Valenciennes, Noyon, and Champaigne, then attempted to intercept Bouillon at Hames, determined to bring an end to his recent offensives. He was himself cut off by Field-Marshal Norria and the Duke of Chateau-Thierry at Dury (July 6-9, 1796), resulting in a decisive victory for the allied forces. On July 11, Chateau-Thierry itself came under siege from allied units, and would remain so for nearly a month. The day after the Siege of Chateau-Thierry commenced, forces under Prince Maurice of Nassau and General Merethia defeated Cordoba and Fuentes in the Battle of Givet (July 12, 1796), thereby leading the way to an allied recovery of Dinant. By the end of July 13, Prince Maurice was preparing for an offensive against the stronghold.
    • However, he now received word that his brother, Prince Philip William of Orange, had suffered a major stroke at Gadalian Estate on Buren. The Stadholder of Durthia, whose health had been in decline for more than two years by this point, had delegated more and more of his governmental responsibilities to his brother, Prince Maurice. In January 1796, in his final will and testament, he confirmed his brother as his successor as Prince of Orange (for he had no children of his own); made a strong "recommendation" to the Durthian States-General that they designate him as Stadholder; and provided the terms for his funerary arrangements. Prince Maurice, who was aware of all of this, and determined to have no opposition from the States-General, now hastened to Buren. He did not arrive in time, however, to see his brother at his deathbed. On July 14, 1796, after having reigned as Prince of Orange and Stadholder of the United Durthian States for twelve years, Philip William died at the age of 42. Condolences now arrived from the majority of foreign courts. In her communique of condolences to Prince Maurice, who was now Prince of Orange, Empress Aurelia declared that "Your late brother was a saintly man, dedicated to the welfare of his subjects and to the security of the Durthian States. He sought to maintain your father's achievements and to ensure that your republican monarchy would not endure the rule of tyrants or fiends any longer."
    • Even Emperor Philicus, who had in December 1795 renewed his declarations of insurrection against both Philip William and his brother Maurice of Nassau, declared that "the death of the young Prince is a sorrowful loss to galactic civilization." His brother, Prince Maurice of Nassau, now wasted no time in securing acknowledgement of his titles from the Durthian States-General. On July 18, 1796, four days after the death of Philip William, the body formally declared him to be Stadholder of the United Durthian States and Associate Governor of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, Guelders, and Overjissel. His cousin Prince William Louis of Nassau-Dillenburg remained Associate Governor of Drenthe, Friesland, and Groningen. Philip William would be buried at Amsterdam on July 22, in a ceremony attended by ambassadors from all the foreign courts accredited to Durthia. Two days later, Prince Maurice returned to his operational headquarters at Givet. Dinant finally fell on July 25, 1796, followed by Thuin and Wavre (July 26-August 2). On August 5, 1796, the Battle of Roubaix ended in victory for Field-Marshal Norria and the Duke of Bouillon, who combined their forces together to launch a pincer maneuver against the Spamalkan garrison. Tourcoing and St. Omer were both recovered by allied forces on August 7. Chateau-Thierry finally fell to the Duke of Montpensier and the Prince de Conti (August 10, 1796). By the middle of August 1796, allied forces had recovered Arras, thereby forcing a halt to Spamalkan raids against Epernay, Nancy, and Meaux.
  • July 23-
    • In the wake of the successful Siege of Cadiz, and the consequent Laurasian offensives in Andalusia, Empress Aurelia found herself hailed once again by her own subjects and abroad. Haxonian Doge Marino Grimani was now referring to her as the "Empress of Space", lauding the Laurasian Empire's naval capabilities and offensive power against its Spamalkan and Marasharite rivals (demonstrated against the latter in the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War, which had ended four years earlier). However, the Empress was now to be dealt with more personal tragedy, as two of her closest advisers died in quick succession to each other. On July 19, 1796, Sir Franconius Knollysis, Vice-Chamberlain of the Imperial Household, Minister of Culture and Communications, and one of Empress Aurelia's leading ministers since the beginning of her reign, died at the age of 82. In recent years, Knollysis's religious views had become more extreme, and he had constantly advocated, at sessions of both the Imperial Privy Council and the Holy Synod, for the elimination of the Almitian Mass; a reform of vestments and ornaments, so as to purge them of "outwardly Traditionalist" aspects; and for a comprehensive revision of the prayer services employed by the Imperial Almitian Church. Knollysis had even supported legalizing the practice of prophesying, declaring that congregations should be in direct contact with their Lord Almitis.
    • In spite of this, however, he had remained a trusted adviser to the Empress. The Empress had awarded him the Order of St. Alexander in 1793; conferred upon him the honorary title of Knight of the Imperial Banner the following year; and made several successive grants to him, of funds amounting to €77 billion dataries, as well as extensive properties in the Purse Region. Knollysis died at Rotherfieldian Grays on Azatha II, the central estate of his family. At his deathbed, he was surrounded by all of his surviving children, including the Dowager Countess of Leicesterius; his sons, Sirs Willanius, Menelaus, Antiochus, and Tiberius; and his other daughters, Aurelia and Anna. The Empress, when she was informed by Lord Treasurer Burghley of Knollysis's death, wavered in her words and abruptly retreated to her bedchambers, remaining there for the rest of the day. During the early hours of July 20, Aurelia issued a proclamation commending Knollysis for his long years of service to the Empire; ordering the Court into a day of mourning on his account; and commanding for the Household to pay its respects to the late Vice-Chamberlain by wearing black. No later than this had passed than the Empress received word that her cousin, Lord Husadarania, was gravely ill.
    • Husadarania had taken to his bed at his private bedchambers in Someranian House, one of the chief noble residences in Christiania. He refused all inducements to eat and declared his resolution to die "in comfort." Aurelia, still in grief over Knollysis's death, developed severe anxiety. She prayed in her private chapel, and on July 21, went to visit Husadarania herself. The Empress was utterly dismayed when she saw her cousin, who had turned seventy just three months earlier, in such horrendous condition. She came to his bedside; urged him to eat; and sang him a series of songs, attempting to revive his spirits. The Empress also offered to make him Earl of Redia, the title once held by their grandfather, Sir Thomasius Boleyenia, declaring that if the Lord Almitis permitted her, she would reward him more than ever before. Husadarania, however, regaining his senses, turned slowly to the Empress and said: "Madam, as you did not count me worthy of this honor in life, then I shall not account myself worthy of it in death." After saying this, he fell into a coma. Aurelia, startled by his last words, but still truly concerned by his condition, now ordered physicians to come in and herself retreated back to the Quencilvanian Palace. Husadarania's decline proceeded rapidly, and during the late hours of July 22, the physicians declared that they could do nothing more for him.
    • Lord Husadarania died on July 23, 1796, surrounded by his children, including his sons Georgius (who succeeded him as Lord Husadarania), Demetrius, Edmundius, Robertius, and his daughter Katharina, Lady Howardis of Effinga (she was the wife of Lord Howardis, a Lady of the Bedchamber, and a good friend of the Empress). Empress Aurelia was plunged into an even deeper grief when informed that Husadarania had died. Stating that she should never have raised the subject of the Earldom of Redia, the Empress berated herself and wailed constantly in her bedchambers, telling her ladies that "never a more faithful and honorable personage lived than my cousin so lately past." Aurelia now ordered the Court into a additional day of mourning; issued a proclamation on Husadarania's death; and herself donned black, in honor of both Knollysis and Husadarania. Lord Treasurer Burghley and his son, newly-elevated Chancellor Cecilis, both expended much effort, during the last days of July 1796, in comforting the Empress. She was now settled into a melancholy mood, and became once more obsessed with death. Chief Procurator Whitshiftus conducted a public memorial service for Husadarania, on the Empress's orders, on July 26. The Empress herself did not attend, but was represented by her dear friend, Lady Norria. On July 29, she reiterated her commands against the use of any words suggesting death or mortality in her presence. Lord Husadarania would be buried at the Westphalian Cathedral on August 12, 1796, in a funeral attended by all of his colleagues, foreign ambassadors, and all of the courtiers of the Imperial Household. Knollysis would be interred at Rotherfieldian Grays, in accordance with his will, four days later; many found themselves having to shuttle from one funeral to the next. The Empress did not fully emerge from her distress until the end of August 1796, and announced her decision not to go on progress this year.
  • August 18-
    • While the Laurasian Empire's military forces, under the direction of such commanders as Fleet Admiral Lord Howardis of Effinga and the Earl of Estatius obtained a string of successes in Andalusia against the Holy Spamalkan Empire (particularly with the Siege of Cadiz), allied forces in the United Durthian Duchies continued to make further progress. On August 9, 1796, Empress Aurelia had appointed Sir Thomasius Baskrania as the commander-in-chief of the Empire's military forces in the Durthian Duchies. Promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General, Baskrania had already distinguished himself in confrontations with Spamalkan forces and garrisons in Picardy, the Pale of Calais, and the Ardennian Worlds. Five days later, Baskrania established his command headquarters on Roosevelt and held a strategic conference with Prince Maurice of Nassau, now Prince of Orange and Stadholder of the United Durthian States. It was decided that the Prince's Durthian forces, supplemented by detachments from the 66th Imperial Fleet and the 55th Imperial Army of the Laurasian Empire, would complete the expulsion of Spamalkan forces from the Luxemborgian Sector. At the same time, Baskrania and his units, with naval forces under the command of Rear-Admiral Sir Tacitus Tassius (1751-1816), would expel Spamalkan units from Charleroi, Passchendale, Roufers, Dismoude, and Thurmont, and maintain the allied position in the Province of Zeeland. On August 16, the two military commanders separated, and immediately, allied forces pushed forth into Spamalkan held-space. Prince Maurice, whose forces now controlled Limburg, Petterdange, Differdange, and Esch, proceeded to a renewed siege of Luxembourg Prime. Capture of this stronghold, one of the chief bastions of Spamalkan power in the Durthian Duchies, would sever to disrupt Spamalkan lines to the Electorate of Cologne and Franche-Comte, thereby ensuring the success of allied moves into those regions.
    • After defeating a Spamalkan expeditionary force sent by Admiral Cordoba at Arlon (August 19, 1796) and destroying the Spamalkan military headquarters on Bastagne (August 22), Prince Maurice's forces approached the outskirts of Luxembourg Prime on August 24. The world, which had a population of more than forty billion inhabitants by 1796, was defended by a substantial Spamalkan force, comprised of conscripts from the Hereditary Dominions, the Duchy of Milania, the Kingdom of Naparia, and the Germanian Principalities. However, the outer defenses of the system were held by a Durthian militia corps, which had long since become disgruntled with the Spamalkan occupation. The Garrison of Luxembourg Prime was commanded by General Hector de Hereuga (1746-96), who although he had much experience in fighting the Durthians, was nevertheless arrogant and self-assured of the power of his forces. Furthermore, Maurice's spies had exposed a weakness in the Spamalkan deployments, which would allow for Durthian units to penetrate to the farther side of Luxembourg. All of this was revealed within hours of the commencement of the Siege of Luxembourg Prime. Although the first Durthian assaults against the system's defensive lines were repelled, Maurice was able to sunder the system's communications and to issue an appeal to the local population, informing them of his desire to liberate them from the rule of the "overbearing foreigners." At 3:00 p.m. Galactic Standard Time, four hours after the commencement of the siege, the Durthian Militia Corps, under the command of General Carl von Voorst (1740-1806), opened the barricades to Prince Maurice's forces, betraying their allegiance to the Holy Spamalkan Empire.
    • By the late hours of that day, Prince Maurice's units had secured all approaches into the star system. With the assistance of General von Voorst, Luxembourg Prime's shields were breached and a pinpointed bombardment of Spamalkan military positions on the planetary surface commenced. During the early hours of the following day, Durthian units landed on Luxembourg Prime's surface. The local population, acting in response to the Prince's appeal, now engaged in riots and harassing actions against Spamalkan troops, expelling them from their quarters. They provided vital intelligence to the allied advance. General de Hereuga and his tercios, outnumbered and outmaneuvered, fought to the end in the Grand Palace of Luxembourg, inflicting much damage to the residence. On August 31, 1796, the final cells of resistance on the world were suppressed. With Luxembourg Prime securely in his hands, Prince Maurice was able to quickly secure the expulsion of Spamalkan units from their remaining strongholds in the Sector and to advance into Cologne. The Spamalkan strongholds of Coblenz and Slogsburg fell to a assault from Vaduz and Eschaan (September 3-9, 1796). On September 14, Maurice repelled a counteroffensive by Admiral Cordoba against Wiltz, and two days later, he destroyed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Folschette. By September 22, the Spamalkan garrisons of Kaerjeng, Tandel, Rambrouch, and Remich were expelled. The following day, Prince Maurice crushed Spamalkan Admiral Gabe de Fuenos (1745-1808) in the Battle of Remich. Vianden surrendered on September 25, followed by Ettelbruck (September 29) and Grevenmacher (September 30-31). The conquest of Esch-sur-Azlette, on October 2, 1796, completed the expulsion of Spamalkan units from the Sector.
    • At the same time of these decisive Durthian offensives in the Luxembourgian Sector, General Baskrania was able to gradually advance the allied position in Zeeland and to inflict a series of defeats upon Spamalkan forces scattered over the length of the entire region. Using Wavre as a operational base, General Baskrania defeated the formerGovernor-General of Durthia, Pruthian General Ernest von Mansfield, in the Battle of Soianges (August 22, 1796). Three days later, he repelled a Spamalkan counteroffensive from Hulst against Givet, Thuin, and Dinant. On August 28, 1796, the Battle of the Arnemuiden Straits resulted in a decisive victory for Laurasian forces under Baskrania. He now firmly secured allied possession of Axel and on September 3, combined with General Merethia for an advance against Dismoude. Although General Mansfield, receiving auxiliary support from the Count of Fuentes and Spamalkan Admiral Coloma (in the form of the 9th Spamalkan Corps), managed to inflict a series of minor defeats upon Laurasian-Durthian units at Azlon, Binche, and Berrissart (September 5-14, 1796), he was ultimately repelled in a confrontation near the Celles Drift (September 22, 1796). Dismoude fell under assault two days later, and despite the efforts of the Garrison Commander, General Count Volt de Herudurt of Gembloux (1749-1822), the world fell into Baskrania's hands on September 25. Within another two days, he had stormed both Roufers and Thurmont without resistance, capturing more than 40,000 under-equipped and exhausted Spamalkan tercios in a humiliating defeat for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. By October 7, Laurasian forces were approaching Charleroi, determined on expelling the Spamalkans from that stronghold once and for all.
  • September 6-
    • By the beginning of September 1796, the fortunes of Spamalkan Duke Albert of Caria, the Count of Fuentes, and Admiral Coloma had turned to the worse in Picardy, the Pale of Calais, Champagne, and the Ardennian Worlds. In spite of his successes at Hulst and Calais, the Duke soon found that the worsening economic situation in the Holy Spamalkan Empire worked against him. Following the fall of Chateau-Thierry, restlessness increased among the units of the Holy Spamalkan Military Forces. Emperor Philicus, who had already declared bankruptcy three times in the past (1757, 1769, and 1775), had, on August 3, announced to the Spamalkan War Council that further reductions in military pay and provisions were necessary to stabilize the Empire's treasury reserves. Duke Albert, who had remained in constant communication with his brother over the Holonet, was alarmed when the Emperor informed him of his decision to cut the pay of his men by more than 20%.
    • The Duke, who had developed a working relationship with his troops, and respect for the rigors of military life, begged Philicus not to weaken the strength of his military forces at such an important juncture. In spite of his pleas, however, the Emperor decided to move forward with his schemes. On August 13, 1796, the War Council formally announced the salary reductions, affirming in a proclamation from Madrid that "this did not prejudice His Majesty's love and respect for the exertions of his troops." Duke Albert, who was forced to deliver this proclamation at his command headquarters, found that the morale of the Spamalkan forces suffered as a result. Rates of desertion increased substantially during the following weeks; many garrisons now openly disobeyed orders from their superiors; and supply lines were weakened, as regular patrols were not conducted, in protest at the Emperor's reductions. Albert and the Count of Fuentes both feared a recurrence of the events of the Devastation of Antwerp, which had occurred two decades earlier, and was the worst incident of military insubordination within any power in the eighteenth century.
    • As a result of all these troubles, further losses were suffered against the allied forces. Longwuy was recovered by the Duke of Bouillon in a surprise offensive (August 19-22, 1796). Verdun, which was now virtually isolated by Franconian forces, surrendered on August 27, thereby depriving Fuentes of a major transit outpost in the Ardennian Worlds. Franconian forces under Bouillon and Chateau-Thierry subsequently defeated Spamalkan units in a series of confrontations at Jurginy, Vervins, and Laan (August 29-September 7, 1796), forcing the Count of Fuentes to abandon any plans he still held for an offensive move against Rouen, Caen, and Bayeux. On September 9, Hames, which had been so fiercely disputed between allied and Spamalkan forces, was secured by Field-Marshal Norria, who forced Spamalkan General del Avila to abandon his strategic positions in the star system.
    • Guines fell on September 13. Admiral Coloma, attempting to secure the defenses of Calais, launched an offensive against Boulougone and Dunkirk on September 17. Although the outskirts of both star systems were overrun by Spamalkan units (September 18-22, 1796), and Breuteuil even fell to a Spamalkan starfighter squadron (September 25), Coloma ultimately suffered a ruinous defeat at the hands of Admiral Seriavin in the Battle of Julianne (September 29, 1796). By October 2, Spamalkan units had been forced to retreat from Dunkirk and Boulougone, and on October 7, Field-Marshal Norria captured Guines, thereby rendering the Spamalkan positions at Breuteuil precarious. That world was recovered by Norria on October 11. Drocourt and Vimy fell on October 15, and on October 17, the Battle of Douai resulted in a decisive victory for Field-Marshal Norria. By the latter part of October 1796, allied forces were preparing for a major offensive against Le Catelet and Cambrai, intent on securing both strongholds and terminating the threat posed to Compaigne and Valenciennes.
  • September 28-
    • Empress Aurelia, who continued to maintain a firm watch over these military campaigns which were being conducted by her Empire's military forces in the Great Amulak Spiral, also grappled with more stirrings over the succession at the Imperial Court. As regards to the military campaigns, August and September 1796 witnessed Laurasian forces making more progress in the Colonial Territories and in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions. The Earl of Estatius, on his part, was now demonstrating his capabilities as an effective military campaigner, though in the process, he was inadvertently angering his imperial mistress on Laurasia Prime. On August 7, 1796, the Duke of Medinia-Sidonia, who was now being chastised by Emperor Philicus for his alleged "incompetence" and who sought to expel Laurasian units from the confines of Andalusia, ordered for a series of vigorous counteroffensives in the vicinity of Cadiz. That day, a Spamalkan force under the command of Joaquin de Castro, Count of Avilos (1744-1804) defeated Admiral Raleghia in the Battle of Roquetas de Mar, forcing the termination of Laurasian expeditions against Mairena.
    • During the next four days, Spamalkan forces expelled their Laurasian counterparts from Dos Hermanas, Gudadix, and Motril. Jerez was briefly threatened (August 18, 1796), and on August 22, Lord Howardis of Effinga was repelled by Avilos in the Battle of the Barracuda, allowing for a Spamalkan corps to land on Arcos and briefly overrun Laurasian positions there. On August 25, the Count of Avilos secured another victory in the Battle of Velez-Magala; Durthian Admiral Dunyvenvoorde barely evaded capture at the hands of the Spamalkans. Five days later, Avilos advanced upon El Puerto de Santa Maria. Here, however, he now encountered the man considered to be the "Hero of the Empire." Estatius, determined to further prove his skill against the Spamalkans, and to decisively halt this Spamalkan counteroffensive, stationed his units at the Orgos Comets, intent upon using a trick maneuver to surround the Spamalkan force and storm their warships.
    • The Battle of the Orgos Comets (August 30, 1796), ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Avilos lost thirty of his galleys to Laurasian boarding parties, and was forced to flee on his personal starfighter. On September 3, he suffered another defeat in the Battle of Tamque, with Estatius's Marines repelling successive assaults by Spamalkan units against the Tamque Space Station. On September 8, he combined with Howardis of Effinga to drive Avilos from Velez-Magala, and on September 12, Avilos suffered another humiliating defeat in the Battle of Estepona. From here, Estatius and Lord Howardis of Effinga launched a joint naval-land offensive against Ronda; the world's fall on September 19 completed the series of recent Spamalkan humiliations. On September 23, Dos Hermandas and Motril were both secured by Laurasian forces under General Verus, and on September 26, Spamalkan Admiral Dunyenvoorde gained his revenge over Avilos in the Second Battle of Roquetas de Mar, sweeping his units from both space and land. Mairena fell on September 27, 1796 to Dunyenvoorde and Admiral Raleghia. Empress Aurelia was absolutely enthused by this victory, and during the early hours of September 28, issued a proclamation ordering for a service of thanksgiving at the Westphalian Cathedral.
    • Later that same day, however, the Empress received word that Lady Margarina Stanelis, Dowager Countess of Duana, had died, aged 56, at her estate on Tarentum. Up until her death, the Dowager Countess had continued to declare to her household that her line was the rightful one to inherit the throne of the Laurasian Empire following the Empress's demise. She had aggressively pushed forward the claims of her son, the young Earl, and had gained the sympathy of such figures as the new Procurator-General, Sir Egertonia. The Empress therefore greeted the news of the Dowager Countess's death with some alarm, knowing that it would spark renewed talk about the succession. The Countess's son, Duana, was now viewed by many as the leading contender. The Empress issued a note of condolences on the death of the Countess, and ordered the Court into a day of mourning for her cousin. At the same time, however, she again asserted to her Privy Council that the Countess's death "did not change my position on the succession" and that she would not be forced to designate a successor against her will. The Dowager Countess would be buried at St. Tarkh's Citadel on Tarentum (October 5, 1796). By that point, Laurasian forces in the Colonial Territories, under Admiral Langatonia, had stormed the Spamalkan colonies of Villa Canales, Chinauta, and Chimenaugo (June-September 1796) and were now blockading Portobello. Aurelia herself turned to her thoughts on the Earl of Estatius.
  • November 4-
    • By the latter weeks of October 1796, Empress Aurelia had become utterly resentful of the prominence and popularity enjoyed by the Earl of Estatius. As indicated above, Estatius had taken a major role in the string of Laurasian military successes, within the confines of Andalusia, since the conclusion of the Siege of Cadiz. On October 7, 1796, with Mairena securely in the hands of the Laurasian Empire, Estatius and Lord Howardis of Effinga planned their most ambitious offensive yet: against Medinia-Sidonia. This star system, the hereditary dukedom of the Governor of Andalusia and former commander of the Spamalkan Armada, boasted a population in excess of 22 billion by 1796. It was one of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's primary commercial ports; a major entrepot of galactic communications and transportation; and a resort colony, with many of the Spamalkan magnates owning residences in the star system. The Duke of Medinia-Sidonia himself owned the vast Sidonia Family Estate, which covered more than 150,000 acres and was one of the chief private residences in the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Capture of this star system would inflict a major humiliation upon him, and secure the Laurasian position in Andalusia.
    • From here, Howardis of Effinga and Estatius alike hoped, Laurasian units could then secure Vigo and Baiona. On October 14, Estatius, in cooperation with Admiral Raleghia, began his move from Dos Hermandas and Motril. Four days later, he defeated a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Chiclana. On October 19, Howardis, who had advanced from Cadiz and Roqueta de Mar, defeated the Count of Avilos in the Battle of Rota. Three days later, he and Estatius made a junction at Puerto Serranos, and from there, proceeded against the outskirts of Medinia-Sidonia. The siege of that stronghold commenced on October 24, 1796. In spite of Medinia-Sidonia's efforts, this world fell into the possession of the Laurasian Empire (October 29, 1796). Tarifa was stormed the following day, and Algecircas, at the end of October 1796, found itself now seriously threatened by Laurasian units. It was at this point that Empress Aurelia, who had heard the tales among the Imperial Court, enthusing about her favorite's virtues and qualities in war, was jealous over this, and also yearning for his presence, decided to recall Estatius back to the Laurasian Empire.
    • Lord Treasurer Burghley, who still retained some affection for his former ward, and fully aware of Estatius's popularity with the Empress's subjects, advised that she stage a grand welcome for him on Laurasia Prime. The Empress agreed, and instructed the Lord Treasurer and the newly-appointed Lord Chamberlain, the ailing Lord Cobhamia, to make the arrangements. On November 4, 1796, Aurelia formally recalled the Earl of Estatius back to the Laurasian Empire, declaring that the "extent of his victories, his loyalty to us, and his vigor for the interests of the Imperial State mandate that he return to this, our realms, in order to share the good news of his exploits with our subjects, and to receive proper reward from us." Estatius, who had been readying his forces for an offensive against Algecircas, was nevertheless determined to bask in the comforts of his adoring admirers and to see the Empress. He was unaware of her mounting dislike of his popularity and his achievements. The Earl now made swift preparations for his own departure from the front-lines, and on November 8, 1796, ventured back across the Galactic Void on his personal flagship, the IMS Halaxaria. He had reached Belkadan on November 10, being met by an imperial fleet under the command of Admiral Ushavious (who had become Chief of the Imperial General Headquarters in July 1796, but was desiring to serve in the Durthian States) and was from there escorted to Laurasia Prime. His arrival at the capital world (November 12, 1796), was marked with much ceremony. Preachers praised him as a champion of Imperial Almitism, with Chief Procurator Whitshiftus hailing his merits at the Westphalian Cathedral. Massive throngs of subjects gathered on the Calaxies, Jadia, and Hepudermia, as well as the major cities of Laurasia Prime, to welcome "Laurasia's shining hero."
    • Wherever he appeared, the Earl was greeted with cheers and hails by the adoring populace. Accompanied by his friends, including Sir Franconius Bagonius and the Earl of Southerton, Estatius ingratiated himself with the crowds; accepted gifts of bouquets, banners of war, and sheaths of honor; and basked in all of the praise conferred upon him. After undergoing a ceremonial procession through the streets of Christiania, visiting all of the historic and governmental sites, he reached the Gates of the Quencilvanian Palace. There, Empress Aurelia herself, attended by Chancellor Cecilis, Lord Treasurer Burghley, and Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, greeted him. She publicly praised him, declaring that "Your Lordship must dine with us, and all must be made aware further of your victories!" Even at this stage, however, Estatius was vexing her. He replied that he would dine with her "if the people permit me, Your Majesty", still receiving cheers and praise from the nearby crowds. The Empress herself had a frown on her face, and resented all of the attention given to the Earl. This showed later on. During the late hours of that night, the Earl did indeed dine with Aurelia. It was not, however, all of a happy occasion. She demanded to know why the seizure of Spamalkan funds at Cadiz had been botched. When Estatius informed her of Governor Giron's scheme, the Empress refused to accept it.
    • Tensions were further inflamed the following morning. The courtiers of the Imperial Court had gathered in the Public Reception Chambers, with Lord Treasurer Burghley in presence and with Estatius delivering his formal thanks to all of the magnates present. The Empress then burst through a door (Lord Treasurer Burghley had to hastily tap his staff to summon all to obedience), flounced past all of her now bowing and humbled subjects, and yelled that she knew that "everyone will make a profit, except for she who actually ordered it! [The Expedition]" She then announced the cancellation of celebratory festivities that were to be held that night. Aurelia felt that Estatius's popularity might pose a threat to her authority, and she would not allow for the publication of an official government tract describing the recent successes in the war. She even made derogatory remarks, on November 14, at a session of the Imperial Privy Council concerning the recent progress in Andalusia. Estatius, for once adhering to Bagonius's advice, decided to bear all. By November 17, 1796, with the celebration of the Empress's 38th anniversary on the throne, she had softened to some extent. The Empress conducted herself with decorum at the Accession Day festivities, with Estatius again earning distinction at the jousts. That night, however, when Lord Treasurer Burghley declared that the victories of Estatius, Howardis, and Raleghia had all further secured the Empire's position in the war, the Empress berated him, shouting: "My Lord Treasurer, either for fear or favor, you regard the Earl of Estatius as more than myself. You are a miscreant! You are a coward!" Burghley, who was now 76 years old, and the oldest of the Empress's advisers (since the death of Knollysis earlier that year), confided to his son that he was once again in the "predicament of decay." Estatius expressed his sympathy for the Lord Treasurer, but his rivalry with the Cecilis faction had reemerged, and was to increase in strength further. The Franconian Ambassador would report that "a man who was of the Lord Treasurer's party is surely to be an enemy of the Earl."
  • November 25-On November 25, 1796, the diplomatic delegations of the Laurasian Empire, Autocratic Pruthian Empire, and Holy Austarlian Empire formally convened at the Diplomatic Palace in Christiania, Laurasia Prime, to write the final treaty of partition, formally dissolving the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth and all of its institutions. This was the convention which had been called for in the Second Preliminary Treaty of Partition the previous year, to deal with the Commonwealth's debts, finances, nobility, governmental institutions, military assets, diplomatic relations, economics, and other matters of importance among the three partitioning powers. The convention was to also settle the final territorial arbitration between the Autocratic Pruthian and Holy Austarlian Empires, as regards to the Vistulan Colonies; the rights of the Empress of Laurasia to free commerce and access rights in Podlachia, the Lublin Voivodeship, and Lodz; and an accord to suppress any further outbreaks of dissent among the populations now subdued. Empress Aurelia had designated Chancellor Sir Robertius Cecilis, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, Procurator-General Sir Thomasius Egertonia, Field-Marshal Lord Surovius of Rymnik, Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod Gaillenus Whitshiftus, and the former Laurasian Ambassador to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Sir Jacob Sievers, as the plenipotentiaries of the Imperial Laurasian Government. Emperor Fransios II of Austarlia was represented by Ambassador Count Louis Coblenzl, Field-Marshal Leonard von Daun (1734-1807; son of the famous commander of the Seven Year's War), the diplomat Count Michel von Volehorst of Pressburg (1752-1810); and Duke Clement-Ashburg of Carlsbad (1749-1833). Finally, Pruthian Emperor A'rua III was represented by the Chief of the Pruthian War Council, General Bogislaw Taurentizen; the newly-appointed Pruthian Ambassador to the Court of Christiania, Ferdinand Frick, Baron von Werclais (1748-1825); Prince Joseth-Tauetz of Cleves (1755-1821); and the Duke of Brunswick. Negotiations continued among the three governments for the next three months, as they wrangled over the terms of the final settlement. Chancellor Cecilis, in particular, proved himself once again to be a skilled negotiator, driving a hard bargain with his Pruthian and Austarlian counterparts. At the same time, Cecilis was also adept at reconciling the differences of the Empire's "partners in crime", and was amenable to both foreign delegations.
  • December 7-
    • As had been mentioned previously, the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia had, by the beginning of November 1796, geared themselves up for a offensive against Le Catelet and Cambrai, both of which had become important strongholds for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Duke Albert, who now established his command headquarters at Verviers, was determined to prevent Franconian and Laurasian forces in the Ardennian Worlds and the Pale of Calais from linking up with Durthian units at Mons, Liege, Maastricht, Utrecht, and Charleroi. On October 27, 1796, the Count of Fuentes, acting on instructions issued to him by the Governor-General, and intending to drive a wedge into the Franconian lines, launched a massive counteroffensive into Picardy and the Pale of Calais. Drawing reinforcements and military units from the Spamalkan garrisons of Colfontaine, Chimay, and Chievres, he defeated the Duke of Bouillon in the Battle of Aeinoye (October 28-29, 1796). At this stronghold, Fuentes dispatched Admiral Coloma, with a substantial detachment of Spamalkan tercios and armored transports, to seize the Franconian fortifications of Dinant, Hirson, Avennes, and Mezieres.
    • In this objective, Coloma enjoyed some success. He blunted a counter-strike by the Duke of Chateau-Thierry at the Sedan Straits (November 2, 1796), storming Dinant and Hirson the following day. On November 6, 1796, Coloma scored another victory, this time over Prince de Conti, in the Battle of Rethel, penetrating as far as the Oile Military Highway. Avennes, which was blockaded by Spamalkan forces, surrendered on November 9. At the same time, Fuentes managed to breach Durthian defenses at Mons (November 4, 1796) and by November 11, had driven Durthian units from Borsele, Domburg, and Dishoek, thereby securing Spamalkan hold of Hulst. Then on November 13, 1796, the Battle of Queant resulted in a victory for the Count, who now managed to harry Douai and to temporarily overrun Vimy, Le Basee, and Villers. By this point, however, the Spamalkans had lost steam. The Duke of Montpensier and Field-Marshal Norria, who had halted an expedition sent by Coloma against Noyon, Dieppe, and Pontoise, executed a pincer maneuver against Spamalkan units in the Somme Pocket, cutting off the Spamalkan forces operating at Villers, Vimy, and Peronne (November 15-18, 1796).
    • On November 20, Fuentes was decisively defeated in the Battle of the Arras Battle Outpost, ending this last Spamalkan push. Prince Maurice of Nassau, whose forces had stormed Ghent and Hazelbrouck (October 11-19, 1796) and were now seriously menacing Charleroi, then executed a surprise move of his own, driving Fuentes from Colfontaine, Chimay, and Chievres (November 22, 1796). Within another four days, Hirson and Avennes had both been recovered by Field-Marshal Norria. The Duke of Bouillon, clearing Spamalkan units from the Oile Military Highway, advanced decisively against them at Mezieres and Aeinoye, scoring a major victory in the Battle of Yser (November 25, 1796). On November 28, Borsele was recovered by Laurasian General Baskrania, and on December 3, the Spamalkan forces in the Somme Pocket, under the command of Captain-General Julio von Peredies (1749-1809), were finally forced to surrender.
    • On December 5, the conquest of Domburg and Dishoek by General Baskrania completed the reversal in Spamalkan fortunes. The following day, he stormed Festubert, opening a route of communications with allied forces in the Pale of Calais. Then on December 7, 1796, Prince Maurice of Nassau, now receiving reinforcements from the States-General, and from Laurasian naval forces at Gravelines and Roosevelt, finally instigated a siege of Charleroi. The Siege of Charleroi, as it became known, lasted for the greater part of the month. Finally (December 18, 1796), the world fell to the Durthian-Laurasian forces, dealing a severe blow to the Spamalkan position. Spamalkan Admiral Coloma then suffered a horrendous defeat in the Battle of Barrisis (December 20, 1796), leading to the expulsion of Spamalkan units from St. Quentin and Ferroy, and from these strongholds, to a siege of Le Catelet. The Siege of Le Catelet began on December 22, 1796, conducted by the combined forces of the Dukes of Bouillon and Montpensier, Prince de Conti, and Field-Marshal Norria. This siege was to continue early into the following year. The last victory of note was the conquest, by King Hensios himself, of La Fere (December 24, 1796), further weakening the Spamalkan position in Picardy.
  • December 19-
    • As was mentioned above, Empress Aurelia's recall of the Earl of Estatius back to the Caladarian Galaxy came just as the important Spamalkan stronghold of Algecircas, which was located two thousand light-years to the east of Cadiz, came under direct threat from the Laurasian Empire's military forces. In the long run, Estatius's recall proved to have no effect on the overall campaign, for Lord Howardis of Effinga, Admiral Sir Walterius Raleghia, and the Empress's other military commanders proved themselves more then capable of thrashing the Spamalkans. On November 3, 1796, the Battle of Baeza resulted in victory for Lord Howardis and General Verus over Admiral de Bazan and the Duke of Medinia-Sidonia. From Baeza, Laurasian units quickly stormed the garrisons of Almunecar, Marbella, and Mijas (November 4-11, 1796), and then repelled a Spamalkan offensive against Cadiz (November 14, 1796). Then on November 17, 1796, whilst the Empress and the Imperial Court celebrated the 38th anniversary of her accession to the throne, Howardis of Effinga moved against Algecircas. Admiral Raleghia distinguished himself as he chased Spamalkan starships under the command of Commodore Juan Reyes (1744-`801) across a distance of more than thirty light-years, ultimately cornering and neutralizing them at Beyes, a isolated red giant system located seven hundred light-years northeast of Algecircas.
    • Algecircas itself was besieged from November 19, 1796, with the Spamalkan garrison proving no match for the superior firepower, organization, and efficiency of the Laurasian forces now assaulting it. Howardis of Effinga displayed tactical genius in enveloping Spamalkan defensive ships in the Straits of the Rio de la Mel; sundering communications between the garrison and the Los Barrios Outpost; and conducting a pinpointed bombardment of the planetary shields, relying on constant pressure and concentrated fire from his chief battleships to crack the defenses. This strategy worked, although the siege of the stronghold dragged on into December 1796, and was marked by constant Spamalkan counteroffensives against Guadix, Loja, Sancular de Barramenda, San Fernando, and Tarifa, all of which failed. It was on December 5, 1796, that Algecircas's planetary shields, no longer capable of withstanding the Laurasian onslaught, finally cracked. General Verus now commanded the landings on the planet, and directed his forces in a massive thrust towards the Algecircas Nuestra Citadel. Five days of intensive fighting followed, but finally, Garrison General Almed al-Effuse (1745-1805) surrendered to the Laurasian forces (December 10, 1796).
    • The fall of Algecircas was received with almost as much jubilation at the Imperial Court, and throughout the Empire, as had been the fall of Cadiz. Within a week, Howardis of Effinga and Raleghia had stormed Castellar de la Frontiera, Nijar, and El Ejido, thereby completing the virtual subjugation of Andalusia. Empress Aurelia, whose relations with Estatius had continued to improve, ordered, on December 18, for a formal manifesto of thanks to be issued from the Quencilvanian Palace, hailing all of the Empire's military commanders for their efforts. Verus would be promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General and conferred the Order of St. Antigonus the Conqueror by the Empress on December 28, 1796, for his efforts. The day after the manifesto of thanks, however, Aurelia received word of the death of yet another person close to her. On December 19, 1796, Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Rumanstevius, 1st Baron Rumanstevius of Kagul, died at the age of 71 on Bucharina, in the Northern Reaches. Rumanstevius, although he had retired from active military service in 1791, had nevertheless continued to serve the Empress of Laurasia faithfully. She had reappointed him to the Bucharanian Governor-Generalship in January 1794, confident of his abilities to oversee the intensified colonization efforts by imperial authorities in that region. Rumanstevius also, between 1775 and 1795, held a position as Professor of Military Sciences at the Imperial Army Academy of Laura.
    • In that capacity, he published a series of well-regarded works on military operations and strategy, including the Instructions (1776), Customs of Military Service (1780), and Thoughts (1787), each of which helped to inspire additional reforms within the Empire's military forces. The Empress now ordered the Court into a day of mourning for the late Field-Marshal; issued a proclamation praising his merits; and declared that none could match him. He would be buried at his family estates on Briannia, on December 24, 1796; the Empress was represented, once again, by Lady Norria, whose son was distinguishing himself through faithful service in Franconia. Nevertheless, the procession of Laurasian successes continued as 1796 concluded. On the day of Rumanstevius's death, Howardis of Effinga stormed Narrol and Olerios, having undertaken a daring naval push along the Trans-Galician Highway. Then on Ascentmas Day, 1796, Baiona, whose garrison had been readied for months for a potential Laurasian move, was flatfooted by a sudden Laurasian move from Sancular de Barrameda, launched by Raleghia and Durthian Admiral Duyvenvoorde. In spite of the efforts of the Duke of Medinia-Sidonia and of Admiral de Bazan, it fell within hours. And on New Year's Eve 1796, Laurasian forces in the Guatamalan Sector under Admiral Langatonia stormed Esciuntla, driving a wedge into the heart of the Spamalkan Central Colonies. Thus, at the end of 1796, allied forces were definitively holding the upper hand on all fronts.

1797

  • January 1-
    • 1797, the 97th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire of Empress Aurelia the Great having established its definite position as the most powerful, prosperous, and extensive of all of the numerous states of extra-galactic civilization. The Second Spamalkan War, which had been ongoing since March 1795, had now turned in the favor of the Empire and its allies, the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and the United Durthian States. As 1797 opened, Durthian-Laurasian forces under Prince Maurice of Nassau (who was now Stadholder of the States and Prince of Orange) and Lieutenant-General Sir Thomasius Baskrania, were on the verge of completing the expulsion of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's forces from the Province of Zeeland, and of driving into the heart of Brabant and Flanders, those remnants of the once imposing Grand Duchy of Durthia and Burgundy. Prince Maurice was determined to subdue major strongholds such as Hulst, Venlo, Eschede, and Rheinberg, among others, and to ultimately subdue the bases of Spamalkan power in Southern Durthia: Brussels and Antwerp.
    • This year would see the Durthians all but expelling their Spamalkan foes, with whom they had now clashed (with one brief interruption) for more than a quarter of a century, and driving them from the Electorate of Cologne, seriously humiliating Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I and weakening his strategic position. As regards to events farther galactic-south, in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, Laurasian-Franconian allied forces, under the command of such skilled military commanders as Laurasian Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria; the Dukes of Montpensier, Bouillon, and Chateau-Thierry; Prince de Conti; and of course, King Hensios IV of Franconia himself, had made considerable advances. By the commencement of the new year, the Spamalkan forces of Duke Albert of Caria, the Count of Fuentes, and Admiral Carlos Coloma had suffered numerous losses in Picardy, the Ardennian Worlds, and the Pale of Calais. Le Catelet was now under siege by the allied forces, and Cambrai was in serious danger.
    • As in the Durthian theater, 1797 would see the Spamalkans expelled completely from Franconian territory; Franche-Comte and the Duchy of Milania,which had remained in Philicus's hands to this point, would both fall victim to victorious invasions by the allied forces. As regards to the Colonial Territories and to the Hereditary Dominions, Emperor Philicus found himself in severe peril. The Imperial Laurasian Military, under the command of the Earl of Estatius, Lord Howardis of Effinga, Lieutenant-General Sir Franconius Verus, Admiral Lord Thomasius Howardis, Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia, and Admiral Sir Walterius Raleghia, had demonstrated its utter superiority and efficiency over its Spamalkan adversaries. Admirals de Bazan and Zubiaur, and the Duke of Medinia Sidonia, proved themselves to be utterly incompetent against their Laurasian foe's military forces.
    • Andalusia was virtually secure in the Empire's hands; Galicia was under invasion; and the Spamalkan Spice Colonies, with the exception of the Virgins and Havana, were under Laurasian occupation. The Holy Spamalkan Empire was to suffer further humiliations and to find its supply lines throughout the Galactic Void and Colonial Territories under serious threat. Such circumstances would drive Philicus and his Council of State over the cliff. And finally, the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth's abolition was all but a confirmed fact, as the final convention of the three partitioning governments wrangled over the last formalities. The Laurasian Empire's rule over the whole of the Great Tesmanian Cloud would be firmly consolidated early in this new year. Empress Aurelia kept all of this in mind as she issued her New Year's proclamation, declaring that "the Lord Almitis and his Angels have truly blessed our realms; His Guidance has allowed for our Empire to strive forward, and to obtain its natural dominion over this Galaxy, and over the satellite galaxies."
  • January 17-
    • As had been mentioned before, Esciuntla had been seized by Admiral Sir Thomasius Langatonia on New Year's Eve 1796, giving the Laurasian Empire a substantial foothold in the Guatemalan Sector. On January 2, 1797, he destroyed a Spamalkan force of colonial militia, tercios, and Colombianian conscripts in the Battle of the Buy, securing Esciuntla. From this stronghold, Langatonia had stormed the Spamalkan bases of Petapa, Mixco, and Villa Canales (January 3-6). On January 7, 1797, he secured another victory over Spamalkan forces under Admiral Zubiaur (who was once again vainly commanding military campaigns against his Laurasian foes), in the Battle of Coban. Salama was stormed (January 12, 1797), allowing for a decisive move by Laurasian naval units against Guastyoya, which fell on January 14. Langatonia, who felt that his rear was sufficiently secure in the face of Spamalkan forces in the Guatemala Sector, decided to turn his attention to the Spamalkan stronghold of Portobello.
    • This stronghold had been blockaded by Laurasian forces, primarily of the 69th Imperial Fleet, since before the death of Admiral Dracius; consequently, the Imperial General Headquarters had a firm grasp of the defenses and geography of the surrounding region. On January 16, 1797, Langatonia, who had assembled detachments of the 64th and 69th Imperial Fleets, and the 61st Imperial Army, at Cubagua, occupied the Spamalkan outposts of Cabo de le Veda and Nombre de Dios, approaching the outskirts of Portobello. During the early morning hours of January 17, the Laurasians employed a captured Spamalkan relay to respond to a hailing request from the Spamalkan outpost of San Felipe; following this ruse, Langatonia was able to place his warships on the outskirts of the star system undetected.
    • He now ordered for fifteen of his agents on Portobello to disable the planetary shields; once this was done, a series of swift planetary landings were conducted by the Imperial Laurasian Army. The Spamalkan Space Port of Santiago de la Gloria was unable to respond to the landings, and was in short order seized by a Laurasian force. Spamalkan Governor Pedro Melendez (1741-1807) hastily organized a counteroffensive, but by the later hours of that day, Portobello had been completely blockaded, and the Empire's military forces had taken the advantage in space. During the next two days, a series of bitter confrontations ensued on the planetary surface, as the Spamalkans, disoriented but still armed, attempted to repel the Laurasian assaults. This ultimately proved futile, as Laurasian aerial supremacy, the coordination of the landings, and their superior numbers ultimately decided the outcome of the battle.
    • On January 21, 1797, Brigadier-General Sir Willanius Parrius (1755-1830), who had once been one of Fleet Admiral Dracius's subordinates during the confrontations with the Spamalkan Armada (1788), stormed the Portobello Castra, securing the chief Spamalkan positions on the world. Governor Melendez surrendered later that day, and was, on the orders of Langatonia, immediately bound in chains. He was eventually transported back to the Laurasian Empire and imprisoned at the Military Prison of Kherson until the conclusion of the War in July 1798. Portobello's fall left the waist of Panama open to Laurasian offensives. David (January 22-23); Yaviza (January 25); Cristobal (January 26); Arrajan (January 28); Tocumen (January 29-February 1); and Panama Prime (February 5), would all fall in succession to Laurasian forces. Admiral Zubiaur launched a series of counteroffensives at Vista Algere, Pacora, and Santiago de Veraguas which would ultimately be terminated with a decisive Laurasian victory at Caiobre (February 14, 1797). By the end of February 1797, the Spamalkans held on tenaciously to the Panamanian garrisons of Icanti, Ipeti, Jacque, Gualaca, Garachine, and Kanir-Dup.
  • January 24-
    • Whilst these victorious campaigns were ongoing in the Colonial Territories, allied forces made substantial gains in Flanders and in the Pale of Calais. At the commencement of 1797, the major Franconian system of Le Catelet, which had been held by Spamalkan forces since June 1795, was under siege by the combined forces of Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, Prince de Conti, and the Dukes of Bouillon and Montpensier. On January 3, 1797, the Count of Fuentes and Admiral Coloma, seeking to relieve the pressure on Le Catelet, launched another ambitious counteroffensive, taxing the resources of the Holy Spamalkan Forces of Flanders, dangerously exposing their supply lines, and increasing the pressure only further upon beleaguered Spamalkan units at Le Catelet and Doullens. They scored a series of victories at first, briefly seizing St. Cale (January 3); Montdider (January 5); Roye (January 6-9); Fontoise (January 11); Peronne (January 12); and Guise (January 13).
    • By January 14, Spamalkan expeditions were penetrating as far as Ham and Noyon, but they were now hundreds of light-years out from their supply bases on Cambrai, Doullens, and Calais, and were in serious danger. This was exposed the following day, as on January 15, 1797, King Hensios IV, who had assembled his forces and garrisons carefully at Albert, Proyart, Laon, Soissons, and Compeigne, launched a hook maneuver against the Spamalkan "bulge", as the offensive pocket created by this thrust was called by allied commanders. In a series of swift assaults, he encircled the Spamalkan forces, defeating them in the ruinous Battle of Arc (January 16, 1797) and hurling them from Vervinso (January 18), before storming into Guise and Peronne (January 19). By January 20, the King's forces, receiving reinforcements from Prince de Conti and the Governor of Picardy, had penetrated all the way back to the outskirts of Proyart, seriously menacing Doullens and isolating the Spamalkan forces within range of that stronghold.
    • On January 22, 1797, Admiral Coloma, realizing that his forces would not progress further, ordered for a breakout assault at Hirsono and Auiyone, with the goal of retreating back to the Spamalkan supply bases in Hainault. Although Spamalkan units successfully repelled a Franconian counteroffensive at Ham (January 23), they were ultimately given a ruinous defeat in the Battle of Maubeuge (January 24-25, 1797), terminating the attempted Spamalkan breakout. Coloma himself, as well as the Count of Fuentes, were able to retreat back to their headquarters on Cambrai, but by the end of January 1797, Spamalkan garrisons at Montdider, St. Cale, Roye, and Fontoise had been forced to surrender, being hopelessly cut off from their supply lines without any possibility of reinforcement. Le Catelet's defenses, on their part, finally succumbed to the allied onslaught, and on January 29, 1797, the world surrendered to the Duke of Bouillon and Field-Marshal Norria.
    • Norria, who had instructions from both the King and the Imperial General Headquarters to be ruthless (in retaliation for harsh Spamalkan treatment of allied prisoners of war), ordered for the Governor of Le Catelet, Spamalkan Count Francisco Ferraro (1749-97), and all of his subordinates to be rounded up and executed. This was done in swift order, and none of the condemned men were given any chance to beg for pardon. Into February 1797, the allied advance continued. By February 6, the Duke of Bouillon had cleared Spamalkan units from Vesoul, Epinal, and St. Die, destroying the last Spamalkan holdouts which had existed in Eastern Champagne and in Lorraine. On February 9, he defeated General del Avila in the Battle of Mulhouse, putting an end to that Spamalkan commander's efforts at making contact with Spamalkan garrisons in Eastern Flanders and in Cologne. Then on February 14, King Hensios and the Prince de Conti advanced once more into Franche-Comte. Jours fell quickly to a Franconian force (February 16-18, 1797), and on February 22, Vesoul was captured by Prince de Conti. Belfort was besieged from February 23, and did not fall until four days later. By the beginning of March 1797, allied forces had overrun Gray, Pesmes, and Dole; Bescanon was now under direct threat from the King.
  • January 26-
    • On January 26, 1797, after over two months of negotiations, the Treaty of Christiania was signed by the diplomatic delegations of the Laurasian Empire, Holy Austarlian Empire, and Autocratic Pruthian Empire, constituting the final settlement over the formal dissolution of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth and all of its institutions. In the preamble to the Treaty, the universal commitment, among all powers of extra-galactic civilization "to peace and internal tranquility" was affirmed. It was declared that the "spread of revolutionary tensions, of considerable civil unrest, and of turmoil unlike any which has been seen before within this century" had necessitated for the intervention, by the three powers, into the affairs of the "Dejanican civilization", and finally, for the formal dissolution of the Commonwealth. In the following eighteen articles, the three powers outlined the deposition of all last matters relating to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Articles I, II, and III, reiterated the division of the Commonwealth's territory among the three powers (Laurasia, Austarlia, Pruthia).
    • Empress Aurelia of Laurasia was now recognized as "the absolute sovereign, with unrestricted jurisdiction and territorial rights, over the following to wit": the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, with the Voivodeships of Kaunas, Vilinus, Utena, Panevezys, Alytus, Marijampole, Taurage, Klaipeda, and Telsai, including Memel; the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia, including the systems and associated districts of Talinin, Mitau, Jakobstadt, Dunasburg, Pilten, Goldingen, Windau, and Libau (including the Windwawa Barrier Regions); Tesmanian Dejanica, comprising Biaylstok, Brest, Chelm (from the Lublin Voivodeship), Podlaskie, and Tesmanian Switokyrzkie (with the exception of Sandomierz, Ozarow, and the Kunow Territories in the Great Amulak Spiral); and the Bug Highways, Barbarossa Wormhole, and Dejanican Wormhole. The Holy Austarlian Empire formally acquired the following territories, with Emperor Fransios II acknowledged as sovereign of: the Lublin Voivodeship (except for Chelm); Krakow; the Dejanican Regions of the Switokyrzkie Voivodeship (including Sandomierz); Subcarpathia (including Prezmysl); and the Southern Vistulan Colonies, with Sulejow, Tuzyn, and Warta included. Finally, the Autocratic Pruthian Empire gained possession of the following territories, with Emperor A'rua III acknowledged as sovereign of: the Lodz Voivodeship; Dejanica Major; the Masovian Voivodeship; Podlachia (that is, Belachatow and the Lower Vistulan Reaches); the Northern Vistula Colonies; and Warmia.
    • Article IV provided for allied affirmation of the abdications of former King Stanis Vorrust I of Dejanica-Lithuania and of Duke Peter von Bironia of Northania and Semigallia, and for the continuation of their conditions of "treatment and comfort as is befitting to royal and noble personages" under the "protection" of Laurasian Empress Aurelia. Both ex-monarchs were to enjoy all rights of precedence and of title until their deaths. Article V provided for the establishment of a tripartite commission, comprised of delegates chosen by the monarchs of the three states, and derived from their diplomatic and economic affairs services, to oversee the repayment of the Commonwealth's state debt and of the personal debts which had been owed by the King of Dejanica. It explicitly declared that the commission would have the power to expunge any debts which it viewed "contradictory to the aims of Their Imperial Majesties" and that the commission would be headquartered on Dejanica Major (now a possession of the Autocratic Pruthian Empire).
    • It would begin its work from May 1, 1797, and all those who held claims to the Commonwealth's debt, be they businesses, foreign governments, private investors, or nobles, would have two years (through May 1, 1799) to prove their claim and to obtain just compensation. After such time had lapsed, the debts in question would be formally liquidated by the agreement of the three governments. Article VI provided for the establishment of a similar commission to handle all navigational disputes which were to arise; to determine the joint regulations of the three governments on the occupation and dismantling of all Dejanican border outposts, relays, and provincial markers; and to reorganize the Dejanican Holonet, so as to incorporate it into the respective communications networks of the three Empires. Article VII provided for another commission to deal with all claims related to the Commonwealth Stock Exchange, which had been the central exchange market operated by the Commonwealth throughout the eighteenth century, and which had been formally dissolved in February 1796.
    • All investors and realtors who held claim to shares worth more than €50 million dataries (in Laurasian currency) would have until January 1, 1800, to make due on such claims. Article IX provided for the formal dissolution of all remaining Dejanican military forces. All militia and garrisons of the star systems so occupied were now to come formally under the jurisdiction of the military commands of each Empire; all Dejanican military arsenals, repositories, garrisons, and fortifications were now confirmed to be in the possession of that power which held them; and all Dejanican military honors, decorations, and orders were formally abolished. Article XII provided that those nobles and subjects of the former Commonwealth who held properties in all three of the partitioning zones would have until January 1, 1798, to decide which realm to make their permanent domicile, and to sell all properties outside of their realm of residence.
    • All Dejanican religious institutions and properties would be obliged to make the same decision, although claims on jurisdiction, debts, mortgages, and endowments would automatically accrue to the state treasuries. Article XIII confirmed the privileges and rights of the Dejanican nobility in the Holy Austarlian and Autocratic Pruthian Empires; in the Laurasian Empire, such rights were to be subject to "Her Majesty's discretion." Article XIV provided for the establishment of a special commission to resolve all territorial disputes among the respective governments; Pruthia and Austarlia, in particular, continued to have some contretemps over certain of the Vistula Colonies. Article XV formalized the abolition of all state institutions of the Commonwealth. This included the Diet, the Permanent Council, and all positions in the Dejanican civil service, local administration, and the courts of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Crown of Dejanica, and voivodeships. Article XVI mandated for the formal termination of all Dejanican diplomatic ties; the dismantlement of any remaining Dejanican embassies and consulates; and the "full cooperation of these governments to secure recognition of the cessation of the Commonwealth."
    • Article XVII, the most infamous article of the Treaty of Christiania, affirmed all of the above terms; confirmed the abolition of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth; and stated: "In view of the necessity to abolish everything which could revive the memory of the existence of the Commonwealth of Dejanica, now that the annulment of this body politic has been effected, the high contracting parties are agreed and undertake never to include in their titles, the name or designation of the Commonwealth of Dejanica, which shall remain suppressed as from the present and forever." This provided that none of the existing emblems, ensigns, or seals of the Dejanican-Lithuanian monarchy would ever be employed by any of the partitioning powers. Finally, Article XVIII provided that the Treaty's terms would come into effect immediately, pending final ratification by the three sovereigns of the contracting states. Empress Aurelia, when formally informed by the Privy Council of the conclusion of the Treaty of Christiania, leaped for joy. Remembering her decades-long "efforts" at imposing over, and maintaining Laurasian influence in, the Commonwealth, the Empress declared that "the elimination of this Commonwealth serves to our Empire's advantage, and to affirm our position of supremacy and dominance in relation to the powers of the Great Amulak Spiral." The Treaty of Christiania was ratified by Aurelia on January 28 (on the fiftieth anniversary of the death of her father, Antigonus the Extravagant); by A'rua on January 30; and by Fransios on February 2.
    • The reaction of most foreign courts was as the three governments had expected: they acknowledged the final dissolution of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Haxonian and Vendragian Confederacies did so on January 31, 1797; they were followed by the Great Kingdom of Masacavania (Feodor II had promoted himself to that rank in 1794, February 3); the United Durthian States (February 4); the Serene Kingdom of Franconia (February 7); the Electorates of Bavaria and Saxony (February 9); the Sultanate of Morocco (February 13); the Serene Kingdom of Portugallia (February 18); and the Marasharite Empire (March 1). The sole exception to this trend was the Holy Spamalkan Empire, which continued in its war with the Laurasian Empire and its military allies, Durthia and Franconia. Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka, in a proclamation issued from Madrid on March 5, 1797, declared that the "abolition of the Dejanican Commonwealth is an act which is in direct contradiction to the hopes of tranquility and stability among the powers of extra-galactic civilization; it is an act which, in the end, will have damaging consequences for those powers involved in such banditry and plunder." The Empress of Laurasia, when learning of her Spamalkan enemy's reaction, made light of it, declaring to Chancellor Cecilis and the Earl of Estatius that the power of her Empire's military forces would soon bring the Spamalkans to heel. The decrees of February 22 and March 7, 1797, confirmed the Laurasian Empire's annexation of all the remaining Dejanican territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud; reiterated the protection extended to former King Stanis Vorrust I of Dejanica and former Duke Peter von Bironia of Northania and Semigallia; and reorganized the Commonwealth's Tesmanian Provinces (including the Grand Duchy of Lithuania) into the Bialarian, Vilinus, Kaunian, Klapedian, and Swiotzeranian Governorates.
  • February 1-
    • Following the conquest of Charleroi, the allied forces of Durthian Prince Maurice of Nassau and Lieutenant-General Sir Thomasius Baskrania pursued a coordinated offensive against the Spamalkan positions and strongholds in Southern Durthia, into the early months of 1797. On December 22, 1796, the Battle of Tongres had resulted in a decisive victory for Prince Maurice, as he defeated Admiral Cordoba's efforts to storm the Tongres Defensive Approaches and from there, to secure the Mons-Gembloux Hyperspace Route. From Tongres, Prince Maurice had stormed the Spamalkan strongholds of Boeechout (December 24-29); Nijen (December 30); and Balek (December 31, 1796-January 2, 1797). On January 4, 1797, General Baskrania, who had been engaged in repelling Spamalkan moves against Roosevelt, Leuven, and Mechelen, destroyed a Spamalkan force under the command of General Juan de Hernandez (1755-1808) in the Battle of Hossett, capturing more than 30,000 Spamalkan troopers. Two days later, he and Prince Maurice of Nassau effected a junction at Goes and from there destroyed the Durthian garrisons of Hulsout, Kasterlee, and Meerhout (January 7-11, 1797).
    • Lilles, which was constantly threatened by Spamalkan units, was completely cleared of their presence following a further confrontation between Prince Maurice and Admiral Cordoba at Mol (January 15, 1797). From Mol, Prince Maurice captured the military arsenal at Retie (January 16) and drove Spamalkan naval units from Westerlo (January 18, 1797), completely securing the lanes around Gembloux and Charleroi. Gembloux itself was now under siege from allied forces, and it was completely isolated from its supply lines. The Spamalkan Captain-General, Count Joaquin Valax (1740-97), was now determined to relieve Gembloux and to strengthen his own positions at Huy, in preparation for a move against Utrecht, Maastricht, and Breda. On January 20, 1797, he launched a counteroffensive in the vicinity of Namurs, briefly driving allied forces from Florennes and Diant (January 20-22) and penetrating as far as Givet, before retreating back in the Marche Straits (January 23). Wesel then suffered from a Spamalkan raid on January 24. Prince Maurice, who had assembled his forces at Bergen op Zoom, Geertruidenberg, Breda, Venlo, and Axel, now decided to sunder Spamalkan supply lines and to expose Valax's position.
    • To do this, he launched a direct assault against Turnhout itself, intent on forcing Count Valax to turn back to the stronghold and to be destroyed by a surprise assault from waiting allied detachments. The Battle of Turnhout commenced on January 28, 1797, and lasted for the next four days. Prince Maurice's units quickly penetrated the surprised garrison's defenses, occupying the Tielen Colonies and the Straits of Turnhout in short order. Count Valax, who had been attempting a move towards Wiltz, was forced to turn back hastily. Blunting a Durthian force at Schelle (January 29, 1797), he reached Turnhout during the early hours of the following day. Spamalkan forces penetrated into the system's outskirts, and the Count was able to secure control of Turnhout Monitoring Station. At this point, however, Prince Maurice released his trap. During the early hours of January 31, Laurasian forces under General Baskrania and Admiral Sir Leonnatus Cravilla (1757-1831) surprised the Spamalkans, cutting off their supply lines and punching a hole through their offensive squadrons. Within hours, the battle shifted decisively in favor of the Laurasian Empire.
    • Count Valax himself was seriously wounded when his flagship was damaged by Laurasian turbolaser fire, and forced into retreat. More than two-thirds of the Spamalkan force (some one hundred warships) was captured or swept away by the superior allied onslaught. It was not until the following day, however, before the garrison of Turnhout surrendered. Nevertheless, the Battle of Turnhout ended in a decisive victory for the United Durthian States and Laurasian Empire. Count Valax retreated to Willerbruck, but he died there on February 6, 1797, at the age of 57, from his injuries. From Turnhout, Prince Maurice made rapid advances. By February 11, he had stormed Lint, Hove, and Essen, inflicting severe damage on Spamalkan units waywards of Namur, Gembloux, and Brussels. Glaubek and Boourstem fell on February 17, 1797. Four days later, the Siege of Gembloux ended as that world's exhausted garrison surrendered to General Baskrania. From Gembloux, Holsebeck, Tienen, and Landen fell in succession to allied forces (February 24-28, 1797). By the beginning of March 1797, Hertogenbosh and Ostend were both in serious danger.
  • February 16-
    • Following their conquest of Baiona, Admiral Sir Walterius Raleghia and Durthian Admiral Jacob Duyvenvoorde pressed the offensive against Vigo, determined to secure this major stronghold of the Holy Spamalkan Empire. On December 30, 1796, Admiral Raleghia earned distinction for himself by his victory against a superior Spamalkan force, under Don Marco del Abastios (1756-1802), in the Battle of the High Racantara Straits. Following this, he stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Cangas and Marin (December 31, 1796-January 5, 1797). On January 8, 1797, Raleghia secured another victory over the Don again in the Battle of Cradaria. This battle was even more decisive than the last: Don Abastios was not only defeated but captured, being bound in chains on the Admiral's orders. Raleghia then cooperated with Duvyenvoorde to drive Spamalkan units from Lugo (January 11-15), securing that base for further operations in Galicia. Vigo itself, constantly harassed by Laurasian naval fleets since the conquest of Baiona, finally felt the brunt of the Empire's power on January 19, as Raleghia and Duyvenvoorde launched a two-pronged move into the star system.
    • Receiving reinforcements from Lord Howardis of Effinga, they ruined the Spamalkan defensive lines and soon penetrated Vigo's shields. Within a day, the Battle of Vigo ended in victory for the Laurasian Empire and United Durthian States, as the incompetent Duke of Medinia Sidonia was unable to organize a effective counteroffensive. Admiral de Bazan was blunted by Lord Howardis of Effinga in the Battle of Calan (January 23, 1797), and by January 27, Howardis had stormed the Galician systems of Culleredo, Artexio, and Narron. Ferrol and Corunna were now under direct threat from a Laurasian offensive. On February 4, 1797, Emperor Philicus was informed by his Council of State that the emergency loans from the Bank of Milania were on the verge of expiring, and that the Spamalkan Treasury would soon be exhausted of funds. Seeking to reopen the export lines with the Colonial Territories, Philicus ordered de Bazan and Medinia Sidonia into a series of rash offensives against Algecircas, Cadiz, Sancular de la Barrameda, and Baeza (February 9-17, 1797), which only ended with a decisive victory by Howardis of Effinga and Raleghia in the Battle of Ostera (February 19, 1797). On February 22, Corunna was blockaded by the forces of the Laurasian Empire, which had secured Narron. The Siege of Corunna was to continue for more than a month, as Spamalkan forces under de Bazan and Medinia Sidonia vainly attempted to break the Laurasian stranglehold.
  • March 6-
    • Whilst these military campaigns were ongoing during the early months of 1797, Empress Aurelia continued to grapple with affairs at the Imperial Court and with her favorite, the Earl of Estatius. In spite of the Empress's jealousy, and of her complaints over the Earl's popularity (in the wake of the successful Andalusian Campaigns), 1797 had nevertheless opened with the Earl in an ascendant position within the ranks of the Imperial Laurasian Government. He was now one of the most influential and recognized members of the Privy Council, involving himself energetically in foreign and domestic policy alike. The public regarded him with adulation as a near-legendary hero, and crowds gathered wherever he appeared. One poet, Sir Eurosythenes Laries of Charasia (1753-1815), even referred to him, in January 1797, as "Great Laurasia's glory and the Universe's wide wonder." Estatius made too much out of this, and Sir Franconius Bagonius warned him that he must do his utmost not to trespass on the Empress's autocratic authority, and to assure her of his utter loyalty. He should abandon marital pursuits and "faction fights" in order to devote himself to his governmental duties.
    • He also suggested that he convince the Empress to appoint him Imperial Privy Seal, an office which Lord Treasurer Burghley, whose health continued to decline, had held for the past seven years (since the death of Chancellor Walsingis), and which would allow him influence over affairs in the Imperial Chancellory. Estatius, however, who was as impulsive and headstrong as ever, was incapable of taking such advice. Although he declared that he had "no ambition but Her Majesty's gracious favor and the reputation of well serving her", he could not envision confining himself to a civilian role. Sir Antiochus Harringtia, the Empress's godson, had in the meantime vexed her with his publication of The Metamorphosis, which contained libelous references to figures, both past and present, of the Imperial Court, including the Earl of Leicesterius. This had offended the Empress greatly, and when she refused to allow the Ministry of Culture and Communications to license Harringtia's work, he defied her, circulating copies through his private Holonet. This resulted in the Empress banishing him from court on January 21, 1797. Harringtia now went to duty in the Scottrian Governorates, and would over the next few months beg the Empress to forgive him. Then, in February 1797, Estatius claimed that he was ill.
    • The Empress rushed to his bedside, which caused a "miraculous" recovery. A relapse soon followed, with many attributing this to Aurelia's refusal to release the Earl back to military service. He lay in his chamber for a fortnight, whilst the Empress appeared agitated and the Court swirled with rumors. On February 18, 1797, the day after the Earl's "relapse", the Empress announced that "I shall break him of his will, and pull down his great heart." She added that his mother had contributed to his obstinacy. Then on March 6, 1797, following the Earl's emergence from this latest bout of sickness, Willanius Brokania, 10th Baron Cobhamia, Imperial High Chamberlain and Warden of the Cron Drift (he had held the latter position for thirty-eight years), died at the age of 69. His death dealt another emotional blow to the Empress, who once again declared that "the hand of the Anti-Almitis had been particularly cruel to her." She had fond memories of a visit to his personal residence, Cobhamia Hall, in June 1759, at the beginning of her reign. She issued a proclamation on the Warden's death, ordered the Court into a day of mourning, and wrote a communique of condolences to his son, Antigonus Brokania, 11th Baron Cobhamia (1764-1818).
    • Cobhamia would be buried at Cobhamia Hall on March 11, 1797. The question now inevitably arose over the matter of his offices. Sir Antiochus Sidronius, who was one of Estatius's friends, had long lobbied for the succession to the Wardenship; the Earl now supported his claims. Estatius also sought to press forward his uncle, Sir Willanius Knollysius (1744-1832), as the new Imperial High Chamberlain. The Empress refused his requests, and on March 22, 1797, she appointed the new Lord Cobhamia as the Warden of the Cron Drift. Two days later, the Empress designated the new Lord Husadarania, son of her late cousin, as the new Imperial HihChamberlain. Thus, she placed the positions in the hands of heirs to those personages who had been close to her. Estatius was angered by this, however, and Bagonius suggested that the Earl make a tactical withdrawal from the Imperial Court. On March 27, 1797, the Empress avoided a further quarrel by naming Estatius as Master of the Imperial Ordnance, a position once held by his step-uncle, the Earl of Sarah, and approving his request to depart for further military service by June 1797.
  • March 12-
    • As mentioned above, the allied forces of Prince Maurice of Orange and Lieutenant-General Sir Thomasius Baskrania had, by the beginning of March 1797, placed Hertogenbosh and Ostend in severe danger. Of the two strongholds, Prince Maurice considered Hertogenbosch to be the most essential, for an eventual move to clear all Spamalkan units from Cologne, Meurs, and the Lippe Straits. On March 3, 1797, Prince Maurice defeated Admiral Cordoba again in the Battle of Galmaarden, preventing the Spamalkans from taking advantage of the world's factories and production outposts. Four days later, the Prince mobilized the 8th and 9th Durthian Expeditionary Forces, the 67th Imperial Fleet and 55th Imperial Army of the Laurasian Empire, and the Mercenary Corps, for an decisive offensive against Hertogenbosch. Hertogenbosch itself possessed among the most impressive defensive formations in the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Hertogenbosch also had good supply lines leading to Oirschot, Ostend, and Huy; Prince Maurice would therefore have to apply great effort in seizing this stronghold. On March 9, 1797, General Baskrania stormed the Spamalkan garrison of Hagalnsberg, slowing communications among the Spamalkan commanders. Three days later, allied forces approached the outskirts of Hertogenbosch and imposed a blockade, sundering all lines into the star system. Prince Maurice's aggressive efforts to impound Spamalkan stations in the Halian Straits succeeded, as the garrison was successively deprived of its routes. On March 18, 1797, Duke Albert, who had returned to Brussels, and was determined to call for more reinforcements from Emperor Philicus, dispatched a Spamalkan relief force under the command of Count Frederick van den Bergh (1759-1818) to break the siege and to peril Prince Maurice's positions.
    • Two days later, Count van den Bergh reached Oirschot, and then launched a swift offensive against the blockade forces. At first, he had the advantage, and was able to drive Durthian warships northwards. 30,000 personnel of the Durthian Navy were killed in the ensuing Battle of the Hertogenbosch Straits. Ultimately, however, on March 21, 1797, Prince Maurice's cousin, Count William Louis of Groningen, arrived with his forces and assaulted Oirschot, forcing Count van den Bergh to terminate his moves. Van den Bergh then suffered a ruinous defeat in the Battle of Langen (March 23, 1797), barely evading capture. Oirschot fell that very day, and on March 27, so did Hertogenbosch. Hertogenbosch's fall therefore allowed Prince Maurice to move forth into Zeeland. Huy fell in a swift offensive (March 30-April 3, 1797). Two days later (April 5, 1797), Prince Maurice, with support dispatched by the Duke of Bouillon and Prince de Conti, blockaded Tholen, long a Spamalkan base of operations near Gravelines. The Siege of Tholen lasted for five days, with Count van den Bergh, Admiral Coloma, and Duke Albert struggling (in vain), to prevent further allied advances. Tholen's fall on April 10 left Hulst completely exposed. Durthian forces secured Vlissingen and Noord-Beveland, and on April 19, 1797, Hulst itself fell under assault. The stronghold's garrison, commanded by Anthonie Scetz, Baron of Grobbendonck (1761-1835), resisted fiercely, but ultimately (April 23, 1797), it succumbed. The fall of Hulst completed the expulsion of Spamalkan forces from Zeeland. By the end of April 1797, Prince Maurice was preparing for the decisive move against Ostend.
  • March 27-
    • The Siege of Corunna, as previously mentioned, dragged on for more than a month, as the Holy Spamalkan Empire's forces under Admiral Alsonso de Bazan and the Duke of Medinia Sidonia sought to break the Laurasian hold over the star system. On February 26, 1797, Medinia Sidonia launched an offensive against Santiago de Compostela, attempting to drive the detachments of the 54th Imperial Marine Corps from that stronghold and to open a supply line to the Garrison of Corunna, which was commanded by Santiago Rodriguez, Duke of Lugo (1756-1814). This offensive move was blunted in the Battle of the Santiago de Compostela Fields (February 26-28, 1797), by the combined efforts of Lord Howardis of Effinga and Admiral Raleghia. On March 1, a Spamalkan move against Vigo and the Vigo Transit Highway, launched by Admiral de Bazan, also ended in failure. By March 5, Admiral Raleghia had stormed Maplica, Fisterra, and Cedeira, tpreventing Spamalkan ships from employing the hyperspace lanes into the Corunna star system. Four days later, he obtained a major victory in the Battle of Heuria, employing a flanking maneuver to disorient and destroy the convoy of Spamalkan galleys and transports. On March 15, the Duke of Medinia Sidonia launched a series of counteroffensives against Ferrol, Baiona, Calan, and Baeza, which ultimately ended at the Battle of Pedeira (March 17). On March 19, Admiral Raleghia blockaded the Spamalkan military garrison of Espasante, and by March 21, Laurasian units had finally penetrated Corunna's defenses. It was not until March 25, 1797, before the stronghold was completely secured by the forces of Admiral Duyenvoorde and Major-General Sir Franconius Verus. Nevertheless, the fall of Corunna posed a serious blow to the Spamalkan economy. The Emperor of Spamalka, whose financial resources had been exhausted, was forced, on April 2, 1797, to declare that the Empire could no longer meet its debt obligations and consequently, was in a state of formal bankruptcy once again.
    • This was the fourth time in his reign that Philicus was forced to make this declaration (after those of 1757, 1760, and 1775). As a result of the declaration of bankruptcy, the Spamalkan Treasury was absolved of its immediate debt obligations to the trustees and brokers of Madrid, Barcelona, Antwerp, Brussels, Milan, and Naparia, but consequently was forced to impose a elevated impuesto personal (personal tax), from 5% of disposable income to 27% of disposable income. This caused considerable strain in the Spamalkan real estate, commercial, and agricultural markets, raising the Empire's unemployment rate. The declaration of bankruptcy also had a substantial impact upon the Spamalkan ability to wage war. The Council of State announced on April 6 that all payments to the garrisons of Flanders, Brabant, Galicia, Valencia, and Milania would be temporarily suspended, and that the payments of those in Naparia, Aragon, Castille, Spamalkan Navarre, and the Basques would be placed on "deferred" status. Spamalkan troops now lost morale and began to protest against their superiors. They were no longer as capable as before of waging war with their foreign enemies, giving the decisive advantage to Laurasia and her allies. The weeks after the declaration of bankruptcy saw rapid gains for the Laurasian Empire's military forces in Galicia.
    • Camarinas fell to Lord Howardis of Effinga on March 28, 1797; two days later, Admiral Raleghia stormed Espasante, consolidating Laurasian control over the Corunna regions. By April 5, Laurasian units had secured Carino, capturing more than 60,000 tons worth of Spamalkan military supplies and equipment. On April 6, Admiral de Bazan, whose commands to his naval units were now largely flouted, was forced to abandon Ourense to Lord Howardis of Effinga. From this star system, Howardis seized Beade, Beriz, Baltar, and Avion (April 8-14, 1797), penetrating as far as 30,000 light years into the interior of the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions. On April 18, 1797, the Skirmish of Allariz ended in victory for General Verus, whose forces repelled frontal assaults by Spamalkan tercios, and quickly stormed their command positions, taking advantage of their disorientation and lower motivation. Banos de Molgos was besieged the following day, and fell on April 22, with Admiral de Bazan unable to relieve the garrison due to Laurasian raids against Cortegalda and Cartelle. Both of those star systems were soon in enemy hands as well, and on April 29, the Spamalkan garrison of Gomesende mutinied, surrendering to Lord Howardis in exchange for guaranteed payment. The garrisons of A Gudina, Entrimo, and Esgos surrendered to Howardis the following day, for similar promise of payment. Thus, by May 1797, allied forces were preparing for offensives against Redondela and Ames, among the major remaining Spamalkan systems in Galicia.
  • April 5-
    • On March 3, 1797, shortly after Dole was subdued by the 9th Royal Franconian Fleet, King Hensios IV of Franconia, determined to expel his Spamalkan adversaries from Franche-Comte, launched a major offensive against Bescanon. Prince de Conti, who had now been engaged in repelling Spamalkan expeditions against Dijon, Grenoble, and Mulhouse, advanced on Bescanon from the galactic-south; the Duke of Bouillon from the Ardennian Worlds; and the King of Franconia himself from Jura and Belfort. Within hours, Bescanon, which had already suffered severe damage from allied raiding expeditions at Chaumount, Mirecourt, and St. Die, was surrounded. General del Avila, who had managed to storm Franconian positions at Charmes (March 1, 1797) and then blockaded Luneville (March 3), now attempted to launch, in conjunction with Admiral Coloma, a counteroffensive to sunder the Franconian lines. He penetrated to Colmes (March 8) and two days later, destroyed a Franconian-Laurasian force, detached by Field-Marshal Norria, in the Battle of Donon. He subsequently reached Wissembourg, and from there, launched a swift move towards Mulhouse, intent on storming that stronghold and forcing Hensios to terminate his siege of Bescanon. This effort failed, however, and on March 14, 1797, de Conti, hastening from Bescanon, intercepted and defeated del Avila decisively in the Battle of Samaburg. On March 18, he drove Spamalkan units from Donon and Wissmebourg, and on March 21, forced General del Avila to retreat back towards Doullens. The following day, Bescanon finally surrendered to King Hensios, entrenching Franconian forces in the heart of Franche-Comte. Colmes was shortly afterwards recovered, and on March 27, the Duke of Bouillon stormed both Charmes and Luneville, consolidating his gains of the previous months over del Avila. Montbeliard capitulated after a quick Franconian assault (March 29, 1797), and on March 31, Lons-le-Saunier surrendered to King Hensios.
    • Oricourt's fall on April 2, 1797, completed the expulsion of Spamalkan units from Franche-Comte; the entire Duchy was now occupied by Franconian forces. Just two days later, however, the Spamalkan Governor of Doullens, Hernando Tello Porto Carrero (1750-97), proposed to Duke Albert that a surprise offensive be launched against Amiens, Dury, Cantigny, Villers, and the Franconian Somme Colonies. The Duke, who sought to secure his control of Calais, and to pose a threat to the Franconian rear in Normandy, decided to approve this proposed offensive. He ordered the Count of Fuentes to provide reinforcements to the Governor, and for there to be no delay. Spamalkan agents on Amiens, disguised as Franconian merchants, disabled the world's shield generators, giving Governor Carrero the time to blockade and overrun the star system's defenses (April 5, 1797). Within hours, Amiens was in the hands of the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Governor Carrero now quickly stormed Dury (April 9); Cantigny (April 10-11); Villers (April 12); Bretonneux (April 14); and Montdidier (April 15-18), penetrating beyond the Somme and posing a renewed threat to Abbeville, Caen, and St. Quentin, all of which were now in Franconian hands. The King of Franconia, who had focused his efforts on subduing the remaining Spamalkan outposts in the Upper Jours Region, was alerted immediately of the Spamalkan offensives. He now hastened back to Parri (April 22, 1797), and assembled his military forces for a swift counteroffensive against the Spamalkan positions. On April 25, the King, who had placed the Duke of Chateau-Thierry in command of his naval formations, and Field-Marshal Norria of the allied military detachments, departed from Parri. Repelling a Spamalkan offensive against Chaulines (April 26, 1797), he cut off the supply lines from Doullens and appeared directly at the outskirts of the Amiens star system. The Spamalkans were taken by surprise at the speed of the Franconian reaction, having not prepared for such a swift move. As a consequence, the garrison of Amiens found itself totally unprepared. They made many unsuccessful attacks against Franconian siege lines, but by the early weeks of May 1797, Franconian forces had already regained the advantage.
  • April 26-On March 4, 1797, Vice-Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia, who had received additional reinforcements from the Imperial General Headquarters, moved his forces against Icanti, determined to storm this major colonial stronghold of the Holy Spamalkan Empire, and to apply pressure to Spamalkan military positions in the Guatemalan and Nicaraguan Sectors. The ensuing Siege of Icanti (March 4-11, 1797), witnessed several vain efforts by Admiral Zubiaur and by Spamalkan General Carlos de Amesquita (who had commanded the daring Caucasian Raid of 1795), to break the Laurasian lines and to force Admiral Langatonia to halt the siege. Ultimately, however, Icanti's fall on March 11 dealt a ruinous blow to the Spamalkan strategic position. Jacque and Ipeti fell in quick succession to Langatonia (March 13-19, 1797), and on March 22, he ruined Admiral Zubiaur in the Battle of the David Approaches,retaining that stronghold for the Laurasian Empire's military forces. Gualaca was then assaulted on March 23, and fell within three hours of the first Laurasian appearance. Garachine followed on March 29, 1797, with General Amesquita's effort to blockade the Laurasian Headquarters of Garachine Main being repelled by a series of coordinated Laurasian turning maneuvers. Kanir-Dup proved to be harder, and was placed under siege from April 1. It did not fall until April 12, 1797, during which time, Admiral Langatonia secured control of the Spamalkan garrisons of Churranchao and Palencia. On April 17, 1797, San Miguel Petapa surrendered to Langatonia, and four days later, he earned further distinction in the Battle of Ayampuc, inflicting a ruinous defeat upon Zubiaur and Spamalkan Garrison General Luis Esteadies (1760-1805). By the end of April 1797, Spamalkan units had been driven from Say Raymando, Catarina, and San Pedro, consolidating Laurasian dominance over the regions surrounding Guatemala Prime.
  • May 16-
    • Having expelled Spamalkan units from Zeeland, the forces of Prince Maurice of Nassau now proceeded directly to the subjection of Ostend. On May 2, 1797, having stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Staden and Ruiselede, they approached the outskirts of Ostend. Ostend, which in 1797 had a population of more than 36 billion, was one of the last remaining commercial entrepots of note under the control of the Holy Spamalkan Empire in Flanders. Dominated by the Asterlian Spaceport, and with connections to Brussels, Antwerp, Bruges, Ghent, Niewpoort, and other such strongholds, capture of this stronghold would be essential to securing Durthian supply lines into the Pale of Calais. Prince Maurice had assembled a substantial force to conduct the siege. This force was comprised of the 9th and 11th Durthian Fleets; detachments from the 66th and 67th Imperial Fleets of the Laurasian Empire; and the 4th Durthian Expeditionary Force. Prince Maurice had at his disposal more than a million personnel of the Durthian States and Imperial Laurasian Armies, and almost three hundred warships. Lieutenant-General Sir Thomasius Baskrania commanded the landing corps and armed forces, while the Prince of Orange's subordinates, Frederick van Dorp (1758-1809), Char'va van der Noop (1752-1820), Jacques der Meer (1759-1819), and Jar van Loon (1764-1824), directed the blockade and the naval efforts. The Prince himself coordinated the Siege of Ostend from his newly-established headquarters on Kortemark. The garrison of Ostend was commanded by Spamalkan General Medro de Cavahilla (1735-97), who received support from Admiral Coloma (still engaged in operations against Franconian forces in the Ardennian Worlds) and from Duke Albert himself. The Spamalkans were determined not to sacrifice this stronghold, and as a result, the Siege of Ostend dragged on for most of the month. On May 5, Duke Albert, who sought to penetrate to Roosevelt and Lingen, thereby disrupting Durthian communications lanes, launched an offensive against Ghent, Louvien, and Leuthen.
    • Although he managed to briefly storm the defenses of Ghent (May 5-11, 1797); isolated Louvien (May 14); and penetrated as far as Gronlo and Axel (May 15, 1797), he was ultimately defeated by General Baskrania in the Battle of Zeebruges (May 16). Spamalkan units were driven from Ghent the following day, and the Battle of Montaigne (May 19, 1797), prevented Spamalkan units from penetrating further into the Ardennian Worlds. On May 20, Garrison General de Cavahilla launched a series of strikes against the allied siege positions, managing to penetrate to the Communications Center and force Admiral van der Noop to shift his positions. By May 23, however, after Louvien had been secured by General Baskrania, the tide had turned against the Durthian garrison. That day, Ostend's shields were breached by Admiral der Meer, and General Baskrania (returning from his pursuit of Spamalkan forces), ordered for landings in the 2nd, 4th, and 19th Quadrants of Ostend. These were widely dispersed across the planetary surface, allowing for an allied offensive against all Spamalkan positions and fortresses on the world. The Ostend Valleys and Stene City were both stormed on the first day of the landings; Zandvoorde City on May 24; and then Mariakrele on May 27. By May 28, the Ostend Command Citadel had been surrounded by allied troops.
    • General de Cavahilla, who had been unable to escape the star system, now commanded the last stand of the Spamalkan troops in the Command Citadel. It was not until May 31 before the Citadel was stormed, with de Cavahilla dying in the last struggle with the Laurasian and Durthian units. The allied forces, however, suffered a serious loss of their own accord. General Baskrania, who had himself commanded the last moves by Laurasian troops, was seriously wounded by a Spamalkan concussion grenade. He was taken to the bridge of his flagship, the IMS Passadia. Despite the best efforts of his physicians, Baskrania died on June 4, 1797, at the age of 53. Empress Aurelia, when she was informed of Baskrania's death, declared that "the Lord Almitis has decided, at this important juncture, to deprive us of a commander most faithful, most diligent, and most prudent." On the Empress's orders, Baskrania's body was transported to Picqguiny in Picardy, and from there, on June 11, 1797, back across the Galactic Void to the Caladarian Galaxy. A proclamation lauding the General's merits was issued from the Quencilvanian Palace, and on June 15, he was given a ceremonial funeral at St. Catherine's Cathedral in Christiania. He would eventually be interred in the Imperial Military Cemetery of Christopher.
    • On the day of his ceremonial funeral, the Empress promoted Baskrania to the posthumous rank of Field-Marshal. She had no idea that Baskrania's death would soon be followed by another, among her most essential military commanders. However, their deaths would bring into the theater the Empire's most prominent and popular military commander, who would contribute to the rapid collapse in Spamalkan fortunes. As regards to the course of events immediately following Baskrania's death, June 1797 witnessed a series of victories for Prince Maurice. On June 5, 1797, Heuvelland, which had long posed an irritation to Durthian forces at Gravelines and Rotterdam, fell to a swift offensive by Count William Louis of Groningen. During the next four days, he stormed the Durthian garrisons of Mesen, Windgene, and Oeselkamp. On June 12, 1797, Admiral Cordoba suffered a disastrous defeat in the Battle of Rellenberg; as a result of this, Spamalkan supply lines to Bruges finally collapsed. That major stronghold fell into Prince Maurice's hands on June 17, with assistance from Laurasian Major-General Sir Caelius Kutzarania (veteran of the War in Defense of the Constitution and the Koscizuko Revolt), who had assumed the temporary supreme command of the Empire's forces in the Durthian frontier. On June 19, Admiral Cordoba was pursued to Diksmuide, with Spamalkan units having been expelled from the outskirts of Ypres. The ensuing Battle of Diksmuide (June 19-21, 1797), ended with Cordoba becoming a Laurasian prisoner of war.
    • This deprived Duke Albert of one of his chief military commanders. De Haan, Bredene, and Dentergem fell into Durthian-Laurasian hands (June 22-24, 1797), and on June 28, Cerfontaine fell to Prince Maurice. Namurs was now threatened by the allied forces. This threat was amplified with the Durthian seizure of Hastiere, Hamois, Walcourt, and Yvor (June 29-July 3, 1797). On July 4, 1797, Duke Albert attempted a counteroffensive at Mechelen, Middleburg, and Goes which came to naught in the Battle of Rochefort. Orhaye then fell into allied possession, and on July 9, 1797, Namurs itself, which had been under Spamalkan control for twenty years (since its seizure by Don John of Austarlia), fell under siege from the forces of Prince Maurice and General Kutzarania. The Siege of Namurs dragged on for the following weeks, as Duke Albert and Admiral Coloma launched a series of strikes against Laurasian forces at Dinant, Covey, Gembloux, and Florennes. On July 16, the Duke of Caria barely evaded capture when a Laurasian starfighter detachment overran his convoy at Beauraing. Berhare then fell (July 18, 1797), depriving Albert of any means to relieve the pressure on Namurs. Namurs itself finally surrendered (July 24, 1797), dealing a serious blow to the Spamalkan position in Wallonia. By the end of July 1797, Prince Maurice had also seized Zwolle, Wachtendonk, and Mulheim, penetrating perilously close to Cologne.
  • May 27-
    • While the forces of Prince Maurice of Nassau and his Laurasian allies made substantial gains in the Durthian Duchies, with the Siege of Ostend and the expulsion of all remaining Spamalkan units from Zeeland, those of King Hensios IV of Franconia and Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria completed the virtual destruction of the Spamalkan position in Picardy and the Ardennian Worlds. As was noted above, Duke Albert had approved for a surprise offensive against Amiens and the Somme Colonies, in the hopes of punching a hole through the Franconian lines and forcing the diversion of Franconian forces from Franche-Comte. This would allow for the Holy Spamalkan Empire to recover that territory and for a renewed threat to be posed in Champagne and the Orleans Region. In spite of the Spamalkan ambitions, and their first initial, successful moves, the offensive ultimately ended in failure. Amiens itself was under siege by King Hensios, the Duke of Chateau-Thierry, and Field-Marshal Norria. Governor Carrero found that his forces, which had been spread thin and had been focused on offensive, not defensive capabilities, could not resist the allied advance.
    • On May 4, 1797, King Hensios launched the final direct offensive into the Amiens star system. Within hours, the weak and paltry Spamalkan defenses collapsed, and Field-Marshal Norria commanded a successful land offensive against Amiens City. Governor Carrero himself, commanding operations from his flagship, the Bourdjia, was surrounded by a Laurasian starfighter squadron. Cut off from his supply routes, he vainly sought to punch through Laurasian lines. His enemies however, outgunned and outnumbered him, and by the early hours of the afternoon, the Governor and his main subordinates were dead, the bridge of the Bourdjia destroyed by a string of phylon torpedoes. The citizens and authorities of Amiens, who had been compelled into cooperation with the Spamalkans, quickly surrendered, and Amiens was soon back in firm Franconian control. Giolamo Caraffa (1764-1833), Marquess of Montenegro and a former subordinate of the Duke of Parma, now became Governor of Doullens, with the rank of Captain-General. Caraffa, however, found that the allied forces were not to be stopped. On May 11, Villers was recovered by Field-Marshal Norria and the Duke of Chateau-Thierry in a surprise operation.
    • Spamalkan units were soon expelled from Montdider and Bretonneux (May 12-18, 1797), and on May 20, Governor Caraffa's attempted move against Le Cateau ended in ruinous failure at the Battle of Peronne. Cantigny surrendered on May 23, followed by Dury two days later. Then on May 27, 1797, the Battle of Jurigny ended in a decisive victory for Prince de Conti and the Duke of Bouillon. Nearly 75,000 Spamalkan troops died during their vain landings on Jurigny's surface. Most importantly, Spamalkan General Juan del Avila, who had long been a thorn in the side of the allies, was finally captured. Bound in chains, he was treated with great respect by de Conti and Bouillon, who recognized his tactical prowess. On June 2, 1797, King Hensios, assembling his forces at Le Cateau, Avennes, Guise, Auinoye, Maubauge, Peronne, Arras, Vimy, and Douai, launched a major offensive against Cambrai. This world, one of the chief strongholds of the Durthian Duchies, stood out as an enclave in Franconian Picardy, and it was the King's goal to erase this cancer from the surface of his kingdom. The Count of Fuentes himself commanded the garrison of Cambrai, and had his units stationed at Bavay, Bergues, and Lewerde, attempting to block an allied advance. Although King Hensios and the Duke of Montpensier were held up at Bavay (June 5, 1797), and a Spamalkan move against Lilles briefly threatened to cut off Maubeuge and Auionye from the Franconian forces (June 6-8), Hensios ultimately reached the outskirts of Cambrai on June 10.
    • The Siege of Cambrai commenced that day, and lasted for the next seventeen days. The Count of Fuentes continued to prove himself a skilled adversary. Although Bergues and Lewerde quickly fell into Franconian hands, Bavay proved far more resilient, and Fuentes launched a constant series of scorpion attacks and flanking maneuvers to keep Franconian corps and fleets off balance. The Duke of Montpensier's first move against the Cambrai Mounts ended in defeat (June 14, 1797), and on June 16, Fuentes even captured a Franconian dreadnought, employing it to devastating effect on Franconian offensive lines. The power of the allied forces ultimately proved great. Bavay eventually fell on June 19, and two days later, the Franconian siege turbocannon finally succeeded in breaking down Cambrai's shields. A landing then followed, but it was not until June 24 before the Cambrai Mounts were finally overrun. On June 26, the Count of Fuentes himself managed to flee from Cambrai, leaving the remainder of the garrison at the hands of the allied forces. Governor Fe'ro de Hero of Cambrai (1760-1817) surrendered to King Hensios the following day. The Siege of Cambrai had therefore ended in victory for the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and the Laurasian Empire. By that point, however, Laurasian Field-Marshal Norria's health had entered a serious decline.
  • June 17-On June 17, 1797, King Georg IV of Vendragia, who had reigned for just three years, died at the age of thirty-five. The King's extravagant lifestyle and gluttonous eating habits had taken a severe toll on his physical health. By 1795, the King of Vendragia's weight had exceeded more than three hundred Vendragian tons, which was considered far in excess of the normal weight of a Vendragian male. He suffered from feral gout, porphyria, dropsy, and the infamous Cragnite condition, which was one of the most feared diseases for the Vendragian species. His bulk had grown to such an extent that he had to move about in a hoverchair. It was therefore no surprise to any of his subjects, or to foreign observers, when they learned of the King's demise. He was now succeeded by his ten-year old daughter, Charavia, who became Queen of Vendragia and Irvania, Electoress of Hanover, and Sovereign of the Ameridinian Colonies (r. 1797-1817). Because of Charavia's age, her uncle, the late King's younger brother, Willag, Duke of Cumba and York (1763-1827), became Regent of the Kingdom. Georg's death was received with the proper condolences from foreign sovereigns, including Empress Aurelia of Laurasia. He was not, however, that much of a respected sovereign. Georg was formally buried at Windsor Crypt on Frogmore, on June 22, 1797.
  • June 23-
    • By June 1797, the forces of the Laurasian Empire had made substantial gains in both Galicia and in the Spamalkan Colonial Territories. At the same time, the Earl of Estatius, who had finally gained Empress Aurelia's agreement to his resumption of his military duties in the campaigns against Spamalka, was making preparations for his departure. By the beginning of May 1797, Admiral Langatonia's forces, having secured the chief strongholds of the Guatemala Sector, had embarked upon a siege of Guatemala Prime. The Guatemalan outposts of Pradilla and Sevhrila were stormed by Langatonia's corps (May 3-9, 1797), and on May 11, he repelled a Spamalkan counteroffensive, launched by Admiral Zubiaur, in the Battle of Mixco. Two days later, Langatonia stormed Amatitlan, thereby depriving the Spamalkans of their last significant outpost ahead of Guatemala Prime. The Admiral's forces reached the outskirts of the star system on May 16, 1797. Quickly blockading all supply routes into the star system, Langatonia organized detachments of the 49th, 66th, and 67th Imperial Fleets for a direct offensive against the Guate Straits. Within a day of combat, the Straits had been secured. The naval garrison of Guatemala Prime, under the command of Commodore Rodoflo Herliez (1745-1801), found itself unable to threaten the Laurasian offensive lines, or to blunt the moves made by Laurasian warships in the Straits. Commodore Herilez launched a futile assault at La Aurora (May 19-21, 1797), which ultimately ended in failure and with the destruction of thirty Spamalkan galleys. Herilez himself barely evaded capture on his starfighter, and was able to flee the star system ahead of the bombardment of Guatemala Prime's shields.
    • This bombardment commenced during the early hours of May 22. The world's shields, assailed by a hail of fire from Laurasian turbocannon and ion disruptors, proved unable to resist. On May 26, 1797, the shields were penetrated, and Laurasian troops under Brigadier-General Sir Metronius Aver (1757-1818) quickly made their descent onto the planetary surface. After two further days of fighting, the Guatemala Central Citadel was stormed, and on May 30, the Governor of Guatemala Prime, Count Ricardo Anjona of Tilwana (1743-1834), formally surrendered. With the fall of Guatemala Prime, Admiral Langatonia was now free to launch offensives into the Nicaraguan and Honduran Sectors. Jinotega (May 31-June 2) and Esteli (June 4), fell swiftly into Laurasian hands. On June 6, Spamalkan Admiral Tedro de Bonha (1755-1836) launched a counteroffensive against Palencia, San Miguel Petapa, and Gualaca, attempting to cut a hole in the Laurasian communications and supply lines.
    • Although he managed to briefly overrun the latter two strongholds (June 6-9, 1797), he was ultimately cornered and defeated by Langatonia in the Battle of Willico (June 12, 1797), maintaining the Laurasian strategic position in the Panamanian and Guatemalan Sectors. Langatonia subsequently cleared Spamalkan units from San Miguel Petapa and Gualaca, and on June 17, captured Masaya, one of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's chief agricultural colonies. Two days later, Laurasian forces, blockading Tipitapa, advanced to Leon, which had served as a major Spamalkan military arsenal for more than a century. The Battle of Leon (June 23-24, 1797), which again pitted Langatonia against de Bonha, resulted in a decisive Laurasian victory. De Bonha was captured; on June 29, Tipitapa surrendered to the Laurasian Empire. The following day, Langatonia launched a swift, and surprise assault upon San Pedro Sula, quickly storming that stronghold. As July 1797 opened, the Laurasians seriously threatened Matagalpa and Managua, the two most populous systems in the Nicaraguan Sector. In the meantime, in the Galician Provinces, events had continued to advance in Laurasian favor.
    • On May 2, 1797, Lord Howardis of Effinga and Admiral Sir Walterius Raleghia had held a strategic conference on Ferrol, deciding to launch a string of offensives against Redondela and Ames without the slightest delay. Repelling a Spamalkan move against Sancular de Barrameda (May 5, 1797), and securing the defenses of Lugo in the Skirmish of Billabo (May 7), Lord Howardis advanced against the Spamalkan stronghold of Vilagarcia de Arousa (May 8-11, 1797). The Siege of Villagarcia de Arousa lasted for three days, and despite Admiral Alonso de Bazan's constant raids against Algecircas, Cadiz, and Medinia-Sidonia, the world ultimately fell to Laurasian forces. On May 15, Howardis obtained another victory in the Battle of Ponteareas, blunting Spamalkan moves to reinforce Redondela. Two days later, Admiral Raleghia, penetrating from his headquarters on Santiago de Compostela, cleared Spamalkan garrisons from Rixas de Barreiras and Pontevedra, and reached the northern outskirts of Redondela. Lord Howarids approached from the south, and the stronghold fell under blockade from the Empire's forces. The Siege of Redondela lasted for the remainder of the month, as Admiral Martin de Padilla, who had managed to halt Laurasian raids into the Basques, and had reinforced the garrison of Cangas de Onias and Cangos de la Narcea, sought to blunt the Laurasian offensive moves.
    • Ultimately, on May 30, 1797, after Admiral Raleghia and Lord Thomasius Howardis had defeated de Padilla's last move in the Battle of the Lower Ourense, the world's defenses were breached. Within a day, Redondela was in the hands of the Laurasian Empire. Ames, which found itself now virtually surrounded by Laurasian forces, proved an easy target; it fell on June 3. By June 7, Admiral Raleghia had seized Gijon, preventing Admiral de Padilla from renewing his moves into Inner Galicia, depriving the Spamalkans of one of their chief strongholds, and establishing an allied foothold in Asturias. This was now coupled, during June 1797, with Laurasian offensives and expeditions from Navarra into the Basques. By June 15, Laurasian forces had stormed the Spamalkan strongholds of Getxo, Irun, and Barakaldo, benefiting from the support given to them by the native Basquerians, who had long resented the Holy Spamalkan Empire's rule. Although a move by Lord Howardis against Llanes and Mieres ended in failure (June 18, 1797), and Admiral de Padilla even managed to recover Gijon for a time (June 22-26, 1797), the supremacy of Laurasian forces in Galicia was all but assured. By the end of the month, Howardis and General Verus had driven Spamalkan units from Cambra, Cinzo de Limla, Vereda, and Ribadavidia, all but expelling the Holy Spamalkan Empire from that region.
    • It was in the midst of all of this that the Earl of Estatius now made his return to military service. On May 7, 1797, more than a month following his appointment as Master of the Imperial Ordnance by Empress Aurelia, the Earl invited his political rivals, Lord Treasurer Burghley and his son Chancellor Cecilis, as well as Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia and Procurator-General Egertonia, to a private dinner at Estatius House, in Christiania. At this dinner, the Earl entertained his guests lavishly, expending more than €50.5 million dataries in one night, money that he could hardly afford to dispense with, to impress upon them his opinions. Burghley and Cecilis now agreed to help advance the Earl's claims further, believing that his distraction with the glories of military service would reduce the threat he posed to their influence at the Imperial Court. Six days later, the Lord Treasurer suggested to the Empress that she promote Estatius to the rank of Field-Marshal, and entrust him with absolute command over the Empire's ground forces in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions. He also suggested that Estatius be given precedence above her cousin, Lord Howardis of Effinga, in the order of the military campaigns. Empress Aurelia, who at this point thought that she had yielded enough by giving Estatius the Mastership of the Ordnance, and by permitting him to return to military service, was at first reluctant. For several days, she refused to consider any promotion. Ultimately, on May 22, the Empress was informed that the Earl had fallen "violently ill" at Estatius House, and that he was in great physical discomfort. At this, Aurelia rushed to her favorite's bedside again, staying with him for the entire night.
    • The following day, she returned to the Quencilvanian Palace, her opinion completely changed. On May 27, 1797, the Empress formally announced to the Privy Council her intention to formally promote Estatius to the rank of Field-Marshal, and to name him as supreme commander of her Empire's forces in the Hereditary Dominions. Estatius, pleased to learn of this impending promotion, quickly emerged from his "sickness". Four days later, in a formal ceremony at the Diplomatic Palace, Aurelia formally raised the Earl to the rank of Field-Marshal. Estatius, who was now confident of his position, persuaded the Empress, on June 6, 1797, to restore Sir Walterius Raleghia to his position as Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners. She did so, and in a communique to the Admiral himself, informed him that, upon completing his military duties, he would be free to attend her once again at the Imperial Court. Raleghia expressed his gratitude, but he was not to enjoy the same favor as before. Estatius now hurled himself into the preparations for his departure, and on June 13, 1797, the General Headquarters informed Lord Howardis and Admiral Raleghia of the Earl's impending arrival, and of his commission of supreme command.
    • Ten days later (June 23, 1797) the Earl made his fond leave of the Empress at Tudoria (the Court was again at the Gilbertine Palace, in anticipation of that year's progress). They exchanged affectionate communiques over the next few days as the Earl proceeded to Belkadan, and then to the Galactic Void. He addressed her as his "most dear and admired sovereign" and telling her that "since words be not able to interpret for me, then to your imperial dear heart I appeal. I will strive to be worthy of so high a grace, and so blessed happiness. I am tied to Your Majesty by more ties than ever was subject to a prince." The Empress sent him gifts and a portrait of herself for his flagship. She told him that he should "remember that who does their best at this venture shall never receive any blame, but neither shall you find in us so rigorous a judge." Estatius finally reached the Galactic Void on June 26, 1797, and quickly proceeded to Vigo. He arrived there two days later, being greeted by Admiral Lord Thomasius Howardis. The Earl now proceeded to Baiona, establishing his command headquarters there on July 2, 1797. The Earl was accompanied by the young Earl of Southerton (who had been granted an honorary commission in the Imperial Laurasian Army on Estatius's initiative), by Sir Peter Ashelius, 1st Baron Ashleius of Katherine (1779-1852), Sir Antiochus Mansellia (1773-1856), and Sir Johanius Donneria (1772-1831). The first months of Estatius's renewed involvement would see a further string of Laurasian victories. This would be followed by a series of failures, however, which would arouse the Empress's anger against Estatius and lead to his recall.
  • July 4-
    • Following the conquest of Cambrai, the attention of the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia shifted to securing Bergues and Lewerde, two of the major remaining Spamalkan strongholds in the Pale of Calais (besides Calais itself). The Duke of Montpensier destroyed a Spamalkan force at Drocourt (June 27-29, 1797), and on July 1, humiliated Admiral Coloma in the Battle of Le Brosee, securing that stronghold for the allied forces. The following day, allied forces began to advance in the direction of Lewerde, having secured their rear against any enemy assaults. It was at this juncture, however, that Field-Marshal Norria, whose health had already entered a decline, lapsed completely into illness. During the late hours of July 1, the Field-Marshal had complained of pains in his head, back, and chest. By the middle hours of the following day, just as allied forces were advancing on Lewerde, Norria collapsed from a stroke attack and fell into unconsciousness. King Hensios, who had come to regard the chief Laurasian commander in the Franconian theater with much respect, and was genuinely concerned, therefore, about his situation, ordered for Norria to be transported immediately to the Field Hospital of Vimy. The Field-Marshal arrived there during the early hours of July 3, being attended by his younger brother, Colonel Sir Thomasius Norria (1756-99). His condition declined further, and his physicians soon discovered that he had contracted the Gangrathian syndrome, one of the rarest physical conditions in extra-galactic civilization. This condition had no effective treatment, and had the capability of destroying the body's immunity system in short order. Furthermore, the physicians discovered that Norria had been suffering from the disease for more than four months. They could therefore do nothing for him.
    • On July 4, 1797, Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, one of the Laurasian Empire's most successful military commanders of the eighteenth century, died at the Field Hospital on Vimy, aged only fifty. Norria's death was greeted with much sadness, and news of it spread quickly through the Galactic Holonet. King Hensios IV, who had continued the advance against Lewerde by storming Oviliers and La Boiselle, expressed his sincere condolences when informed of the Field-Marshal's death. Norria's fellow associates of war, the Dukes of Montpensier, Chateau-Thierry, and Bouillon, as well as Prince de Conti, also expressed sincere regrets over the Field-Marshal's passing. Even such an enemy as the Count of Fuentes declared that "never a more dedicated and loyal commander for any sovereign has existed than this Laurasian Field-Marshal, so lately past." The greatest reaction of all was from Empress Aurelia. The Empress, who had been told of Norria's declining physical condition, burst into tears when informed of his passing. She declared that "everyone of importance is being taken. First my beloved Lord of Leicesterius, then my ministers, and now my generals!" Frosbisherius, Rumanstevius, Hawkius, and Baskrania had all died; now Norria too was gone. In a proclamation to the Imperial Court (July 5, 1797), formally announcing Norria's death, the Empress declared that "this personage has benefited our Empire through his victories against the Spamalkan fiends. He has, through his service to us and to our realms, ensured for himself an everlasting fame and a honorable place in the realms of the After-Life."
    • Aurelia sent her sincere condolences to the parents (long good friends of hers), who had already lost three of their six children: "We couple you together from desire that all the comfort we wish you may reach you both in this bitter accident. We were loath to write at all, lest we should give you fresh occasion of sorrow, but could not forbear, knowing your religious obedience to Him whose strokes are unavoidable. We propose ourselves as an example, our loss being no less than yours." The Empress ordered the Court into a day of mourning for Field-Marshal Norria; herself donned black garments; and on July 7, ordered for the Field-Marshal's body to be transported back to Laurasia Prime. Three days later, Norria's body arrived at the capital world, and he was, on July 15, 1797, given a great ceremonial funeral at the Westphalian Cathedral. Four days later, Norria was buried at his family's estate, Yatternden Mansion, on Apathama Vixius. In spite of Field-Marshal Norria's death, allied forces made further decisive gains against the Spamalkans. On July 6, 1797, two days following the Field-Marshal's demise, King Hensios reached Lewerde, finally placing the stronghold under siege. The Siege of Lewerde lasted for ten days, as the Governor of the stronghold, Mateo de Surarez, Count de Borno (1745-97), with support from the Count of Fuentes, sought to blunt all further allied moves into the star system, and even managed to drive allied warships from the Lewerde Entrance Ways. On July 14, 1797, however, the inhabitants of Lewerde revolted against the Spamalkan garrison, disabling the planetary shield generators and allowing for King Hensios to land his troops, under the command of the Duke of Montpensier. Lewerde fell within two days, and Count de Borno himself was killed in the last confrontations. Bergues was then assaulted by Montpensier and Chateau-Thierry. Its fall (July 21, 1797), therefore left Calais isolated. Ligue and d'Arqg fell (July 22-27, 1797), and on July 28, Montpensier arrived at Dunkirk, determined to prepare his forces for the final move on Calais. As August 1797 opened, Calais and Doullens were the only remaining strongholds of note under Spamalkan control in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia.
  • July 24-November 10-
    • On July 24, 1797, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court departed from the Gilbertine Palace on Tudoria to commence the official progress of 1797. The Empress had originally planned to depart on July 9, but had deferred this date out of respect for the grieving Norrias. Three months earlier, the Empress had announced that her progress this year would be to her newly-acquired Ochanian Provinces in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. She was determined to survey for herself these star systems which had now been under the Empire's jurisdiction for more than five years. The Empress paid brief visits to several of the major strongholds of the lower Rebeccan Galactic Trade Route. This included Kigonia, Chancia, Katherine, Rebecca, Durglais, Martina Mccasia, Mariah, and Blackria (July 24-31, 1797). On August 2, 1797, the Empress proceeded to Sair, and from there to the Larkian Way. This would allow for a rapid progress to the Corporate Sector. The Court passed through the systems of Zoe, Eaidon, Leopoldia, Frederickslandia, Big Twinny, Greyson, Lawson, Mocktrialis, Capone, and the outer Lacian Cluster (August 3-6, 1797). Finally, on August 8, 1797, the Court reached Andrea Doria. The Empress toured the Dorian Metallurgical Academy and visited the Observational Palace, remaining on the world for two days. From Andrea Doria, she visited Longmira, Gumpjenney, and Eightia (August 11-14, 1797); at Gumpjenney, the Empress found herself particularly amused by the antics of the Gumpian Company of Oceanic Players, one of the largest undersea performance acts in the Caladarian Galaxy. Eightia, on its part, impressed the Empress with its vast xillerite ranges, lush valleys, and animal reserves. Then on August 16, the Imperial Court reached Theodore, once capital of the Longmiran Kingdom, the most populous system in the Corporate Sector, and one of the Empire's chief strongholds in the Burglais Arm.
    • The Empress proceeded directly to the Palace of King Terry, which dated to the 8th century BH. By the late eighteenth century, Theodore had a population of more than twelve billion inhabitants. The planetary surface was covered with factories, urban sprawl, commercial parks, mining operations, and numerous high-rise habitation complexes. It was surrounded by a series of spaceports and artificial admission outposts. The world's surface was crowded with ore barges, freight haulers, passenger liners, military craft, and commercial vessels of every possible shape and size. Theodore was therefore known both for the beauty of its ancient architecture, and for its industrial significance. During her stay, the Empress was presented with a trophy of shollerian boranite, one of the rarest minerals produced in the Empire. Departing on August 19, she now proceeded direct across the Galactic Void to the outskirts of the Great Tesmanian Cloud, making her the first Laurasian monarch to ever visit that satellite galaxy. On August 22, 1797, the Court reached Liman, which was now one of the Empire's chief navigational spaceports. Although it had a population of only sixty-two million, Liman nevertheless impressed the Empress with the solid construction of its spaceport and docking facilities; the beauty of its beaches; and the rolling "effects" of its oceans. From Liman, the Court passed through Desna and on August 25, reached Fidonsi. This world, site of a major victory by Fleet Admiral Ushavious in 1788, was now a major naval headquarters and shipyard for the Imperial Laurasian Navy. The Empress was greeted at her arrival to the star system by Rear-Admiral Sir Ligonius Mereduthia (1751-1821), commander of the Fidonsi Specialized Construction Yards. She toured the automation lines of the Yards; presided over the commissioning ceremony of the dreadnought IMS Brethenia; and observed a stimulation of the Battle of Fidonsi (August 27, 1797). From Fidonsi, the Court subsequently proceeded to Ochania (August 28, 1797).
    • The Empress was greeted by the Governor of Ochania, Sir Constantine Tamius, 1st Baron Tamius of Navarino (1746-1816), and toured the renowned Ochania Stations, which had proven to be such a barricade to Laurasian advances the previous decade. She stayed at the Ochania High Tower; received tributes from the Marasharite and Haynsian quadrants on the world; and observed a performance at the Ochania Auditorium of the Greats. From Ochania, the Court progressed through Pildrin, Pirthen Adasi, and Del Valle (August 31-September 5, 1797). Del Valle, in particular, impressed the Empress with its Martial Academy of the Arts, now one of the chief military institutes in the Empire. Turutukai was then reached on September 6, and the Empress expressed her joy at being present of one of the sites of triumphs by her military forces over the Marasharites. She stayed there for two days, touring the Ramparian Construction Works and delivering a speech to the Guild of Tai. From here, the Court now moved through Vikhta, Grad, Hadjibey, and Kaushany (September 7-15, 1797). It was at Vikhta that the Empress celebrated her 64th birthday, receiving congratulations from all of her chief courtiers. The Empress's visit to Hadjibey on September 11 was particularly memorable, with Aurelia declaring herself enthralled by the world's massive crystalline caverns and moss-formation islands. She subsequently reached Trans-Ruse (September 16, 1797), touring the Ruse Communications Terminal, which now served as a major gateway by Laurasian military, commercial, and diplomatic ships for easy access to the Galactic Void, the Lower Danube Military Highway, and the Peldavian Gateways. From Trans-Ruse, the Court visited Duros (September 18), whose substantial Bulganian population held on to their traditional customs; Kuchuk Kaynarca (September 19-21), where the Empress visited the Conference House, at which the Treaty of Kuchuk Kaynarca had been concluded twenty-three years earlier; Stauvachany (September 22), where a simulation of Munnich's victory there (1738) was staged for her benefit; Ivrim (September 23); and Focasani (September 26), site of Surovius's victory in 1789 and a major water source for the systems of the Great Tesmanian Cloud. She now decided to tour Silistra, Ruse, Shumen, Izmail, and Varna, which had been the most important strongholds of the Marasharite Empire in the Ochanian Provinces.
    • Silistra became the first of these systems to be graced with the Court's presence. On September 28, 1797, the Empress was welcomed into Silistra by a thunder of turbocannon and a procession of warships of the 61st Imperial Fleet at the Silistian Asteroid Belt. She then proceeded by Silistrian Star and to the world itself, with crowds of her subjects assembled on the Orbital Platforms. The Empress stayed at this system (which had 9 billion inhabitants in 1797) for two days, enthralled by its Bulganian and Marasharite architecture, customs, and language. She visited the historic Cathedral of Durostorum, the oldest edifice of the Almitian Church in the Great Tesmanian Cloud; the Byzzarian Palace of Emperor Basir the Great; the Livian Palace, constructed by Bulganian Emperor Ivan Asen I; the former Marasharite Command Citadel; and the Silistra Knoll, one of the largest preserves in the Empire. She also indulged in hunting in the Silistran Waists. Upon leaving Silistra on September 30, she proceeded immediately to Ruse. Ruse had a population of 4 billion (1797), and was known as the headquarters of numerous media outlets, including the Rousse Communications Channel, one of the largest private consortiums in the Empire. The Empress toured the Channel Tower, the Ruse Opera, the University of Ruse (established by imperial charter in 1794), and the Ruse Regional Historical Museum, all of which displayed the unmistakable signs of Marasharite and Bulganian influence. From Ruse, Shumen became her next destination (October 3-5, 1797). With a population of more than seventeen billion, it was an economic powerhouse, the headquarters of the Shipwrights Union of the Trans-Danube; site of the Empire's second-largest shipyard in the Great Tesmanian Cloud (only that at Chesma was larger); and possessed the Osumpler Drydocks, from which freighters and commercial convoys from throughout the Cloud congregated. The Empress then proceeded to Izmail (October 9-12, 1797), which had been subjected to a lengthy siege by Surovius and Ushavious back in 1790.
    • She was greeted there by the Governor-General of the Upper Ochanian Governorate, the newly-created Earl of Ochania, Sir Craterus Passidius (1758-1815), and by the High Pentarch of the Bulganian Order, Meres Cravailt (1739-1808). Aurelia toured the Izmail Fortress; went sportfishing with her courtiers in the Izmail Ponds; and was treated to numerous banquets, pageants, masques, and festivals in the streets of Izmail City. From Izmail, the Court proceeded now to Varna, the most populous of the Bulganian Colonies, and perhaps the most important system in the Upper Ochanian Provinces (October 14, 1797). The Rings of Varna Outer, which were now nearly a millennia old, greeted the Empress upon her first arrival. Varna Outer itself, known for its vast reserves of minerals, pearls, firenodes, and nova-crystals, proved a bedazzling sight from space. From there, the Empress proceeded to Varna proper, with the Dormotion of the Mother of Almitis Cathedral (1592); the Varna Command Citadel (1559); the Bulganian Baths of Draki (11th century AH); and the Archaeological Compounds (14th century AH), all impressing the Empress with their startling beauty and complexity.
    • The Empress proceeded to the Euxinograd Palace, one of the oldest Bulganian residences in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, which had been occasionally utilized by Marasharite Emperors up to the time of Sassas III. The Palace had more than 2,000 rooms and was dominated by a vast complex of gardens, observatories, and nature parks. The Court stayed on Varna for four days, as the Empress received submissions from her Bulganian subjects at the Debar School and visited the Laurasian cells of St. Nicholas and St. Athanasius, which had existed since the fifteenth century. She also visited the Marasharite Platforms of Pitra, formerly a slave processing market, which had now been transformed into a bazaar and marketplace. From Varna, the Court rapidly proceeded to Navarino (October 19, 1797), with the Empress reaching that stronghold in short order. Navarino, site of a decisive victory by Fleet Admiral Hawkius in 1770, saw visits by the Court to the Old and New Navarino Fortresses, the Morean Spaceport of Navarino, and the High Cross of Navarino. Chios, Lesbos, and Aldormeia were then visited (October 22-25, 1797). Finally, on October 28, the Empress reached Chesma, site of one of the Empire's most decisive naval victories. She visited the Chesma Spaceport and Dockyards, among the largest, busiest, and most impressive in her realms; witnessed a simulation of the Battle of Chesma (1770); and stayed at Chesma Castle, once resident to the Marasharite Viceroys of the star system. On November 5, 1797, the Court departed from Chesma, and the Empress now decided at this juncture to return promptly back to Laurasia Prime, in spite of not visiting the Caucasian Colonies. She declared those worlds, and the former Duchy of Northania and Semigallia, to be her goals for next year's progress. The Court proceeded rapidly across the Galactic Void, reaching Belkadan on November 8, and from there to the Larkian Way. On November 10, 1797, the Empress arrived at Laurasia Prime, utterly exhausted. Other matters however, now occurred: with the return of the Earl of Estatius. This was why she had come back to her capital world, as will be explained below.
  • August 9-
    • By the early days of August 1797, Prince Maurice of Nassau's Durthian forces were pushing towards Cologne, the Holy Spamalkan Empire's chief base of military operations in the Germanian Principalities. Maurice's attention however, was now fixed upon Rheinberg. Rheinberg had been fortified by Spamalkan troops since its seizure by the Pruthian mercenary-General, Ernest von Mansfield, in February 1790. On July 22, 1797, the Durthian States-General had instructed Prince Maurice to secure the allied position at Twente, and to penetrate into the Electorate of Cologne. This would complete the expulsion of Spamalkan forces from Eastern Flanders. Maurice's objective was now to seize Rheinberg and Meurs, and then head directly through eastern Flanders, with the goal of subjecting Grol and Oldenzaal. The conquest of Rheinberg, would in particular, increase the isolation of the remaining Spamalkan garrisons in Gelderland.
    • Proceeding from his military headquarters on Maastricht, Prince Maurice went to Arnhem, where on August 4, he was reinforced by his cousin, Count William Louis of Groningen. Count Louis brought with him the 55th Imperial Army under the command of Major-General Sir Horacius Verus (1765-1835), brother of Sir Franconius, and Brigadier-General Sir Antigonus Balferia (1763-1839). On August 10, after besieging and storming the Spamalkan garrison of Alphen, he approached the outskirts of Rheinberg. The Garrison of Rheinberg was commanded by Naparian General Camillo Sanchino (1755-1826). The star system was quickly surrounded by the allied forces with barricades. General Sanchino launched a series of counteroffensives against the Rheinberg Straits, with Count William Louis being wounded by turbolaser fire. Once the turbocannon batteries were installed, Rheinberg came under intensive fire from the allied forces. After ten days of blockade and bombardment, Sanchino, aware of the garrison's mutinous sentiments (due to the withholding of pay by Emperor Philicus and the Council of State), decided to negotiate a surrender.
    • On August 20, 1797, General Sanchino surrendered to the forces of the United Durthian States and Laurasian Empire, thereby handing Rheinberg into allied possession. With the capture of Rheinberg, Prince Maurice now had a direct route for further decisive offensives into Cologne and throughout Eastern Flanders. He stormed the Spamalkan garrison of Verviers (August 24) and inflicted a serious defeat upon Spamalkan General Francesco de Mendoza (1746-1823) in the Second Battle of the Lippe Straits (August 26, 1797). Three days later, Maurice headed towards Meurs. The garrison of Meurs had been reinforced by Count van den Bergh, who was now Governor of Upper Guelders, with more than 200,000 military personnel and detachments from the 7th Royal Spamalkan Fleet. Spamalkan General Andres de Miranda (1760-1840) commanded the garrison of Meurs, including the reinforcements. Upon his arrival, Maurice had Meurs besieged from two fronts. During the late hours of August 29, 1797, allied turbocannon razed the planetary shields. By the early hours of September 1, the world's shields had been breached, and Prince Maurice ordered General Verus to land his corps on the planetary surface. Within two days, most of the planet had been secured. General Miranda, realizing that further resistance was useless, surrendered (September 3, 1797). With the conquest of Meurs, which he had failed to seize nearly two years earlier, Maurice consolidated his grip over Mechelen, Leuven, Utrecht, and the Lippe Straits. From Meurs, he stormed Orsay (September 8); Bilburg (September 10-13); and Roche (September 14), completing the expulsion of Spamalkan units from the Western Cologne. From Roche, he now proceeded towards Groenlo. By that point, the Holy Spamalkan Empire had suffered further, humiliating losses in Franconia, which had led to the expulsion of Spamalkan forces from the Serene Kingdom's territory.
  • August 25-
    • Following the death of Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, Empress Aurelia had refrained for some weeks on the point of designating his successor. To the Empress, Norria was a commander "of such caliber and such prominence that it would not be so appropriate to replace him at such a quick juncture." Eventually, however, by the middle of July 1797, the Empress had been persuaded otherwise. Not only Lord Treasurer Burghley and her other advisers on the Privy Council, but also her own conscience compelled her to now choose one of the Empire's most victorious commanders to finish what Norria had started: Field-Marshal Lord Surovius of Rymnik. Ever since the suppression of the Koscizuko Revolt in 1794, Surovius had been at duty in the Great Amulak Spiral and the Great Tesmanian Cloud. He had formally resigned from his position as Viceroy of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth on June 4, 1796, supervising the withdrawal of all remaining Laurasian forces from the territories allocated to the Autocratic Pruthian and Holy Austarlian Empires. From this, he had been assigned back to his old post in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, serving as Governor-General of the Chesma Governorate from August 1796 to March 1797.
    • Surovius had then taken command of the Caucasian Colonies, overseeing their fortification in the aftermath of the Amesquita Raid of 1795. In May 1797, Surovius had returned to Laurasia Prime, once again hailed as a hero by the Imperial Court and by the Empire's subjects in that particular star system. Ever since his return, he had constantly petitioned the Empress to allow him to fight in the Spamalkan theater. At every audience, he would drop on his knees and state "Your Majesty, let me fight the Spamalkans!" The Empress would tell him to get up at every juncture, and to leave it alone. The Empress's reluctance eventually faltered, due to her realization that Surovius was, without question, her best military commander, and that denying him his opportunity to again wage military campaigns, this time against the Spamalkan foe, would be in itself self-destructive to the efforts of war. On July 23, 1797, Empress Aurelia declared to a session of the Imperial Privy Council that the death of Field-Marshal Norria had dealt "a blow to the morale and spirit of these dominions, for such a commander who had gained such a series of victories over our Empire's enemies fell to the hands of the Anti-Almitis."
    • At the same time, however, the continued run of successes by allied forces in Picardy and the Pale of Calais demonstrated that the Holy Spamalkan Empire, recently bankrupt and with its military resources pushed to the limits, was heading "further down the dark path of defeat." Therefore, on this day, the day before she departed for her progress to the Ochanian Provinces (as was previously noted), the Empress formally appointed Field-Marshal Surovius as the new supreme commander of all Laurasian forces in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and the Durthian Duchies. Surovius was in his personal bedchambers at the Old Royal Palace when a messenger from the Empress arrived. Bearing a communique for the 67-year old general, the messenger noticed that "Her Imperial Majesty has been pleased to call upon your services once again for the destruction of our Empire's foes." Surovius took the communique, calmly read it, and then announced his prompt readiness to depart for the ardors of war.
    • When the Imperial Court left Laurasia Prime the following day, the Field-Marshal accompanied them. With assistance from Lord Treasurer Burghley, he was able, on July 26, to obtain the Empress's further agreement to the re-assignment of Fleet Admiral Ushavious to the Franconian-Durthian theater. Ushavious had continued to command the Chesma Dockyards and the Bosporan Straits garrisons, and he was also determined to obtain further recognition through loyal military service to his sovereign. On July 29, 1797, after receiving further instructions from the Imperial General Headquarters, Surovius departed from Mariah, at which the Court was presently located, and proceeded rapidly to Belkadan. There, he was joined by Admiral Ushavious, who had been authorized to bring the 59th and 60th Imperial Fleets, the 27th Imperial Army, and detachments from the Valedictorian Guards as reinforcements for the military campaigns. The two commanders departed from Belkadan two days later, and proceeded rapidly across the Galactic Void. Arriving at Boulougone (August 4, 1797), Surovius and Ushavious were greeted by the Dukes of Chateau-Thierry, Torre, and Boulougone, who had been instructed to provide all ready intelligence information to the Laurasian commanders. Surovius now proceeded to Dunkirk, where the King's forces themselves were stationed.
    • He was presented before the King two days later, and wasted no time in whipping his military forces into shape. The legendary Field-Marshal's arrival greatly raised the spirit and the vigor of Laurasian forces; it considerably darkened the mood of the common foe, the Spamalkans. Emperor Philicus, who was still grappling with financial issues in the wake of his bankruptcy declaration, declared to himself that "the arrival of this military commander bodes ill for our Empire's position." The Count of Fuentes and Duke Albert respected and dreaded Surovius at the same time, knowing what was being brought to the fore. Ushavious's arrival was also greeted with alarm; the fate of Spamalkan forces in Northern Franconia and in Flanders now appeared to be sealed. And indeed, the two Laurasian military commanders did not disappoint. Surovius immediately took command of a Laurasian assault against Montruele and Llane (August 7-12, 1797), securing both strongholds for the allied forces.
    • On August 15, the Field-Marshal single-handily repelled a Spamalkan offensive against Guines, leading his troops to drive Spamalkan troops from the Guines Straits Garrisons and the Lower Guines Military Garrison. From Guines, he stormed the Spamalkan outposts of Medin, Audernarde, Courtrai, and Watten (August 16-21, 1797) in conjunction with the Duke of Montpensier and Prince de Conti. Finally, on August 25, 1797, the allied forces reached the outskirts of Calais. Admiral Coloma, in his vain counteroffensives against Boulougone, Hames, Stephani, Julianne, and Dunkirk, had wasted precious Spamalkan military resources and failed to disrupt the Laurasian communications lines emanating from the Galactic Void. He had also dangerously exposed Calais's defenses to the allied moves. Surovius wasted no time in driving Spamalkan units from Risban, Sangate, and Freuthian Nielles (August 25-27), capturing or killing more than 40,000 Spamalkan tercios and decimating the Spamalkan formations through a series of surprise shock attacks.
    • On August 28, the Garrison Governor of Calais, Don Hernando de Fertez (1738-1802), launched a vain offensive against Breuteuil and Montreuil-sur-Mer which ended in failure in the Skirmishes of Aldios. The following day, King Hensios himself arrived to direct the final stage of the siege, ordering for a coordinated bombardment of Calais's shields. Surovius continued to distinguish himself by repelling every Spamalkan assault against his armored transports and Sangate, inflicting serious casualties upon the Spamalkan troops. He inspired his men, maintaining discipline but also reminding them of the rewards to come. A final move by Duke Albert and the Count of Fuentes to relieve the allied siege of Calais failed in the Battle of Beaumount (August 30, 1797), which saw Fleet Admiral Ushavious destroy a superior Spamalkan battleship group by surrounding it with his mobile, flexible couriers and corvettes, preventing a breakthrough and neutralizing their heavier weaponry. Calais's shield defenses were breached the following day, and on September 3, Surovius and the Duke of Montpensier led the final, decisive land offensive, overrunning the Tour de Guet and the Coquelles Tower.
    • Governor Fertez surrendered during the early hours of September 4, 1797, leading to the stronghold's final seizure by the allied forces of Franconia and Laurasia. This Siege of Calais came thirty-nine years after the world's surprise conquest by the Duke of Guise, during the Didymeian War. And with it, brought the capture of one of King Hensios's most ardent adversaries: the Duke of Mayenne. Mayenne had continued to resist the King ever since the capitulation of the Franconian League. He had remained with the Garrison of Calais, for Emperor Philicus, in June 1796, had forbidden the Duke from taking any further command in the field against his former master. He considered him too much of a prize to fall back into the hands of the Franconian King through aggressive action. Nevertheless, Mayenne had been unable to escape from Calais due to the Siege, and he found himself now in Hensios's hands. Hensios had no mercy for this traitor, who had continued to resist his authority willfully. On his orders, Mayenne was deprived of all his honors and estates, and on September 19, committed to perpetual imprisonment at the Bastille in Parri. He would die there on October 4, 1811, at the age of 57.
  • September 29-
    • Following the conquest of Calais, Field-Marshal Surovius and Prince de Conti drove Spamalkan units from Maulde, Etaples, and Clarmount (September 5-9, 1797). On September 11, a final offensive against Champagne and Compeigne was defeated by the Duke of Bouillon and Admiral Ushavious in the Battle of Montcornet. Allied attention now turned to Doullens, the last remaining stronghold held by the Holy Spamalkan Empire in Franconian territory. King Hensios decided on a two-pronged offensive. The King himself, with Field-Marshal Surovius, Prince de Conti, and the Duke of Montpensier, would assault Doullens from the north. The Dukes of Bouillon and Chateau-Thierry (with Admiral Ushavious) were to attack the stronghold from the south. The allied advances quickly proved successful. On September 16, 1797, Surovius and Conti ruined a Spamalkan force under General Federico Mendoza (1754-1801) in the Battle of Montherme. Hirson and Revin were then secured (September 17-19), preventing Spamalkan moves from the Ardennian Worlds. By September 22, when Admiral Ushavious had repelled a Spamalkan thrust in the Battle of Flize and blockaded a starfighter squadron at Flint, the King of Franconia's forces reached the northern outskirts of Doullens. At Crecy-en-Pothieu and the Doullens Straits, the allied forces established barricades to control all traffic into and out of the system. Admiral Coloma, who had launched a string of raiding expeditions against Bapuame, Douai, Villiers, Valenciennes, and Cambrai, continually sought to relieve the blockade. On September 24, 1797, the Admiral, commanding the 9th Spamalkan Expeditionary Force and a corps of Germanian, Naparian, and Haxonian mercenaries, was able to penetrate into the outskirts of the Doullens star system and to storm allied positions at the Station of Auxi-le-Chateau. The arrival of Ushavious, however, now ended the Spamalkan counteroffensive, and Coloma suffered a swift defeat in the Battle of the Doullens Straits (September 26).
    • Two days later, Ushavious destroyed the Spamalkan intelligence outpost of St. Pierre, forcing Coloma to retreat back towards Brussels. On September 29, 1797, the defenses of Doullens were breached when a combined offensive from King Hensios and Prince de Conti broke through the Belfry Approaches; more than half of the Spamalkan naval force was wiped out in this onslaught. Within hours of the allied landings on the surface of Doullens, the stronghold succumbed to their superior power. The Garrison General of Doullens, Ignacio de Valeria, Count of Flores (1756-1825), surrendered during the late hours of the day, with Field-Marshal Surovius and the Duke of Montpensier receiving his submission. With the fall of Doullens, all strongholds which had been occupied by the Holy Spamalkan Empire in Franconian territory, were back in Franconian hands. King Hensios was now able to turn his attention to pursuing vigorous offensives in Spamalkan Andorra and Catalonia. He was also determined to push back into the Duchy of Milania, hoping to gain border rectifications in those regions. At a conference on Le Catelet (October 2, 1797), the King ordered the Duke of Bouillon and Admiral Ushavious to pursue the offensive vigorously into Flanders, aiding Prince Maurice of Nassau in the final subjection of that territory, and of other Spamalkan positions in Durthia. The Duke of Chateau-Thierry was now commanded to defend the Pale of Calais, Normandy, and Picardy against any potential Spamalkan counteroffensives. Prince de Conti now assumed responsibility for the intended offensives into Milania. Finally, the Duke of Montpensier and Field-Marshal Surovius were to launch a series of offensives into Catalonia and Andorra, thereby applying additional pressure to Philicus's forces in the Hereditary Dominions. As all of this was ongoing, the swing of events had gone to and fro with the Earl of Estatius and his involvement in the military campaigns.
  • October 7-
    • Following the establishment of a command headquarters at Baiona (July 2, 1797), the ambitious and enthusiastic Earl of Estatius had not wasted any time in proceeding to the renewal of vigorous military campaigns in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions. His goal was the subjection of the remainder of the Basques and Asturia to the military forces of the Laurasian Empire. The Imperial General Headquarters was already aware of impending Franconian plans for a move into Andorra, Navarre, and Catalonia; it was now hoped that, with Galicia occupied, and severe pressure applied on the northern frontiers of the Hereditary Dominions, Emperor Philicus would finally be forced to begin considering peace. And for some time, Estatius gained a further run of victories. On July 5, 1797, Estatius and General Verus destroyed a Spamalkan force under General Diego Brochero (1750-1810) in the Battle of Llanes, finally securing that stronghold for the Laurasian Empire. Within another three days, they had stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Mieres and Donostia, penetrating dangerously close to the confines of Spamalkan Navarre, capturing more than $2.3 trillion ducats worth of military supplies and equipment, and disrupting all remaining Spamalkan supply lines to Biscay. Then on July 12, Lord Howardis of Effinga launched an ambitious offensive into the heart of Asturias, intent upon securing Laurasian control of Irun and Gijon (now back in Laurasian hands). He defeated Admiral de Bazan in the Battle of the Merdillo Bebula (July 16, 1797), securing a number of Spamalkan battleships; impounded a Spamalkan commercial convoy at Sariego (July 17); and stormed the Spamalkan command outposts of Somiedo, Sola del Barco, and Taramundi (July 18-22, 1797), recovering more than 150,000 Laurasian prisoners of war at the Somiedo Military Prison and inflicting severe damage to the Dockyards of Taramundi.
    • Admiral Raleghia, who had repelled a renewed Spamalkan counteroffensive by Admiral de Bazan against Gijon (July 24, 1797), then joined with Howardis in a surprise offensive against Aviles (July 26-29, 1797). This stronghold, with a population of more than eight billion by the late eighteenth century, was important to the Holy Spamalkan Navy for its communications outposts, shipyard facilities, and automated factories. It had long been a major minerals and naval production colony for the Holy Spamalkan Government. Admiral de Bazan and the Duke of Medinia Sidonia, launched a coordinated counteroffensive, briefly driving as far as Sancular de Barrameda and Ourense, in an attempt to relieve the pressure on Aviles. Nevertheless, the stronghold fell on July 29, and two days later, Estatius, whose praises were now being sung by many subjects on Laurasia Prime, defeated de Bazan in the pitched Battle of Reyes, expelling him from Galicia. On August 7, 1797, Estatius stormed Basauri, depriving the Spamalkans of control of the Basque Military Highway, which had since the fourteenth century been a major route for first the Kingdom of Lesser Spamalka, and then the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Santurzi (August 8-11); Errenteria (August 15); and Vitoria-Gasteiz (August 16-22), quickly followed.
    • By the latter weeks of August, 1797, Lord Howardis of Effinga and Admiral Raleghia had penetrated as far as Cabrnas, Boal, and Bimenes, disrupting Spamalkan lines and inflicting serious damage on their strategic position. On September 4, 1797, the Adelantaldo of Lesser Spamalka, the Count of Santa Gadea, was defeated by Estatius and Lord Howardis in the pitched Battle of Ferrol, preventing a Spamalkan breakthrough to that star system. Five days later, after Estatius had distinguished himself in landings at Castrillon, the Empress penned a communique to her favorite, declaring that "Your Lordship's achievements in the midst of battle have enhanced mine own reputation with all foreign courts of the Universe." Estatius responded gallantly, declaring that he was "there only for Your Majesty." At this point, however, complications arose. The Earl, who was becoming overconfident, now announced a bold offensive against Valladolid, Burgos, and Salamancia, deep in the heart of Lesser Spamalka. On September 15, he advanced his forces in that direction, overriding the complaints of Howardis of Effinga and of Raleghia. Both of these commanders suggested that the remaining Spamalkan strongholds in Asturias and the Basque Provinces be secured first before such bold moves into the heart of enemy territory. Estatius stormed Miranda de Ebro (September 18-21, 1797), and the following day, repelled Medinia Sidonia at Laguna de Duero, storming the Spamalkan Fortifications of Dubreno.
    • Emperor Philicus, alarmed by the presence of enemy forces in the heart of his hereditary realms, now ordered Santa Gadea and Admiral de Bazan to assemble their forces at Soria, Avila, and Medina del Campo for a swift counteroffensive against Laurasian lines. On September 23, 1797, while Estatius was engaged in efforts to seize the defenses of Aranda del Duero, Admiral Raleghia, who had come to despise Estatius's presence, led a rash assault against Fayal. Although Raleghia captured most of the Spamalkan military supplies and currency at the Fayal Arsenal, and occupied the Fayal Asteroid Stations, he nevertheless exposed the Laurasian supply lines needlessly. Estatius accused Raleghia of disobeying orders and of attacking Fayal with the sole purpose of "vain glory for his own person." Such arguments among the Laurasian command gave Santa Gadea and de Bazan their chance to strike. On September 29, 1797, Santa Gadea launched a surprise offensive against San Miguel, from which Estatius conducted his reconnaissance expeditions against Aranda del Duero. Estatius and Lord Howardis now hastened back to meet this threat, with land support provided by General Verus.
    • Upon arriving at San Miguel, however, Admiral de Bazan unleashed his waiting destroyer and battleship squadrons, cutting off most lines of retreat and forcing Laurasian forces into a pincer. The Battle of San Miguel lasted for a day and ended in a decisive victory for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Following this confrontation, Miranda de Ebro and Laguna de Duero were both recovered by the Spamalkan commanders, forcing Estatius to terminate his raids against Aranda del Duero. In short order, Santa Gadea expelled Raleghia from Fayal (October 4, 1797), and on October 7, stormed Boal, Bimenes, and Candamo, thereby establishing a beachhead in the thick of the Laurasian occupied regions of Asturias. Four days later, the Duke of Medinia Sidonia and Admiral de Padilla launched a surprise offensive against Baeza, Loja, and Guadix. By October 17, all of these strongholds had been recovered by Spamalkan forces, placing the Laurasian position in Andalusia at peril. Utera and Dos Hermanas were then overrun (October 19-25, 1797). By that point, the Earl's favor with the Empress had dropped significantly. As this was ongoing, allied forces continued to make progress on other fronts.
  • October 23-
    • Following the conquest of Roche, Prince Maurice of Nassau had advanced towards Groenlo, which was one of the chief Spamalkan military strongholds. Groenlo was protected by the Minefields of Zaal and the Groenlo Defensive Spaceport, both of which dated to the sixteenth century and had long served as barriers for foreign forces seeking to penetrate into the star system. General Jan van Sirium, one of the few remaining Durthians in the service of the Holy Spamalkan Forces, had taken command of the garrison and its defenses. By 1797, Groenlo had a population of more than ten billion. Its seizure would therefore be of great importance to the conduct of further Durthian campaigns in Flanders, Gelderland, and the Electorate of Cologne. On September 17, 1797, after repelling a Spamalkan move against Roosevelt and Groningen, Prince Maurice's forces appeared at the outskirts of Groenlo and immediately commenced their siege. During the next eleven days, they proved themselves superior to the exertions of combat, as Groenlo's defenses ultimately withered under relentless allied assaults. General van Sirium also had to deal with mutinous sentiments among his troops, due to the lack of pay, and to the obvious sympathy of the world's inhabitants for the Durthian Prince. Groenlo was ultimately overrun on September 28, two days after a rebellion of its inhabitants in Bravar City led to the dismantlement of the world's defensive grid. The Groenlo Defensive Spaceport fell within hours, and soon the planetary surface was overrun. Governor van Sirium was bound in chains on the Prince's orders and would ultimately be imprisoned at Overjissel. No sooner than Groenlo fell then Maurice hastened to move against Bredevoort.
    • On October 1, 1797, allied forces under Prince Maurice and General Verus approached Bredevoort's outskirts. The world was defended by a Spamalkan garrison of 120,000 troops and 35 warships under the command of the Naparian mercenary-General Damien Gardot (1750-1803). Gardot's forces were undermanned and under-equipped, with Count van den Bergh having been forced to divert units to Cologne. As a result, Maurice's forces were able to breach Bredevoort's shields in short order, driving the planetary garrison into the Compound City. From October 6-10, allied forces blockaded the Compound City, imposing relentless pressure upon the Spamalkan garrison. Finally, on October 10, 1797, General Gardot, seriously wounded by a grenade explosion, surrendered to Prince Maurice, handing the world over into allied hands. Maurice's troops, however, had ransacked many of the planet's residential quarters and spaceports, seizing more than $230 billion ducats worth of goods. The Prince was angered by this, and over the next several days, would have some 25,000 troops court-martialed and executed for disobedience. Nevertheless, the fall of Bredevoort allowed for a move on Enschede. On October 12, 1797, Admiral Ushavious, ordered by the King of Franconia to provide aid to the Durthian States, arrived at Bredevoort Outpost, and was immediately given supreme command by Prince Maurice of Laurasian naval forces in the States.
    • With Ushavious now under his command, the Prince proceeded towards his next goal. On October 18, a part of the Durthian force under Counts Solms and Van Duvyenvoorde proceeded to Gronau, while Prince Maurice, Count William Louis, and Admiral Ushavious proceeded with the remainder of the Durthian-Laurasian mobile and armored corps. At Glanerburg, the Prince reformed his forces into battle squadrons, sending his artillery and reconnaissance units forward to establish the blockade. Enschede was quickly blockaded, and the allied turbocannon pounded its defenses. Prince Maurice then demanded Enschede's surrender, pointing to Groenlo and Bredevoort as examples of why the garrison should not resist. The Governor of Enschede, Araves van Grootveld (1743-1819), aware of his garrison's weakness, and unwilling to have the Spamalkan defenses sacked by allied troops, surrendered (October 19, 1797), on condition that his troops be allowed to proceed in a fair manner from their military positions. Prince Maurice agreed to this, and garrisoned Enschede without further incident. This time, he restrained his troops from any acts of plunder or destruction of property. He ordered the world's fortifications and shield generators dismantled, so that the star system could not be used as a military outpost in the future. From Enschede, Prince Maurice now divided his military forces, intent on taking the systems of Oldenzaal and Ootmarsum at the same time. The offensive against Ootmarsum was led by Count Van Duyvenvoorde and Admiral Ushavious, with General Verus providing auxiliary support. On the same day that Enschede surrendered to Prince Maurice, Count Van Duyvenvoorde's forces appeared in the outskirts of the Ootmarsum star system, demanding its surrender.
    • Acting on the Prince's orders, Duyvenvoorde again pointed to Groenlo and Bredevoort as reasons for why the garrison should surrender. Garrison General Otto van den Sande (1754-1830) replied that he was commanded on authority of the Emperor of Spamalka himself to hold fast and to not surrender. Sande therefore conducted his own bombardments of the besieging forces, with the defensive warships of the Ootmarsum garrison harrying the formations of the 67th Imperial Fleet of the Laurasian Empire. Prince Maurice, learning of Ootmarsum's resistance, dispatched four ion disruptors to the outskirts of the star system. The garrison of Ootmarsum continued its bombardments while Admiral Ushavious and Count Van Duyvenvoorde positioned their offensive units and turbocannon around the star system's edges. Van den Sande realized, during the late hours of October 20, that further resistance was hopeless, and now decided to surrender. On October 21, 1797, Ootmarsum surrendered to the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and United Durthian States; Van Duyvenvoorde had the world's fortifications destroyed. Van den Sande himself was treated honorably. At the same time this was ongoing at Ootmarsum, the Siege of Oldenzaal (which had been occupied continuously by the Holy Spamalkan Empire since 1772), continued. Governor Frederick Boymer (1749-1826) commanded Oldenzaal's defenses, with more than 300,000 troops and a series of artillery turbocannons at his disposal. Prince Maurice had a definite advantage therefore, both in numbers of troops and in the availability of naval forces, and this was quickly displayed as the Siege of Oldenzaal commenced (October 20, 1797). Within a day, Spamalkan defenses were penetrated, and Prince Maurice's land corps quickly overran most of the planetary surface. On October 21, Governor Boymer, realizing he was outnumbered, decided to sue for peace. Two days later, Oldenzaal surrendered to the Durthians and Laurasians, thereby handing yet another humiliation to the Holy Spamalkan Empire. By the end of October 1797, Spamalkan forces held only Brussels, Antwerp, Niewpoort, Cologne, Rees, and Lingen; they were on the verge of being completely expelled from the Durthian Duchies.
  • November 16-
    • On November 16, 1797, Autocratic Pruthian Emperor A'rua III the Lazy, the nephew and successor of Pru'a IX the Great, died after reigning for just eleven years. Gluttonous and lavish from his earliest years, the Emperor of Pruthia's reign had seen both expansion and humiliation for the Autoratic Pruthian Empire. The recently concluded First War of the Germanian Principalities, which had been waged with the Haxonian and Vendragian Confederacies, had seen a string of military defeats and reverses for the Autocratic Pruthian Empire's forces. Following the death of Pru'a IX in 1786, the condition and military readiness of the Pruthian military forces had declined, and this had been seen through the Battles of Valmy, Mainz, and Frankfurt. Although A'rua III had managed to extract himself from that conflict in April 1795 without any territorial concessions on Pruthia's part, he had nevertheless been forced to recognize Vendragian supremacy over Hanover and its acquisition of the minor Germanian principalities of Jutland, Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Oldenburg, and Luneburg. Furthermore, A'rua, although managing to extend Pruthia's authority over Greater Dejanica, Podlachia, and Dejanica Major, found that he had to do so in accord with the demands of Laurasian Empress Aurelia, and that his Empire did not possess the military strength to halt the aggressions of both its Laurasian and Austarlian neighbors. The last disability, in regards to Pruthia's military prospects, was that the Emperor himself was not an effective military commander. He did not have the same passion for war as all of his predecessors had; he did not understand military tactics and the necessities of military organization; and he hated being on the battlefield.
    • The Emperor had patronized the arts and sciences in his realms, sponsoring the construction of such monuments as the Brandenburg Tor on Berliania III. This however, did not compensate for the increase in the Pruthian deficit and for the troubles with the stock exchange, agricultural, and industrial sectors experienced during the reign; between 1786 and 1797, the Pruthian economy contracted by more than DM1.6 quadmillion. He had also alienated his subjects through his promotion of Pruthian Mysticism, and his rejection of the traditions of the Martialist Order. All of this had served to drive a wedge between the Autocratic Pruthian Government and its subjects. A'rua III was now succeeded to the throne by his eldest child and namesake, Crown Prince A'rua (now twenty-seven years old), who became A'rua IV of Pruthia. Condolences arrived from the courts of all foreign powers on the death of A'rua III, including Empress Aurelia of Laurasia. The Empress declared that "His late Majesty of Pruthia was a figure to be treated with such respect...that his death was an unfortunate coincidence for all of us." A'rua III would be buried at the Berliner Dom on Berliania III, on November 26, 1797.
    • A month before A'rua's death, the Holy Austarlian Empire under Fransios II concluded the Italianian War with the Haxonian and Vendragian Confederacies by the Treaty of Campo Formio (October 16, 1797). By the terms of this treaty, Fransios agreed to recognize all Haxonian and Vendragian acquisitions in Italiania and in the Germanian Principalities. Sardinia, Pisa, and Florence were now confirmed to be in the possession of the Haxonian Confederacy, thereby giving the Haxonians control of a unified bloc of territory extending from Dalmatia and Istria to Sardinia, a distance of more than 75,000 light years in diameter. The Vendragian Confederacy's gains in Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Oldenburg, Jutland, and Luneburg were again acknowledged; the Holy Austarlian Empire conceded Western Frisia to Vendragia as well. In return, the two Confederacies agreed to recognize Austarlian acquisition of Padua, Paravia, Geneva and the Alpian Provinces, Benevento, Bologna, and Caranza, thereby consolidating its control of Tuscany, Mantua, and the Vatican Circles. Free navigation was guaranteed for Austarlian vessels in Istria, the Ionian Provinces, Morea, and the Peloponnese; Haxonia also agreed to permit Austarlian transport of goods across the Trieste Straits. This agreement therefore restored the peace among all of those states, for the closing years of the eighteenth century.
  • November 17-
    • As mentioned above, the series of recent Laurasian failures in the military campaigns in Asturias and in Andalusia, which had begun with the disastrous Battle of San Miguel, inspired the ire of Empress Aurelia and of the Imperial Privy Council. Into the first days of November 1797, the series of Laurasian failures had continued. Motril and Jerez were stormed by Admiral de Padilla (October 28-29, 1797), who inflicted a humiliating defeat upon detachments of the 49th Imperial Fleet under the command of Commodore Sir Athanasius Modaila (1755-1804). From Jerez, de Padilla cleared Laurasian reconnaissance units from the outskirts of Marbella and Estepona (October 30-November 2, 1797). On the latter date, the Earl of Estatius launched a futile offensive from Cabrnas, which came to naught in the Battle of Laviana, as Admiral de Bazan captured a number of Laurasian starfighter units. Cabrnas itself was reconquered by Spamalkan forces (November 4, 1797), placing Gijon, Aviles, and Oviedo in direct danger of falling back into the hands of the Spamalkan units.
    • Two days later, Empress Aurelia, who had continued to consult with her advisers over this recent series of Laurasian failures, and seeking to reorganize the Empire's forces (as the assaults upon Catalonia and Spamalkan Navarre were now commencing), decided to recall the Earl of Estatius back to the Empire, and to the Imperial Court on Laurasia Prime. She sent the command during the early hours of November 7. Estatius himself, who was determined to return back to the Court, and to regain the favor of the Empress, decided to waste no time in responding to her commands. He departed from his command headquarters on Baiona during the latter hours of that day, having made a rapid move back to that star system from Cabrnas Straits, and made his journey across the Galactic Void. Estatius had reached Belkadan by November 9, and he proceeded to Laurasia Prime by use of the Larkian Way and Rebeccan Galactic Trade Route. Arriving at the Quencilvanian Palace during the early hours of November 11, 1797, Estatius was not greeted with an official welcome by the Empress and the Imperial Household.
    • Instead, almost immediately, Aurelia took him to task over the recent string of failures in Asturias. She accused him of incompetence, and of being unable to restrain the actions of his subordinates (referring to Raleghia's assault on Fayal). Furthermore, the Empress was alarmed about Estatius's continued popularity with her subjects; many hailed the overall success of the military campaigns, and declared that the recent failures were a trifling issue. They pointed to the course of events over the past several years, and of how the Empire had overcome every failure in its turn. Estatius, on his part, was furious, and did not understand why the Empress chose to take issue over something as this. He had sent a communique to the Empress, stating: "We have failed in nothing that Almitis gave us means to do. We hope Her Majesty will think our painful days, careful nights, poor diet and many hazards deserve not to be measured by the event." Estatius, however, still distressed over the Empress's criticisms, decided, on November 13, to retreat from the Imperial Court to Wanstead Estate on Impania.
    • From there, he sent a further communique to her: "You have made me a stranger. I had rather retire my sick body and troubled mind into some place of rest than, living in your presence, to come now to be one of those that look you afar off. Of myself, it were folly to write that which you care not to know. I do carry the same heart I was wont, though now overcome with unkindness, as before I was conquered by beauty. From my bed, where I think I shall be buried for some days, Your Majesty's servant, wounded, but not altered by your unkindness. S. Estatius." The Earl's absence, as before, brought a change of heart in the Empress. After speaking affectionately of him to the ailing Earl of Oxfadia (who had been diagnosed with a rare form of Testhane's cancer in March 1797, and who was not predicted to live for longer than a year), she wrote to Estatius, inquiring again about his health. Then on November 15, she sent another communique, implying that the time was now ripe for forgiveness. Estatius replied: "Most dear Majesty, your kind communications is able either to preserve a sick man that were more than half dead to life again."
    • "Since I was first so happy as to know what love meant, I was never one day, nor one hour, free from hope and jealousy. If Your Majesty do, in the sweetness of your own heart, nourish the one, and in the justness of love, free me from the tyranny of the other, you shall ever make me happy. And so, wishing Your Majesty to be mistress of all that you wish most, I humbly kiss your fair hands." Delighted by these words, the Empress invited Estatius back to the Court for the Accession Day celebrations. Estatius, however, would not come, and now nursed another grievance. On November 8, 1797, the Empress had announced that she was formally elevating her cousin, Fleet Admiral Lord Howardis of Effinga, to the Earldom of Notthamia as a reward for his victories over the Spamalkans, and furthermore, that he was being conferred the office of Imperial Constable. Estatius felt that he alone deserved the credit for the Empire's most recent victories in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions, and in particular, for the Siege of Cadiz. He was also angered that Effinga's promotion to Imperial Constable was placing him above the Earl in terms of precedence among the Officers of State. Estatius therefore informed the Empress, on November 16, that he was to ill to move from Wanstead. Lord Treasurer Burghley and Lord Husadarania (son of the elder Husadarania, who had died the previous year) both sent communiques to the Earl, urging him to reconsider. It was all in vain. The following day, November 17, 1797, Empress Aurelia (in a dark mood once again), and the Imperial Court, celebrated her 39th anniversary on the throne with a series of banquets, operas, festivals, masques, and performances staged by Sir Sidronus, the Empress's Champion, and by the leading magnates of Laurasia Prime. Estatius's functions as Master of the Imperial Ordnance and Master of the Empress's Vehicles during the festivities were carried out by Sir Andronicus Maerlius (1764-1841), a Gentleman of the Imperial Privy Chamber.
    • On that day also, the Empress formally raised Lord Howardis of Effinga to the Earldom of Notthamia and the Stewardship of the Empire; he received his honors through Holonet communication, and was formally designated by the chief officers of his command headquarters. Shortly after this was done, Notthamia (in a spirit of friendship) and Burghley both messaged Estatius. The Lord Treasurer reminded Estatius that the fortieth year of the Empress's reign was now approaching. Estatius was by now breaking, and on November 21, replied that he would come if the Empress wished him to. The Empress, however, was aggravated by his behavior, and on November 24, declared that "His duty ought to be sufficient to command him to court; a prince is not to be so treated by their subject." The irony in all of this, however, was that the Empire's forces were once again on the ascendant. On November 11, 1797, the Battle of the Aviles Barricade resulted in a decisive victory for Admiral Raleghia and General Verus, as they destroyed nearly one-third of the Spamalkan starfighter squadrons. Two days later, Cabranas was recovered. From here, Raleghia drove Spamalkan units from Laviana, Bimenes, and Boal, thereby reversing most Spamalkan gains in Asturias (November 14-19, 1797). On November 21, the newly-promoted Earl of Notthamia, who had rushed by means of the Galician Military Highway to Andalusia, defeated Admiral de Padilla in the Battle of Fuengirola, preventing a Spamalkan counteroffensive against Cadiz, Ronda, and Rincon de la Victoria. By November 26, by which time Utera and Dos Hermanas had both been recovered by Notthamia's forces, the Spamalkan forces under Santa Gadea had been forced to terminate moves against Fayal, Vigo, and Corunna, maintaining the Laurasian hold over those star systems. On November 29, 1797, Raleghia and Verus obtained another victory in the Battle of Mieres, and from there drove Spamalkan units from Valdes and Vegadeo (November 30-December 3, 1797). While this was ongoing, allied forces had made major gains in the Durthian Duchies, Milania, and Catalonia.
  • November 27-
    • Following the conquest of Oldenzaal and Ootsmartsum, Prince Maurice of Orange, with support from Fleet Admiral Sir Theodosius Ushavious and Major-General Sir Caelius Kutzarania, moved his forces against Lingen, determined to secure his control of the Lippe Straits, Wesel, and Twente. Count van den Bergh had now assumed the command of the garrison of Lingen; he had at his disposal nearly 700,000 Spamalkan and mercenary troops, a force of forty defensive warships, and a series of minefields and defensive barricades, intent on obstructing any allied advance. The Siege of Lingen commenced on October 25, 1797, as the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and United Durthian States completely blockaded the outskirts of the star system; Major-General Sir Horacius Verus distinguished himself further when he repelled a vain Durthian assault upon the allied siege lines. Within five days, allied turbocannon and ion disruptors had inflicted serious damage to Lingen's shields; and on November 4, 1797, the final offensive was launched.
    • Within hours, Prince Maurice and Admiral Ushavious completely destroyed Lingen's defensive fleet; thirty Spamalkan galleys were destroyed or captured thanks to a pincer maneuver by the Laurasian Fleet-Admiral against the Spamalkan naval formations. The planetary shields then collapsed, with Prince Maurice himself and General Verus leading the final landings on the world. Count Van den Bergh now sought to call for reinforcements from Duke Albert. This proved to be in vain, however, for Albert was himself blockaded at Brussels by Laurasian and Durthian units under Count William Louis and Major-General Kutzarania. Nevertheless, the resistance of Lingen's garrison proved to be stiff, and it was not until November 9 before the Lingen Central Command Headquarters was reached by the invading forces. Two days later, the final assault by the 9th and 11th Regiments of the 49th Imperial Army, and by the 3rd Squadron of the Durthian Ancillary Force, broke the Headquarters command lines. Count Van den Bergh was himself captured, along with most of his subordinate officers. By the early hours of November 12, Lingen was securely in the hands of the allied forces.
    • With the fall of Lingen, Durthian control over the Twente Region was secure. During the course of the next several days, Prince Maurice launched a campaign which destroyed the Spamalkan garrisons of Hellendorn (November 13); Hengelo (November 16); Hof van Twente (November 17-19); and Losser (November 20). Then on November 21, 1797, he and Admiral Ushavious destroyed a Spamalkan force under General Mendoza in the Battle of Wierden, thereby securing both that stronghold and Twenterand. The conquest of Tubbergen (November 22); Rijessen-Holten (November 23); Dinkelland and Borne (both November 24); Haaksbergen (November 26); and Bentheim (November) completed the assertion of Durthian control over the Twente Region. By the beginning of December 1797, the attention of the allied forces turned to Rees, from which Spamalkan units continued to threaten Alpen. Orsoy was actually recaptured by General Mendoza and Count Hendrick van den Bergh (December 3, 1797), from which Spamalkan expeditions seized Doetichenhem, Broich, and Zaltbommel. On December 6, Prince Maurice advanced upon Zees, with Count Simon of Lippe (1754-1813), Major-General Sir Horacius Verus, and the Count of Solms in command of his military formations.
    • Within hours, the allied forces had established a blockade around the Rees system, but on December 10, 1797, following a series of skirmishes in the Rees Strait, Don Ramiro de Guzman (1740-1808), Governor of Rees, having received reinforcements from General Mendoza, was able to break through the barricades and to briefly threaten the allied supply lines. It took two days to force Guzman back into the inner sections of the star system. The Count of Lippe now launched a decisive counteroffensive, destroying the Spamalkan 9th and 11th System Formations under the command of Captains Andres de Ontoria (1761-1814) and Andres Ortiz (1759-1828), and on December 14, 1797, reached the orbit of Rees itself. With support from General Verus and the Count of Solms, Lippe then conducted an extensive bombardment of Rees's shields and defensive outposts, breaching them within two days. On December 16, 1797, the allied forces launched their final offensive against Rees, with Prince Maurice now taking command of the final assaults. Rees fell within hours, and Governor de Guzman was captured by Durthian Marines. With the fall of Rees, Prince Maurice pressed on to Cologne. Cologne fell under assault from December 18, 1797. The star system's garrison, hopelessly outnumbered by the combined Durthian-Laurasian forces, and long since sundered from its supply lines, posed no challenge for the Durthian Prince. Its fall on Ascentmas Day, 1797, completed the destruction of Spamalkan power in the Electorate of Cologne. By the end of 1797, Prince Maurice and his military subordinates had drafted extensive plans for the final offensives against Brussels, Antwerp, and Niewpoort, determined to secure all three of those strongholds.
  • December 7-
    • While Prince Maurice of Nassau's forces swept forth in their conquest of Lingen, Rees, and Cologne, those of King Hensios IV and Laurasian Field-Marshal Lord Surovius of Rymnik made substantial gains in Milania and in Catalonia. On October 4, 1797, two days after the King's strategic conference on Le Catelet, Prince de Conti (now joined by the Duke of Bouillon, whom the King had decided to reassign from the Durthian theater), assembled his Franconian and Laurasian forces at Nice, Avignon, the Comtat Veniassin, Cannes, Grenoble, Aix-en Provence, Briancon, St. Trope, and Grasse. Spamalkan counteroffensives against Dijon, the Alperian Military Highway, and Fontaine-Francaise (October 4-11, 1797), were blunted, and on October 15, Prince de Conti launched the long-awaited offensive against the Duchy of Milania. Blunting a Spamalkan move against Monaco (which had been annexed by Franconia in 1782), he defeated a Spamalkan force under the Governor of Milania, Jeronimo de Salas, Duke of Fries (1754-1802), in the Battle of Barclonette. From Barclonette, de Conti besieged and conquered the Spamalkan strongholds of Cheri and Pinorello (October 18-19, 1797). By October 22, Franconian forces had driven Spamalkan units from the systems of Rivoli and Moncalleri, inflicting a series of humiliating defeats upon the Duke of Fries and his chief subordinate, General Ambrosio Spinola. On October 28, 1797, the Battle of Venaria Reale resulted in another decisive victory for the allied forces, leading to a full-fledged offensive along the Piedmont Highway to Turin, Alessandria, and Bielia. Turin, formerly the capital of the Kingdom of Savoy-Piedmont (conquered by the Holy Spamalkan Empire during the 1740s and 1750s), fell under siege from November 3, 1797.
    • It remained besieged for four days, and its fall on November 7 dealt a severe blow to the Spamalkan position in Piedmont. Alessandria followed (November 14, 1797), and on November 23, Prince de Conti and the Duke of Bouillon destroyed the Duke of Fries's chief naval armada in the Battle of Ossona. Bielia capitulated the following day, followed by Cueno and Fossano (November 25, 1797). From Fossano, de Conti stormed Genoa, Mondovi, Alba, and Bra (November 26-December 3, 1797), thereby driving deep into the heart of Spamalkan Piedmont. He now decided to launch a daring offensive against Asti and Toreno. On December 5, 1797, isolating the Spamalkan garrisons of Cherasco and Bargo, de Conti advanced upon Asti. He was now intercepted by General Spinola near Villafranca d'Asi. The ensuing Battle of Villafranca d'Asti (December 7-9, 1797), was decided by the superior firepower of the Burllian-class starfighters of the Royal Franconian Navy; the storming by the Duke of Torre of the Spamalkan control garrison of San Damiano d'Asti; and the failure of efforts by the Duke of Fries to drive Franconian units from Genoa and Mondovi. Villafranca d'Asti quickly fell into Franconian hands, followed by Asti itself (December 13, 1797). On December 15, General Spinola was defeated again in the Battle of Canelli, thereby yielding that stronghold to the Franconians. Toreno was now reached by the Duke of Bouillon. His first assault into the star system was repelled (December 18, 1797), but three days later, the Duke, receiving reinforcements from Genoa, Monaco, and Barclonette, was able to blockade the star system's supply routes. Toreno, however, did not fall until December 28, 1797; by that time, Franconian forces had secured Asti, Turin, and the Genoan Colonies from the Holy Spamalkan Empire. As the year closed, Franconian forces were posed for an offensive against Novara, Milan Prime, and Parma.
    • Field-Marshal Surovius and the Duke of Montpensier, on their part, enjoyed great success in Catalonia and Andorra. Repelling Spamalkan counteroffensives against Burlada and Pamplona (October 4-11, 1797), Surovius and Montpensier then destroyed a Spamalkan force under the Viceroy of Catalonia, Juan Pablo, Count de Heves (1761-1805), in the Battle of Urbasia (October 14, 1797). Montpensier then stormed the Spamalkan garrisons of Ordino and Canillo (October 22, 1797), establishing a foothold in Andorra. From Canillo, he destroyed a Spamalkan force in the Battle of Santa Coloma (October 28, 1797) and penetrated as far as Figueres and Banyoles, inflicting severe damage on both strongholds (October 29-November 4, 1797). On November 6, 1797, Field-Marshal Surovius led an unparalleled Laurasian thrust against Pugcerda and Ripoli, bypassing Andorra la Valla and Encamp by means of the Andorran-Terrano Military Route. Pugcerda, whose defenses were still unprepared, and which the Spamalkan Council of State had assumed would remain beyond the range of Laurasian forces, fell quickly. On November 11, Surovius defeated a Spamalkan assault at Riyon Station, and from there commanded a decisive offensive against the Mounterra Outposts, capturing more than 40,000 Spamalkan tercios in a surprise ambush. He then blunted a Spamalkan move against Santa Coloma (November 15, 1797), and landed his troops on Ripoli; the stronghold fell within hours. This decisive feat, which had taken Laurasian forces more than 10,000 light years from Andorra into Cerdanya and Ripolles, ensured the destruction of the now isolated Spamalkan units in Andorra.
    • Encamp was stormed by the Duke of Montpensier (November 19, 1797) and he then drove Spamalkan units from the outposts of Escaldes-Engorany, La Massana, and Amisal (November 20-25, 1797). On November 26, Surovius stormed Monte Ori and Ezabka, entrenching himself within Spamalkan Navarre, and two days later, destroyed Count de Heves's armored squadrons in the Battle of the Tilyes, preventing any Spamalkan moves to reinforce Andorra la Valla. Andorra la Valla fell under siege by the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and Serene Kingdom of Franconia (November 29, 1797), a siege which continued until December 8. In spite of the valiant resistance of Bruno des Mares, Count de Furhez (1753-1820), commander of Andorra's garrison, the world fell in what proved to be a decisive victory for allied forces. The capture of El Pas de la Cassa (December 10-12, 1797), completed the conquest of Andorra, which had been a protectorate of Greater Spamalka and the Holy Spamalkan Empire from 1188 until Char'va I had annexed it directly in 1748. Field-Marshal Surovius and the Duke of Montpensier now combined to secure a decisive victory over the Count de Heves and Spamalkan General Juan de Pedragua (1763-1811) in the Battle of Urgell (December 15, 1797), leading to the fall of the Spamalkan systems of Girona, Oilot, and La Bimbal to the allies. On December 19, Surovius obtained a further victory in the Battle of Lodva, wiping out a superior Spamalkan force through use of combined artillery and mobile assaults. Two days later, he captured the Spamalkan headquarters of Bandino, destroying most of the world's military supplies and suppressing an attempted Spamalkan counteroffensive against his lines. By December 28, Surovius and Montpensier had seized La Seu d'Urgell, Sort, Tremp, and Vielha, thereby establishing a direct supply line with Laurasian units in the Spamalkan Basques.
  • December 15-
    • Empress Aurelia, who continued to be distressed by the contretemps with her favorite, the Earl of Estatius, now turned her attention to matters of diplomacy. By late November 1797, King Hensios IV of Franconia, with his military forces gaining such an unparalleled string of successes against the overextended and weakened Holy Spamalkan Empire, was beginning to contemplate peace. With Spamalkan forces now expelled from Franconian territory, and with allied forces making rapid gains in Andorra, the Southern Durthian Duchies, Milania, Catalonia, and in Cologne, Hensios rightly thought that Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I would now be at a limb. Therefore, on November 27, 1797, the King had dispatched to the Imperial Court on Laurasia Prime a special envoy, Andre Hurault, Sieur de Maisse (1742-1807), in order to hold a series of discussions with the Empress of Laurasia over the situation. Maisse had departed from Boulougone on December 3, escorted by a substantial Franconian naval convoy under the command of Gaston Surand, Admiral de Bruviers (1744-1804). He had proceeded quickly across the Galactic Void, arriving at Belkadan (in the Caladarian Galaxy), two days later. At Belkadan, Maisse was greeted by the Earls of Aretha and Aeoleon, these personages having been dispatched by the Empress herself.
    • From Belkadan, the Franconian Envoy and his escort proceeded almost immediately to Laurasia Prime. His arrival at the capital world of the Empire (December 9, 1797), had been greeted with great ceremony by the Empress and her courtiers. Aurelia praised Maisse for his "loyalty to His Highness, the honorable King of Franconia"; presented him with numerous gifts, both for the embassy and for the King, with a value of more than €3 billion dataries; and paid him great respects by treating him to a honorary banquet that night. After two days of festivals and celebration at the Imperial Court, the Empress and the Envoy proceeded to business. De Maisse raised up his master's thoughts of peace, declaring that the allied forces were on the verge of achieving their objectives, and that continued campaigning, in an aggressive manner into the Hereditary Dominions, would serve only to backfire on the coalition. Empress Aurelia herself, who wished to turn her attention fully back to internal affairs, and knew that the Spamalkan position in the Durthian Duchies was all but destroyed, responded in a positive manner to the Envoy's words.
    • The Empress conducted herself with much decorum throughout the audience, offering the Envoy a seat and allowing him to retain his headgear. In spite of all, she seemed distracted. He reported back to the Estates-General and the Conseil royal that the Empress constantly rose from her seat, complained about eye strain, and told him repeatedly of her desire to remain standing during audiences. She then moved on to discussing about Philicus himself, telling the Envoy of the Emperor's involvement in conspiracies of old. Exclaiming "How the man must love me!" she went on to state that she very much regretted the rupture in relations between their two Empires, and then stated that she feared for her subjects, knowing herself to be lurching towards death. Maisse's face contorted at this, and Aurelia hastened to reassure him. "No, no! I don't think I shall die as soon as that. I am not so old, M. l'Ambassadeur, as you would suppose." She angled for a compliment, expressing her sorrow that Maisse, having been at the courts of many great princes, would come to see such a foolish old woman. She also spoke dismissively of her accomplishments. Maisse praised the Empress's judgment and prudence; she answered that "it was but natural that I would have some knowledge of the affairs of the Universe, having reigned from such an age..When anyone speaks of my beauty, I say that I was never beautiful, although I did have that reputation twenty or thirty years ago..." Maisse recognized the Empress was deliberately debasing herself, and he again assured her of her beauty.
    • On December 15, four days after their first audience, the Empress called Maisse to her presence again. He was astonished by her wardrobe: she wore a gown of silver gauze in the Briannian style, edged with wide bands of gold lace. It had "slashed sleeves with red taffeta", a open front with a white damask kirtle, and a chemise, with her bosom exposed. Maisse was embarrassed by this, and the Empress aggravated this by constantly opening the front of her robe. She wore a long tress of bright red hair, which flowed down her back; he could tell that this was a wig. The Empress's neck was encircled with a exotic necklace of pearls and rubies. The Envoy knew that the Empress was attempting to "bewitch him with faded charms", and noted her long face, low cough, and the wrinkles which even the best cosmetics could not obscure. The spectacle of a sixty-four year-old woman attempting to win the Envoy's favor was truly one to behold. Maisse, however, did not fail to also acknowledge that the Empress's memory and wit, which had become almost legendary, remained as sharp as it had been during her youth and the early years of her reign. On December 24, 1797, Maisse's third audience with the Empress began with her listening to a performance, of lutes and pianos, by some of her chief ladies. They discussed about many things, and the Empress indicated that she would be open to beginning negotiations once the Spamalkans had been deprived of Brussels, Antwerp, and Niewpoort. She had no territorial ambitions for herself, being already mistress of seventy million star systems and three galaxies, and she would not seek to enhance her Empire's position in the Great Amulak Spiral at risk to future peace and tranquility. Envoy Maisse reported back to his government and to the King that "further progress must be made in this war before Her Majesty will consider negotiations." The Envoy also did not fail to take note of the underlying tensions at the Imperial Court, concerning the Earl of Estatius.
  • December 28-
    • By December 1797, the forces of the Laurasian Empire had made further decisive gains in Asturias, Andalusia, and the Basques against the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Following their seizure of Vegadeo, Raleghia and Notthamia had turned their attention to Langreo, which remained a major military arsenal and shipyard facility for the Spamalkan Military Forces. Conquest of this stronghold would deal a severe blow to the Spamalkan High Command, and secure the Laurasian position around Laviana and Llanes. On December 8, 1797, after defeating a Spamalkan force sent by the Count of Santa Gadea in the Battle of Santa Fe, the two Laurasian military commanders advanced upon Hautres Point, from which they would be able to blockade Langreo. Admiral de Bazan and General Diego Brochero (1754-1825), with support from the Duke of Medinia Sidonia, attempted to fortify Hautres Point, launching strikes against the Laurasian supply lines extending from Ferrol, Santiago de Compostela, and Braga. This move, however, ended in failure in the Battle of Gozon (December 10-12, 1797), and on December 15, Admiral Notthamia reached the outskirts of Langreo.
    • He launched a series of offensive threats to surround and defeat Spamalkan starfighter squadrons; to threaten the system's supply lines; and to destroy communication buoys at the Comets of Ivaddia. On December 19, 1797, after four days of siege, Notthamia and Raleghia broke the system's defensive lines. Within hours, General Verus had overrun the La Feguera Works, depriving the garrison of the system's chief metallurgical facility. Laurasian units then overran the cities of Sama, Ciano, and Riaho, inflicting a series of crushing defeats upon overstretched and scattered Spamalkan formations. It was not until December 24, however, before the Langreo Spaceport was taken by Raleghia's corvettes, and not until December 26 before the garrison of Langreo surrendered. Langreo's fall, nevertheless, allowed for a swift occupation of Norena, Nava, Posez, Pilona, and Cangos del Narca (December 26-31, 1797),consolidating Laurasian control over most of northern and central Asturias. In spite of these successes, however, Notthamia was in a foul mood. Events at the Court now intervened. The Empress had, in her second audience with the Earl of Estatius, declared that "His Lordship's incompetence warrants condemnation and a thorough investigation. I have no compunction about punishing him, if it is found that he expressly violated my mandates."
    • On December 24, however, she changed her tune, telling Maisse that she was satisfied her favorite was blameless. Estatius, on his part, wished for the Empress to change the wording of Notthamia's patent of elevation, but she refused. He then demanded that Notthamia be recalled, and that the two engage in a honorary duel; the Empress rejected this out of hand. Estatius was now refraining from attending any sessions of the Privy Council, in protest at the way Aurelia was treating him. This situation could not continue. Empress Aurelia, herself wishing for the return of her favorite, decided, on the advice of Chancellor Cecilis, to finally settle the issue. On December 28, 1797, the Empress formally appointed Estatius as Imperial Marshal of the Laurasian Empire, making him one of the Great Officers of State of the Imperial Household. The Marshalship had remained vacant for the past seven years, since the death of the Earl of Aretha in November 1790, and the Chancellor had long been prodding the Empress to fill this, the only vacancy among the Offices of State. Furthermore, the Empress declared in her patent of elevation, Estatius was now to enjoy precedence over the Earl of Notthamia, whose position as Imperial Steward had placed him above his rival military commander. Estatius was delighted at hearing of this, and he wasted no time in returning to the Imperial Court.
    • Arriving there during the early hours of December 30, the Earl was greeted by an Empress pleased that he had finally decided to return to her side. In this euphoria of reconciliation, the Empress bowed to Estatius's entreaties for her to receive his mother, Dowager Countess Laetita, at the Imperial Court. Aurelia, however, had declared that she would only do so in her Private Throne Room. The Countess had, during the past two years, routinely visited the Privy Gallery to see the Empress as she passed, only to find that Her Majesty had gone by another route. Then she had been invited to a banquet, in July 1797, that the Empress was supposed to attend, but learned that Aurelia had changed her plans at the last minute. Now, however (December 31, 1797), she was received, frigidly, in the Private Throne Room. The Dowager Countess, now fifty-four years old, but still retaining a semblance of her youthful beauty, curtsied before her cousin, kissed her hands, embraced her, and received a cool kiss in return. This was not enough for her son, who sought for the Empress to repeat the charade in the Public Throne Room. At this, however, the Earl received a reminder of her autocratic authority when she bellowed to him that she "did not wish to be importuned in these unpleasing matters." That was an end to it, and the Dowager Countess was commanded to depart from the Court later that very day. The Empress was never to see her cousin, whom she had once adored so much (during the early years of her rule, when Laetita had been one of her ladies-in-waiting), again. As the year 1797 ended, the Holy Spamalkan Empire was in the dark depths of defeat.

1798

  • January 1-
    • 1798, the 98th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire and its allies, the United Durthian States and the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, on the brink of absolute victory over their common enemy, the Holy Spamalkan Empire. The previous year had seen allied forces make substantial gains in the Durthian Duchies, Northern Franconia, Franche-Comte, Milania, the Spamalkan Colonial Territories, and the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions against the forces and garrisons of Emperor Philicus I. The allied coalition's advantages were inherent in their strong and stable economies; in the mobilization of their populations and resources for a total war effort; and in their excellent strategic coordination with each other against the overstretched and outnumbered Spamalkan forces. In the Durthian Duchies, Prince Maurice of Nassau, with the assistance of such commanders as the Count of Solms, Count William Louis, Stadholder of Groningen, Fleet Admiral Sir Theodosius Ushavious, and Major-General Sir Horacius Verus, had all but completed the virtual destruction of Spamalkan power and influence. His swift conquest of Bredevoort, Lingen, Enschede, Oldenzaal, Oortmarsum, Namurs, Ostend, Cologne, the Luxembourgian and Lichenstein Sectors, Meurs, the Lippe Straits, Turnhout, Rheinberg, and Gronelo, among other strongholds, had all consolidated the United Durthian States, widening its territorial base. Duke Albert of Caria and the Count of Fuentes held on to only Niewpoort, Brussels, and Antwerp, being now at a distinct disadvantage.
    • As for the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, King Hensios IV, who had now reconciled himself and his government with the majority of his subjects (by his conversion to Franconian Catholicism), had gained further popularity and acclaim through his string of military victories over the Spamalkan foe. Franconian forces had ejected all Spamalkan units from the Serene Kingdom's territory; were assisting Durthian operations in Brabant and Flanders; and furthermore, had occupied Franche-Comte, most of the Western Duchy of Milania, and Andorra. The Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions were themselves in severe danger, with Laurasian Field-Marshal Surovius and the Duke of Montpensier leading victorious thrusts into Spamalkan Navarre and Catalonia. This was in conjunction with the efforts of Fleet Admiral Notthamia and Admiral Raleghia (with Major-General Sir Franconius Verus), who had secured the Laurasian grip over Andalusia, Asturias, Galicia, and the Basque Provinces.
    • Finally, Vice-Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia had established the Empire's hold over the Spamalkan Spice Colonies and the Central Territories; Managua, Ciudad Santino, Tabasco, and Puerto Caballos were among the handful of strongholds in the Nicaraguan and Gutatemalan Sectors to remain in the hands of the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Philicus I was now seriously considering peace with his Empire's adversaries, even with the hated Empress Aurelia, who had so humiliated him and done so much to drag down his Empire's power and reputation. The Empress of Laurasia herself was basking in her own elevated popularity with her subjects; they continued to praise Her Majesty's direction and declared that the end of this conflict would see the Empire's influence in the Great Amulak Spiral amplified. In her New Year's proclamation, Aurelia promised her subjects that "the destruction of Spamalkan power in the Durthian Duchies will bring about the end to all troubles, and will result in the restoration of tranquility and stability to the powers of extra-galactic civilization." And indeed, 1798 would see the end of the Second Spamalkan War. It would, however, also see the Empress's attention distracted by disturbing developments in the Scottrian Governorates.
  • January 3-
    • By the beginning of January 1798, the Spamalkan High Command had become determined to launch a surprise offensive against the Doveranian Straits and Sluis, with the intention of halting the momentum of the allied forces and relieving pressure on Niewpoort and Antwerp. On December 22, 1797, Emperor Philicus had conferred his formal approval upon the assembly, at Barcelona, Valencia, Alacant, and Orihuela, of the 19th and 25th Holy Spamalkan Fleets. This force was now placed under the command of Captain-General Federigo Spinola (1771-1803), younger brother of Spamalkan General Ambrosio Spinola. By January 1, 1798, the force was ready to depart, and two days later (January 3, 1798), Spinola, utilizing the secret Minorca-Alpine Military Highway, was able to proceed quickly from Barcelona to the Doveranian Straits. At this point, however, the Spamalkan offensive was already doomed. On January 2, Spamalkan communications at Sezimbra had been intercepted by a Laurasian starfighter squadron, and quickly transmitted back to the General Headquarters on Laurasia Prime. The Empress, when she was informed of the Spamalkan plans for a naval counteroffensive, ordered for quick and speedy action to be taken to obstruct their plans. She instructed Fleet Commodore Sir Basil Mansellius (1747-1809) to take command of the 49th and 55th Imperial Fleets assembled before Sluis and Dunkirk, and to cooperate with the Durthian States Navy to halt the Spamalkan naval moves. The States-General on their part, ordered Vice-Admiral Jacob van Duyvenvoorde (1754-1823) to intercept Spinola at Ferrol and Vigo before he was able to proceed any further. Spinola, however, managed to evade the Durthian patrols, and Van Duyvenvoorde was forced to dispatch several of his frigates and battleships against him, placed under the command of Rear-Admiral Jan van Cant (1761-1820).
    • On January 4, 1798, Mansellius departed from Dungeness. Judging that Spinola would seek to send his ships directly to the Sluis Vector, he was able to establish an offensive line from the Vector into the Straits, and the following day, was joined by Rear-Admiral van Cant. During the early morning hours of January 6, 1798, the Spamalkan force dropped out of hyperspace and proceeded towards the Sluis Vectors. Commodore Mansellius, informed of this, now ordered a direct assault, with his three chief battleships, the IMS Samson, Luna, and Anatharia. Spinola decided to move his ships galactic southeastwards, but the lead ship of his front line, the San Felipe, was intercepted by the Anatharia and the IMS Victoria. Mansellius, on his part, used his starfighters and mobile corvettes to great effect, penetrating in and out of the Spamalkan lines, and inflicting great damage on their vessels. Twelve of the thirty Spamalkan galleys were destroyed, and another ten suffered severe damage. Spinola now began a desperate retreat towards Niewpoort.
    • He was hotly pursued by Commodore Mansellius's squadrons. Confrontations continued across a distance of more than one hundred light-years, in the direction of Dunkirk, Niewpoort (the only stronghold still held by the Spamalkans in the region), Gravelines, and Sluis. By the end of the day, Rear-Admiral van Cant, relying on the superior mobility of his lead warships, had cut off the Spamalkan supply route. The San Felipe, already damaged from earlier Laurasian turbocannon and torpedo fire, was then assaulted by the Durthian warship SS Mackrel and was forced towards Vice-Admiral Cant's flagship, the SS Halve-Maene. The Spamalkan dreadnought attempted to escape, but this did not work. San Felipe was soon destroyed by a coordinated assault from the Mackrel and the Halve-Maene, with more than 40,000 Spamalkan military personnel being killed. The Spamalkan destroyer Lucera then attempted to evade the enemy forces, but the Durthian corvette Himania inflicted severe damage to its shield generators and impulse engines, which were soon completely destroyed, thereby denying the ship the ability to escape on sublight speed.
    • Vice-Admiral Cant then finished the Lucera off, and another 20,000 Spamalkan personnel died. San Juan and Jacinto, the two largest remaining galleys in the Spamalkan force, were in the meantime being pursued by Victoria and two Durthian corvettes. Both galleys ultimately managed to escape interdiction range and to head towards Niewpoort, although they were utterly unfit for further combat and had lost nearly half of their personnel. Another Spamalkan galley, the Delores, managed to evade the Victoria, but then suffered a catastrophic reactor failure, taking the lives of all 25,000 personnel on board. The San Luis, Spinola's flagship, suffered severe damage and was boarded at least twice, but the Captain-General was ultimately able to flee from the Doveranian Straits; he would eventually be blockaded near Vanderbilt by a detachment of Laurasian cruisers. By the early hours of January 8, 1798, the Battle of the Doveranian Straits had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire and United Durthian States. Nearly two-thirds of the Spamalkan fleet (some 150 warships and 7,000 starfighters) was destroyed or captured, and over 200,000 personnel of the Holy Spamalkan Navy had lost their lives. The allies suffered the loss of only ten vessels and 3,000 personnel. Mansellius was promoted to the rank of full Admiral as a result of his victory, while Van Duyvenvoorde and Cant both became Grand Admirals of the Durthian States. Spinola, on his part, was disgraced, and would remain entrapped at Vanderbilt, unable to provide any assistance to the garrison of Niewpoort. The failure of this Spamalkan counter-offensive now allowed Prince Maurice to strike.
  • January 13-
    • Whilst the Battle of the Doveranian Straits was ongoing, Prince Maurice and his military subordinates had finished their preparations for the military offensive against Niewpoort. By January 12, 1798, the Prince had assembled the 7th and 9th Durthian Expeditionary Forces, the 2nd Durthian States Army, the 67th and 66th Imperial Fleets, and the 55th Imperial Army of the Laurasian Empire, a force comprising nearly six hundred warships, well over two million military personnel, and 20,000 starfighters, for the conquest of Niewpoort. All of these forces had been assembled at Ostend, Huy, Deventer, and Bergen op Zoom, which were major strongholds for the United Durthian States. Major-General Sir Horacius Verus commanded the front-line armies, in conjunction with the Count of Solms; Fleet-Admiral Ushavious commanded all Laurasian naval forces; and Prince Maurice himself served as supreme commander. On this day, January 13, 1798, the allied forces departed from Ostend and commenced a further move against Niewpoort.
    • Arriving at the outskirts of the stronghold, Maurice dispatched the 9th Expeditionary Force and detachments from the 66th Imperial Fleet to the Yser to prevent Fuentes and Duke Albert from launching any-counter moves against Passchendale, Dunkirk, or Ypres. Shortly afterwards, while the Prince's forces were establishing a blockade around the star system, he learned that Duke Albert was approaching with the bulk of the remaining Spamalkan field forces against his rear, and that Leuven had been threatened by a Spamalkan convoy. Prince Maurice now ordered his cousin, Count Ernest Casimir of Nassau (who commanded the reconnaissance parties), to delay the Spamalkans, while the Prince would bring his field forces around the Yser and face the Duke. The Prince knew he had to blunt this Spamalkan move. Ernest Casimir assaulted the Leffinghen Outpost (January 14, 1798), but found that the Spamalkan garrison was firmly entrenched and was forced to retreat, with heavy casualties and equipment losses. Casimir was forced to fortify Ostend and to prevent a Spamalkan move against Axel. Duke Albert, following this minor victory, held a conference with his commanders.
    • Most urged him to entrench his forces near Ostend, which would force Maurice to attack along a narrow front and neutralize the advantages of the Durthian naval forces. His rank-and-file men, however, still mutinous, urged for a direct attack against Prince Maurice. This was the course that the Duke followed, and it was to have terrible consequences. Maurice, on his part, had fortified the Niewpoort Comets and the Yser, with his best lines of infantry and mobile marines being placed in a strong defensive position. This front-line was commanded by Major-General Verus. The Spamalkans sent a reconnaissance force to cover their advance. The 9th and 11th Spamalkan Marine Harquebusiers foolishly assaulted the Yser Lines, and having no effective command of the air and space, were repelled by General Verus's troops with heavy losses. Prince Maurice then launched a offensive against Spamalkan fortifications on Blount, pressing against the disoriented Spamalkan mercenary regiments and forcing them to retreat from the outpost. Admiral Ushavious subsequently executed a surprise move from the Comets, capturing or destroying more than half of the Spamalkan armored transports, light frigates, and couriers. A Durthian move against the battleships and cruisers, however, was repelled. The garrison of Niewpoort then struck, inflicting serious losses upon allied blockade units. General Verus was forced to abandon three of his command positions on the Comets, but the Spamalkans soon ran out of energy and found themselves stretched out from their supply base.
    • Prince Maurice launched a decisive counter-assault, preventing the garrison from joining Duke Albert's forces, and forcing a retreat back behind the Comets. Verus then recovered the 9th and 11th Comets, with the Spamalkan tercios of Enrico Cullares, Count de Villar (1753-1804) suffering more than 20% losses of their equipment and officers. Count William Louis of Groningen, on his part, who had remained in reserve at Ypres, now launched a decisive thrust against the Duke's command headquarters, sweeping the Spamalkan units from space and from their land positions. The front soon crumbled, and Duke Albert was forced to call a retreat. The Durthian garrison of Ostend struck shortly afterwards, storming Leffinghen and thereby bottling the Spamalkan fleet in a narrow corridor. Ultimately, Duke Albert was able to retreat, but was forced to abandon his flagship and a third of his strategic warships. By the early hours of January 16, 1798, the Battle of Niewpoort had ended in a decisive victory for the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and the United Durthian States. The garrison of Niewpoort itself, now with no hope for reinforcements (due to the victory in the Doveranian Straits), and under severe pressure from allied bombardments, surrendered later that day. Although Prince Maurice was unable to follow up with a immediate offensive against Antwerp, he had, nevertheless, eliminated the last of the Spamalkan strongholds in the Flanders Barriers. Duke Albert retreated back to Antwerp, and the Prince was now able to seize the last remaining Spamalkan bases windward of that stronghold. By the end of January 1798, Durthian units had seized Tielt, Veurne, Dammes, and Houhelt, and were virtually on the outskirts of Brussels.
  • January 17-On January 17, 1798, the first Great King of Masacavania, Feodor I, died on Moscow, in the Crone Galaxy. He had ruled since his accession to the Mascavanian throne (as Grand Duke) in March 1784. Feodor's reign had witnessed the further expansion of the Masacavanian realms in the Crone Galaxy; the widening of its diplomatic and economic ties; and great internal stability within the Masacavanian realms. The destruction of the Confederacy of the Great Breffals (1788), accomplished by a coalition of the Grand Duchy and of the Haxonian and Vendragian Confederacies, had resulted in the elimination of a state which had posed such a considerable threat to the security and the stability of Masacavania, and had, little more than a century before, been its formal suzerain. Feodor had followed this feat by subduing the Kuchite Colonies (1789); the Nogai Hordes (1791); and the Kamackhtan Confederacy (1792-95), thereby adding more than 500,000 star systems to his dominions. His proclamation of himself as Great King of Masacavania in 1794 had been acknowledged by virtually every power, except for the Marasharite Empire. There had then followed the short Azeorite War (1795-96), by which Feodor was able to obtain control of Azov and Voronezh, and to force recognition of his title from Marasharite Emperor Selim III. Feodor was at the time of his death a respected monarch. He had continued to conduct a lengthy correspondence with Laurasian Empress Aurelia; a further Treaty of Commerce and Amity had been signed between Laurasia and Masacavania in 1790; and by 1795, the Masacavanian Corporation (formerly the Company of Commerce), had established an extensive network of more than a thousand brokerage houses, retail outlets, depots, way stations, and landing fields in Masacavania and in the Galactic Void. The Masacavanian Galactic Void Corridor had been charted between 1785 and 1796, spanning more than 75,000 light years and linking to the Bessarabian Wormhole in the Great Amulak Spiral, encouraging further commerce between the two states. Feodor's death, therefore, was greeted with condolences from all foreign courts. The Empress of Laurasia praised his "continued friendship towards us, his concern for the tranquility and stability of all powers, and his ability to see through all difficulties and all challenges to strive for more." Because he was childless, Feodor was succeeded to the Masacavanian throne by his only surviving nephew, Dmitri, who became Dmitri II of Masacavania (r. 1798-1805).
  • January 23-
    • Into January 1798, the run of the Empire's successes in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions continued. The early weeks of the new year witnessed a renewed advance by Laurasian forces, under Fleet Admiral Notthamia, Admiral Raleghia, and General Verus, into Greater Spamalka and Leon, those heartland territories of Emperor Philicus's realms. The Spamalkan military base of Astruga was stormed by Admiral Raleghia (January 1-3, 1798), forcing the Count of Santa Gadea to terminate his plans for counteroffensives into Asturias and the Basque Provinces. By January 6, Leon Prime had been blockaded by Laurasian units, and from this vantage point, Notthamia humiliated Santa Gadea and Admiral de Bazan in a series of confrontations at the Coversa Straits (January 6-9, 1798). Benavente was then seized (January 12, 1798), and Leon, under full pressure from the allied forces, fell six days later. Zamora and Toro were now under direct threat from Notthamia and Raleghia. Spamalkan Admiral Martin de Padilla, in a desperate effort to catch the Empire's forces off balance, decided to assemble his forces at Sesimbra for a move into Galicia.
    • He intended to assault Ourense, Corunna, Ferrol, Salamander, and Lugo, with the goal of disorienting the Laurasian garrisons from those star systems and thereby forcing an end to Laurasian moves in Leon and Lesser Spamalka. On January 20, 1798, however, Admiral Notthamia ordered Admiral Howardis to deploy at Santiago de Compostela, and to proceed to block any attempted Spamalkan moves. The following day, Howardis learned that the Spamalkans had assembled at Sesimbra, and that it was apparent that Admiral Padilla intended to launch a counteroffensive into Galicia. He now decided to strike. During the early hours of January 23, 1798, the Admiral's forces reached the outskirts of the Sesimbra star system. Admiral Padilla had under his command the Christopher, the Santo Louis, Fortleza, Trinidad, Santo Lopo, Leva, Occasion, San Jacinto II, Lazar, Padrilla, and San Diego.
    • These were the cream of the Spamalkan 19th Fleet, which possessed more than one hundred offensive warships total. The detachments of the Imperial Laurasian Navy (the Operational Force of Galicia), that opposed them had nearly 20% more firepower and personnel, enjoying a distinct numerical and tactical advantage from the beginning. As soon as he reached Sesimbra, Admiral Howardis ordered for an immediate bombardment of the Spamalkan positions. The Fortleza and Trinidad, along with ten Spamalkan frigates, suffered extensive damage, but soon, Admiral de Padilla shifted his warships out into interstellar space, seeking to form a crescent. Howardis reacted, and sent three of his destroyers under Fleet Captain Sir Richardius Leveronia (1770-1805) into the thick of the Spamalkan formations. Leveronia's force harried the Leva and the San Jacinto; de Padilla suffered disastrous losses. Within hours, with Howardis having formed his chief warships into a parallel formation, the Occasion and the Trinidad were both destroyed, while the Lazar was captured by Laurasian boarding parties. Padilla was now forced to abandon Sesimbra, and the world fell into Laurasian possession. The Sao Valentinco, the largest Spamalkan transport, was soon captured, with Admiral Howardis's men seizing more than $400 billion ducats worth of military equipment, supplies, and minerals. Howardis subsequently pursued Padilla across a distance of more than twelve cubic light-years; the San Jacinto, Santo Louis, and San Diego were all destroyed in combat, while the Leva was abandoned and seized by Imperial Marines.
    • On January 25, de Padilla reached Flores, bringing an end to the Battle of Sesimbra Straits, which had ranged far from the actual star system. This confrontation had ended in another decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire, which had halted Spamalkan attempts at re-entrenchment in Galicia. The Spamalkans lost more than seventy warships and 175,000 military personnel; $1.5 trillion ducats worth of goods and equipment; and almost all of their siege turbocannon. The Laurasians lost only five warships, with Howardis's flagship, the IMS Garlandia, experiencing moderate damage to its hull and starboard ion disruptors. As a result of this victory, the offensives by the Empire in Leon and Lesser Spamalka continued. Toro was stormed by Admiral Raleghia (January 26, 1798), followed by Sanabria (January 29) and Fermosselle (January 31-February 4, 1798). Villafailla was then besieged (February 6-9, 1798), and in spite of Santa Gadea's efforts, the stronghold fell into Laurasian hands with the loss of 10,000 Spamalkan tercios in action. Admirals Raleghia and Notthamia now decided to blockade Zamora, and to launch a strike against Heubra and Ledesma (February 15-22, 1798), which ended in both outposts being destroyed and deprived of all viable military assets. The Siege of Zamora continued through the end of February 1798, by which stage Laurasian forces had conquered Lumbrales, Moncalvo, and Lerilla, consolidating the Empire's strategic position in Salamanca and the heart of Lesser Spamalka.
  • February 10-
    • Whereas the Empire's military forces, and those of its allies, made further gains during these early months of 1798, events continued to proceed at the Imperial Court. Empress Aurelia held her fourth and final audience with the Franconian Special Envoy, the Sieur de Maisse (January 7, 1798). In this audience, the Empress assured de Maisse of her dedication to restoring tranquility in the Great Amulak Spiral; indicated her support for Franconian acquisition of Franche-Comte, Milania, and Andorra; and the reduction of Spamalkan military and diplomatic influence. De Maisse, on his part, assured the Empress that Laurasian transit rights in Franconian and Durthian territories would be guaranteed, in case of a future military conflict in the Germanian Principalities or elsewhere. The Envoy was, however, astounded by the Earl of Estatius's assertion that he was not supportive of any prospects of peace with Spamalka at the present time. Furthermore, Estatius confided to the Envoy, the Imperial Court was victim of two "evils", delay and inconstancy, and that the cause of it was the "gender of the sovereign."
    • It was true that by this point the younger elements of the Imperial Court were becoming restive under the governance of an aging female sovereign; some had even said that they would not have "a Empress followed by another Empress." Estatius and many others viewing the future were looking towards succession possibilities (the Earl had overcome his earlier reluctance about that matter). Estatius himself considered the young Earl of Duana as the most viable successor. Empress Aurelia, however, continued not to permit any talk of the succession in her presence, and in November 1797, she had reiterated her commands against referring to her death or to the Empire's future in her presence. Nevertheless, she and Estatius remained on good terms, although there was briefly talk of an affair between the Earl and Lady Didymeia Howardis (1774-1862), one of the Empress's ladies-in-waiting. Estatius ultimately managed to convince her that it was nothing. There was, however, one young man at the Imperial Court who was dabbling: Estatius's friend, the Earl of Southerton. Southerton had returned from the Hereditary Dominions, upon his friend's urging, in December 1797.
    • Now twenty years old, he had become renowned for his patronage of the arts and sciences; his own intellectual tastes; and his passion for history, literature, and architecture. The Earl was also athletic, involving himself in many jousts and tournaments. But there was one other side to him: Southerton was a philanderer. It was already alleged that he had had sexual intercourse with more than thirty young ladies of the Imperial Household, and that he boasted of his sexual accomplishments with his personal associates and friends. This was once again seen upon the Earl's return from the duties of war. For the past two years, Southerton had engaged in a clandestine affair with Lady Aurelia Verania (1772-1855), who was a maid of honor to the Empress. His relationship with her bloomed after his return, and on February 3, 1798, the Earl asked Empress Aurelia for permission to marry Lady Verania. The Empress refused however, again resentful of all of the attentions gained by the young men at her Court. He then asked permission to travel abroad in Pruthia, Austarlia, and Haxonia, which was granted. Southerton now made hasty preparations for his departure, and he left Laurasia Prime (February 10, 1798).
    • His mistress, Lady Verania, saw him off, and "wept out her fairest eyes", according to Sir Franconius Bagonius. She had good cause to weep: she was pregnant, having learned of this through the physicians at the Imperial Hospital just two days earlier. Fearing that she would be ruined, she now began to beg Estatius to arrange for a secret ceremony of marriage. The Earl at first resisted, but, ultimately convinced by a plea from Southerton himself, decided to relent. On February 14, 1798, just four days after the Earl's departure from Laurasia Prime, he and his mistress (who had been granted leave by Estatius, who as Imperial Marshal had responsibility for the security of the Empress's household), were secretly married at Belkadan, with only the Earl and the officiating priest in attendance. Southerton then continued on his journey to the Great Amulak Spiral, while Lady Verania retreated to Estatius House on Laurasia Prime. For the time being, the Empress remained ignorant of Lady Verania's pregnancy and of her secret marriage with Southerton.
  • February 12-
    • On February 12, 1798, two and a half years after his enforced abdication, the former King and Grand Duke of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Stanis Vorrust I, died at the Old Royal Palace in Christiania, Laurasia Prime. He was sixty-six years old at the time of his death. Empress Aurelia's attitude towards the former King of Dejanica had mellowed, following the spectacle of his presentation at the Imperial Court in March 1796. In February 1797, the Empress had granted the ex-monarch permission to travel freely from Laurasia Prime (as long as he notified imperial authorities and was escorted by a honorary corps of Imperial Marines), conferred upon him personal bedchambers at the Old Royal Palace and properties on Caladaria, Americana, Osama, Azatha II, Little Mexicana, and Chloe; and allowed him to retain possession of his state seals, insignia, and ceremonial robes of state until his death. Stanis Vorrust, treated now more as a guest aristocrat, made routine visits to the Imperial Court, and received visits in turn from many of the more prominent figures of the Imperial Laurasian Government. Among those who saw the former King included Lord Treasurer Burghley, Chancellor Cecilis, and the Earl of Estatius himself. In September 1797, Stanis Vorrust had begun work on his official memoirs, having received a publication license from the Imperial Ministry of Culture and Communications.
    • He was then a guest at the Accession Day celebrations two months later. By late 1797, however, the former King's health had entered a serious decline, and he halted work on his memoirs in January 1798. On January 22, he suffered a panic attack while visiting the Imperial Academy of the Arts; then on February 3, a debilitating stroke, which confined him to his bedchambers. The King of Dejanica was surrounded at his deathbed by his personal servants, his younger brother Prince Josef Poniatowskia (who had been pardoned by the Empress of Laurasia in December 1795, the only one of the leaders of the Koscizuko Revolt to be so spared, and who had been at Laurasia Prime since April 1796), and by Valedictorian Guards. Empress Aurelia was informed of the ex-King's death while eating her lunch in her private bedchambers. She expressed her sincere condolences over his demise, ordered the Imperial Court into a day of mourning, and on February 14, issued a proclamation declaring that "His late Majesty of Dejanica's demise affects us all, and is a blow inflicted only by the Anti-Almitis." On the Empress's orders, the King would be given an official lying-in-state at the Westphalian Cathedral, from February 14 to February 21. He would be buried at St. Catherine's Cathedral in Colombia on February 25, 1798, in a ceremony attended by most personages of the Imperial Court and Government.
  • February 23-
    • The momentum of the Laurasian Empire's military offensives in the Spamalkan Colonial Territories picked up steam during the early months of 1798. On January 5, 1798, Admiral Langatonia launched a decisive offensive against Ciaudad Santino. This stronghold, which had a population of more than seventy million by 1798, commanded the Managua Spices and Mineral Highway, an important route extending for more than 25,000 light-years from Managua to David. It was by means of this route that the Holy Spamalkan Empire shipped out convoys of mineral and spice goods, including diamonds, neuranium, auburite, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, cinnamon, cocoa, and peppers, on an annual basis. The capture of this world would consolidate Laurasian control over that important juncture, and thereby deal further damage to the transportation and mineral production sectors of the Spamalkan economy. Despite the resistance of the Governor of Ciaudad Santino, Martin de Jeugez (1755-1807), the stronghold fell to Admiral Langatonia's forces within the day.
    • The conquest of Ciaudad Santino now allowed for Admiral Langatonia to seize the Spamalkan colonies of San Jose, Cartago, and Paraiso (January 6-11, 1798), and on January 13, to defeat a counteroffensive launched by Admiral Zubiaur at the Ichita Star Cluster. From the Star Cluster, Langatonia moved with full force against Managua. By January 16, Laurasian units had seized the Relays of Cocibola, thereby sundering communications from the Managua star system to the remainder of the Nicaraguan Sector, and to the Holy Spamalkan Empire's garrisons in Newer Spamalka. Two days later, Langatonia repelled another counteroffensive by Admiral Zubiaur in the Battle of Rivas; he then stormed the Mayeros Spaceport, one of the largest commercial exchanges in the Great Amulak Spiral. Managua was under a full siege by the forces of the Empire by January 19, 1798.
    • The Siege of Managua continued for more than ten days, as Zubiaur attempted (in vain), to breach Laurasian positions at Matagalpa, Esteli, and Chinadega; to provide support to the beleaguered garrison; and to harry Laurasian supply lines. Ultimately, Managua's defenses collapsed under constant Laurasian bombardment (January 31, 1798), and within hours, Laurasian troops under Major-General Sir Honorius Dunaria (under Langatonia's command since April 1797), had overrun the world's garrison. The Governor of Managua, Revenies del Rudez (1745-1803), surrendered during the early hours of February 1. The Siege of Managua therefore ended in a decisive victory for Laurasian military forces. From Managua, Admiral Langatonia and General Dunaria besieged and conquered the Spamalkan outposts of Palmares, Atanas, Oerio, and Naranjos (February 2-9, 1798), impounding more than $700 billion ducats worth of Spamalkan goods. Palmares in particular, was a major source of gold, silver, and duranium, and its capture was a severe blow to Spamalkan corporations in the Hereditary Dominions, particularly La Casas Refineries.
    • Emperor Philicus was forced to call a temporary suspension on the circulation of bullion in the Spamalkan Treasury (February 11, 1798), as a result of the Laurasian successes. Langatonia now turned his attention to Tabasco, which possessed the largest commercial spaceport in the Nicaraguan Sector, and which had defied the grip of the Empire's military forces until this point. The stronghold had a population of nearly one hundred million, and was commanded by Governor Lazaro Surarez de Cordova (1743-98). The Battle of Tabasco commenced on February 15, 1798, as Admiral Langatonia launched a surprise offensive against the Tabasco star system. Organizing his mobile corvettes and couriers into a flexible line of battle, Langatonia was able to quickly defeat Spamalkan squadrons under the command of Commodore Don Ricardo Flores (1744-1819), and to push all the way through the Tabasco Asteroid Belt. Storming the outposts of Del Reala, Bautista, and Herrera, the Admiral's ships soon appeared in orbit of Tabasco. It was not until the late hours of February 16 before the world's shields were breached. It was at this point that Brigadier-General Sir Christopherius Newportia (1761-1817) distinguished himself.
    • A veteran of the First Spamalkan War and the Kosciusko Revolt, Newportia led the decisive assault on the Fortress of Central Tabasco, expertly repelling Spamalkan tercio assaults against his lines through a combination of mobile power and superior artillery coordination. By the end of the day, Tabasco was securely in the hands of the Empire; Governor de Cordova died of injuries sustained in confrontations with the Imperial Laurasian Army. From Tabasco, the attention now shifted immediately to Puerto Caballos, which had already been harried by Laurasian expeditions from Tortuga. During the late hours of February 17, 1798, Langatonia and General Newportia (who had now gained prominence with his superiors), reached the outskirts of Puerto Caballos. A quick confrontation soon ensued with the Spamalkan galleys in the Caballos Void: the Neustra Senora del Rosario, under the command of Captain Juan de Monasterios (1754-1808), and the San Juan Bautista, commanded by Captain Franciso Ferrufino (1762-1812).
    • Within hours, Imperial Marines, taking advantage of hull and shield breaches in the two galleys, managed to board them. The Spamalkan troops and crew onboard held them off for some time, but the IMS Archangel, a reserve carrier of the Imperial Laurasian Navy, came from behind and directed a series of projectile strikes against the two Spamalkan galleys. Marines, under General Newportia, finally seized the Neustra Senora del Rosario; the San Juan Bautista surrendered shortly afterwards. Langatonia ordered his warships to blockade the Puerto Caballos Gate and to bombard the world itself; after nearly eight hours, its shields were broken, and a swift land offensive commenced. On February 19, 1798, Puerto Caballos surrendered. With the fall of this stronghold, the whole of the Guatemalan and Nicaraguan Sectors was now under the control of the Laurasian Empire's military forces. Attention subsequently turned to the El Savordian Sector. On February 21, Admiral Langatonia stormed both Santa Tecia and Apopa, thereby giving Laurasian forces a foothold in that region. The Battle of Delgado then followed (February 24-28, 1798), as Admiral Zubiaur again attempted to blunt a further Laurasian advance. His failure opened the way to the Empire's conquest of Ilopango (March 3); Ahuchapan (March 5-9); Mejicanos (March 14); San Miguel (March 18); and Soyapango (March 19-22). By the end of March 1798, Laurasian units were besieging Santa Ana, Izalco, and Metapan, all of which had been isolated from their supply routes.
  • March 14-
    • By March 1798, the Laurasian Empire's military forces, in conjunction with those of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia, had made further progress in Catalonia and Milania against their Spamalkan adversaries. It has already been noted that by the end of February 1798, Admirals Notthamia and Raleghia had reached the heart of Lesser Spamalka, threatening the security of the Madrid Region, Valencia, and Aragon, Emperor Philicus's core territories. In accord with that, Field-Marshal Surovius and the Duke of Montpensier continued to secure more of Catalonia, dealing a series of humiliating blows to overstretched Spamalkan forces and garrisons. Following the conquest of Viehla, Field-Marshal Surovius found himself compelled to ruin a Spamalkan counteroffensive, launched by the Duke of Medinia Sidonia, in the Battle of the Las Novas (December 31, 1797-January 4, 1798).
    • On January 6, Surovius gained another victory in the Battle of Ludi, storming three Spamalkan command positions in the face of withering artillery and turbocannon fire. By January 9, the Laurasian Field-Marshal, having taken his troops on a arch through the Isabellan Outposts, had reached and stormed the Spamalkan garrison of Solsona. Bergeuda then followed (January 12-14, 1798), and on January 16, Surovius blockaded Vic, thereby preventing Spamalkan units from moving to reconquer Girona. Banyoles was stormed by the Duke of Montpensier (January 19-24, 1798), who then secured Santa Coloma de Farners (January 26); La Bisbal d'Emrpoda (January 29); and Olot (February 2-5). By February 11, fifty colonies along the Girones Route had been secured by Montpensier and Surovius.
    • The Count of Santa Gadea now fortified the garrisons of Garanollers, Mataro, and Sabadell. Medinia Sidonia, on his part, advanced against La Seu d'Urgell and Sort, determined to drive a wedge through Laurasian supply lines. Although he managed to harry the outskirts of the former stronghold (February 17, 1798) and briefly overran Lesser Sort (February 19-20), he was ultimately defeated by Field-Marshal Surovius and a detachment sent by Admiral Raleghia in the Battle of the Alt (February 25-26, 1798). Surovius then drove Spamalkan units from La Seu d'Urgell (February 28, 1798). Mollereusa, Cervera, and Tarrega fell in succssion (March 1-5, 1798), and on March 11, Surovius destroyed a force under the command of Admiral Juan Gutierrez de Garibay (1751-1814) in the Battle of Balaguer. Palafurgell was blockaded the following day, and on March 14, 1798, Surovius repelled a Spamalkan break-out attempt in the Battle of Camprodon.
    • Palafurgell fell the following day. On March 17, the Duke of Montpensier stormed Sabadell, driving through Santa Gadea's defensive lines. Two days later, joining with Surovius at Besalu, they seized Livia and Salt, and on March 22, 1798, defeated de Garibay again in the Battle of Girona. Surovius subsequently pursued de Garibay to Sant Feliu de Guixols, capturing the stronghold (March 24). Garibay himself was then blockaded at Lloret de Mar, and was finally forced to surrender (March 30, 1798). By that time, Montpensier's forces, now working with General Verus and Admiral Raleghia's units, had seized Garanollers, Mataro, Terrasa, and Manresa, providing a vantage point from which to plunder the defenses of Barcelona. Emperor Philicus, utterly alarmed at this string of Laurasian successes, ordered Santa Gadea and Admiral de Bazan to begin preparing for a counteroffensive in Solsones, Bergeuda, and Bages, with the goal of driving to Girona and cutting off allied forces farther south. He also had other worries, for the Duchy of Milania was now almost completely in Franconian hands.
    • On January 2, 1798, Prince de Conti and the Duke of Bouillon cooperated in an offensive against Arona, Oleggio, and Cameri. General Ambrosio Spinola managed to defeat a Franconian force at Croatina Post (January 6, 1798), and to force Bouillon's troops to retreat from the outpost of Rainier (January 9-11), but on January 15, the defenses of Arona were breached by Prince de Conti in a decisive counteroffensive. De Conti arrayed his naval forces in a parallel column, and used his interdictor units to disrupt planetary communications as well as energy sources. Arona fell within the day. The Duke of Bouillon launched a renewed offensive against Rainier (January 16-19, 1798), going on not only to seize that system but to drive into Galliate (January 22) and to force the Duke of Fries to retreat from Nabbiolo (January 27). He then swept forth and seized Camari (February 1-3, 1798), humiliating Spinola by defeating his troops at the outskirts of the Camari Orbital Garrison.
    • A fierce confrontation then ensued on Camari Minor (February 6-11, 1798), ultimately ending in a victory for allied forces. De Conti now advanced to Novara, with Bouillon commanding his auxiliary forces. A final Spamalkan counteroffensive at Borgomanero was defeated (February 15, 1798), and four days later, Novara came under siege. The Siege of Novara dragged on into the following month, as the Duke of Fries and General Spinola, receiving sporadic reinforcements from Naparia and the Balearic Provinces, attempted in vain to break allied supply lines. Finally, on March 7, 1798, Novara surrendered to Prince de Conti. Piacenza surrendered without a fight four days later, and from there, de Conti stormed the Taro Colonies, Trebbia, and Novi (March 12-19, 1798). At the same time, Bouillon and the Durthian General Count Johnes von Herlms (1747-1811), operating from Valduz and Schaan, besieged and captured Belinzona (March 14-17, 1798), thereby depriving Spinola and Fries of their last possible links to beleaguered Spamalkan forces in Flanders.
    • The Battle of the Lago di Coma Straits (March 22-25, 1798) and the Skirmish of the Brescia Colonies (March 29), followed, as Bouillon attempted to link up with Conti's forces near Parma. Ultimately, allied forces succeeded in establishing their supply lines, though Asti and Aosta were briefly seized by Spamalkan units under General Fe'ro de Pederia (1749-1812). Verbania and Stressa fell (April 1, 1798), and two days later, the Siege of Parma commenced. This world, once the hereditary dukedom of the late Governor-General of the Durthian Duchies, was heavily fortified. With more than six billion inhabitants by the late eighteenth century, Parma had been under the suzerainty of the Holy Spamalkan Empire since 1745. Before then it had belonged to the Holy Austarlian Empire (1721-45); the Serene Kingdom of Franconia (1700-21); the Duchy of Milania (1541-1700); and the Po Confederacies (974-1541). The Siege of Parma lasted for most of April 1798; its final fall on April 22, 1798, therefore left only Milan Prime and Bergamo in the hands of the Holy Spamalkan Empire.
  • March 29-
    • At the beginning of February 1798, the allied forces of the Laurasian Empire and United Durthian States were approaching the outskirts of Brussels, one of the last remaining bastions of Spamalkan power in the Durthian Duchies. Prince Maurice of Nassau and Laurasian Fleet-Admiral Sir Theodosius Ushavious were determined to destroy the last remaining strongholds of Spamalkan influence in Flanders; that was the goal expressed by Empress Aurelia and King Hensios both, as a prerequisite to any negotiations with the Holy Spamalkan Empire. On February 3, 1798, Anderlecht, located ten light-years to the southeast of Brussels, was besieged and conquered by General Verus and Count van Duyvenvoorde, who thereby inflicted severe damage upon the star system's defenses. Auderghem and Berchem were then captured by Verus and Van Duyvenvoorde (February 4-9, 1798), preventing the Count of Fuentes from making an attempted breakout to Gembloux, Namurs, and Mons. On February 14, Admiral Ushavious defeated Fuentes in the Battle of Koekelburg; by February 22, the Spamalkan garrisons of Uccle, Schaarbeck, Ganshoren, and Ixelles had all been stormed by Ushavious and Prince Maurice, with support from these subordinate commanders.
    • Finally (February 23, 1798), Brussels itself fell under blockade from the forces of the Allied Coalition. The Siege of Brussels continued for the better part of two weeks; Fuentes, in command of Brussels's garrison, proved to be a worthy adversary. Finally (March 9, 1798), the world's defenses were breached. Nevertheless, it was not until March 16 before Brussels was fully secured by the forces of the United Durthian States and Laurasian Empire. The Count of Fuentes managed to evade capture, and fled on his starfighter to Etterbeek. However, on March 22, 1798, Watermaal and Bruxelles were stormed by Admiral Ushavious; the following day, Fuentes died when his starfighter exploded at Etterbeek's Moon, following a surprise offensive by Laurasian dreadnoughts. Etterbeek itself soon fell to Laurasian and Durthian units.
    • Duke Albert of Caria soon found himself blockaded at Ekeren and Hoboken, on the outskirts of Antwerp. Ushavious and Prince Maurice, marshaling their forces from Bergen op Zoom, Ostend, Liege, Nimejgen, Groningen, Breda, Venlo, Axel, Zutphen, Gembloux, Mechelen, Utrecht, and Maastricht, launched a decisive offensive against Ekeren (March 29-April 3, 1798). Duke Albert was decisively defeated, and forced to retreat with his squadrons towards Hoboken. On April 5, however, Hoboken was stormed by Durthian units under the Count of Solms and Count William Louis of Groningen. Albert was now virtually isolated by allied forces. It was on April 12, 1798, that the Duke was finally captured. Albert found himself surrounded on all sides by allied warships. Unable to escape, he surrendered without a fight. With Fuentes dead and Duke Albert now in allied custody, Antwerp was left completely exposed to the final onslaught. The Garrison General of Antwerp, Cipriano de Meres, the Count de Meres (1746-1809), had been ordered by Emperor Philicus to yield nothing to the allies. De Meres, however, realized that this would be hopeless, since the system would be completely surrounded by enemy forces. On April 21, 1798, he formally surrendered to Prince Maurice of Nassau, completing the virtual destruction of Spamalkan power in the Durthian Duchies.
  • April 7-
    • Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court celebrated St. Georgius's Day, one of the chief holy days of the Imperial Almitian Church, and a major holiday for many subjects throughout the Laurasian Empire (April 7, 1798). St. Georgius was an ancient Laurasian saint, who had been one of the elite Praetorian Guards, a specialized corps in the service of Brethalian Emperor Commodus (r. 2903-2886). He had been executed in 2897 BH, on the orders of the Emperor himself, for refusing to convert to Brethalian Traditionalism and to abjure his Almitian beliefs. The Almitian Church had canonized him three centuries after his death, and all the way into the Space Age, he had been revered for his heroism and his faith in the Lord Almitis. The Empress, adhering to traditional Laurasian custom, washed the feet of twelve elderly individuals in the Public Throne Room; attended a service of thanksgiving and praise to the Lords Paul and Euesbius, overseen by Chief Procurator Whitshiftus; and was in attendance at a feast in the Saint's honor, at the Westphalian Cathedral.
    • It was at this time that a Pruthian visitor to the Imperial Court, Paul Hentzner (1758-1823), saw the Empress in procession as she went from the Quencilvanian Palace to the Cathedral. He described her as "very majestic" and then went on to state that her "face was oblong, fair, but wrinkled; her eyes large, jet-black, and pleasant; her nose somewhat hooked; her lips narrow and her teeth clear white; her hair was of an auburn color, although anyone could tell that it was not genuine; upon her head she had a small crown. Her bosom was uncovered, as all of the ladies among this Empire's nobility have it until they marry. Her hands were slender, her fingers rather long, and her stature neither tall nor low; her air was stately, and her manner of speaking mild and obliging." As the Empress passed, he further reported, "she spoke very graciously, first to one, than to another, in Laurasian, Franconian, and Haxonian, for she is mistress of all these languages and of the other major languages in her Empire."
    • "Whoever speaks to her, it is kneeling; now and then she raises some with her hand. Wherever she turned her face, everybody fell down on their knees." The Empress was pleased about the progress of her military forces, and was confident that Philicus would soon be forced to break. Her manner, however, darkened considerably some days later; all vitality appeared to be drained from the Court. On April 13, 1798, the Empress received word that her adoptive stepsister, Didymeia Seymouris, Duchess of Kendalia, her husband, Sir Perseus Amaysius, and their two daughters, Didymeia and Katharina, had died in a combustive explosion at Seymouris Estate on Kendalia. When informed of their deaths, the Empress burst into tears, declaring that the "Lord Almitis was cruel to her and that he has not ceased taking away all who are most beloved to me."
    • Hentzner now reported that "Her Majesty has canceled all entertainments and has ordered for the Court to enter a day of mourning for Her late stepsister, the Duchess of Kendalia, and her family." The Empress issued a proclamation from the Imperial Court, declaring that the Duchess's death gravely affected her. She was only forty-nine years old when she died; Aurelia asserted that "the Lord Almitis and his Angels will surely be welcoming her in heaven." Chancellor Cecilis and the Earl of Estatius now found themselves engaged in vigorous efforts to help the Empress overcome the emotional turmoil of this sad spectacle. On her orders, the late Duchess, her husband, and daughters, would be given ceremonial funerals at the Westphalian Cathedral (April 22, 1798). The explosion had completely destroyed their corpses. Empress Aurelia also received Didymeia's son Perseus, now Duke of Kendalia, and expressed her condolences to him over the deaths of his parents and siblings. Thus, Aurelia was in less than a happy mood as the Empire's military campaigns against Spamalka were finally reaping their last reward.
  • April 26-
    • As Empress Aurelia experienced yet another episode of personal tragedy at the Imperial Court, in regards to the sudden and unfortunate deaths of the Duchess of Kendalia and her family, the Laurasian Empire's military forces in the Colonial Territories and the Hereditary Dominions pushed forth with a series of final victories, which, in conjunction with the destruction of Spamalkan power in the Duchy of Milania, would finally compel Emperor Philicus I and his government into suing for peace with the allied powers. At the beginning of April 1798, the Count of Santa Gadea and Admiral de Bazan had been readying their forces for a counteroffensive against the Laurasian lines. On April 7, the Count, who had strengthened the garrisons of Solsones, Cervera, and Comarques, launched a series of strikes northwards, attempting to dislodge the Laurasian communication lines and to disrupt the momentum of Surovius's forces.
    • At the same time, de Bazan directed an offensive against Vic, Granollers, and the Wayward Provinces of Occidentia and Marseme, aiming to terminate the allied threat to Barcelona. Of the two commanders, de Bazan enjoyed the greater success (temporarily). He defeated the Duke of Montpensier's subordinate, the Count of Poitiers, in the Battle of Sessarisa (April 7-11, 1798) and on April 14, temporarily reconquered Granollers, capturing more than 76,000 troops of the 9th and 11th Royal Franconian Armies in a surprise offensive. De Bazan then stormed Sabadell (April 16, 1798), thereby terminating allied raids against Igaulada, Villafranca, and de la Pendes. Two days later, he drove allied forces from the outskirts of Vic, and on April 22, captured Mataro, driving a wedge into the Province of Marseme and seriously threatening the Marseme Highway, which had come to be dominated by Franconian forces.
    • At the same time, Santa Gadea managed to recapture Berga (April 8, 1798), and two days later, to defeat the Duke of Montpensier himself in the Battle of Ager. Mollerussa, Algerri, and Aldes were then stormed (April 14-19, 1798), and on April 23, even Tremp fell back into Spamalkan hands. Field-Marshal Surovius, who had been completing the subjection of the Osries Colonies to allied control, now prepared a brilliant series of counteroffensives. Relying upon the superior mobility of his troops and ships; upon extensive coordination with his Franconian allies; and upon a strategy emphasizing surprise strikes, quick maneuvers, and rapid assaults with formations of armored tanks and craft, the Field-Marshal quickly turned back Santa Gadea's moves. He repelled an offensive against Urgell (April 24, 1798), and reconquered Tremp, driving Spamalkan troops off the world's surface in just three hours. Two days later, April 26, 1798, the Count of Santa Gadea launched an offensive against Bassella, attempting to seize this world which had become a supply outpost for the Imperial Laurasian Army.
    • Surovius allowed for Santa Gadea to land his troops on the world, and called in naval units under Commodore Sir Zephyrus Theruius (1744-1815) to sunder Spamalkan escape routes and to blockade Bassella. The Field-Marshal then employed his rapid armored columns and turbocannons to suppress the Spamalkan lines; Santa Gadea was forced to retreat, with heavy casualties, by the end of the day. The Battle of Bassella therefore ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. Following this, Mollerussa and Algerri were recovered by Surovius (April 27-30, 1798), and on May 1, he humiliated Santa Gadea again in the Battle of Les Avellanes, terminating any threat posed by enemy forces to Pugcerda. By May 5, the Duke of Montpensier had recovered Granollers, Sabadell, and Vic, forcing de Bazan to retreat back towards Barcleona. Villafranca was stormed (May 6, 1798), and two days later, Field-Marshal Surovius, in a series of surprise armored assaults, destroyed Spamalkan positions on Berga, Ager, Aldes, Cervera, and Lleda within a span of twenty hours. On May 15, 1798, Igaulada surrendered to allied forces, and three days later, Surovius defeated Santa Gadea and the Duke of Tarragona in the Battle of El Vendrell.
  • May 19-
    • As this was ongoing, Admirals Raleghia and Notthamia gained their own string of victories over overstretched Spamalkan forces in Lesser Spamalka, magnifying the extent of the allied successes in Catalonia. Zamora finally capitulated to the Laurasian Empire's naval forces (February 28, 1798), and from there, Raleghia seized Santovenia de Piseurga (March 5); Boecillo (March 9-11); and Olmedo (March 14). Admiral de Padilla and General Brochero launched a counteroffensive, briefly storming Sanabria, Toro, and Lerilla (March 15-19, 1798). Ultimately, however, Admiral Lord Howardis halted them in the Battle of Medina del Campo (March 24, 1798). He now seized this stronghold, so important to the diplomatic history of both governments. It was there, in March 1689, that the Laurasian Empire under Neuchrus I had concluded a treaty of diplomatic and marriage alliance with King Fe'ro II of Greater Spamalka and Queen Fresia I of Lesser Spamalka, providing for a common policy among the governments towards Franconia; the establishment of a fairer, and more equitable commerce policy; and most importantly, the marriage of Catarina of Greater Spamalka (who became Katharina of Shenandoah), to Grand Prince Craterus. Howardis, and the other Laurasian military commanders, were well aware of the significance of this stronghold to the Empire's history. With Medina del Campo now secure, Howardis recovered Sanabria and Toro (March 26, 1798), and subsequently drove Spamalkan units from Lerilla (March 29).
    • By April 3, Raleghia had besieged and conquered the Spamalkan garrisons of Aldemayer, Medina del Rioseco, Cigales, and Cimancas, thereby posing a serious threat to Valladolid. A series of skirmishes now ensued at Cabezon de Piseurga, Mojados, and Pedrajas (April 4-13, 1798), as Admiral de Padilla tried (in vain) to stem a further Laurasian advance in the direction of Valladolid. Although the Imperial Laurasian Navy suffered greater casualties then their Spamalkan counterparts in these campaigns, it ultimately had little impact upon the course of events in the whole. On April 17, 1798, Tordesillas, which had been threatened by Laurasian units from the previous month, surrendered to Fleet Admiral Notthamia without any resistance. He then stormed Laguna del Duero (April 19); Cisterniga (April 22); and Tudela del Duero (April 24), securing the Empire's hold over Medina del Campo. Admiral de Padilla then lost nearly half of his remaining frigates in the Battle of the Iscar Nebula (April 28, 1798), and on May 3, Zaratan was stormed by General Verus. On May 9, receiving reinforcements from Field-Marshal Surovius, Verus blockaded Penafiel and Agusal, preventing de Padilla from drawing reinforcements from either star system. Torrecilla fell under blockade from May 13, and was then successfully seized four days later (by Admiral Raleghia). On May 19, 1798, the Battle of Fontihoyelo ended in disastrous defeat for the Holy Spamalkan Empire. General Brochero himself, who had proved valiant in his direct skirmishes and confrontations with Laurasian troops in the field, was captured at the end of the battle, in which more than one-third of the Spamalkan Tercio and infantry corps was annihilated.
    • And as regards to the Colonial Territories, Admiral Langatonia and General Dunaria made more substantial gains. Izalco surrendered to the Empire on April 7, 1798, being quickly followed by Santa Ana (April 9). Metapan proved to be a more difficult target, however, and it required a full-scale Laurasian assault (April 14, 1798), before the stronghold finally fell into their possession. Brigadier-General Newportia again distinguished himself in direct combat with the enemy troops, using an innovative frontal assault strategy to storm Spamalkan positions in the Metapan Lowlands. From Metapan, Admiral Langatonia seized the Spamalkan garrisons of Usulutan (April 16-19); Sonsosante (April 22); and Opico (April 26). Admiral Zubiaur, who had remained such a persistent enemy of the Laurasian Vice-Admiral, and had continued in vain to attempt the defense of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's position in the Colonial Territories, suffered a final, humiliating defeat in the Siege of Toncatepeque (April 29-May 6, 1798). The Spamalkan Admiral was seriously wounded as he commanded the retreat of the last Spamalkan warships from the star system, and retreated to the Spamalkan medical facilities at Valapariso. In spite of the efforts of the Surgial Reconstruction Center's physicians, the Admiral died (May 13, 1798), depriving Emperor Philicus of another of his trusted commanders. With Toncatepeque in Laurasian hands, Langatonia and Dunaria had no issue in seizing Custancingo (May 18, 1798); destroying a Spamalkan transport convoy in the Battle of Izlal's Star (May 19); and blockading the Spamalkan fortifications of Chichen Izta (May 20-24, 1798).
  • May 25-
    • Simultaneously, while the allied forces made these final, decisive gains in the Colonial Territories and Hereditary Dominions, those under Prince de Conti and the Duke of Bouillon completed the destruction of Spamalkan power in the Duchy of Milania. On April 27, 1798, after obtaining a series of further victories over out-matched Spamalkan units at Seriate, Grassbolio, and Dalmine, the allied forces under de Conti and Bouillon approached the outskirts of Bergamo. Bergamo's garrison was commanded by Stefano da Vinci, Count of Caravaggio (1737-98), who was one of the most prominent Milanian commanders in Emperor Philicus's military forces, and who had a absolute hatred for the Franconians. Caravaggio had taken every effort to strengthen Bergamo's defenses, and he was determined not to make the advance an easy one for the allies. From the moment the siege commenced, however, victory was already within the Franconian grasp. Ten days earlier, King Hensios IV of Franconia had issued a manifesto from Dijon, declaring that any Milanian subject who revolted against the authority of the Holy Spamalkan Emperor would be rewarded, granted rights of free navigation and free transportation in his dominions, and (if serving in the Spamalkan military), given an immediate release. Furthermore, the King of Franconia promised to restore the Confedercial Councils of all Milanian star systems, which had been abolished by Philicus during the 1760s and 1770s, in his efforts to centralize the Duchy's political structure. This all appealed to the inhabitants of Bergamo, who despised the Spamalkan presence and were oppressed by the weight of taxes levied by the Holy Spamalkan Treasury.
    • On May 3, 1798, a series of riots broke out in Como City, Bergamo's capital and largest city; within two days, they had spread all over the planet. Prince de Conti, who had in the meantime driven Spamalkan troops from Dalmne, Romino, and Alvone, now ordered for a direct bombardment of Bergamo's shields. The garrison, now facing dissent from the local population, and ruthless bombardment from above, collapsed under the pressure. On May 9, Caravaggio himself was murdered by his own Milanian bodyguards; the following day, Bergamo surrendered to Prince de Conti without a fight. Milan Prime only was left. The Duke of Bouillon had already departed for that stronghold (May 7, 1798), and had seized Alzano, Stezzano, and Osio Sotto as a prelude to setting up a blockade. General Spinola led a final charge against Franconian-Laurasian lines at Cologno Monzenze (May 9-12, 1798), which ended in his utter defeat and capture by Bouillon.
    • Milan Prime, now isolated even further, saw the writing on the wall, and on May 19, 1798, the same day as the Battles of Izal's Star and Fontihoyelo, the Duke of Fries surrendered Milan Prime and all other remaining Spamalkan bases in the Duchy to allied forces. With this, the Duchy of Milania was now occupied as a whole by the Serene Kingdom of Franconia and Laurasian Empire. Emperor Philicus, whose treasury was financially exhausted; whose subjects were suffering from supply shortages, lower standards of living, rampant inflation, and staggering unemployment; and whose own morale was seriously exhausted, now acknowledged the need for peace. The Emperor of Spamalka's military forces were in shambles. Already, the garrisons of Minorca, the Lesser Balearics, Naparia, and the Syrite Colonies were threatening to revolt; his commanders were informing him of the stranglehold on the Empire's resources; and uprisings in Colombiana, the Peruvian Colonies, and Valencia drained the attention of his authorities and of his garrisons.
    • Furthermore, the Spamalkans had been completely expelled from Southern Durthia, Cologne, Franche-Comte, Asturias, Galicia, Andalusia, Milania, and most of Catalonia; the Spice Colonies, Central Territories, and Canaries were occupied by the Laurasian Empire's military forces; and the Colombiana was effectively isolated, suffering from endless enemy raids and expeditions. Naparia itself was now under direct threat, and the Emperor had received alarming intelligence that both Portugallia and Morocco were considering entering the war, to deliver the coup de grace to the Hereditary Dominions, Naparia, and the Sicilian Wayward Colonies. Philicus therefore found that he had no choice. On May 25, 1798, the Emperor commanded his Council of State to send a communique to the Imperial Laurasian, Royal Franconian, and Durthian Governments, requesting for an immediate military armistice and for a conference on negotiations to end the war. When the allied chancellories received this Spamalkan request, all found themselves enthused. Empress Aurelia, whose attention was turning to increased tensions in the Dumbarton Governorate, accepted the request immediately. She was shortly afterwards followed by King Hensios IV (who had been the first to raise the idea of peace with her and the Durthians), and on May 27, by the Durthian States-General. On May 31, 1798, Duke Albert of Caria (who was still an allied prisoner of war, but now authorized by Emperor Philicus as his chief armistice commissioner), the Count of Santa Cruz, and Admiral Coloma (who had managed to evade capture at the hands of allied troops), held a impromptu conference with the Dukes of Chateau-Thierry and Montpensier, Field-Marshal Surovius, Fleet Admiral Ushavious, and Grand Pensionary Jan van Alfterdort of Gelderland and Groningen (1735-1805) at Bordeaux, in the Serene Kingdom of Franconia.
    • After just two days of discussions, the Armistice of Bordeaux was signed (June 2, 1798), providing for the suspension of all active military hostilities among the powers; for all powers to retain the territory they now held (uti possidetis) until the conclusion of a formal peace treaty; and for the resumption of commercial intercourse. Preparations were now made by the three governments for the final peace conference. On June 4, 1798, the Imperial Privy Council held a session over the impending peace negotiations with the Holy Spamalkan Empire, and to discuss about the Truce of Bordeaux. Lord Treasurer Burghley, who was now suffering grievously from feral gout, and whose decline in health had become openly marked to all, urged the Empress to make no delay in hastening the process along with the Holy Spamalkan Empire. The Earl of Estatius, however, who had entertained grand ambitions of completely crushing the power of Spamalka, and of partitioning the whole of its territories along the allied powers, vehemently disagreed, declaring to Her Majesty that the Empire would gain further glory through the will of the Lord Almitis. Burghley then accused the Earl of breathing nothing but war, slaughter, and blood. The Empress was torn between these two viewpoints. Still grieving over the unfortunate death of the Duchess of Kendalia, and having heard of the Earl of Oxfadia's rapidly declining condition, her temper was worn down by her efforts to maintain the peace between the war and anti-war factions. On the whole, the Empress supported Burghley's views. Estatius retaliated by publishing a holonet tract (June 9, 1798), espousing his views and thereby gaining the ire of the Empress. The tensions between Aurelia and Estatius therefore increased considerably during the course of June 1798, while negotiations commenced and alarming reports arrived from the Dumbarton Governorate in the Angelina Spiral.
  • June 14-
    • On June 14, 1798, twelve days after the conclusion of the Armistice of Bordeaux, the diplomatic delegations of the Laurasian Empire, Holy Spamalkan Empire, Serene Kingdom of Franconia, and United Durthian States convened at Vervins, a minor Franconian resort colony in the Province of Picardy, for the peace conference to end the Second Spamalkan War. Vervins, which had originally been colonized in the eighth century AH, had a population of less than forty million inhabitants by the late eighteenth century, but was dominated by pleasant resorts, springs, and estates. This world was chosen as the site of the peace conference, by the agreement of the four governments, due to these attributes and to the fact that it had not been seized or otherwise disputed over during the course of the war. The Imperial Laurasian Government's plenipotentiaries to the conference were Field-Marshal Lord Surovius of Rymnik, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, Fleet Admiral Notthamia, Chancellor of the Laurasian Empire Sir Robertius Cecilis, and Sir Demetrius Pophamia, Chief Justice of the Imperial Star Chamber (1731-1807). The Holy Spamalkan Empire was represented by Juan de Tassis, Count of Villa Mediana (1741-180718), Alessandro Robida, Senator of Milania (1742-1806), Jean Richardot, President of the Brussels Privy Council (1740-1809), Philicus des Nales, Duke of Barcelona (1753-1821), and the Count of Santa Gadea. The Serene Kingdom of Franconia was represented by Hensios's chief minister, the Duke of Sully, the Prince de Conti, the Count of Poitiers, and the Duke of Bouillon.
    • Finally, the United Durthian States was represented by Count William Louis of Freisland and Groningen, Johan van Oldenbarnevelt, Advocate of Holland, Grand Penisionery Jan van Myden of Zeeland (1763-1834), the Count of Solms, and Admiral Jacob van Duyvenvoorde. The four delegations all assembled at the Vervins Conference House, and immediately got down to the rigors of business. The overriding condition presented by the allied delegations to their Spamalkan counterparts concerned the absolute recognition, by Emperor Philicus, of the independence of the United Durthian States. This was a point which the Counts of Villa Mediana and Santa Gadea, who served as the leaders of the Spamalkan delegation, had no qualms with. Furthermore, the allies demanded that Brabant, Flanders, Cologne, the Luxembourgian Sector, and the Lichtenstein Sector all be conceded to the authority of the United Durthian States; Franche-Comte, Andorra, Milania, Girona, Spamalkan Navarre, and Comarques to the Serene Kingdom of Franconia; and financial compensations granted to the allied governments, including the Laurasian Empire. The Spamalkan delegation reluctantly conceded all of this also, but when the Laurasian delegation made demands relating to the concession of particular of the Spamalkan Spice Colonies and Central Territories to Durthia and Franconia, the Spamalkans objected. The conference was to continue for nearly three months, as all of the delegations wrangled over the final terms of the peace settlement.
  • June 24-
    • By June 1798, the tensions in the Scottrian Governorates, particularly in the Dumbarton Governorate, against the authority of the Imperial Laurasian Government had grown severe. Following the suppression of the Desmonian Rebellion by Lord Greysius and Admiral Whyrtia (November 1783), general tranquility had returned to the Empire's newly acquired dominions in the western Angelina Spiral. This did not mean, however, the end of all tensions against Laurasian authority. Between 1783 and 1796, the confiscations, by imperial authorities, of Scottrian noble and gentry properties continued; by the middle of the last decade of the eighteenth century, only about 15% of the magnate properties, as they were in 1779, still remained in Scottrian hands. In 1786 and 1787, protests and riots against the Empress's authority erupted on Kildare, Dumblaine, Dumbarton, Misseldon, Branxholme, Erith, Derith, Albright, Madelaine, Albemaine, Leith, Stirling, and Dunbar, among other strongholds in the Scottrian Governorates.
    • Ediania was disturbed by the Holyroodian Palace Protests of 1788, and in 1790, the Governor-General of Ediania, Sir Caliocles Skiffingia, 1st Baron Skffingia of Tilleganus (1755-1824), was forced to impose martial law in the planet's cities, in order to quell further outbursts of dissent. By then, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council, in their effort to suppress these tensions against the Empire's authority, were sponsoring the elevation of certain Scottrian magnates, who they deemed loyal to the Empire, in order to maintain control among the Scottrian populace, and to give those subdued peoples some semblance of their prior traditions. The Scottrian lords Hugh O'Neill (1750-1800) and Hugh O'Donnell (1762-1800), who had been among the few to swear an unconditional oath of allegiance to Empress Aurelia in 1786, found themselves rapidly promoted. O'Neill became Earl of Tyrone (1787) and O'Donnell Earl of Donnaugh (1792). Tyrone, furthermore, became Governor of Dumbarton (1790), becoming one of the first native Scottrian nobles to be accepted into the service of the Imperial Laurasian Government. By that time, however, he was already stirring with dissent against the authority of the Laurasian Empire.
    • Since 1791, Tyrone had begun contemplating a rebellion against the Empire, entertaining ambitions of possibly liberating the Scottrian Outskirt Districts, and of proclaiming himself King of Scottria, of a new dynasty. In this ambition, he ultimately found support from the Earl of Donnaugh. In November 1791, the Governor-General of Dumbarton, Sir Antigonus Bagenrallia (1756-98), ordered for the confiscation of the properties of the MacMahons, O'Reillys, and McDonalds, all of whom were alleged to have colluded with Spamalkan agents. Furthermore, Bagenrallia proclaimed martial law on Imohkill, Lochleven, and Monroe, having received reports of the stirrings among the local populaces. Donnaugh, who owned estates in those star systems, and had ties with the MacMahons and the O'Reillys, found himself angered by the Governor-General's actions. In July 1792, he had submitted a petition to the Gubernatorial Council of Dumbarton, requesting for a through review of the Governor-General's actions and for the revocation of any decrees concerning the imposition of martial law. This petition had been denied.
    • Then in September, Bagenrallia came into conflict with Tyrone directly, when the Scottrian Earl eloped with the Governor-General's sister, Messalina (1761-94), and married her against her brother's wishes. The marriage lasted for nearly two years before Lady Tyrone died suddenly in August 1794. During that time, Tyrone and Donnaugh began assembling military supplies, armor, and equipment, at their estates and strongholds on Monaghan, Newry, Sligo, Dumblaine, Smwerick, Niddry, Brechin, and Limerick, for a possible "defense" of their livelihoods and honors against the Empire's authorities. In June 1794, the two Earls had the first of several contacts with the former Spamalkan Ambassador to the Laurasian Empire, Mendoza, who now served as Vice-Secretary of Foreign Affairs to the Council of State. Although the Treaty of Alacantara was on the verge of being concluded between the Allied Powers and the Holy Spamalkan Empire, Mendoza assured Tyrone and Donnaugh that Emperor Philicus had nothing but sympathy for their aims.
    • By July 1795, by which time the Second Spamalkan War had erupted, Philicus himself issued instructions to his Council of State, for the intensification of possible tensions against the Laurasian foe's authority over the Scottrian Governorates. In January 1796, Tyrone received a communique from the Holy Spamalkan Emperor himself, declaring his willingness to provide financial aid and mercenaries, at any point that the Earl deemed necessary. During the next two years, Tyrone built up his support among the remaining Scottrian elites, and recruited mercenaries from the Marasharite Empire, the Haxonian Confederacy, and the Germanian Principalities with the goal of an active military resistance against the Empire. It was not until February 1798, however, before the Earl submitted a final petition to the Gubernatorial Council of Ediania, requesting for the termination of all states of martial law imposed throughout the Governorates; for the restoration of properties and titles stripped from Scottrian nobles during the preceding eight years; and for Tyrone himself to be granted a military commission in the Imperial Laurasian Navy. The Governor-General of Ediania, Perseus Tarmanius, 1st Lord Helleborne of Dourif (1731-98), refused the petition, and now alerted the Imperial Privy Council. The Imperial Intelligence Agency had been monitoring Tyrone's actions for some time, and in March 1798, Lord Treasurer Burghley first raised the issue in a session of the Privy Council.
    • At that point, the Empire's military resources were still diverted to the Second Spamalkan War, and Empress Aurelia asserted that any potential rebellion in Scottrian territory would be "swiftly crushed nonetheless." Yet she, and her Council, proved to have too little of a reaction to what was going on. On May 13, 1798, Tyrone and Donnaugh issued a proclamation at Bresharia, formally proclaiming themselves to be in rebellion against the Imperial Laurasian Government. In their proclamation, Tyrone announced that he could not "allow for the oppression, by foreigners, of my native peoples and of our customs to continue unchecked." Within days of their proclamation, the two rebel Earls rapidly advanced their position. Adare and Castleroy were captured (May 16-22, 1798), and on May 28, Cathallfaon fell to a surprise offensive by Tyrone. Askeaton was besieged from May 29, 1798, and its fall on June 7 humiliated the Imperial Laurasian Government. By June 12, Tyrone and Donnaugh had secured Longford, Balloghan, Ballyduff, and Merchinston, thereby establishing a base in the Dumbarton Governorate.
    • Empress Aurelia, who was now genuinely alarmed by the progress of the rebellion, ordered Governor-General Bagenallia to set from Dumblaine and to relieve the rebel siege of Monaghan Fortress (the rest of the world was already in their possession). Proceeding through Dundalk and Newry (June 15-16, 1798), the Governor-General was determined to give no quarter to the rebel forces. By June 19, he had repelled rebel assaults against Kinsale, Carriagfoyle, and Mons Graspicus; Tyrone however, who had defiantly asserted his status as a Scottrian, and not a Laurasian, Earl, planned an ambush. On June 24, 1798, the Governor-General's force, comprised of the 87th Imperial Fleet and the 75th Imperial Army, was ambushed by Tyrone's mercenaries and conscripts at Clontibret, located ten light years east of Monaghan. The ensuing Battle of Clontibret lasted for the following two days, with the Scottrians employing their superior knowledge of the space to harry the Laurasian forces on all sides and to disrupt their supply lines. The assaults of the Scottrian mobile corps and arquebusiers caught the Imperial Laurasian Navy's warships off guard, and by the end of the day on June 26, Governor-General Bagenallia had been forced to call a retreat. Thirty of the forty capital warships in the Laurasian force were captured or destroyed by the Scottrian rebels, and more than 150,000 personnel of the Imperial Laurasian Navy died. Tyrone now consolidated his control of Clontibret, and on June 29, 1798, stormed Monaghan Fortress.
  • July 1-
    • By the beginning of July 1798, Tyrone's Rebellion in the Scottrian Governorates, as it was already being called, had seriously alarmed Empress Aurelia of Laurasia and the Imperial Privy Council. In public, she maintained an optimistic mood. The Empress announced, in a proclamation to her subjects on June 31, that the impending conclusion of peace with the Holy Spamalkan Empire would lead to the Empire's position being strengthened. At the same time, she declared that the outbreak of rebel tensions in the Scottrian Governorates was "of no consequence" and that within a short time, "Tyrone, Donnaugh, and the other fiends will be forced to acknowledge once again the might and authority of our Empire." But in private, as noted above, things were different. On July 1, 1798, the Empress summoned an extraordinary session of the Imperial Privy Council to discuss about the progress of Tyrone's Rebellion and the worsening situation in the Scottrian Governorates. The mood of the Privy Council was strained; part of its was due to the frustration over the outbreak of further rebel tensions in the Scottrian Governorates, and part of it to the increasingly strained relationship between the Empress and the Earl of Estatius. At the beginning of the session, the Empress inquired as to who would now undertake the "governance of the Scottrians."
    • Lord Helleborne, the Governor-General of Ediania, had died suddenly on June 23, 1798, leaving a vacancy in that Governorship. Besides, the Empress had come to the conclusion that a experienced military commander was needed to suppress this new outbreak of rebellion. Moving on, the Empress made some comments about Scottrian customs and stated that any future outbursts might be covert. She then admitted that not all of the Scottrians were savages, a view which had become popular at the Imperial Court. None on the Council responded to what the Empress was saying. With a flash of emotion, she now demanded why they were "studying the table so closely", alluding to their silence. The Earl of Estatius on his part, in rage over the peace negotiations with the Holy Spamalkan Empire, and determined to get rid of one of his enemies, suggested that "Lord Burghley's son" (Chancellor Cecilis) be appointed as the Governor-General of Ediania and Dumbarton. This was a ridiculous suggestion, for Cecilis was atop one of the highest positions in the Imperial Laurasian Government, and a demotion to Governor-General would make a joke of it. There was also the fact that Cecilis was a bureaucrat and a diplomat, not a military commander.
    • Empress Aurelia knew all of this; she and the fellow members of the Council were astonished by the Earl's suggestion. Lord Treasurer Burghley, who was now 77 years old and in serious pain from feral gout, could only muster a look of firm disapproval at this former ward of his. The Empress, however, concealed her surprise at first, and asked the Earl to explain further. Estatius now went into a mocking charade of pointing out the Chancellor's qualities of statesmanship. Aurelia, however, could not contain it any longer, and burst out laughing, declaring that the Earl was joking. Estatius, who was growing angrier by the minute, said in a calm tone that he was not doing any such thing. Aurelia, still calm, but also with underlying tension, quietly said that she thought he was. Estatius's voice trembled, and he asserted that he was not. That was the final straw. The Empress's face quickly changed from one of surprise and laughter to one of anger and rage. She jumped up from her seat, yelling, in an aggravated voice, that he was a "sportish little brat." This caused everyone to rise from their seats. The Empress hit Estatius upside his head, causing him to jerk up. She then declared: "I will not suffer one more day of your insolence!"
    • Estatius quickly reacted, saying: "Take your hands off me!" He now drew his sword of honor, and the members of the Privy Council quickly leaped forward. They restrained the Earl and separated him from the Empress. But it was too late. Estatius yelled: "I will not incur an insult of that nature from any man, and not a woman who thinks she can do so!" The Empress had a look of absolute surprise and terror, as this man (Estatius was thirty-three in 1798), openly defied her autocratic authority. Lord Treasurer Burghley now hastened with a speed that astonished all, in light of his gout and age, and yelled to Estatius: "You are speaking to the Empress of Laurasia, sir!" Estatius, however, continued, and rashly asserted: "I tell you, I would not have suffered it from your father's hands!" This astonished all: Antigonus III's memory was held in "great odium and fear." Even though fifty-one years had passed since his death, all were fully aware that Antigonus would have had anyone who defied him promptly executed without a second thought.
    • Had Estatius truly done so, the Emperor may very well have killed him on the spot. Lord Treasurer Burghley lowered his tone, asking "Have you any idea of what you are doing?" Estatius, still defiant and impulsive, responded: "I have a very good idea, old man!" thereby revealing his hatred of the elderly Lord Treasurer. The Empress now spoke, and in a very grave tone, said: "You dare to question my authority." Estatius responded, with a smirk on his face: "Cannot princes err? Cannot subjects receive wrong? Is an universal power or authority infinite? Pardon me, pardon me, madame, but I cannot subscribe myself to those principles!" This was a direct display of insubordination and denouncement of the Empire's entire autocratic system, which had now stood for more than seven centuries. Aurelia, deeply offended at this man who was disgracing her, her ancestors, and every Laurasian monarch since Honorius the Liberator himself, then said "Then it is hard for me to understand why you remain at court, Sir." She raised her hand towards the chamber exit, ordering Estatius to leave. He dashed by her without a second thought, and exited the chamber, muttering threats and further insults directed against Her Majesty and her ministers. The Valedictorian Guards and some of her Privy Councilors then barred the doors. Once he was gone, the Empress turned towards her Council.
    • Her tone of voice changed and she said: "Well, Gentlemen, I believe that we have found the right man for Scottria!" Chancellor Cecilis, who had been attending the session via Hologram, and witnessed everything that was going on, responded: "He would certainly blend in, ma'am!" Everyone laughed at this, and returned to their seats, with the Empress gently patting Lord Treasurer Burghley on the back. She went back returned to her place at the front of the table, slowly saying: "When deprived of our favor for long enough, he will soon come to heel." The Empress then looked at her Council, with a cold, authoritarian gaze. Steeling her voice again, the Empress declared: "My dogs wear my collars, Sirs! And let no one at this table ever forget that fact!" She therefore reminded her Council who was the Autocrat and the sovereign. The Empress's gaze softened again, however, when she saw the Lord Treasurer still standing, struggling to get back to his seat. Softening her voice, Aurelia then qualified her command: "With the exception of Lord Burghley." Gravitating towards him, she helped him sit, and ordered him to get better. She observed he was not well. The Empress held his hand and looked at his eyes, saying he was "worn out by hard labor towards the State." Burghley responded: "Writing and gout, Madame, my closest friends." The Empress kissed his hand and returned back to her seat. Her voice wavered, and she could barely control herself for the rest of the session. She knew that the Lord Treasurer was dying, and knew that she was about to lose yet another of her ministers. Yet the Empress also found herself thinking again about Estatius.
  • July 5-
    • Estatius himself, on July 5, 1798, wrote a bold communique to the Empress: "The intolerable wrong you have done both me and yourself not only broke all the laws of affection, but was done against the honor of your gender. I cannot think your mind so dishonorable but that you punish yourself for it, how little soever you care for me. But I desire, whatsoever falls out, that Your Majesty should be without excuse, you knowing yourself to be the cause, and all the Universe wondering at the effect. I was never proud till Your Majesty sought to denigrate my honor. And now my despair shall be as my love was, without repentance. Without Your Majesty all comforts and joys in the Universe are gone, and there is no greater punishment for your wrongs to me than to know the faith of him you have lost, and the condition of those you keep." Most individuals, at the Imperial Court and on Laurasia Prime, expected for the Empress to order his arrest and imprisonment in the Fortress of Baureux. Some anticipated that he would be attainted and executed. The Empress, however, did nothing, and never referred to the incident again. The quarrel was symptomatic of a change in their relationship. Each was growing tired of the other and finding it more difficult to play accustomed roles. Estatius was wary of the Empress's fickleness and tempests, while she was determined that he should be governed by the same rules of behavior as her other courtiers. She later told the Franconian Ambassador, Claude dan Vallet, Duke of Nancy (1748-1825), on July 9, 1798, that she was "apprehensive from the impetuosity of his temper and his ambition, that he would precipitate himself into destruction by some ill design."
    • She subsequently told the Ambassador that the Earl should "content himself with pleasing her on all occasions, and not to show such an insolent contempt for her as he did; but to take care not to touch her sceptre, lest she should be obliged to punish him according to the laws of the Empire, and not according to her own, which he had found too mild and favorable for him to fear any suffering from them." Yet the Empress also told the Ambassador that the Earl would ruin himself nevertheless. On July 15, 1798, Knollysis wrote to his nephew, begging him to "set aside your insolent attitude" and to return to dutiful service to the Empress and the Imperial Court. His pleas were joined by Procurator-General Egertonia, who told him that "The difficulty, my Lord, is to conquer yourself. You are not so far gone but you may well return." Estatius had embarrassed his supporters, ruined his "honor and reputation", and failed in his duty to his most gracious sovereign, so he should "humbly submit", to the service and greater good of the Empire. Estatius replied to this on July 18, 1798, declaring: "If my Empire had at this time any need of my public service, Her Majesty would not have driven me into a private kind of life. I can never serve her as a villein or slave. When the vilest of all indignities are done unto me, doth religion force me to sue? I can neither yield myself to be guilty, or this imputation laid on me to be just." Having uttered such dangerous and subversive statements, Estatius continued to hold his ground through the remainder of July and into August 1798.
  • July 19-
    • Through July 1798, the forces of the Earls of Tyrone and Donaugh continued to make gains against the Laurasian Empire. Tyrone soon learned of the outburst in the Imperial Privy Council that had taken place, and of the Earl of Estatius's open defiance of the Empress. The Earl confidently declared that the apparent dissensions at the Imperial Court would allow for the rebellion to proceed forth without further obstruction. Following the seizure of Monaghan, Tyrone turned his attention to Mons Graspicus, determined to seize this stronghold and to thereby impose pressure on the garrison of Carrigafoyle. The ensuing Battle of Mons Graspicus (July 2-5, 1798), ultimately ended in victory for the rebel Earl, who was able to capture a large amount of Laurasian military supplies and armor. From Mons Graspicus, Tyrone's forces secured Rathkeale, Ravar II, and the Mauguard Asteroids (July 6-11) and on July 15, Governor-General Bagenallia was defeated in the Battle of Lower Corgaff. That important stronghold surrendered to Tyrone on July, and two days later, he began his Siege of Carrickfergus.
    • Control of this world would allow the Earl to sunder government supply lines to Kildare, and from there, to impose a final blockade on Carrigafoyle. On July 19, 1798, Scottrian rebel units under Tyrone and Laird Sorley MacDonnell of Ronnaugh (1746-98), given that position by Tyrone ten days earlier, as the Earl was determined to restore Scottrian institutions, launched a swift assault against the garrison of Carrickfergus. That garrison was commanded by Brigadier-General Sir Demetrius Chiectria (1763-1825), who had been reassigned to duty in the Dumbarton Governorate four months earlier. Chiectria was a veteran of the Kosciusko Revolt, the First Spamalkan War, and the War in Defense of the Constitution. And indeed he proved to be a formidable adversary, as all direct rebel assaults against the star system, on the first day of the offensive, failed miserably. It was not until July 24, 1798, before Tyrone's forces breached Carrickfergus's lines, and even then, Chiectria staged a coordinated retreat of the Laurasian forces. Although Carrickfergus fell into the hands of Tyrone, he failed to inflict significant losses upon the Laurasian naval ranks. By the end of July 1798, Kildare and Baltinglass were under serious threat from Tyrone's forces.
  • August 4-
    • As noted above, the health of Lord Treasurer Burghley was, by July 1798, in a pitiful condition. The Lord Treasurer had suffered from recurrences of feral gout during the past twenty years; it had only become worse with the passage of time. He also suffered from numerous other ailments, including a heart issue (Burghley was forced to undergo an emergency artery operation in 1788) and intestinal issues (his appendix was removed in 1790). Two years following that operation, the Lord Treasurer had collapsed at Burghley House, his residence in Christiania, and it was rumored for a time that the Empress would allow him to retire. This, however, did not happen. The incident of July 1, 1798, in which Estatius so brazenly defied Aurelia, caused a considerable toll on Burghley's already pitiful physical condition. The Lord Treasurer, white-haired and shrunken, was still in harness because the Empress, having relied on him so much for four decades, would not let him resign. This was in spite of the fact that she knew that the Lord Treasurer suffered from numerous ailments, experienced troubles with his eyesight and hearing, and could barely walk.
    • On July 18, 1798, the Lord Treasurer, who could not bear it any more, retired to Burghley House, and there his condition rapidly declined further. As he lay in bed, worn out with age and overwork, Empress Aurelia (who had so expressed her concern for him at the Privy Council session), visited him and affectionately fed him his meals. She also sent him medicines, telling him: "I do entreat Heaven daily for your longer life; otherwise myself, and my subjects, will be in loss of such a helpful hand. My comfort has laid in the happiness of my subjects, and their happiness is in turn, dependent upon the existence of worthy and reliable advisers." She told him that she had no wish to live longer than she had him with her, a remark which made him weep. Aurelia, furthermore, declared: "You are, in all things to me, Alpha and Omega." The Empress, by the latter weeks of July 1798, was so distraught with the thought of losing him that she could attend to nothing. Burghley was the last surviving member of her original Privy Council of 1758; indeed, he was the last surviving member of government whose service extended back to the reign of Demetrius II.
    • To the Empress, Burghley was representative of happier times, of when she had her contemporaries and her associates. Almost everyone else, save for some notable exceptions such as the Norrias, her cousin Notthamia, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lord Buchamia, and the Dowager Countess of Aretha (as well as her despised cousin, the Dowager Countess of Estatius and Leicesterius), were dead; without him, she knew that she would be isolated among these younger generations, who were eager for power. On July 28, 1798, the Empress paid her last visit to the aged Lord Treasurer, feeding him with some Franconian game broth that had been sent by his son from Vervins. She burst into tears at the end of her visit and commanded Burghley's physicians to do all they could for him. Two days later (July 30, 1798), Burghley dictated his last communique, addressed to his son: "I pray you, diligently and effectually let Her Majesty understand how her singular kindness, has showed that she is a careful nurse. She has fed me from her princely hand; and if I am able to arise from this condition, I shall be more ready to serve her in this realm. If not, I hope to be, in Heaven, a servitor for her and the Church of Almitis. And I thank you for your gifts. Serve Almitis by serving the Empress, for all other service is indeed bondage to the Devil." Burghley then lapsed into a coma on August 1; his physicians declared they could do no more for him.
    • On August 4, 1798, Sir Willanius Cecilis, 1st Lord Burghley, Lord High Treasurer, Imperial Privy Seal, Master of the Court of Wards, President of the Privy Council, and formerly, Chancellor of the Laurasian Empire, died at Burghley House in Christiania, at the age of 77. He had served in the Imperial Laurasian Government for more than fifty years, being its most senior official at the time of his death, and had remained Empress Aurelia's chief minister for forty years. The Empress was in her throne room when Lord Husadarania and Sir Antiochus Harringtia (restored to favor since the previous year), approached her and informed her of the Lord Treasurer's death. The Empress came down from her throne, went to her knees, and cried as she never had before. She then hastily retreated to her bedchambers and did not emerge for two days. She prayed with her private Chaplain of the Imperial Household and her ladies, and expressed her fervent wish that Burghley "had a residing place in paradise." By the time of his death, the Lord Treasurer was being called the father of the Empire. The Empress herself had declared, in 1795, that "No prince in the Universe has had such a councilor as I have had in him." He had been, according to Sir Willanius Camdania (1751-1823), official historian of Empress Aurelia's reign, "a singular man for honesty, gravity, temperance, industry, and justice. To these was added a fluent and elegant speech, wisdom strengthened by experience and seasoned with exceeding moderation and most approved fidelity. In a word, the Empress was happy in so great a councilor, and to his wholesome counsels the state of Laurasia for ever shall be beholden."
    • Empress Aurelia ordered the Court into a day of mourning for the late Lord Treasurer; issued a proclamation from the Quencilvanian Palace; and, on August 9, 1798, announced that the Lord Treasurer would be honored by a ceremonial funeral at the Westphalian Cathedral. Burghley had expressed his wish to be interred at St. Martin's Church on Durglais. The funeral (August 13, 1798), was attended by the Empress herself, who had become adverse to attending such ceremonies over the preceding several years, considering that there had been so many of them. Among the more than 50,000 mourners at the Lord Treasurer's funeral was the Earl of Estatius. According to observers, he carried "the heaviest countenance" but this was attributed by most people to his own disfavor rather than to grief over his enemy's demise. A startling scene occurred at the end of the formal services. The Empress was exiting the Westphalian Cathedral, with the grieving Sir Thomasius Cecilis, now 2nd Lord Burghley, and her attendants behind her. She was flanked by Chancellor Cecilis, who had hastened back from the negotiations at Vervins when he learned of his father's death, and had arrived at Laurasia Prime on August 8. The Empress commented to the Chancellor that "this was no common funeral. The whole Universe mourns your father." She then looked over and saw Estatius. She commented sternly that she saw that "the Earl of Estatius [has] finally made a appearance. What great effect my silence can have." Cecilis now spoke up, reminding the Empress that Estatius had been his father's ward, and that they had been raised in the same household during their teenage years.
    • The Empress shook her head, and asked Cecilis about how Estatius was. Cecilis remarked that he was "graceful, good at sports, and loved by all." His voice trembled, however, and Aurelia quickly asked: "And cruel to you?" Cecilis nodded yes, qualifying it that he was cruel "as boys can be, as all can see. I was his pastime." The Empress looked at Cecilis sympathetically, and decided to now confront the Earl of Estatius. She came up to him; he was facing the Cathedral. She commanded him to turn around to face her. Estatius's eyes were red, and his face disheveled. The Empress now said, in a mocking voice, "Tears, Sept. I wonder for who you shed them." Estatius responded that he knew "how you loved Lord Burghley, and when I was his ward, he was ever kind to me." Aurelia dismissed this with a scoff, remarking that his wardship was a long time ago. Estatius now got to his knees, and in a trembling voice, declared: "I want to serve you!" Aurelia looked down at this cowering fool, remarking: "But you want to do glorious things in my service. Well I can offer you that. I can offer you great glory, Sept. There is an open rebellion in Scottria. I can offer you a governorship, and military forces to bring the Scottrians to heel." Estatius remarked that Her Majesty had great faith. Aurelia continued: "It is an important thing that we trust those who we rule."
    • Deepening her voice, lacing it with a menacing and threatening tone, the Empress continued: "See, there are those who tell me not to trust you. And I know that one day you may come within a hair's breath of betraying me." Estatius pleaded, using the Empress's nickname Ruelia, as his stepfather had, but she did not waver: "You will come as close to treachery as a snake on the ground. But I also know that you will never betray your Empire, since your Empire is nothing more than this poor self of mine. And you have loved me as men will love women, without regard to the cost, not thinking what they do. So you're mine poor boy, you are all mine." The Empress then told him to rise and promised him a military commission in the Scottrian Governorates. Estatius made ready to leave, but she detained him. Softening her voice, she gave him a ring and told him to take it as a testament to her love. Estatius accepted it and rushed off; the Empress then spoke to the Chancellor, with the Earl looking back, in both relief and pent-up rage. This whole charade, however, was the Empress's way of asserting her authority over him, and she would use the commission as a dangle in his eye, to keep him under control during the following months. The day after this whole spectacle at Burghley's public funeral service (his private funeral was conducted on Durglais, August 22, 1798), serious news arrived from the Scottrian Governorates, which demonstrated once again the reality of Tyrone's Rebellion.
  • August 14-
    • By the early weeks of August 1798, the forces of the Earls of Tyrone and Donaugh had made further substantive progress against the authorities and military garrisons of the Laurasian Empire. As mentioned above, Kildare and Baltinglass were under severe pressure from the Earl's units at the beginning of August. Tyrone himself, who had by now secured the loyalty of a substantial segment of the surviving Scottrian gentry and nobility in the Dumbarton Governorate, issued numerous proclamations from his headquarters on Bresharia, announcing that "the end of the fiend Empress of Laurasia and her rule over these realms, the realms of our ancestors, is at hand." He urged all loyal Scottrians to revolt against the imperial authorities, to take up arms for the defense of their customs and privileges, and to yield no ground to the demands of an "alien, aggressive, intrusive Empire." By August 4, Tyrone and Donaugh had besieged and conquered the government garrisons of Bandon and Sharron, capturing a large number of military arms, armor, shields, turbocannon, and other equipment, which would come to good use for future offensives against government positions. Two days later, Tyrone defeated a government force under Brigadier-General Sir Petreus Leseus (1758-1811) in the Battle of Mavhill, site of a victory by the Laurasian Empire over Brian Fitzgerald in 1783. Two days later, Tyrone commenced a siege of Blackverigh, which had been fortified by government forces under the command of Sir Franconinus Burghlia (1754-1801), who operated from Armagh. Tyrone established a new operational headquarters at Dungannon, and sought to sever the supply lines from Blackverigh to Armagh.
    • On August 8, 1798, Governor-General Bagenallia himself, determined to subdue this rebellion before it progressed any further, and receiving reinforcements from the garrisons of Leith, Stirling, Askeateon, Niddry, Mar, Angus, Morton, and Lennox, decided to proceed against Tyrone at Blackverigh and to relieve the siege. Tyrone, however, received word, on August 9, of the government advance. Donaugh now reinforced him with more than 200,000 Scottrian and mercenary troops, a detachment of captured warships (Imperial Laurasian Navy), and thirty interdictor units. All total, he managed to establish a two-to-one supremacy over government forces in terms of artillery and personnel. Tyrone, on his part, now ordered for Blackverigh Straits and Dungannon to be ringed with minefields and defensive barricades, as part of the strategy to obstruct further Laurasian advances. Finally, on August 14, 1798, the Governor-General's forces reached the Yellow Pulsar, so named for the bright color it emitted. The forces under Bagenallia's command were organized into six squadrons; two forward, two center, and two rear, with his starfighters and mobile corvettes at the center. Tyrone's forces, on the other hand, were organized into four squadrons, with the starfighters and corvettes placed at the sides, so that they could rapidly move out and intercept the government force. The Laurasian squadrons quickly became separated due to a series of hit and run attacks by Scottrian starfighters.
    • This problem was accentuated when transports and freighters of the 80th Imperial Fleet tried and failed to penetrate the barricades on the farther side of the Pulsar; more than one-third of the Laurasian ships in that wave (about 70) were lost or severely damaged as a result. The 2nd Squadron managed to breach rebel barricades, but found itself under attack by superior interdictor units and was forced to pull back with heavy losses, interlapping with the 3rd Squadron and thereby confusing the whole offensive. Governor-General Bagenallia was killed when his starfighter was destroyed by a well-timed phylon torpedo. Command of the forces was taken over by Commodore Sir Athanasius Megreius (1765-1815); ten of the Laurasian automated transports were boarded and seized by Scottrian troopers. Megreius now decided to retreat back towards Armagh, but Tyrone pressed the offensive forward, and destroyed nearly half of the 80th Fleet's destroyers, cruisers, and carriers. By the end of the day, the Battle of the Yellow Pulsar had ended in a decisive victory for the forces of Tyrone's Rebellion.
    • Nearly two hundred warships, 3,000 starfighters, and over 250,000 military personnel died during the confrontation (on the side of the Laurasian Empire), with Tyrone suffering losses of less than one-fifth of his ships and military personnel. Following this battle, Blackverigh finally surrendered to Tyrone (August 16, 1798). Within a week, Tyrone had stormed Newry, Nenagh, Craibstone, and Clontkilly, consolidating his grip over Dungannon and ruining government supply lines. Empress Aurelia, when she received word of Bagenallia's death, and of the disastrous Battle of the Yellow Pulsar, flung into an absolute rage. On August 22, 1798, the Empress declared to her subjects that "the continued progress of the forces of that traitor Tyrone, and his associate Donaugh, have so damaged the authority and position of the Empire in the Scottrian Governorates, that nothing but firm action, and resolve in the Lord Almitis, will bring about his defeat." Four days later, she formally imposed a bounty on the heads of Tyrone, Donaugh, and their associates; ordered all of her loyal subjects in the Scottrian Governorates to report all suspicious activity to imperial authorities; and commanded for the diversion of all military resources for the "destruction of the Rebellion." The last days of August 1798 did see some government successes. On August 24, Tyrone's offensive against Tipperary failed, and on August 28, government units seized Ronnaugh; "Laird" Sorley MacDonnell was defeated and killed by that confrontation. Nevertheless, by September 1798, Tyrone was in the ascendant. The Empress, however, now received news, news that was far more pleasing to her.
  • September 2-
    • On September 2, 1798, after nearly three months of sometimes intense diplomatic negotiations, the Treaty of Vervins was signed by the diplomatic delegations of the Laurasian Empire, Holy Spamalkan Empire, Serene Kingdom of Franconia, and United Durthian States, ending the Second Spamalkan War and with it, the Durthian Revolt. The Durthian Revolt, which had dragged on almost without interruption since 1772, and had dominated most of the last quarter of the eighteenth century, was now finally at a close. Chancellor Cecilis (who returned to Vervins on August 19, 1798, and was instrumental in the conclusion of the Treaty's final provisions), was able to drive a tough bargain with his Spamalkan counterparts, and to obtain concessions which would have been unthinkable just three years earlier. The Treaty was divided into twenty-four articles and a preamble. In the preamble, the typical universal commitment to "peace and tranquility among all the powers of extra-galactic civilization" was confirmed; the cessation of war would be viewed as a benefit to all states. Article I provided for the restoration of universal peace and tranquility among all powers; Article II, for the release of all prisoners of war, military and political. The Duke of Fries, Duke Albert of Caria, General Juan del Avila, and Admiral Cordoba were among the Spamalkan personages to now be released from allied custody as a result of this provision. All prisoners of war were to be returned to their respective states by no later than September 2, 1799, exactly one year from the conclusion of the Treaty. Article III provided for the restoration of diplomatic and economic relations.
    • The Laurasian Empire, United Durthian States, and Serene Kingdom of Franconia received confirmation of their rights of free navigation, transport, and commerce through the realms of the Holy Spamalkan Empire (as had been conferred through the Treaty of Alacantara). These rights were now extended to last until January 1, 1830. The three governments also gained the right to establish commercial warehouses in the major systems of the Spamalkan Colombiana and the Peruvian Colonies; to issue regulations concerning the conduct of their subjects in Spamalkan dominions; and to attach consuls to the Court of Madrid, in order to deal with any complaints or petitions relating to the conduct of their subjects. Finally, the Holy Spamalkan Government agreed to grant the three powers the right of asiento, which gave them the privilege to export, duty-free, spices, minerals, and agricultural goods into the Spamalkan Colonial Territories for a period of thirty years (ending September 2, 1828). All the profits on such trade were to accrue to the treasuries of the three allied powers, and they would have the ability to revoke or extend their rights under the contract at any time. Article IV provided for the establishment of a special commission among the four governments, to solve any disputes related to the asiento and to ensure the enforcement of any laws or regulations issued by the Allied Powers as regards to their commerce in Spamalkan territory. Article V provided for the evacuation of all Laurasian and Durthian forces from Newer Spamalka, the Colombiana, and the Canaries by no later than January 1, 1800.
    • Articles VI and VII listed similar terms for the evacuation of all Laurasian and Durthian military forces from Andalusia, by the same date. The Andalusian Provinces were now restored to the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Among the systems to now be returned were Almeria, El Ejido, Nijar, Algecircas, Sancular de Barrameda, San Fernando, Jerez, Cadiz, Medinia-Sidonia, Guadix, Loja, Motril, Ubeda, Baeza, Marbella, Fuengirola, Estepona, Utera, Dos Hermanas, Puerto Real, Ronda, and the systems of the Jaen, Granada, Malaga, and Seville. Article VIII provided for the withdrawal of Laurasian and Franconian military forces from Asturias, Galicia, and Southern Catalonia (vis, the Provinces of Barcelona, Tarragona, and Penent) by no later than November 1, 1799. All star systems in those regions, including Vigo, Baiona, Corunna, Ourense, Lugo, Santiago de Compostela, Pontevedra, Ferrol, Olerios, Naron, Redondella, Riberia, Culleredo, Ames, Carballo, Artexio, Marin, Cangas, Gijon, Langreo, Llanes, Cangas de Onis, Oviedo, Aviles, Gijon, and the Caragues Worlds were restored to the authority of the Holy Spamalkan Empire. Article IX was now the first article to deal with the territorial concessions by the Holy Spamalkan Empire. By the terms of this article, "His Holy Majesty of Spamalka" agreed to acknowledge the "absolute, unfettered, and unbridled" independence of the United Durthian States; to repeal all decrees, bounties, and instruments imposed against the Durthian Government and its officials; and to establish diplomatic ties without delay.
    • Article XI provided for the concession, by the Holy Spamalkan Empire, of all remaining territories in the Durthian Duchies to the United Durthian States. This included Brussels, Antwerp, the Hainault Worlds, Gembloux, Namurs, Liege, Turnhout, Rheinberg, Meurs, Lingen, Huy, Ostend, Niewpoort, Hertogenbosch, Oldenzaal, Enschede, Ootsmartsum, Bredevoort, Rees, Limburg, Luxembourg Prime, the Luxembourgian Worlds, Valduz, Schaan, the Electorate of Cologne, and the Lichtenstein Colonies. Article XII provided for recognition, by the Emperor of Spamalka, of Hensios IV's absolute authority over the Serene Kingdom of Franconia; of Franconian possession of the Ardennian Worlds, the Pale of Calais, and Roussilon; and recognition of the Edict of Nantes (April 30, 1798), by which King Hensios had granted rights of religious toleration to his Huguenot subjects. Article XIV provided for the concession, by the Holy Spamalkan Empire, of Franche-Comte, Pesignol, Andorra, Spamalkan Navarre, and Northern Catalonia (vis, the Provinces of Girona, Comarques, and Lleda) to Franconia. Emperor Philicus agreed to abandon all claims to those territories, and to abolish the representation for those territories on the Council of State. Article XV was a further blow to the Holy Spamalkan Empire: the Duchy of Milania, which had been such a point of bitter contention between Franconia and Spamalka throughout the entire century, was now permanently conceded to the Serene Kingdom of Franconia. All Spamalkan claims, financial or otherwise, to the Duchy were to be abandoned; the Duchy of Parma was confirmed as a patrimony and dukedom of the Franconian nobility; and King Hensios IV assumed the title of Duke of Milania and Turin.
    • Article XVI provided for the concession of the Spice Colonies of Guantanamo, Santiago, Sao Vicente, San Juan de Ulua, St. Lucia, Kitts, the Spamalkan Antilles, the Spamalkan Caymans, Recife, Pinos, Tabasco, David, and Panama Prime to the United Durthian States; Article XVII, of Puerto Caballos, Miquelon, Tobago, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Montserrat, Curacao, and Anguilla to the authority of the Serene Kingdom of Franconia. As specified in Article VIII, all other Spamalkan Colonial Territories occupied by allied forces (the Guatemalan, Panamian, Nicaraguan, and El Savordian Sectors, the Puerto Rican Worlds, and Floriana) were to be restored to the Holy Spamalkan Empire, with all military forces of the Laurasian Empire, United Durthian States, and Serene Kingdom of Franconia withdrawn by no later than December 1, 1799. Article XIX provided for the abandonment, by the Emperor of Spamalka, of the titles of Duke of Milania, Grand Duke of Durthia and Burgundy, King of the Windward Provinces, King of Spamalkan Navarre, and King of Catalonia. Article XX provided for recognition by the Holy Spamalkan Empire of the dissolution of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth and all of its military, administrative, and diplomatic institutions, and for all gains made by the Laurasian Empire in the Great Tesmanian Cloud since 1792. Article XI provided for the return of the Duke of Merceour and other Franconian League fugitives to the custody of the King of Franconia. Article XII absolved the Allied Powers of any responsibility for compensating their Spamalkan counterpart for financial or property losses incurred during the war, and Article XIII provided for the establishment of a commission to delineate territorial boundaries in Catalonia, Navarre, and in the Electorate of Cologne.
    • Article XXIV, the last article of the Treaty, provided that its provisions would come into effect immediately, pending ratification by all sovereigns. When news of the Treaty of Vervins reached Laurasia Prime, the Imperial Court, which was belatedly preparing for the Empress's progress of 1798 to the Caucasian Colonies and the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia, erupted in jubilation. Empress Aurelia issued a proclamation from the Imperial Court praising the conclusion of the Treaty and declaring to her subjects that "thirteen years after the conclusion of the alliance [Treaty of Nonsuchia], the Durthian Duchies have now been finally liberated totally from the authority and influence of the Holy Spamalkan Empire." King Hensios IV of Franconia praised the Treaty's conclusion in a speech to the Estates-General, and informed his subjects that "the Franconian realms are more secure than ever before." The Durthian States-General also hailed the Treaty, and Prince Maurice of Nassau was now called "the Liberator" and "the Savior" by his fellow citizens. The reaction at the Holy Spamalkan Court of Madrid, however, was anything but joyous. Emperor Philicus, now on the verge of death (as will be explained below), decried this Treaty, but found that he had no choice but to ratify it. Madrid, Valladolid, and Barcelona were all under threat from enemy forces, and if he did not approve, then his Empire might be completely destroyed. The Treaty of Vervins was ratified by Empress Aurelia of Laurasia on September 3; by the Durthian States-General and Prince Maurice of Nassau on September 5; by King Hensios of Franconia on September 7; and by the confined Emperor Philicus on September 9, just four days before his fate.
  • September 13-
    • As alluded to above, the condition of Emperor Philicus I of Spamalka was, by September 1798, most pitiful. The Emperor of Spamalka, when he had succeeded his father Char'va I upon his abdications from the Spamalkan and Durthian thrones in January 1756, had been considered for years as being possibly the most powerful sovereign in the Great Amulak Spiral. With dominions spanning more than 140,000 light years, and located in the Great Amulak Spiral, Little Amulak Cloud, and Crone Galaxy, it seemed as if the Holy Spamalkan Emperor was riding high. He ruled over nearly forty million inhabited star systems, more than any other power except for the Laurasian Empire. And from 1780 to 1794, Philicus had claimed to be King of Portugallia, exerting rule thereby over a further six million star systems. Yet the Durthian Rebellion, whose seeds were laid in the 1760s, and which fully erupted in 1772, had over the course of time drained away the Holy Spamalkan Empire's military, diplomatic, and economic resources. By 1798, Spamalka had incurred the largest deficit of any power in extra-galactic civilization, at more than $3.3 quadmillion ducats, and it seemed as if the level would not stop increasing. The Empire's humiliating defeat in the First Spamalkan War had deprived it of Portugallia, United Durthia, and its footholds in the Barbary States; this Second Spamalkan War proved much more consequential. By 1798, Philicus's dominions had contracted from their maximum of forty-six million inhabited star systems and 169,000 light years of territory (claimed), to twenty-three million star systems and 110,000 light years of territory in just one decade. The Empire had lost the Durthian Duchies, the Electorate of Cologne, the Duchy of Milania, Northern Catalonia, Spamalkan Navarre, Andorra, Portugallia and its colonies, virtually all the Spice Colonies, parts of the Central Territories, Fuerteventura, Gibraltar, Ceuta, and Melillia as a result of the two Spamalkan Wars.
    • Emperor Philicus's military forces were seriously weakened, and he was now decidedly eclipsed by Laurasian Empress Aurelia, reluctantly acknowledged by every power as the most powerful sovereign in known space. All of these losses, and all of this despair, wreaked havoc on the Emperor's health. By the late 1780s, Philicus had come to suffer from recurrent bouts of feral gout, gastroenteritis, and kidney stones; by 1794, he was forced to move about in a hoverchair; and the following year, suffered a minor stroke which slurred his speech and paralyzed his left arm. In 1796 and 1797, the Emperor's mental condition declined; his hearing and eyesight gave way; and he became increasingly unwilling to eat or to partake in physical activity. The death of his younger daughter Catalina, Duchess of Savoy in November 1797 was a heavy blow. The final decline came in March 1798, as Milania and Flanders were falling into allied hands. The Emperor now refused to move from his chambers, and sessions of the Council of State had to be conducted there, for his leisure. By August 1798, the Emperor's entire body was covered by boils, and he could no longer move from his bed. On August 22, the Emperor lost speech, and was forced to communicate with a computer pad.
    • It was through this means that he conferred his ratification of the Treaty of Vervins. On September 10, he called his only surviving son, the twenty-year old Prince Philicus, his child by his last wife Anna of Austarlia (1749-80), to his side. Ordering all his servants way, Philicus now made his son swear, under an oath of absolute secrecy, to avenge him and the humiliations inflicted by the Empire in the new century, and in particular, against the "pestering and meddling Laurasian power, under the guidance of its ungrateful and greedy Empress." The Prince pledged to do so. He then fell into a coma, from which he never emerged. On September 13, 1798, Philicus I, Holy Emperor of Spamalka and King of Naparia, formerly Duke of Milania, Grand Duke of Durthia and Burgundy, Lord of Franche-Comte, Elector of Cologne, King of Portugallia, King of Navarre and Catalonia, and Duke of Andorra, died at the age of 71. He had reigned for forty-two years (since 1756). The news of Emperor Philicus's death came as hardly a surprise to any of the galactic powers. All were aware of his declining health, and that he was on his deathbed at the time of Vervins. Condolences arrived from all foreign courts. King Hensios IV of Franconia, so recently an enemy of the Holy Spamalkan Emperor's, expressed his "absolute sadness on the death of His Majesty" and declared it a blow from the Universal Gods. Prince Maurice of Nassau expressed solemn "remorse" for the death of the former master of the Durthian realms.
    • Emperors A'rua IV of Pruthia and Fransios II of Austarlia; Great King Dmitri II of Masacavania; Doge Marino Grimani of Haxonia; Willag, Lord Protector of Vendragia, Irvania, and Hanover (in the name of Queen Charavia); Marasharite Emperor Selim III; Sultan Ahmed al-Mansur of Morocco; and King Fernando I of Portugallia all expressed their solemn sympathies for the death of the Holy Spamalkan Emperor. The most compelling reaction, however, came from Empress Aurelia. The Empress of Laurasia, who had once viewed Philicus as a potential ally (in the early years of her reign), and had come to see him a bitter enemy, also remembered him as her former brother-in-law. She declared that "His late Majesty of Spamalka was once a personage of importance in my Empire. His passing brings great sadness to me, for I do remember him as the faithful and loving husband, consort, and co-ruler of my late sister, the Empress Didymeia of blessed memory..The hostilities so recently concluded do not detract from my respect and honor for the late Emperor of Spamalka."
    • The new Emperor Philicus II of Spamalka (r. 1798-1821), when he learned of this, mellowed, and privately resolved not to instigate renewed conflict until after "Her Majesty of Laurasia has in her turn passed." The death of Philicus I also meant something else, something of great symbolic importance for the Empire. Empress Aurelia I of Laurasia, already the most powerful sovereign of extra-galactic civilization, was now senior monarch. Approaching her 40th anniversary on the throne, she had reigned longer than any other monarch in any of the galaxies, whether of the major states or of the minor Principalities and Protectorates; the next most senior monarch was the ailing Elector Char'vak Theodore of Bavaria (who had ruled from 1777, and who would die in March 1799), and after him, Marasharite Emperor Selim III. She had also ruled longer than many of her contemporary monarchs (A'rua IV, Fransios II, Dmitri II, Philicus II, Selim III, Fernando I, Charavia I), had been alive. Others (Maurice of Nassau, Hensios IV, Ahmad-al Mansur) were only children or toddlers when the Empress acceded to her throne in November 1758. Doge Marino Grimani of Haxonia was the Empress's only contemporary in age, and the only one who had been an adult when she came to the throne. The Empress was to enjoy the status of senior monarch for the closing 4.5 years of her reign.
  • September 17-November 15-
    • On September 17, 1798, ten days after her 65th birthday, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court departed from Laurasia Prime to commence the official progress of 1798. The Empress had for a time been considering a stay on Laurasia Prime. The deaths of the Duchess of Kendalia and Lord Treasurer Burghley, and the impending demise of the Earl of Oxfadia, had placed a great emotional strain upon her. However, by the end of August 1798, with the Laurasian Empire on the verge of obtaining final victory in the Second Spamalkan War, Aurelia had changed her mind. Victory had been sealed in the Treaty of Vervins, which had witnessed the destruction of the Holy Spamalkan Empire's position in Milania, the Spice Colonies, and the Durthian Duchies. Therefore, in spite of the earlier personal losses, and of the contretemps with the Earl of Estatius, she decided to proceed forth with her progress. The Empress was attended by her godson, Sir Antiochus Harrinigtia; by the Earls of Aretha, Aeoleon, Melorkia Major, and Kimania; and by the Countess of Notthamia, one of her closest personal friends. Chancellor Cecilis and Lord Buchamia had returned to Laurasia Prime on September 8, 1798, following the conclusion and ratification of the Treaty of Vervins, and had been received with much ceremonial by the Imperial Court. From Laurasia Prime, the Imperial Court paid brief visits to Blackria, Nezbit, Martina Mccasia, Mariah, Briannia, Nystadia, Gdov, Durglais, Rebecca, and Kigonia (September 17-24, 1798), before proceeding rapidly up the Rebeccan Galactic Trade Route to the OsonBoka Nebula. The Empress toured the Nebula's strongholds, visiting Abuza, Parsons, Abrianna, and the Jageron Worlds (September 26-31, 1798), subsequently moving to the Larkian Way. From there, the Imperial Court made a rapid journey to Belkadan and Sernapasia (October 1, 1798). At Belkadan, where the Court stayed for two days, the Empress toured the AstroNavigation Spaceports of Ardhur, from which commercial, military, and diplomatic convoys in the Galactic Void transited, and into the Caladarian Galaxy proper.
    • The Spaceports had been constructed by stages between 1778 and 1796; the Empress was astounded by their technological sophistication, the number of landing bays (there were more than seven thousand), and by the density of the traffic which passed through the star system. At Sernapasia, which had already been graced by the Empress's presence, Aurelia dedicated the consecration of the War of the Rough Wooing Memorial Museum, which had been under construction for six years and was dedicated to the efforts of the Empire's military personnel in that conflict. From Sernapasia, she and the Imperial Court proceeded across the Galactic Void. She reached Fidonsi (October 6, 1798), visiting the Fidonsi Specialized Construction Yards a second time and watching a formal parade by the newly commissioned Elucidator-class starfighters in the outskirts of the star system. From Fidonsi, the Court proceeded directly towards the Caucasian Colonies, which was the first objective of the Empress's visit. Eruzrum became the first of the Colonies to be graced by the Imperial Court's presence (October 7, 1798). This particular star system had a long history. Eruzrum, which had been originally colonized by the Kingdom of Armenia in the 1st century BH as Karin, had been acquired by the Byzzarian Empire in AH 387, when the Kingdom of Armenia had been partitioned between the Byzarrians and the Ammonite Tofs. The system was known as Theodosiopolis during the three centuries that it was under the rule of the Byzzarian Empire, before being conquered by the Umariyan Dynasty at the beginning of the eighth century AH. It was renamed Kakikala and became a base for raids and operations into Northanian, Byzzarian, and Bulganian territory. Over time, as the Umariyan Dynasty's power over the Caucasian Colonies declined, the system gained increased autonomy.
    • In AH 931, the system was captured by the Byzzarian Empire, and fell back into their permanent possession in 949, being renamed Theodosiopolis once again. Its Ummayan population was expelled, and in 1018, Byzzarian Emperor Bazir the Great reorganized the star system's defenses. In 1071, however, it fell into the possession of the Marasharite Seljuks, as they gradually progressed to take control of what became the Marasharite Homeland Territories. From 1071 to 1242, the star system was ruled by the Marasharite Saltudian Dynasty, when it was captured and devastated by the Lithuanian Tribal Confederacy. It became part of the Confederacy, and then Kingdom of Lithuania, for a time, until in the early fourteenth century, it was subdued by the Donathians. By 1375, however, the Black Marasharitemen had taken control of the star system; then in 1502, it fell to the Savadian Empire until its final conquest by the Marasharites under Selim I in 1514. Marasharite hold of the stronghold was threatened by the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria and the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth; the Commonwealth in fact, held Eruzurum (to which it had been renamed by the Marasharites) from 1628 until 1655. From 1733-47, the Scottrians were in possession of it. It then returned to Marasharite control, and remained so until its conquest in 1791 by General Sir Honorius Gudovia. The Empress was thereby visiting a star system with such a storied past. She was greeted by the Governor of Eruzrum, Sir Adonius Tyranios (1755-1816), and by the Marasharite and Caucasian magnates of the star system with much ceremony. The Empress marveled in Eruzrum's subtropical climate; its vast plains, plateaus, and valleys; and its soaring cities, with their combination of Byzzarian, Bulganian, Marasharite, Caucasian, and Dejanican architecture. She toured the Citadel Fortress and the Madrasa of Medrese, both of which had been constructed in the thirteenth century. The Empress resided at the Byzzarian Palace of Theodosiopolis during her two-day stay, and watched a performance of Marasharite mimes at the Halit Endredi.
    • When she departed on October 9, Aurelia declared that she would not forget her visit to "such a wonderful and vibrant system." From Eruzrum, the Court proceeded through Kabarda (October 11-14), Poti (October 15), and Ardahan (October 16-18). Kabarda impressed the Empress with its martial traditions; the Karbadan Warriors of Shemlit were among the most respected close-combat fighters in extra-galactic civilization. Poti was a major minerals and resource producer; its vast reserves of gilestium, rummerite ores, and electrical tristones were exported, by the millions of tons, throughout the Empire's dominions each year. Ardahan, a major transportation and communications terminal, was known for its extensive bazaars, commercial exchanges, and markets. It was also a educational powerhouse, with the University of Ardahan (established in the sixteenth century), renowned for its historical, architectural, and archaeological studies programs. Ardahan itself also had a long storied history, having been colonized as Gogarene in the fourth century AH, and under the control of the Bargatonian Kingdom of Artjan from the eighth to the eleventh centuries.
    • It had been sacked by the Byzzarian Empire in 1021 and by the Lithuanian Confederacy in 1266; the Marasharite Empire had seized it in 1555. Ardahan's population of nine billion inhabitants included Marasharites, Bulganians, Byzarrians, Dejanicans, Lithuanians, Northanians, Laurasians, Haynsians, Torfians, Tofs, Amelianians, Donnians, Billians, Dasians, and Scottrians, among others. Then on October 22, the Imperial Court reached Akhaltiskhe, colonized by the Sametkshe Georgians in the twelfth century and ruled by the Marasharites from 1576 to 1792. Although it had a population of only two billion by the end of the eighteenth century, Akhaltiskhe was nevertheless a major tourist destination. Rabati Castle, once a major residence of the Sametskhe Princes, was considered one of the most beautiful residences in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. The Empress also found herself impressed by the Hyperspace Gateways of Artvin and by the Mosques of the Ahiska, a prominent Tesmanian cult. From this star system, the Empress proceeded to Anapa, the most populous and important of the Caucasian Colonies (October 23-25, 1798). Anapa had been first colonized in the 2nd millennium BH, and from the 6th century BH to the 3rd century AH, was one of the chief communications terminals for the Grecian Colonies. The Byzzarian Empire had ruled the star system from the fifth to the ninth centuries AH; and in 1300, it was acquired by the Principality of Genoa.
    • Genoa controlled the system until its conquest by the Marasharite Empire in 1475, the first of the Caucasian Colonies to fall into their possession. By 1791, when the system was conquered by General Gudovia, Anapa had a population of more than forty billion, making it the third-most populous system in the Great Tesmanian Cloud (after Vilinus and Mitau). The Empress visited the Anapa Opera; the Theater of Suleyman I; the Iredescent Citadels; and the Anapa Fortress, with the last stronghold, formerly one of the strongest in the Marasharite Empire, having been expanded significantly, and with added defenses, since the Laurasian conquest of the star system. Aurelia stayed at the Anapa High Towers during her visit, and partook in the mineral waters of the world's spas. It offered some escape from thinking about the events ongoing with Tyrone's Rebellion, and otherwise at the Imperial Court.
    • On October 25, 1798, the Empress departed Anapa after witnessing a simulation of the Battle of Anapa (1791), by which the system had been secured by the Empire. Kars was then visited (October 26, 1798), with Kars Citadel, the Castle of Kars, the Armenian Temple of the Apostles, and the Junction Crosses all being toured by Aurelia and her courtiers. Finally, on October 27, 1798, the Empress proceeded into the Northanian Governorates. Aurelia was determined to visit those star systems which had been annexed by her Empire just three years earlier, and to underline her role in the destruction of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Northanian Territories, which had existed as a coalition of confederacies from the ninth to the thirteenth centuries, had at that end been unified by the Livonian Dynasty of Mitau. The Livonian Dynasty had waged numerous wars with the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria, Caucasian Colonies, Marasharite Empire, Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and Kingdom of Dejanica from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries. In 1561, Gotthard Kettler, last Master of the Livonian Dynasty, had submitted to the Commonwealth and been proclaimed the first Duke of Northania and Semigallia (r. 1561-87). The Duchy had then existed for more than two centuries until its final disbandment and annexation by the Laurasian Empire in 1795. The Empress of Laurasia visited Dunaburg first (October 28-29, 1798).
    • Dunaburg, which had been colonized by the Livonian Dynasty in 1275, had been captured and plundered by the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria in 1577; the Haynsian Despotate had sacked it four times (1596, 1609, 1617, and 1676), and in 1734, it had been occupied by the forces of Laurasian General Sir Petevius Lacius, during the War of the Dejanican Succession. Nevertheless, it had a population of more than twelve billion by the late eighteenth century, and was known for its vast nature preserves, its agricultural production facilities, and its beautiful city squares. Dunaburg Castle, which had been constructed in the fourteenth century, became home to the Court. The Empress delighted in the traditional Dejanican architecture of the Castle, and had the chance to view portraits by many of the Old Masters of Dejanica. The Sts. Glabanius and Boranius Cathedral, the third-largest Almitian edifice in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, hosted a mass in the Empress's honor; the Dunaburg Pedagogical University held a series of sermons and debates for the pleasure of the Court; and Her Majesty received an honorary tribute from the Northanian Lords of Daguvapils City, the planetary capital city. From Dunaburg, the Imperial Court visited Jakobstadt (October 30-31); Goldingen (November 1-4); and Libau (November 5). Krupstils Castle, the Jakobstadt Central Aeroport, and the Jakobstadt Military Armory (which had been the largest military installation operated by the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia), were the main places visited by Aurelia on Jakobstadt.
    • Goldingen, renowned for its production of luxury goods, including personal crafts, fruits, and rare eatibles, was also dominated by St. Catherine's Shrine, the largest shrine constructed by the Imperial Almitian Church in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1595-1603). Goldingen was also known for the beauty of its countryside and its vast mountain ranges. Libau, known for its shipbuilding, metalworking, electronics production, and electrical processing industries, was a major port and resort in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, attracting nobles and wealthy magnates from throughout the Empire. The Empress herself visited the Libau Refineries and Haurk Stockyards, operated by Katherine Drive Yards and the Kelstonian Family Corp of Talinin. From Libau, the Court proceeded to Pilten (November 6-8) and Windau (November 9, 1798). Pilten, originally held by the Kingdom of Denmarica, had been seized by the Livonian Dynasty in the fourteenth century, and from 1585 to 1706, had served as the site of the Academy of Pilten, one of the Commonwealth's leading naval academies. By the late eighteenth century, however, it had become a hotbed of sympathy for the Laurasian Empire, and in March 1795, the Landtag of Pilten had, months before the actual annexation by Empress Aurelia, declared their loyalty to the Imperial Laurasian Government. As a result, the Empress had allowed for the star system to keep many of its local customs and institutions. With a population of sixteen billion, Pilten was of vital importance to the Imperial Laurasian Navy and the Almitian Church; the largest Laurasian conclave in the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia was located here. Pilten Spire and the Cathedral of St. Timothy's both were visited by the Empress; she also attended a session of the Landtag, now a ceremonial body, at the Windlen Hall. Windau, on its part, was less impressive, being mainly an agricultural colony. It did, however, possess numerous historical sites, such as the Livonian Order of the Lutherans, the Spamalkan Quarter, the Library of Juras Ventil, and the Mansion of Baron Aulephant, a ninth-century Briannian noble who had migrated to the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and was one of Windau's earliest colonists.
    • Then (November 10-11, 1798), the Court visited Talinin, the fourth most populous system in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and one of the Dejanican Duchy's former capital worlds. It had a population of thirty-seven billion, and had been colonized by Northanians as early as the second century AH, although it did not become part of the Livonian Dynasty until 1346 and retained special privileges in the Duchy of Northania and Semigallia throughout that entity's existence. Toompea Fortress, which had been constructed as early as the ninth century AH, became home to the Court; the Empress viewed the Armor of the Teutonic Warriors, the Barricades of Lapala, and the High Mounds, from which the Fortress had been defended in earlier times. Olaf's Treasury, built by the Denmaricans in the twelfth century AH, was the tallest structure on Talinin; it was now a currency reserve for the Imperial Treasury of the Empire, and from which dataries were being circulated throughout the Empire's Tesmanian dominions. The Order of the Brethen of the Sword, one of the chief Northanian crusading orders, and now a charitable organization, hosted a banquet in the Empress's honor at the Old Town of Talinin City. The Empress then received blessings from the Northanian priests of the Maria Cloister; toured the Lower Town of Talinin, with many of the world's most ancient structures and habitations; and attended entertainments at Stenbock House, now headquarters of the Governor-General of the Talinin Governorate. Kadiorg Palace, the Art Museum of Talinin, and the Astrodome of Pirtya all enthralled the Empress; the Astrodome, in fact, was the largest space observatory and auditorium in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, with more than 10,000 high-powered and medium-powered telescope displays, one hundred star observation rooms, and a Holonet frequencies tower with a range of more than forty million light-years.
    • The Astrodome had been constructed by Northanian Duchess Anna from 1715 to 1729, at a cost of more than $500 billion kronas. When the Empress departed from Talinin, she gave her hearty thanks to its inhabitants. On November 12, 1798, the Court finally reached Mitau, once capital of the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia, which had been the most prosperous and cultured region of the defunct Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Empress was received with a display of fireworks, solar flares, and a procession of Northanian bone-craft at the outskirts of the star system; the Liueple Starbase was where the assembled Northanian magnates and businessmen of Mitau, now among the wealthiest personages in the Laurasian Empire, greeted her. Empress Aurelia had affirmed their privileges and properties in March 1796 and in May 1797, thereby earning their loyalty and consolidating the Empire's rule over the Northanian Governorates. The Duke of Mitau, Ernest de Viron (1761-1817), greeted the Empress with much ceremony, presenting her with the Order of St. Midalus and a gift of €4.5 billion dataries. The Empress then proceeded into Mitau City. The Academia Petrina, which had been established in 1622, and was one of the preeminent private schools in the Laurasian Empire, became the Empress's first target. She gave a speech to the Academia's faculty; attended a series of lectures, debates, and plays; and was then presented with a honorary seat on the Academia Board, the rank of "High Professor", and a gift of academia, from the University. The Villa Medem, one of the largest spas and public baths in the Empire, was then visited; the Empress marveled in the intensity of its waters, to which many of the Court's magnates would enjoy themselves during the stay.
    • The Almitian Church of St. Anne, the Marasharite Mosque of Al-Him, and the Northanian Tower of Cloch all were visited by the Empress; she subsequently toured the Mitava Mansion Row, where the residences of many of the Northanian magnates were located. Jelgava Palace, where Duke Ernest von Bironia had spent his retirement years, became the residence of the Court; she paid her respects at the Ducal Mausoleums, where all of the Dukes up to von Bironia had been interred; and on November 15, staged a massive ball for the Northanian nobles, and the magnates of the Court. Two days later, on November 17, 1798, the Empress celebrated the fortieth anniversary of her reign with a procession of Gentlemen Pensioners and Ducal Regullars down Mitava Lane; a open-air gladiatorial contest and performance of mimes at Rudine Auditorium; the issuance of manifestos and public proclamations over the Holonet; and a dinner, for all of the magnates and ambassadors of the Court. She received blessings from Chief Procurator Whitshiftus and from Klaus von Hauffen, Head of the Northanian Order of the Priestly Good (1738-1804). Sir Antiochus Harringtia wrote an ode for the occasion, and now Fleet Admiral Raleghia (whose return from duty will be noted below), entered the stage with his followers in plumes, recounting the tales of the Empire's victories in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions. A public manifesto of celebration was also issued to account for the end of the Second Spamalkan War, and the Treaty of Vervins was formally read to the Imperial Court. On November 20, the Empress conferred the Order of St. Seleucus the Victor upon sixty members of the Valedictorian Guards, Imperial Navy, and Imperial Army for their valor in the late military conflict. Two days later, the Imperial Court finally departed from Mitau. The outposts of the Windwawa Barrier Regions were visited (November 21-24, 1798), and at that latter date, the Court began its journey to Laurasia Prime. Arriving there on November 27, 1798, Empress Aurelia was exhausted. Yet throughout the whole progress, her mind had been fixed on Tyrone's Rebellion, and on the Earl of Estatius.
  • October 19-
    • By the beginning of September 1798, the forces of the Earls of Tyrone and Donaugh were in the ascendant, in regards to their position against the Laurasian Empire's garrisons in the Dumbarton Governorate. Through September and October 1798, Tyrone continued to gain a succession of victories over superior and more numerous Laurasian forces, while the Privy Council engaged in vigorous discussions about the further progress of Tyrone's Rebellion, and while the Treaty of Vervins was being concluded between the Allied Powers and the Holy Spamalkan Empire. On September 5, 1798, Tyrone destroyed a government force under the command of Major-General Sir Antiochus Narmania (1750-98) in the Battle of Tarbet. From Tarbet, the Scottrian Earl expelled government units from Winclace (September 7-11, 1798), and on September 13, blockaded Drogheda. Drogheda, which was a major spaceport and manufacturing stronghold in the Dumbarton Governorate, had a population of more than five billion by the late eighteenth century. The Imperial Laurasian Navy had transformed the star system into one of its chief bastions in the Dumbarton Governorate; the Imperial Shipyards of Drogheda Minor had been commissioned in 1794, producing the new Elcudiator-class starfighters.
    • Capture of this stronghold would allow for Tyrone to gain access to Laurasian prototypes and military equipment; he would be able to use this weaponry to gain an edge in battle with the Empire's forces. The Siege of Drogheda commenced on September 18, 1798, as Tyrone and Donaugh utilized their mercenaries and naval units to cut off all access lanes into the star system. General Narmania, who had retreated to his operational headquarters on Baltinglass, now launched a series of offensives against the rebel garrisons of Hemkey and O'Vill (September 22-25, 1798), in an attempt to draw off Tyrone's forces. Tyrone, however, did not fall for this ploy, and he maintained his blockade of Drogheda as before. On September 30, 1798, a uprising erupted among the Scottrian natives of the star system, who had been aroused by the Earl's pleas and his promises of self-government, withdrawal of curfew and transportation restrictions, and the abolition of all taxes and levies imposed by the imperial authorities.
    • Within hours, Drogheda's shield generators had been dismantled, and the world was left helpless in the face of Tyrone's forces. By the early hours of October 1, 1798, Tyrone had secured the stronghold. On his orders, the Laurasian Governor of Drogheda, Sir Daedalus Masaius (1751-98), was bound in chains, raised on a pike, and executed through the employment of electrical flares. As a result of the fall of Drogheda, Tyrone's forces gained further momentum. By October 9, he had stormed the government garrisons of Carlow, Bansha, Clogary, Killenaulle, and Epakillary, imposing severe strain upon the defenses of Tipperary and Kerry. Then on October 14, 1798, he launched an offensive against Tipperary; the stronghold resisted for four days. Its fall (October 19, 1798), dealt a major humiliation to the Imperial Laurasian Government. On October 22, Donaugh defeated General Narmania again in the Battle of Clevin; Kallagany capitulated on October 27, and by the beginning of November 1798, Kerry was under severe threat. General Narmania himself was now issuing urgent communiques to the Imperial General Headquarters, pleading for the diversion of military forces from the Great Amulak Spiral to the Scottrian Governorates, and for the Empress to assign Field-Marshal Surovius and Fleet Admiral Notthamia to crush the rebellion. On November 6, 1798, however, Narmania died when his starfighter was intercepted and destroyed by a Scottrian convoy near Cordin. Four days later, Kildare, which had been besieged by rebel forces since August 1798, capitulated to the Earl of Tyrone. This finally alerted the Imperial Laurasian Government to the full reality of Tyrone's Rebellion. By the middle of November 1798, Derith, Stirling, Leith, Glasgow, and Lithiglow were under constant threat from daring naval expeditions launched by Tyrone, Donaugh, and their subordinates.
  • December 5-
    • Following her return to Laurasia Prime (November 27, 1798), Empress Aurelia's complete attention came to the subject of Tyrone's Rebellion. Ever since the contentious Privy Council session in July 1798, which had witnessed Estatius's display of defiance towards her, the Empress had seriously considered which commander or official would be assigned to suppress the rebellion. Her options were already dwindling. Vice-Admiral Sir Lysimachus Langatonia, who had gained such prominence and fame at the Imperial Court, and throughout the Laurasian Empire, for his victories in the Spamalkan Spice Colonies and Colonial Territories, suddenly fell ill at Santiago (September 19, 1798), as he was beginning to supervise the gradual withdrawal of the Empire's garrisons from the territories and colonies restored to the Spamalkans. His condition declined rapidly, and his death (September 26, 1798), at the age of 56, was received with much bewailment throughout the Laurasian Empire. He was then followed by the Earl of Cumbria, who died at the Church of the Liberty of Savoy (October 30, 1798), at the age of only forty. Field-Marshal Surovius, on his part, was engaged in overseeing the gradual withdrawal of the Empire's military forces from the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions and from Franconia, in accordance with the Treaty of Vervins; Fleet Admiral Ushavious with the same in the Durthian Duchies.
    • Raleghia, on his part, returned to the Imperial Court on Laurasia Prime (November 3, 1798), having requested for and gained permission to resume his duties as Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners. Furthermore, the Admiral wished to continue raising his son Damasius; his wife, Lady Aurelia Raleghia, was pregnant with their third child. All of this reduced the Empress's options considerably. She now turned to what she had said to the Earl of Estatius, in her anger at the Westphalian Cathedral. She had offered him "great glory" and with it, a military commission in the Scottrian Governorates. For some time, Aurelia had only meant to use it to cow Estatius's spirit, and did not seriously entertain the thought of elevating him to a position of prominence there. The lack of military commanders, however, forced her to consider that option. Estatius, on his part, had returned to Wanstead Estate on Impania in September 1798, awaiting, in vain, for word from the Empress. Over time, the Earl, still angered over the termination of the Second Spamalkan War, but seeing his opportunities in the Scottrian Governorates, grew amenable to accepting the Empress's offer for a commission.
    • He came to consider himself as the only man capable of suppressing Tyrone, and of bringing the rebel to heel. Furthermore, he knew that Aurelia still harbored sympathy for him. Therefore, on November 28, 1798, the Earl feigned illness. This had the desired effect. Aurelia, remembering her own pledge of remembrance to the Earl, sent her physician and a sympathetic message to him. A speedy recovery followed, and the Earl composed a flattering communique of gratitude. Charmed, the Empress, on December 5, 1798, agreed to lift his ban of attendance at the Imperial Court and to receive him in a formal audience. Cecilis and others thought that once again, the Earl had crept into her good graces. He overstepped, however, when on December 7, he asked for an apology from Aurelia. She refused, and ordered him out of her sight; he retreated back to Wanstead Estate. The Empress wished for Estatius to give her an apology; he would not, and a deadlock ensued. Procurator-General Egertonia advised Estatius that it was his duty to submit to his sovereign. It was not until December 15, 1798 that the relationship was repaired. Egertonia had showed Aurelia Estatius's bold communique of July 5, 1798, and she was much disturbed by it. On this day, Estatius again messaged the Empress, indicating his acceptance of her earlier commission offer. This time, the Empress responded in a positive manner.
    • Two days later, the Earl once more returned to the Court, and they settled their differences in a private audience. From this time onwards, the Empress would never display as much affection towards him as before; she still kept bitter memories of his defiance earlier that year. The Earl, on his part, retained a festering sense of injury. On December 22, he asked the Empress about her intentions concerning the Mastership of the Court of Wards, which had been Burghley's most lucrative position. The late Lord Treasurer had held it for eleven years before acceding to that office of state; Estatius, Southerton, and the dying Oxfadia had been among the many wards entrusted to his care during his thirty-seven years at the Mastership. Estatius now wanted the Mastership for himself, for it would elevate his prestige among the nobility and would assist his finances. The Empress, however, had already decided to confer the office upon Chancellor Cecilis. Estatius grew angry at this, but decided to move on. He now requested the Governor-Generalship of Ediania, Branxholme, and Dumbarton, again insisting that only he could conquer Tyrone. The Empress, on Ascentmas Day 1798, announced her intention to confer the office upon Estatius. Although Cecilis, Lord Buchamia (whom the Empress was planning to raise to the Earldom of Doracia, and to the Lord Treasurership), and Raleghia all opposed Estatius's nomination, Aurelia's will prevailed. As 1798 ended, the Empire's vigorous military response to Tyrone's Rebellion was finally coming to play.

1799

  • January 1-
    • 1799, the 99th year of the eighteenth century, commenced with the Laurasian Empire in a predicament of external glory and internal convulsion. The Second Spamalkan War, which had erupted in March 1795, primarily on the initiative of King Hensios IV of Franconia and of the Durthian States-General, had been concluded the previous year with victory for the Allied Coalition. Holy Spamalkan Emperor Philicus I, who had at the beginning of his reign been considered the most powerful sovereign within the Great Amulak Spiral, found his economic, military, and diplomatic influence severely curtailed as a result of the Spamalkan Wars of the 1790s. The Treaty of Vervins, which had been concluded just eleven days before Philicus's death, had resulted in the concession of Andorra, Spamalkan Navarre, Northern Catalonia, Franche-Comte (including the County of Pesignol), and the Duchy of Milania to the Serene Kingdom of Franconia; the sovereign independence of the United Durthian States, and the extension of its jurisdiction over Brabant, Flanders, Luxembourg, Lichtenstein, and Cologne; and the conferral of commercial and transit privileges to the Laurasian Empire, and to its allies, within the Spamalkan realms. The Holy Spamalkan Empire had also been forced to concede many of the Spice Colonies to Franconia and Durthia, as a compensation to them by Empress Aurelia of Laurasia (whose forces had effectively subdued those regions). With the end of the Second Spamalkan War, the Laurasian Empire had been consolidated further in its position as the most powerful state of extra-galactic civilization. Empress Aurelia the Great, who entered 1799 as the senior monarch (she was now in the 40th year of her reign), was respected and beloved by her subjects; feared by her enemies; and revered at the courts of the Empire's allies and neighbors. But at the same time, further events had occurred within the Empire's territory.
    • At the Imperial Court, the deaths of the Duchess of Kendalia and Lord Treasurer Burghley had imposed a great emotional burden upon the Empress's shoulders; the arguments with the Earl of Estatius had inflamed intense emotional passions; and the outbreak, as well as the progress, of Tyrone's Rebellion had imperiled the Laurasian position in the Scottrian Governorates. The Earls of Tyrone and Donaugh, who had now formally repudiated the authority of the Imperial Laurasian Government, were determined to expel the foreign occupiers from the Scottrian Governorates, and to restore the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria. The Battle of the Yellow Pulsar had been a stunning victory by rebel forces over those of the Empire; by December 1798, the Empress had finally resolved upon a response. Her announcement that she would be appointing the Earl of Estatius to the Governor-Generalship of Ediania, Dumbarton, and Branxholme, stunned many. They were surprised that the Empress had not taken action against Estatius after his defiance in July 1798; now he was being raised to another position. Estatius, who as Imperial Marshal, Master of the Empress's Vehicles, Field-Marshal, and Master of the Imperial Ordnance, was a prominent personage at the Imperial Court, was now expected to crush this rebellion. This year would indeed see the Empire's forces make progress against Tyrone and his confederates, but it would also see the worsening of Aurelia's relationship with her favorite, ultimately ending in his utter disgrace, and, in the new century, to his demise.
  • January 4-
    • As previously mentioned, Empress Aurelia's announcement, on Ascentmas Day 1798, that she would be designating the Earl of Estatius as commander-in-chief of the Empire's military and governmental effort against Tyrone's Rebellion, had astounded many. Estatius himself, who was now growing overconfident once more, and who believed that his position at the Imperial Court had become unassailable, from any assaults by his enemies, now flaunted his new-won position. To many, it seemed a complete reversal from the Earl's earlier attempt to thrust the position upon Chancellor Cecilis, and from his contempt of the Scottrians. On New Year's Day 1799, the Earl had told Sir Antiochus Harringtia that "I will beat Tyrone in the field, for nothing worthy of Her Majesty's honor has yet been achieved in that theater." Three days later (January 4, 1799), the Earl wrote that "the Empress has irrevocably decreed that I go to the Scottrian Governorates" and that he was looking forward to gain glory for the Empire in the name of Almitis. Estatius, however, now found himself in conflict again with his Empress. As the military preparations at the Imperial Court proceeded, for the dispatch of forces to crush Tyrone's Rebellion, the Earl sought to gain positions and ranks for his friends among the intended forces. In particular, his attention focused upon the situation of the Earl of Southerton. Southerton's (secret) wife, Lady Aurelia Verania, had resided at Estatius House throughout much of 1798. As the time drew near for her pregnancy to end, Estatius had, in October 1798, dispatched Lady Verania to stay with his sister, Athena Richius, Lady Richius (1764-1807), wife of Sir Ricomedius Richius, 3rd Baron Richius (1759-1819), grandson of the Procurator-General of that name during the reign of Demetrius II. Lady Richius had been married to her husband in 1781, at the age of seventeen; he had acceded to the Barony of Richius ten years later, upon the death of his father. Their marriage had produced seven children, but by 1797, Lady Richius had fallen out of love for her husband. They quarreled constantly, and she believed that he was not doing enough for her.
    • The following year, she entered into an adulterous affair with her brother Estatius's friend, Sir Nicanor Blountia, now 8th Baron Mountjaria of Hoohshikk (he succeeded his elder brother to the Barony upon his death on January 17, 1794). Lady Richius was therefore well verged in subterfuge, and expertly concealed the presence of Lady Verania in her household. On November 8, 1798, she gave birth to her and Southerton's first child, a daughter whom she named Eupraxia (1798-1895). Within weeks, the Empress learned of the birth, and of Southerton's secret marriage with Lady Verania. On November 30, 1798, she ordered the Earl of Southerton, who was then at Grenoble in Franconia, to return at once back to the Laurasian Empire. Southerton, who had learned of his daughter's birth by means of secret contact over the Holonet, knew what the Empress was summoning him for. He did not pose any resistance, and arrived back at Belkadan (December 9, 1798). He then proceeded to Laurasia Prime, and on December 12, was arrested on the Empress's orders. Southerton was committed to the Post Settlement of Hepudermia Prison, and remained there for the rest of the month. Estatius, on his part, had decided to shelter Lady Southerton and her daughter at Estatius House; the Empress threatened to have them both arrested and conveyed to the Post Settlement.
    • On January 7, 1799, the Earl, who could not bear the predicament of his friend for any longer, petitioned the Empress to release Southerton and to acknowledge their marriage. Aurelia, who wished for the Earl's departure for his impending duties of command, and did not seek for a further clash with her favorite, decided to listen to his pleas. On January 15, she ordered for Southerton to be released from imprisonment and pardoned him for his "grievous" offense, although the Empress banned his wife and daughter from the Imperial Court. She also formally dismissed Lady Verania from her position as Maid of Honor and imposed a fine of €17.8 billion dataries upon the offending couple. Estatius dared not press any more, and continued with the preparations. On January 18, he danced with the Empress before the Vendragian Ambassador, Hoag Mallart, 1st Duke of Newcastle (1746-1817). Newcastle observed that the Empress was "still vigorous and disposed to athletic pursuits", even though she was now sixty-five. By the latter weeks of January 1799, the 67th, 64th, and 68th Imperial Fleets, as well as the 49th, 50th, and 52nd Imperial Armies, had been prepared for campaigns in the Scottrian Governorates.
  • January 19-
    • Whilst Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council were engaged in preparations for the government's response to Tyrone's Rebellion, those very same rebel forces continued to make gains in the Scottrian Governorates. As mentioned above, Tyrone's forces threatened many of the Empire's most strongholds in the Scottrian Governorates by November 1798, including Derith, Linlithgow, Leith, and Glasgow, among others. Determined to consolidate his position in the Dumbarton Governorate, Tyrone now pursued a series of offensives to subdue Kerry, Baltinglass, and Iverness. On November 29, 1798, after destroying a government force in the Battle of Askeaton, Tyrone stormed the colonies of Mardonville, Dourif, and Richardson, thereby gaining control over the Branxholme-Iverness Space Run and allowing for him to impose a blockade of Iverness. Although it had a population of only one billion by the late eighteenth century, Iverness was one of the more significant Scottrian colonies. Colonized as early as AH 965, during the reign of King Brude of Picta (r. 954-84), Iverness had been fortified by King Malcolm III of Scottria (r. 1458-93) in 1459. For over three centuries, therefore, it had served as one of the chief dockyards and strongholds of the Royal Scottrian Navy. In 1523, King Robert Bruce (r. 1507-29) granted the stronghold a charter of self-autonomy, according it privileges of self-government and the right to its own planetary administration. Iverness then became subject to disputes by the Lords of the Files, including Clans MacDonald, Munro, and Machintosh.
    • The Battles of Blarnicol (1540); Harlaw (1611); Clanchanarry (1654); and Ross (1691) were all fought in the vicinity of Iverness, and each confrontation led to its seizure by one or the other clans. In 1762, the stronghold had defied Queen Mariana, and she had ordered for the Munro and Fraser Clans to seize the stronghold, garrison it, and prevent any other clans or rebels from obtaining access to it. It had then become a site of contention during the Marianian Civil War, and in 1779, was conquered by the Laurasian Empire during the War of Drury's Intervention. Since 1736, Iverness Fortress had served as the chief stronghold of the star system, controlling planetary landings, shields, and orbital defenses. Tyrone was determined to gain control of this fortress and from Iverness, to prevent government reinforcements from reaching the Dumbarton Governorate. Iverness was besieged beginning on December 4, 1798. In spite of the efforts of commanders such as Lieutenant-General Sir Ricomedius Binghamia and the Governor of Iverness, Sir Aedolus Iverney, 1st Baron Iverney of Madelaine (1742-1805), Iverness ultimately fell into the possession of Tyrone's forces (December 15, 1798). Kerry, which had been threatened by rebel forces for more than a month, finally surrendered to Tyrone on December 19; then on December 24, Aberdeen, whose loyalty to the imperial authorities had faltered, defected to Tyrone willingly.
    • On December 27, 1798, Tyrone defeated General Binghamia in the Battle of Caithness, securing access to the military armor, shield generators, and equipment at that stronghold. Sutherland fell on New Year's Eve 1798; then on January 4, 1799, Tyrone defeated Binghamia a second time in the Battle of Angus. Dumblaine, which was blockaded from December 24, fell to the rebel Earl shortly thereafter (January 7, 1799), and on January 11, Donaugh launched the final offensive against Baltinglass. Within hours, Baltinglass surrendered to the rebel forces, with more than 75,000 troops of the Imperial Laurasian Army becoming prisoners of war. By January 18, Tyrone's forces had also seized Falkirk, Morton, and Burgh Muir, penetrating into the Edianian Governorate and the former Scottrian Homeland Territories. The following day (January 19, 1799), General Binghamia, who had retreated to his command headquarters on Ancrum Moor, died there at the age of 71. Binghamia, whose service in the Imperial Laurasian Military extended back to the reign of Demetrius II, was mourned widely at the Imperial Court; Empress Aurelia declared that his recent reverses against Tyrone and Donaugh "did not distract from the loyal service which he has rendered to this Empire for so many decades." During the last days of January 1799, Tyrone and Donaugh capped off their earlier successes through the seizure of Falaside, Trinity Kirk, and Orkney. Tipperary was also in the firm possession of rebel forces.
  • February 12-
    • On February 3, 1799, following the Earl of Tyrone's victory in the Battle of Orkney, Empress Aurelia formally appointed her favorite, the Earl of Estatius, as the Governor-General and Magister Militum of the Ediania, Branxholme, and Dumbarton Governorates. He gained supreme executive and military authority over the Scottrian Governorates, in particular those regions affected by Tyrone's Rebellion. Estatius, wearing his best suit of armor, was formally dubbed by the Empress in a ceremony at the Diplomatic Palace; blessed by Chief Procurator Whitshiftus; and handed his commission of command. In the commission, the Empress granted Estatius the authority to confer knighthoods and military decorations upon his chief subordinates (as long as his decisions were submitted to the ratification of the Imperial Privy Council), and to directly punish, or dispatch, Tyrone and Donaugh upon their submission or capture. Furthermore, Empress Aurelia absolved the Earl of responsibility for the more than €100 billion dataries in debt which his father had accumulated during his service in the Lavellan Governorate. All of this satisfied the Earl considerably; he observed to Southerton that he "had the best warrant that any person could have." The commission also granted the Earl permission to depart from his station of command, after notifying the Empress and the Privy Council of this move.
    • With the commission now granted to Estatius, the final preparations for his departure, and for the suppression of the Revolt, proceeded apace. On January 17, 1799, Lieutenant-General Sir Horacius Verus (promoted to that rank by a grateful Empress as a reward for his services in the Durthian Duchies), had arrived at Laurasia Prime, and was immediately assigned as one of Estatius's subordinates. His brother, Major-General Sir Franconius Verus, was still engaged in overseeing the withdrawal of the Empire's military forces and fleets from Leon, Lesser Spamalka, and Asturias. By February 5, both the Earl of Southerton and Sir Antiochus Harringtia, who had been granted an honorary commission in the Imperial Military Forces, had been assigned as attaches to the Earl of Estatius. Then finally (February 12, 1799), the Earl of Estatius, his immediate subordinates, and the 52nd Imperial Army (with the 67th Imperial Fleet), formally departed from Laurasia Prime. The Empress herself gave him her formal words of departure; Estatius's admirers in the cities of Laurasia Prime cried "Almitis bless Your Lordship!"
  • February 19-
    • Following his departure from Laurasia Prime, the Earl of Estatius traveled quickly to his station in the Scottrian Governorates. The Empress commanded for him to proceed to Ediania, to take charge of the Gubernatorial Council and the military resources there, and to waste no time in taking prompt action against the Earl of Tyrone and his forces. On February 14, while passing near Dehner in the Galactic Barrier, the Earl received word of supernova activity in the Herlai red-giant star system. The sensors of his flagship, the IMS Didyronica, picked up an image of the ongoing activity in that star system. Many on-board the flagship considered it to be a sign. Sir Franconius Bagonius, who was slowly gaining some respect from the Empress for his services at the Courts of the Chancery and Star Chamber, observed that he "saw his overthrow chained by destiny to that omen." Lord Mountjaria joined with the Earl of Estatius (February 16, 1799), in the Galactic Void, having received his commission from the Empress a few weeks earlier. Estatius, who believed that he and his associates would subdue Tyrone easily, hastened forth to Ediania. His arrival there (February 19, 1799), after bypassing rebel expeditions at Albemaine and Albright, was with some ceremony.
    • Zeno Perethus, 1st Earl of Glencairn (1749-1822), commanded the reception given by the magnates and inhabitants of this, the former capital world of the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria, to the new Governor-General. Estatius toured Canongate, Holyroodian Palace, and Edianian Fortress, viewing with great satisfaction the strongholds which had once been at the heart of the Scottrian Homeland Territories. He established his headquarters at the Holyroodian Palace, and in his first manifesto as Governor-General, declared that "Tyrone and Donaugh will not be able to elude the justice as meted out by the hand of the Lord Almitis." Estatius then staged a massive pageant at the Holyroodian Palace for his subordinates and for the Laurasian nobles of Scottria; these ceremonies continued through February 26. Empress Aurelia was enraged by the whole charade, and wished for Estatius to quickly proceed to the business for which he had been dispatched to the Scottrian Governorates: the suppression of the Rebellion.
    • On February 27, 1799, the Empress sent the first of what was to become a stream of angry communiques, demanding to know the reasons why the Earl was "wasting your time and resources on petty entertainments and trifles for the Court of Ediania." Estatius replied that the Empire's subjects in those regions needed to be seen a display of "Her Majesty's wealth, strength, and might" and that they would therefore be less likely to revolt in the future. The Empress, who knew she could not dispense with Estatius, not at that time, relented. She found herself focused on other matters, of more immediate importance, at the Imperial Court. Earlier that month (February 11, 1799), Dr. Demetrius Haywardia (1751-1813), had published The Reign and Deposition of the Emperor Antiochus IV, and had dedicated it to Estatius. The Empress was painfully aware of the fate of both Antiochus III and IV; they had both died, one by suicide, and the other by assassination, in the wake of revolts by their subjects. Aurelia had already been agitated by Sir Willanius Shakesperius's play Commodus (1797), which had recounted the fate of that Emperor. She therefore declared herself offended by this new work, and asked Bagonius (who was now a legal consultant to the Governing Senate) about Haywardia's offense. Bagonius declared that he believed Haywardia could be tried for felony and libel. The Empress asked why. He replied that Haywardia had "stolen many passages from Ulagrai!" This was a reference to Sir Suetonius Ulagrai (1429-1503), the respected fifteenth-century historian on the Dasian Yoke, Third Laurasian Period, and the early Imperial Laurasian Period. Empress Aurelia, however, was in no mood for jests. She continued: "I suspect the worst. I shall force the truth from him." She even stated that she would have Haywardia flared, but Bagonius was able to dissuade her. Nevertheless, on February 29, 1799, Haywardia was arrested on the Empress's orders, tried and convicted by the Court of the Imperial Chancery on the offense of writing of the deposition of the sovereign, and imprisoned at the Post Settlement Prison of Hepudermia in March 1799, where he remained for the closing years of Aurelia's reign.
  • March 9-
    • On March 3, 1799, after his spectacle of entertainments on Ediania was over, and taking in mind the Empress's first communique (though he remained brash), the Earl of Estatius finally convened a session of the Gubernatorial Councils of the Scottrian Governorates on Ediania. The Governor-General, who had been granted the power of subitis iurisdictionem (emergency jurisdiction), allowing him to override Council-passed measures, to block vetoes, and to appoint all officials in those governorates for the duration of the emergency, announced to the assembled Councils that vigorous action needed to be taken against Tyrone, Donaugh, and their associates. The Gubernatorial Councils, which had received further intelligence about rebel advances, advised Estatius to focus on terminating the rebel threat in the Homeland Territories, and to secure the defenses of Ediania. Estatius had favored a full-scale offensive into the Dumbarton Governorate, but, on the advice of Harringtia and Lord Mountjaria, decided to heed the Councils' suggestions. On March 7, he issued another manifesto from Ediania, increasing the bounties on the heads of Tyrone and Donaugh from €40 to €112 billion dataries; ordering for all subjects in the Governorates to denounce any rebel activity; and imposing harsh penalties upon businesses, magnates, and guilds found to provide any support, financial or otherwise, to rebel forces.
    • He then reshuffled the military commands in the Scottrian Governorates. Major-General Sir Thomasius Norria, younger brother of the late Field-Marshal Sir Demetrius Norria, who had fought under the command of Vice-Admiral Langatonia in the Spice Colonies, and had been reassigned to the Scottrian Governorates (January 1799), was placed in charge of the garrisons of Lenister, Upper Dumbarton, and the Scottrian Borderland Territories. Lieutenant-General Sir Thomasius Butleria, 1st Earl of Ormonde, who had fought against the Desmonian Rebellion nearly two decades earlier, and had been made the first Laurasian Earl of Ormonde in 1796 by his distant cousin, the Empress, was placed in charge of the defenses of the Outskirt Districts, Lower Dumbarton, and Branxholme, while Brigadier-General Sir Craterus Cliffordia (1761-99), a veteran of the Kosciusko Revolt, War in Defense of the Constitution, Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War, and Desmonian Rebellion, assumed command of Dumblaine, Munster, and the Eastern Districts.
    • With these commands reorganized, and further reinforcements arriving from the Caladarian Galaxy, Estatius launched his campaigns. On March 9, 1799, General Norria defeated the Earl of Donaugh and his command subordinate, Alexander Trglaves, 1st Viscount Trglaves (1750-1802), in the Battle of Dingle, preventing that stronghold from falling into rebel hands. Four days later, Norria repelled a repel offensive against Galloway, capturing more than 15,000 of Tyrone's Haxonian mercenaries and forcing the rebel Commander-in-Chief to terminate raiding expeditions against Canongate, Stirling, and Ancrum Moor. Trinity Kirk was recovered by Norria and the Earl of Ormonde (March 19, 1799), and on March 23, Norria defeated Donaugh again in the Battle of Mallow. Sutherland was then abandoned by rebel units (March 24), and Caithness was recovered two days later. At the same time, Limerick was secured by the forces of General Cliffordia (March 12-18, 1799), and on March 19, he imposed a blockade of Carriglea. The Siege of Carriglea continued throughout the last days of March 1799; the stronghold's fall on April 4, 1799, inflicted a severe blow upon rebel lines. Following the conquest of Carriglea, General Cliffordia and the Earl of Estatius pressed against Morton, Angus, and Burgh Muir, determined to expel rebel units from those strongholds. On April 8, 1799, the Battle of Cork was fought between the 67th Imperial Fleet and the 52nd Imperial Army of the Laurasian Empire (under Estatius and Cliffordia), on the one hand, and the forces of the Earl of Tyrone, primarily the 9th Mercenary Force, the Scottrian 1st Harebusiers Corps, and the 9th Revillers Fleet, on the other. The confrontation lasted for over six hours and was especially hard fought, but ultimately ended in a strategic victory for Estatius. Burgh Muir was reconquered (April 11, 1799), followed by Morton (April 14) and Angus (April 16). Although a government offensive against Merchinston (April 17-22, 1799), launched by Norria and Ormonde, failed, Estatius was able to prevent Tyrone from cutting off the supply lines of Madelaine and Albright; Richardson was recovered on April 26. By the end of April 1799, Dourif, Falkirk, and Orkney were under serious threat by government forces.
  • May 15-
    • Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Privy Council followed the progress of the Laurasian Empire's forces in the Scottrian Governorates, against those of the Earls of Tyrone and Donaugh, closely. Up to this point, Estatius, in spite of his initial bout of laziness and of "entertainments" on Ediania, had gradually advanced the Empire's position against the rebel forces. Aurelia, however, was already jealous. She declared that Estatius had thus far only "prevented the rabble from seizing Ediania" and that he had not made any substantial progress in the Dumbarton Governorate, the heart of Tyrone's Rebellion. Aurelia wondered why the Earl did not vigorously pursue the offensive against the rebel forces, ignoring the fact that her own General Headquarters, and the Gubernatorial Councils of the regions in question, had advised for the Earl to proceed cautiously. Therefore, while through March and April 1799, the Empress's subjects celebrated the achievements of the hero of Cadiz, she sulked. Aurelia, however, had her mind focused on other matters: specifically, the dispersal of the late Lord Treasurer Burghley's offices and honors.
    • For months following Burghley's death, Aurelia would break down at any mention of his name. She was unable to bear any thought of it, and in spite of Estatius's desire for the Mastership of Wards, she had taken no action to fill those positions. By May 1799, however, the Empress finally decided to take care of business. She also sought to showcase her displeasure with the Earl of Estatius, by excluding him and his associates from any share in the spoils. On May 4, 1799, the Empress announced that she was elevating the Lord Treasurer's son, Chancellor Cecilis, to his father's positions as Imperial Privy Seal, Master of the Imperial Court of Wards, and Chancellor of the University of Laurasia Prime. Cecilis had already become Minister of the Imperial Chancellory in June 1797, and had assumed the Presidency of the Privy Council (along with the honorific of "chief minister of the Imperial Government" and the precedence it conferred), immediately upon his father's death.
    • The formal ceremonies of elevation took place on May 7 at the Senatorial Palace; Cecilis knelled before the Empress as she handed him the Staff of the Wardship, the Deeds of Wardship, and the Chancellor's Robes. Then on May 15, 1799, Empress Aurelia formally named Lord Buchamia, who had resigned his position as Minister of Foreign Affairs in November 1798, as Imperial Lord High Treasurer of the Laurasian Empire and Minister of Finance, making him the highest-ranking of the Officers of State. Her Majesty also created him as Earl of Doracia, formally raising him from the barony to the second-highest level of the Laurasian Empire's nobility. Buchamia received the Finance Robes, the Treasurer's Staff of Office, and his coronet on May 18, becoming Earl of Doracia and succeeding Lord Burghley to the Treasurership, nine months after his predecessor's death.
    • Doracia was granted Burghley's revenues from his stewardship of the Universities of Caladaria, Darcia, Archleuta, Briannia, Murphy, Jared, Denver, Goldaria, Carina, Seejay Prime, Melarnaria, and Teth, increasing his own financial wealth. The Earl of Estatius, hearing of all of this, was enraged, and on May 22, responded by conferring the Order of St. Alexander upon the Earl of Southerton, Sir Antiochus Harringtia (himself formally raised to the rank of Knight Banneret by Empress Aurelia back in March), Lord Mountjaria, and thirty others among his subordinates. Two days later, whilst preparing his campaign against Cahir (as to be described below), Estatius penned a vigorous communique to the Empress: "Why do I talk of victory or success? It is not known that from the Caladarian Galaxy I receive nothing but discomfort and soul's wounds. Is it not spoken among the forces that Your Majesty's favor is diverted from me, and that already ill is to be done to me? This is the hand of him that did live your dearest, and will die Your Majesty's most faithful, servant." The Empress responded in turn (May 27, 1799): "If you compare the time that is run on and the revenue which is spent, with the effect of anything wrought on this expedition, you must think that we, that have the eyes of foreign princes upon our actions, and have the hearts of people to comfort and cherish, who had for years had to contend with conscription and impositions, can little pleasure ourselves with anything else. We will add this, that it must be the Empress of Laurasia's fortune to be satisfied by the suppression of this foul Tyrone and the restoration of tranquility in the Scottrian Governorates."
  • May 29-
    • While Empress Aurelia was finally filling the vacancies in the offices and honors once held by the late Lord Treasurer Burghley, Estatius and his forces did continue to make progress against those of Tyrone's Rebellion. Dourif capitulated (May 3, 1799), following a offensive by Ormonde and General Norria; two days later, Falkirk, which had been constantly bombarded and harried by the Empire's naval forces, also surrendered. Although Tyrone managed to make some compensation for these failures by seizing Blackness and the Bearns Fortresses (May 6-9, 1799), he was unable to prevent the Earl of Estatius's further moves from Ediania. Estatius, who had stormed the Curragh Colonies and denied rebel forces from drawing any reinforcements from, or providing support to, the garrison of Kildare, now launched a vigorous offensive into the Dumbarton Governorate. He seized Ahy (May 11, 1799), capturing more than a third of the 85,000 rebel troops of that garrison, recovering a number of interdictor units, and destroying the rebel repositories there.
    • He subsequently repelled raids by some of Tyrone's supporters, the O'Mores, in confrontations at Clontilly and Carlow (May 13-15, 1799), recovering both of those strongholds for the Imperial Laurasian Government. The Earl of Ormonde, on his part, had stormed Nenagh and Thurles (May 8-11, 1799), terminating a rebel threat to his own estates on Ormonde, Branxholme, and Solway. On May 16, Estatius relieved the blockade of Maryborough, which had been harassed by rebel squadrons since March 1799, and then, on May 19, 1799, intercepted Donaugh at the Comets of Cahel, located twelve light-years to the east of Maryborough. The Battle of Cahel (May 19-20, 1799), resulted in a decisive victory for the Earl, who repelled assaults by Donaugh's mobile starfighter squadrons against the sides of his force and broke through Scottrian battle-lines. Twenty of the thirty Scottrian transports in Donaugh's force were destroyed; Donaugh was forced to abandon his flagship, the Liberatia, and the Cahel Comets, which had served as an intelligence post for the forces of Tyrone's Rebellion, were seized by Estatius.
    • Estatius followed up this success by the recovery of Kilkenny (May 20, 1799), where he was received by the world's Caladarian Galaxy colonists (primarily Lavellans, Kalbachans, Rasdallans, and Canites) as a liberator from the clutches of the Scottrian rebels, who had pursued a policy of xenophobia against them. From Kilkenny, Estatius recovered Bansha (May 22, 1799) and then drove Tyrone from Clomnel, receiving accolades from the inhabitants of that colony as well. On May 25, 1799, he and General Norria, who had departed from his stronghold at Trinity Kirk, seized Derrylare, which blocked the route towards Epakillary, Tipperary, and Kerry. He now planned the seizure of Cahir. During the late hours of that day, Estatius sent a communique to Thomasius Butleria, 2nd Baron Cahir (1768-1827), who had been captured some days earlier. In this communique, the Laurasian Field-Marshal and Governor-General offered a unconditional pardon to Cahir if he negotiated the surrender of the stronghold to government forces.
    • Cahir, who knew the vulnerability of the stronghold's defenses, declared that his brother, Sir Jamsius Butleria (1772-99), would surrender as soon as he approached. The Earl accepted this, and on May 26, he divided his forces (the 64th Imperial Fleet and detachments of the 49th Imperial Army), into four detachments, with the vanguard to lead and the rear to assemble near Clomnel. Turbocannon were stationed near the outskirts of Cahir, with Estatius himself supervising their transport. He then moved forward with his starfighters and approached the outskirts of the system. Lord Cahir was then sent ahead with Commodore Sir Antigonus Danveria (1773-1843) to call on his brother to surrender and allow Laurasian forces to take possession; he was answered with threats and insults by those who came out to parley with him, and was subsequently accused by Estatius of breach of faith.
    • The Earl now decided to capture the stronghold in a direct offensive, and had Cahir, along with his wife and attendants, again confined. He then summoned a council of war, with the Earl of Ormonde and General Norria both in attendance. Estatius then ordered his reconnaissance expeditions to scout out Cahir's defenses; these units were commanded by Captain Sir Georgius Binghamia (1763-1827), who had captured Enniskillen from Tyrone's forces the previous month. It was now decided that the Cahir Straits would be the place to install the turbocannon, and that the Cahir Belts would be blockaded by Laurasian units. During the late hours of May 26, 1799, the vanguard and main formation moved to the eastern side of the star system; Estatius had his Marines and the 49th Imperial Army detachments to seize Cahir Outpost. This was achieved, with the loss of less than 15,000 troops. The rearguard then arrived with the artillery. Following some hours of preparation, the turbocannon were placed in the Straits and on Cahir Outpost. They opened fire (May 27, 1799), inflicting severe damage on Cahir's shield defenses. Estatius's forces then sundered all supply lines to the star system, and on May 28, Cahir's shield defenses were breached by the turbocannon. Estatius now prepared for the direct landings on Cahir's surface.
    • The garrison of Cahir proved to be completely unprepared, and during the early hours of May 29, 1799, the world was overrun by the Empire's forces virtually unopposed. Butleria, who had been unable to escape Cahir in time, was killed attempting to resist Laurasian troops entering Cahir Fortress. With the fall of Cahir, Estatius proceeded to Limerick (June 4, 1799). Epakillary (June 6-11); Killenaule (June 14); and Askeaton (June 19-22), were besieged and conquered in turn by the Earl's forces. Tyrone's subordinate, Jamsius FitzThomas Fitzgerald, Sugan Earl of Desmond (1771-1807), managed to humiliate the Earl of Ormonde at Adare (June 24, 1799), but this did little to halt the advance of the imperial forces. The following day, Estatius held another command conference with General Norria, at Killamock, and ordered for him to advance against Kerry. Donaugh, however, now inflicted some further humiliations on government forces; he seized Dunbeg, Dungarvan, and Clare (June 27-July 5, 1799), thereby forcing Norria to halt plans for a direct move against Kerry. Nevertheless, by the beginning of July 1799, Clogary was under direct threat from government forces, and Estatius had managed to secure the defenses of Ediania.
  • June 5-September 17-
    • On June 5, 1799, whilst the Earl of Estatius, Major-General Sir Thomasius Norria, and the Earl of Ormonde were making progress against Tyrone and Donaugh in the Scottrian Governorates, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court departed from the Quencilvanian Palace on Laurasia Prime, to commence the progress of 1799. Upon returning from her progress to the Northanian and Caucasian Governorates in November 1798, the Empress had announced her intention to visit the Tesmanian Dejanican and Lithuanian Governorates, the last of the territories thus acquired by the Laurasian Empire in the eighteenth century. The Empress was determined to impress the fact that it was her Empire which had brought the Caladarian Galaxy and satellite galaxies under one rule, and that it was she who had taken the leading role in the destruction of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Empress and her Court proceeded rapidly up the Larkian Way to the Corporate Sector. She visited Whycliff, Garner, Scanlan, Theodore Minor, Longmira, and Andrea Doria (June 8-11, 1799), before proceeding into the Galactic Void.
    • The Court reached the outskirts of the Vilinus Governorate in the Great Tesmanian Cloud on June 12. Utena, which was the second most populous stronghold in the Governorate, became the first target of the Imperial Court. With a population of thirteen billion (1797), it had been one of the Dejanican-Lithanian Commonwealth's most prosperous worlds outside of the Great Amulak Spiral, and was now considered by the Imperial Laurasian Government to be one of its most important possessions in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Utena was particularly renowned for its luxury goods, in particular lavish clothing garments and beverages. It was also a major agricultural colony, exporting more than 200 billion tons worth of foodstuffs across the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and to the Caladarian Galaxy, every year. Having been colonized by the Kingdom of Lithuania in 1261, Utena had during the following five centuries enjoyed among the highest rates of population growth of any world in the Great Tesmanian Cloud.
    • The Empress toured the HKC Upholestry Factories, owned by the Vikakin family, which had been one of the Commonwealth's wealthiest families, but had deliberately refrained from involvement in its political disputes, and in the sessions of the Diet. They had consequently been among the few Lithuanian magnates permitted by Empress Aurelia to retain their privileges and properties. She was led on her tour of the Factories by Klagas Vikakin (1753-1809), CEO of the Upholestry Factories and a respected personage on Utena. He then treated her, and the Imperial Court, to a lavish banquet at Krasouna Park, one of the largest privately-owned nature preserves in the Laurasian Empire. The Empress also toured the Utena High Chancellory, the Uskena Stadium, and the Utena Ranges.
    • She departed from Utena on June 14 and from there proceeded through Amyskicai, Ingalina, Moletai, Zarasi, and Visaginas (June 14-17, 1799). Ingalina impressed the Court with its massive forestry processing plants; Visaginas, with its wine vineyards and massive agricultural farmsteads, operated by specialized lines of V1 industrial robots. Passing through Electrinkai, Salcininkai, Sirvintos, and Tarkai, the Court reached Vilinus, the homeworld of the Lithuanian species, formerly capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and now capital of the Vilinus Governorate (June 21, 1799). Vilinus, from which the Lithuanian species first emerged into space in the ninth century BH, had been briefly subdued in turn by the Dasians, Torfians, and Tofs, before regaining native independence in the eighth century AH. By the following century, it had become the capital world of the Lithuanian Tribal Confederation of Midragas, which persisted until the eleventh century.
    • In 1253, Mindauga (r. 1219-63), unifier of the Lithuanian Worlds and ruler of Voruta, was crowned King of Lithuania at Vilinus. He established Trakai Palace on Vilinus as his main residence, a status it held until the late fourteenth century. Vilinus was threatened continuously by the Livonian Dynasty of Northania and the Pruthian Teutonic Order during the fourteenth century; in 1387, it was fortified by King-Grand Duke Jogalia of Dejanica and Lithuania (r. 1377-1434). Two years later, it was seized by Vyautuas (r. 1392-1430), who then disputed the Lithuanian throne with Jogaila for the next three years. Vilinus gradually increased in importance and population during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, especially after Jogaila and Vyautuas destroyed the Teutonics and Livonians at Tanneberg in 1410. From 1503 to 1522, the Vilinus Towers were constructed, controlling transport and commerce into the star system; King Sigisio August I of Dejanica (r. 1548-72) resided there during the last four years of his reign. In 1579, King Ariogsai I of Dejanica (r. 1574-86), then engaged in war against the Laurasian Empire, established the Academic University of Vilinus, which became the most prominent institution of its kind in the Cloud, and granted the system self-governing privileges, as a Royal System of the Commonwealth. By the early seventeenth century, immigration from the Caladarian Galaxy and Great Amulak Spiral had increased substantially; Vilinus now had a substantial population of Pruthians, Dejanicans, Haxonians, Franconians, Marasharites, Laurasians, Xilanians, Nandi, Marauders, Lacians, Dasians, and Arachosians, among others.
    • The seventeenth century, however, also saw a serious threat to Vilinus. In 1607, 1619, 1625, 1634, 1640, and 1651, the system was raided and plundered by the forces of the Haynsian Despotate; from 1636-38, it was briefly held by the rebel forces of the Ukrainian Kamensies. In 1655, it was besieged and sacked by the forces of the Electoral Kingdom of Pruthia during the War of the Deluge; the Marasharites briefly overran it from 1672-74, and it was subjected to near-constant Haynsian raiding operations from the 1660s to the 1680s, all but smashing the Vilinus Towers. In 1706, Vilinus was stormed by the Pruthians, who held it for nine years until the conclusion of the Treaty of Geldern. It was devastated by chemical explosions and earthquakes in 1715, 1737, 1741, 1748, and 1749. Haynsian raids in 1710, 1718, and 1725 also harried the system's outskirts.
    • The star system suffered during the Wars of the Dejanican Succession, Bar Confederation, Defense of the Constitution, and Kosicuzko; by 1795, its population had dropped from 58 to 42 billion. Therefore, it was still in the process of recovery back to its former splendors when Empress Aurelia graced the world with her presence. She visited the Dejanican Priory of Casimir, the Gate of Dawn, the Central Hall of Vilinus, Subacius Gate, and the Cathedral of the Theodoros, which had been constructed by the Imperial Almitian Church in 1348. The Empress received accolades from the assembled magnates of Vilinus and Kaunas at the Radzwill Palace, which had been seized by the Imperial Chancellory in 1797 and was now part of the Empress's patrimonies. She then attended a opera and harmonics performance at the Philharmonic Opera of Vilinus; toured the grounds of Vilinus Priory, offering prayers to the Dejanican and Lithuanian Gods and to the Lord Almitis; and viewed the exhibits at Gedminias Tower, now a leading art museum.
    • The Empress also paid her respects to the sarcophagi of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania at the Mindaugan Palace; was guest of honor at a traditional Lithuanian banquet, held in the Old Town; and watched a performance of Lithuanian Heralds. The Scientific Museum of Vilinus and the Gallery of the Grand Dukes also received visits from the Court. The Empress stayed on Vilinus until June 24, and then departed, receiving a gift of Lithuanian statuettes from the Municipal Council of Vilinus City. Ukmerge was then visited (June 25, 1799), with the Empress witnessing a simulation of the Battle of Pabaiskas (1435), fought between the Lithuanian Grand Duke Sigisio Kestutatis (r. 1432-40) and Lithuanian Prince Svitagalia (r. 1430-32), who was supported by the Livonian Dynasty. This had been one of the most bloody battles in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Kedaiani, which had been colonized in 1372, was visited (June 26-28, 1799), as the Court proceeded forth from Vilinus. The Empress toured the Radzwillia Family Mausoleum and the Chemical Plants of Kedaiani. Prienai, a major electronics production and manufacturing hub (June 29); Kaisiadorys (June 30-July 1), which had been ruled by the Haynsian Despotate from 1514 to 1589 before its seizure by Dejanica; and Birstonas, known for its annual Regional Festival of Culture (July 2-3), were visited in turn. Then (July 4, 1799) the Court reached Kaunas, the second-most populous of the Lithuanian Worlds and capital of the Kaunian Governorate. With more than 40 billion people (1797), Kaunas was a magnet for starhoppers, navigators, and merchants from throughout the Empire and the Great Amulak Spiral.
    • Kaunas was one of the oldest Lithuanian Worlds, colonized in the fourth century BH; it was granted self-governing rights by the Confederation of Marijampole in 1030; and in 1361, became capital of the Kaunas Voivodeship. The following year, Kaunas was seized by the Pruthian Teutonic Order, who demolished its fortifications; it recovered quickly, however, and in 1408, was elevated to the rank of Ducal System by Grand Duke Vyautuas. It became a Royal World in 1575, by which time Kaunas had established extensive commercial ties with the remainder of the Great Tesmanian Cloud. It was a member of the Trade League of Hansa from 1441 to 1607. In 1665, the Electoral Kindom of Pruthia, successor to the Teutonic Order and the Germanian Principality of Brandenburg, stormed the stronghold, and held it until 1679. In 1682, it fell victim to a raid by the Haynsian Despotate (earlier Haynsian expeditions in 1598, 1609, and 1619 had failed), and in 1701, was captured by the Vendragian Confederacy, as part of its retaliations in Semigallia and Samogitia due to Dejanican violations of Vendragian commerce in the Galactic Void.
    • Just five years later, Kaunas was struck by an outbreak of Marsian fever, and in 1731, was almost ruined by a gamma ray surge. By 1795, Kaunas had suffered further damage from the varied internal conflicts of the eighteenth century. Nevertheless, as after the assault by the Teutonics in 1362, it recovered quickly, and was again prospering at the time of the Empress's visit. The Empress toured St. Michael's Church; the Dejanican Priory of the High Lords; and the Kaunas Seminary, a major institution for religious clerics from the Great Amulak Spiral. Aurelia received an honorary doctorate from the University of Kaunas; attended a ball at the Kaunas Musical Theater; and visited the Gongian Synagogues, confirming an earlier patent of religious toleration for the Lithuanian Judaics, the second-largest alien sect in the former Lithuanian Territories. She visited Kaunas Fortress (ordering for its expansion), Kaunas Mosque (one of the few Marasharite religious facilities in the Lithuanian Worlds), the Vyatutas War Museum, the Kaunas Botanical Arborteum, and the Kaunas Aquarium Settlements.
    • She resided at Kaunas Palace, the world's largest mansion (constructed in the thirteenth century), and which was undergoing a massive renovation project. The House of Perkunas and the Central Bank of Kaunas, one of the leading financial institutes in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, also received visits. The Empress departed from Kaunas (July 9, 1799), passing through the Kaunas Spaceport while doing so. Raisernai and Jonava were then visited (July 11-12, 1799), with the Kutavis Caves at the latter world particularly impressing the Court. Sarkai, Kalzu, and Karajavia were visited as well (July 14-16, 1799), and then on July 18, the Court came to Marijampole. Marijampole, which had only four hundred million inhabitants, was nevertheless an interesting world. The Empress laid a wreath at the Funerary Park of Marijampole, which had been constructed in 1701, to honor the victims of the Marjiampole Central Tower Bombings (1695), in which more than 100,000 individuals had lost their lives. She also visited the Park of Poetry, so named because it contained the graves of more than one thousand prominent Dejanican and Lithuanian poets, muses, and authors from the preceding four centuries. From Marjiampole, Silale, Jurbakas, and Pagerai were visited (July 20-23, 1799), and then Taurage (July 24-25, 1799). Taurage had belonged to the Germanian Principality of Ansbach from 1621 to 1715, and was one of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth's last territorial acquisitions. It had been colonized by the Lithuanians originally in the 9th century AH.
    • The Empress stayed at Ludwika's Mansion, named in honor of the Dejanican Princess who had lived there, and had died in 1695 at the age of only twenty-eight. Aurelia had the chance to visit Princess Ludwika's tomb at the Mansion Grounds. Palanga and Nerinda, both of which had been major trade entrepots, were visited (July 26-27, 1799), and on July 28, the Empress reached Klaipeda, which had once been the Commonwealth's chief naval, commercial, and hyperspace terminal point in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. Klaipeda was colonized in 1052, originally by the Tadargs; the Teutonic Order then seized it in 1265, as their penetrations into the Great Tesmanian Cloud intensified. Throughout the fourteenth century, it was constantly threatened by the Lithuanians, who seized it twice (1323, 1379) and harried its supply lines. In 1389, the world was almost abandoned by the Teutonics due to the constant Lithuanian threat. Finally, the 1422 Treaty of Menlo consolidated the Lithuanian-Dejanican border with the Teutonic Order, with Klaipeda and the Memal Region remaining with the Teutonics. This held until 1525, when the Teutonic Order of Pruthia was secularized, and its Ducal Territories became a protectorate of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
    • Klaipeda was directly incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, but for the next two and a half centuries, it became a point of contention between the Commonwealth and Pruthia. This intensified after the unification of Ducal Pruthia and the Electorate of Brandenburg as the Electoral Kingdom of Pruthia in 1618. King A'rua II (r. 1640-88) seized Klaipeda and Memel in 1656, before proclaiming his full independence of any commitments to the Dejanicans the following year. Klaipeda, however, was recovered by King Janius Sobieskius (r. 1674-96) in 1682, as a condition of Dejanican aid to Austarlia and the Germanian Principalities against the Marasharite Empire. It then suffered from Haynsian raids in 1686, 1689, 1693, and 1697, before the conclusion of the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699. Klaipeda and the Memel Region remained part of the Commonwealth throughout the eighteenth century, although the Pruthians refused to relinquish their claims to them.
    • It was only in 1795, with the Third Partition of Dejanica, that they finally abandoned all territorial claims to the system and its environs, recognizing the region as part of the Laurasian Empire. The Empress's visit to this star system was a particularly memorable one. A specially assembled cavalcade of Lithuanian, Dejanican, and Imperial Laurasian commercial vessels, starfighters, and "performance fighters" circled around the Imperial Household Fleet, and staged a series of "acrobatic aerial performances" for the delight of Aurelia and her courtiers. Following this, she proceeded into the inner depths of the star system, with volley displays in her honor being fired from Memel Minor, Klaipeda Outer, and the Klaipedan Habitation Facilities, located in the heart of the star system. Upon approaching Klaipeda itself, the Empress was greeted with the sight of a massive array of welcoming vessels at Klaipeda Spaceport, with the ships of the Memel Merchantry Guild, the Teutonic Order of the Knights of Mary, and the Dejanican Transport Fleet of Klaipeda proceeding about and conducting their approach procedures. They now formed an escort for the Imperial Fleet as the Empress, on her personal courier, descended to the planetary surface. She then resided at Klaipeda for the next four days.
    • The Spit Garrison, which had been constructed from 1619 to 1626 upon the orders of Ariogasi II (r. 1619-32), was a massive structure, comprised of room enough to house at least 130,000 troops, and with its own water supply, agricultural grounds, communications tower, and shield generator systems. The Empress then toured the Historical Quarters of Klaipeda, with its pleasant, Pruthian-style shops, stores, and marketplaces; she received a warm welcome from these, her newest subjects, in the Quarters. The Hemrengold Bakery of Klaipeda Capital City prepared a massive welcome cake for Her Majesty; it was ringed with strawberry and vanilla twists; and had enough bulk to feed all of the members of her Court and her entourage, twice over. Furthermore, the Empress received a formal welcoming speech from the Masters of the Klaipeda Merchantile Guilds; she then toured the grounds of the Dach Theater (where the statute of the Thrau Girl, a legendary Germanian figure of mythology, originally cast in 1492 and moved to the Theater in 1720, was located), which had been constructed in 1693 and named in honor of the Pruthian poet and playwright Simon Dach (1605-59), a lifelong resident of Klaipeda. The play Sorbiusa, which he had composed in 1644, to celebrate the centennial of the Galactic University of Klaipeda, was staged for the Empress and her Court at the Theater.
    • The Empress toured the Klaipeda Dockyards and Mark's Mortuary, one of the largest edifices of the Pruthian Militarist faith outside of the Autocratic Pruthian Empire itself. The Galactic University of Klaipeda staged a oratory performance in honor of the Empress, and she was conferred honorary degrees in political sciences, theology, and law by the University Dons. Aurelia stayed at Klaipeda for four days, residing at the Royal Mail Palace (constructed 1693), which was built of fine Lithuanian sandstone, brimstone, and courlite. Then, on August 1, 1799, she departed, and continued her journey through the remainder of the Klaipedan Governorate (of which Klaipeda was the capital of). At Plunge (August 2-3), the Empress visited Lake Pliaesai, which was the largest freshwater lake of any known inhabited star system in the Great Tesmanian Cloud; Rietavas (August 4), which had once been a repository for the Grand Ducal Army of Lithuania, and had been colonized in 1533; and Telsai (August 5-7), known for its varied religious edifices, exotic sealife, and mild temperatures. Kelme, Akemene, Joiniskis, and Pakurjoi were then visited in turn (August 8-11, 1799), and on August 12, the Court reached Siaulai. Siaulai had been colonized in 1236, originally as a defensive garrison against raids from the Galactic Void. After 1410, it began to develop as an agricultural and mining colony. It was granted the status of Royal System in 1574, but in the seventeenth century, suffered from Haynsian expeditions (1619-22, 1626, 1638, 1645, 1652, 1669, 1678, 1686, 1692, 1696) and from an occupation by Pruthian forces (1657-1662).
    • Sialuai then began to recover in the early eighteenth century, and under the guidance of the Court Treasurer of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Antoni Tyzenhaus (1733-85), it became a major entrepot and goods warehouse for ships transiting from the Bug Routes and the Barbarossa Warmhole. Sialuai became renowned for its textiles, plexium, jewelry, electronic tools, luxury goods, and repulsorlifts. Tyzenhaus also sponsored the establishment of academic institutes for medicine, accounting, engineering, and culture; a botanical garden (the Siaulai Gardens); and a theater, ballet, orchestra, and publishing house. The Court Treasurer was also responsible for the development of more than eighty colonies in Sialuai's vicinity. In 1782, the Sialuai-Tilsit Highway was charted, thereby improving navigation to the Bug Routes. By the time of Empress Aurelia's visit, Sialuai had a population of 31 billion and growing. The Empress stayed at the Venclauskai Palace, which had been constructed by Tyzenhaus from 1765 to 1771, and was now a patrimony of the Imperial Estate. The Palace had more than 11,000 rooms and was built according to the neo-Baroque model of architecture. The Hill of Crosses, a centuries-old pilgrimage site for faithful from the Great Amulak Spiral and Great Tesmanian Cloud alike, received an imperial visit. The Empress was treated to a ballet performance by Tyzenhaus's Company, and toured the Sialuai Aeroport, whose construction had been finished in 1794, the year before the Third Partition. She stayed for two days, departing on August 14, 1799. Paslvays, Kupiszki, and Birzai received visits from the Court (August 15-17), and on August 18, Panevezys was reached. The Empress stayed at this world for two days, which had been colonized by the orders of King-Grand Duke Alexiagus I (r. 1501-06) in 1503, originally as an intelligence outpost and patrol garrison. Panevezys was eventually opened to general colonization in 1562, and from then through the early eighteenth century, its population and industrial development had intensified. The native Panzian tribes had been effectively subdued by 1602, and five years later, the Panevezys Industrial Valley was established.
    • By the end of the seventeenth century, it was one of the chief manufacturing hubs in the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, producing appliances and accessories ranging from clocks, watches, and monitor displays to advanced computers, protocol droids, repulsorlifts, and personal security devices. The Gynasium of Panevezys (1697), became one of the most renowned athletic training institutes in the Commonwealth; in 1703, the Panevezys Olympics were established, attracting athletes from at first the remainder of the Commonwealth, and then from other foreign powers. By 1797, the stronghold had a population of more than seven billion, and its cities were linked by one of the most advanced high-speed rail systems available. Cido Arena and the Panevezys Auditorium were both visited by the Empress, who attended a performance of the Panevezys Giants, one of the most renowned acrobatic acts of extra-galactic civilization. She then visited the lavish greeting halls at the Dejanican Priory of the Holy Trinity, and resided with her Court at the Panevezys Fortress, previously an intelligence outpost and now a residence of the Imperial Estate. From this stronghold, the Court proceeded to Biaylstok, capital of the Bialarian Governorate (August 22-24, 1799). Bialystok was in itself the hub of a spacefaring species: the Yotvingians. They had emerged into space as early as the fifth century BH, and by the dawn of the Hyperspace Era, had colonized the systems of Sejny, Chroscz, Ciechanowiec, Kolno, Monki, and Czarna Bialostocka, extending their influence to the Galactic Void. In AH 395, the region was conquered by the Byzzarian Empire under Theodoros I (r. 379-95), and remained under their jurisdiction for more than five centuries.
    • The Yotvingian Worlds regained independence in 902, only to be subdued by the First Bulganian Empire. Bulganian rule lasted until 996, when the strongholds again broke away to form the Yotvingian Serene Republic. Bialystok (then known as Yotvingia Major), became the capital of the Republic, which lasted until the thirteenth century. The campaigns of the Marasharite Seljuks in the eleventh and twelfth centuries played a role in weakening the Republic, and in 1305-14, it was conquered by Dejanican King Vologravius I (r. 1305-20) as part of his subjection of the Bug Routes. Yotvingia Major was renamed Biaylstok in 1437, and experienced a surge of immigration from the Great Amulak Spiral, beginning late that century. The Yotvingians, however, erupted in numerous uprisings from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries; the last, in 1592, resulted in their expulsion from the star system, and the dismantling of all of Bialystok's historical settlements. Between 1617 and 1626, the Bialystok Bastion was constructed; the Marshal of Lithuania, Kyrsztodf Wielowskia (1563-1637), was responsible for the fortification of the stronghold. Following his death in 1637, Bialystok became a Royal Planet; between 1645 and 1659, it was under the jurisdiction of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In 1661, Dejanican nobleman Stefan Czarniecki (1599-1665) became proprietor and governor of the stronghold; he commanded its successful defense against a Haynsian raid in 1663. In 1692, Bialystok gained self-governing privileges from the Dejanican Diet, and the Branickia Palace was constructed there (completed 1697), by Great Crown Hetman Janic Branickia (1633-99). Bialystok then matured, with a population of thirteen billion by 1795.
    • The Empress and her Court resided at the Branickia Palace during her stay. She visited the Ludwik Zamenhof Center, the Armory of Bialystok, the Weigkeri Drama Theater, the Habasch Palace, the Lubomirskia Palace, the Masonic Lodge of Bialystok, and the Daughters of Charity Monastery. From Bialystok, the Court proceeded through the systems of Suwalki, Lomza, Augustow, Bielsk Podlaski, Zambrow, and Grajewo (August 24-27, 1799), before paying a visit to Hainjowka, Sokola, Terespol, and the Kolno Colonies (August 28-September 1, 1799). Her next destination was now Brest, colonized during the eleventh century by the Slavic Confederation. Devastated by the Marasharite Seljuks in 1241 and 1275, it had been seized by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania during the fourteenth century, and in 1500, became the capital of the Brest-Litovsk Voviodeship. The Dejanican Diet convened there several times during the course of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; the 1596 session witnessed a reorganization of the Dejanican Order. From 1598 to 1706, however, Brest found itself under constant threat from enemy forces and internal dissent. In 1598, it suffered its first Haynsian raid; Haynsian expeditions continued sporadically throughout the seventeenth century, with those of 1607, 1616, 1626, 1649, 1675, and 1696 being the most prominent. From 1657 to 1661, and again from 1664 to 1667, the stronghold was occupied by Pruthia during the Deluge Wars; and in 1672, the Marasharite Empire seized the world, while asserting its dominion over Dejanican Podolia. It remained in Marasharite hands until 1678, when it was restored to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
    • In 1690, the stronghold erupted in revolt under the Masacavanian emigre Ivan Kohvansky (1643-94), and it was not recovered by central authorities until 1706. It was then disputed during the Expeditionary War, the Wars of the Dejanican Succession and Bar Confederation, and in particular, the Kosicuzko Revolt; Field-Marshal Surovius's major victory here in 1794 has already been noted. Brest fell under the Laurasian Empire's grip the following year, and since February 1796, imperial authorities had been engaged in an effort to expand the world's fortifications. Empress Aurelia toured the sites of the under-construction Brest Orbital Garrison and Brest Military Yards. Brest Technical University, a prominent engineering and mathematics institute, was then graced by the Court. The Museum of Rescued Art Treasures, containing artifacts, paintings, and icons recovered from expeditions throughout the Great Tesmanian Cloud, enthralled the Empress, and she ordered for 5,000 of the paintings to be transported back to the Galactic Art Museum on Laurasia Prime. The Court stayed at Brest Citadel during its visit (September 2-5, 1799). Upon departing from there, the Empress paid visits to Siedlce, Krynkin, Lipsk, Stalwski, Nowogrod, and Gwiracz (September 6-12), before announcing her intention to return back to her capital world; the goal of her progress the following year would be to tour the Ukrainian, Belaranian, and Swiotzeranian Governorates. The Court departed from Gwiracz on September 12, 1799, and proceeded rapidly back to Laurasia Prime. On September 17, however, the Empress decided to divert instead to Nonsuchia Palace on Americana, and arrived there the following day. Here, the disgrace of the Earl of Estatius would occur, as will be described below.
  • June 24-
    • While Empress Aurelia and her Court were engaged in their progress, a further death occurred which affected her personally. As mentioned above, the Earl of Oxfadia had been diagnosed with Tethanes cancer in March 1797, and it had been believed by his physicians at the time that he had only a year with which to live. Oxfadia, however, had managed to march on, and in August 1798, agreed to a series of experimental treatments at the Imperial Hospital of St. Bartholomew in Christiania. For a time, it seemed as if the Earl's physical condition had improved, and he even participated in a series of contests at the Circus Maximus (November 1798). By the beginning of 1799, however, Oxfadia's health had relapsed again, and it entered a rapid decline from which it never emerged. Oxfadia's depression also intensified. Ever since the death of his first wife, Lady Anna Verus, Countess of Oxfadia (Lord Treasurer Burghley's daughter) in June 1788, he had been unable to escape from his "melancholy". In 1791, he married his second wife, Lady Aurelia Trenthamia (1765-1812), who was one of the Empress's Maids of Honor. On February 24, 1793, she gave birth to Oxfadia's only surviving son and heir, Antigonus Verus (1793-1825), at Newingtia. By 1792, Oxfadia was experiencing financial troubles, and in that year was forced to sell Hedingham Castle, his medieval-style estate on Osama. In January 1795, following the failure of negotiations for a marriage between his daughter Aurelia (1775-1827), who had been named in the Empress's honor and was among her numerous godchildren, and the Earl of Southerton, Oxfadia married her to the Earl of Duana, who has already been mentioned in regards to his hereditary connections to the Imperial Laurasian Crown. His other daughters Susanna (1787-1829) and Brigania (1784-1831) were married in 1798 and 1799 to Lord Philip Herbertia, later 4th Earl of Duana (1774-1850) and Sir Franconius Norria (1779-1822), respectively.
    • In August 1795, the Empress had granted Oxfadia an financial annuity of €17.4 billion dataries; this helped to alleviate many of his debts. Oxfadia then entered into conflict with the Earl of Estatius (October 1795), and aligned himself with his brother in law, Sir Robertius Cecilis. In March, August, and September 1796, Oxfadia had endured bouts of illness; these were the precursor to his diagnosis of cancer in March 1797. In early 1799, the Earl's condition lapsed quickly; in April, he was distressed by a suit against his estates, from Katherine Drive Yards, for violation of naval transport privileges. This suit was resolved by the Court of Common Pleas the following month, but it drove Oxfadia to the brink of collapse. By June 18, he had been admitted to the Imperial Hospital of the Quencilvanian Palace. Finally, on June 24, 1799, he died at the age of only 49. Empress Aurelia, who departed from Vilinus that day, was much stricken with grief when she learned of Oxfadia's death, and briefly considered terminating her progress so as to return to the Court and comfort Oxfadia's widow. Ultimately, however, she settled for a proclamation of condolences (June 25, 1799), ordering the Court's members on Laurasia Prime into a day of mourning, and providing for a ceremonial funeral to be conducted at the Westphalian Cathedral. The service would be conducted on July 2, 1799, with the ailing Lady Norria (who was to die on December 12), representing the Empress; Oxfadia would be buried at St. Augustine's Church in Oxfadia, Dosch, on July 11, 1799.
    • His death was not the first prominent one of this year. Laurasian-Kalbacho Prince Sir Nicholas Repanius of Kalbacha Major, formerly Ambassador to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, had died in Soriana, Laurasia Prime, on May 23, 1799. He had been proceeded by the prominent historian, Lady Athena Vassalina, Baroness Vassalina of Krayia, on March 13, 1799. She died at the age of 96. Other deaths had occurred, among figures of the recently concluded Second Spamalkan War. The Duke of Merceour died at the Royal Prison of Nemouch (February 19, 1799), having been imprisoned there upon his return from the Spamalkans at Angers in October 1798. He had been preceded by Spamalkan General Carlos de Amesquita (November 18, 1798) and the Duke of Montpensier (January 5, 1799). The Duke of Chateau-Thierry followed not long after (March 22, 1799), followed by the Duke of Nice (March 28) and Admiral van Duyvenvoorde (April 1, 1799). This spate of deaths among the military commanders of the respective contending states of the Second Spamalkan War was considered by many in the Laurasian Empire to be "a strange and unsettling coincidence of Almitis." Laurasian Lieutenant-General Sir Franconius Verus suffered a bout of illness at Ourense in June 1799, and it was feared that he would join the chorus. Ultimately, that did not occur. The deaths of Oxfadia, Repanius, and Vassalina compounded Empress Aurelia's distress, which she concealed while on progress.
  • August 15-
    • As mentioned above, Clogary was under direct threat from the forces of the Earl of Estatius at the beginning of July 1799. On July 3, Lieutenant-General Sir Horacius Verus destroyed a Scottrian rebel convoy, under the command of the Sugan Earl of Desmond, in the Battle of Acton. Clogary was then besieged by Estatius, Verus, and the Earl of Ormonde (July 4-9, 1799). Its fall on July 9 dealt a humiliating defeat to rebel forces in the Lower Dumbarton Governorate. Following the conquest of Clogary, Estatius repelled a rebel counteroffensive against Killmallock (July 12, 1799), and from there proceeded to the Blackwater Garrisons, determined to strengthen that stronghold. The Earl succeeded in his objective, and Tyrone's offensive from Kerry, Baltinglass, and Corgaff against the Garrisons failed in the Battle of Affane (July 15, 1799). Waterford was then stormed by General Norria (July 22-23, 1799), and Norria was again hailed as a savior by the colonists of that star system. Wicklow, however, became the scene of a humiliating defeat of government forces under Fleet Captain Sir Antigonus Harringtia (1760-1826), at the hands of Phelim MacFeagh O'Byrne (1767-1830), who claimed to be Laird of Imokhill (July 29, 1799). Estatius, now determined to secure his supply lines back to Ediania, embarked on a campaign of devastation and infliction in the regions surrounding Wicklow. O'Byrne, however, confronted the Earl and General Verus at Arklow (August 2-4, 1799). Although O'Byrne managed to capture thirty Laurasian automated transports, and harried the Imperial Laurasian Navy's squadrons relentlessly, Estatius and Verus were ultimately able to gain a strategic victory. O'Byrne was forced to retreat, with his units harried by a starfighter squadron under the Earl of Southerton, who was now proving his bravery in combat.
    • Estatius then stormed Philip's Colony (August 6, 1799) and defeated Captain Richard Tyrrell (1745-1832), one of Tyrone's fleet commanders, in the Battle of the Bough Fields (August 8, 1799), securing Marysborough. He then seized Ronnaugh (August 12, 1799). At the same time, Brigadier-General Sir Craterus Cliffordia advanced against Sligo and Ballyshannon, both of which were important strategic points and could serve as the bases for a decisive government counter-thrust into the Dumbarton Governorate. Cliffordia conducted his military operations from his headquarters on Althone. By early August 1799, Galway had been secured by government forces. By that point, however, the Earl of Donaugh had besieged Sir Hercalius Conneria, 1st Baron Conneria of Sligo (1754-1819) at Colloney; Conneria was one of the most prominent Laurasian emigre nobles in the Scottrian Governorates, and had provided vigorous support to government authorities in their efforts against the rebels. Cliffordia now became determined to relieve Colloney; he also considered the possibility that he would be able to capture Donaugh himself. On August 9, 1799, Donaugh, leaving his main offensive forces at Colloney, decided to move to Dunavaragh, having been informed by his agents of the Laurasian approach. He now prepared an ambush in the Curlew Nebula, along the Laurasian line of march. When informed that the Empire's forces were proceeding through Boyle, Donaugh positioned his freighters, harquebuisers, and mercenaries around the edges of the nebula, and his main offensive force beyond the range of the Laurasian march. General Cliffordia, in the meantime, subdued Boyle, Roscommon, and Tulsk, along his way to relieving Colloney. They reached the Curlew Nebula (August 15, 1799), which had to be transited through before Sligo could be approached. Cliffordia had received false intelligence that the Nebula was undefended, and he choose to seize the opportunity, and to push his marines, warships, and support units through. As soon as they reached the first of Donnaugh's barricades, Laurasian naval forces came under heavy fire from Scottrian turbocannons and interdictor units, forcing them to drop out of hyperspace.
    • The barricade was immediately abandoned by the Scottrians, but as the Laurasian ships pushed through, they suffered further casualties. The further Laurasian vessels advanced, the more intensive Scottrian fire became. Soon, the Laurasian vanguard was scattered, and seven of the Laurasian cruisers were destroyed by the constant turbocannon fire. Laurasian ranks then broke into disarray, and Donnaugh ordered his main battle formations to advance; Commodore Sir Alexander Radclyffia (1747-99), commander of the Imperial Fleet's rearguard lines, was killed. Cliffordia attempted a vain counteroffensive, but died when his flagship was outgunned and overrun by Scottrian light starfighters. The Laurasians were routed, and forced to retreat all the way back to Boyle; the Battle of the Curlew Nebula thereby ended in a decisive victory for the forces of Tyrone's Rebellion. Cliffordia's corpse was chanced upon by rebel troopers. On Donaugh's orders, it was strung up on a rampart and placed in front of Colloney, in order to intimidate the defenders. On August 18, 1799, Colloney finally surrendered; Lord Conneria was bound and then imprisoned on Donaugh's orders. The Battle of the Curlew Nebula allowed for Tyrone's forces to regain momentum. The effect of the disaster for the Laurasians was compounded (August 20, 1799), with the sudden death of Major-General Sir Thomasius Norria at Mallow. General Norria had suffered a blaster wound at the beginning of August 1799, and in the course of time, it had rotted away at his internal organs. His death therefore drove down Laurasian morale. By August 24, Tyrone and Donaugh had seized Epakillary, Killenaule, Madelaine, Huntly, and Perth, entrenching themselves again in the Dumbarton Governorate.
  • September 7-
    • On August 25, 1799, the Empress, then at Zambrow, sent a communique to the Earl of Estatius, commanding him not to depart from his post in the Scottrian Governorates until Tyrone had been defeated, and that she expected to hear in his next report that the "offensive against Tyrone is begun and not in question." Estatius, hurt by the Empress's rebuke, now ordered his military forces to place all effort into a renewed push against Tyrone's units. On August 28, 1799, the Earl departed from Cahir, which he had maintained as a strategic headquarters; three days later, he mustered his forces near Kells. Estatius, however, found himself restrained by Tyrone's ambitious expeditions against Seton, Ancrum Moor, Morton, Angus, and Mar, which threatened to outflank him in the former Homeland Territories. On September 1, 1799, Estatius penned a frantic communique to Aurelia: "From a mind delighting in sorrow, from spirits wasted with travail, care, and grief; from a heart torn in pieces with a passion; from a man that hates himself and all things that keep him alive-what service can Your Majesty reap? Since my services past deserve no more than banishment and proscription into the most cursed of all civilizations, with what expectation shall I live longer? From Your Majesty's exiled servant, Estatius." In the meantime, Tyrone had conducted his forces on the flank, refraining from direct combat with Laurasian units. The opposing commanders now communicated with each other, in contravention of the Empress's directives. On September 6, Estatius readied his forces in front of Kells, with his military commanders urging for a direct offensive against Tyrone without delay. The following day (September 7, 1799), Empress Aurelia's 66th birthday, Tyrone's personal envoy, Captain Hugh Blanarchay (1763-1801), informed the Earl that his superior sought the Empress's mercy, and proposed a secret conference with Estatus at Bellaclinthe Ford, a minor garrison located five light years east of Kells.
    • Estatius, who was aware that the Empress wished for Tyrone's subjugation in the field, before any submission on his part, nevertheless agreed. His paranoia about his enemies at the Imperial Court was increasing, as will be explained below. On September 12, 1799, Estatius, attended only by Southerton, Sir Antiochus Harringtia, and Lord Mountjaria, landed at Bellaclinthe Ford in his personal courier. Tyrone shortly afterwards arrived with several of his subordinates on his personal corvette, the Raider of Mardor. The two commanders then held an impromptu meeting at the Bellaclinthe Central Garrison. During the next four days, they conversed over the terms of truce between the Laurasian Empire's forces and those of Tyrone's Rebellion. Finally (September 16, 1799), the Capitulations of Bellaclinthe Ford were signed. By the terms of this agreement, all hostilities between government and rebel forces were to cease. Tyrone agreed not to launch any further expeditions in the Scottrian Governorates, and to uphold the peace of his forces by oath. The Truce was to be renewed every six weeks until the conclusion of all formal arrangements. Estatius promised to lay Tyrone's demands before the Empress, and to secure her agreement to the Truce. In doing this, he had overstepped his commission. While it was true that the Empress had granted him permission to accept an unconditional surrender from Tyrone, she had not given him any authority to negotiate arrangements with rebel forces. This would be used later as evidence that Estatius had committed les-majestie and disobeyed the orders of his sovereign. Following the conclusion of the Truce, Estatius headed to Drumcondra, while Tyrone returned to his headquarters at Kerry. Estatius gave Tyrone his word that government forces would not seize rebel strongholds. For the time being, word of the Truce remained secret; the Earl was now ready to depart back to the Court.
  • September 28-
    • By September 1799, the Earl of Estatius, whose ego had been bruised by the Empress's stinging criticism and complaints, had become obsessed with fears of what the Cecilis faction were doing at the Imperial Court to undermine his influence. When Lord Buchamia had been promoted to become Earl of Doracia, and named Lord Treasurer, Estatius figured that the Empress was displeased with him. He now attributed her displeasure to the machinations of his enemies, rather than his own behavior. By the beginning of that month, Estatius had "figured out" what he had to do. He had no business to be in the Scottrian Governorates, with the military prospects fleeting; instead, he would return to the Imperial Court in order to safeguard his own interests. Throughout the early days of September, Estatius had confided in Lord Mountjaria and in the Earl of Southerton, among others of his most intimate associates. He declared that he was willing to take a "substantial detachment" of his military forces back to the Caladarian Galaxy, gather reinforcements from his estates in the Galactic Borderlands and in the Malarian Provinces, and head to Laurasia Prime, to insist upon the removal of Cecilis and his party, whose misgovernment was, he believed, responsible for the ruin of the Empire. That accomplished, he would compel the Empress to name him Chancellor, and as chief minister of the Imperial Government.
    • He was convinced that this could be done, knowing that he had the adoration of the Empress's subjects, and substantial military forces of his own. He stressed to his accomplices that he meant no harm to the Empress, and would personally justify his actions to her, hoping that the joy of seeing him would quell any displeasure on her part. Detached from reality as he was becoming, it did not occur to the Earl that his acts would be construed as treason; that the ultimate loyalty of the military forces, nobility, and people of the Empire was to their sovereign; and that the Empress herself would take vigorous action to suppress so direct a challenge to her authority. Mountjaria and Southerton realized all of this, and they were able to dissuade Estatius from taking such rash action; they told him that what he was contemplating was sheer madness, and that it would lead to possible civil war.
    • They also told him that he should only take a detachment of officers and attendants with him, to support him in his demands. Estatius decided to heed their advice. On September 24, 1799, he announced his resolution to his accomplices, ordering them to keep the fact of his departure secret from Ormonde and General Verus, and from the personnel of his military forces. He now took with him a substantial number of his guards and attendants, boarded his personal courier, the IMS Jewel of the Galaxy, and hastily departed for the Caladarian Galaxy. After a journey of four days, during which Estatius proceeded carefully across the Galactic Void, and into the Caladarian Galaxy, so as to avoid attracting attention, he and his entourage arrived at Laurasia Prime. There, the Earl learned that the Empress and the Imperial Court were at Nonsuchia Palace; he had virtually ignored all holocommunications from the Imperial General Headquarters, in the midst of his secret parleys with Tyrone.
    • Estatius now left his escort at the capital, departed on his personal Elucidator-class starfighter, and hurried towards Americana, arriving there during the early hours of September 28, 1799. Estatius was able to send a false transmission to Landing Control, and to arrive at the Nonsuchia Palatial Spaceport. Hastening from his starfighter, he headed into the Palace, dirtied and absolutely disheveled. Having previously been clean-shaven, he had now grown a thick beard, and his hair was in a mess. It was in this state, with his honorary sword and blaster on his sides, that Estatius strode into the Palace, marched through the Presence and Privy Chambers (past the Empress's guards), and burst unannounced into the Empress's bedchamber. The actual scene of presentation was a spectacle. The Empress had emerged from her bed, while her ladies in waiting and maids of honor were about their work. In fact, she was just about to begin her morning bath, and her ladies were almost ready to disrobe Her Majesty, when the noise of Estatius's voice issued from down the hall.
    • He demanded that he be let by, and demanded to know where the Empress was. Calling out her nickname "Eurelia, Eurelia!" he quickly advanced upon Aurelia, whose ladies were hastily closing up her gown and putting her nightcap on her head. The Empress was absolutely startled when the Earl appeared before her. She was not wearing any cosmetics, or jewels; the effects of age now showed through. Having no idea of what was going on outside the Palace, Aurelia thought at first that Estatius may have come with his military forces to depose or restrain her. Seeing his disheveled and nervous manner, however, she quickly concluded that he was alone. Estatius, in his frantic voice, declared that the guards "would not let him pass." The Empress, who concealed her tension underneath a demeanor of "calm" and "understanding", asked him what had happened and if anyone was with him. Estatius said no, and responded by askin if the Empress was angry with him; she told him that "no one is angry with you."
    • He now attempted a weak justification of his actions, declaring that "Tyrone is no fool, Ma'am. My forces were arrayed for combat, and advanced against him, but he would not fight. They harried our camp." The Empress quieted him down, like a "mother would do to her child", and told him to sit. She had her hands upon his shoulder, still maintaining the sympathetic guise. Estatius now admitted what he had done: "I made a truce, Ma'am. I made a truce with the Earl of Tyrone." The Empress was absolutely startled at this; thoughts of sedition and treason by Estatius and his associates entered her mind. A flash of anger swept over her face, and she rolled her eyes about. However, she quickly recovered her facade and responded: "Oh you poor boy! You must tell me everything, but first you must rest!" Estatius then claimed that he would not rest "when you are the victim of false counsel. Cecilis works against me. He works against us. He writes to the young Earl of Hannah. I have it on good authority, securing himself with your successor."
    • Aurelia now raised her voice, and snapping her finger, told him: "Don't think about the Chancellor! Don't think about the little Pigmy!" Estatius then asked the Empress if she understood. She lied, telling him she did and quieting him down again. Touching her hand on his cheek, she told him to rest, and that they would then have a conversation. Estatius asked the Empress if she loved him. She said that she did. The Empress now arose, and commanded her ladies to see to the Earl's needs. They bowed their heads, and quickly proceeded to take care of him. Leaving her ladies behind, the Empress rushed down the hall and closed the door. Awaiting her was Chancellor Cecilis, still in his night-clothes. Aurelia's tone of voice now changed, and she angrily informed the Chancellor: "The Earl has deserted his command! He seeks our approval. He's concluded some sort of a truce with Tyrone, on his own initiative." Aurelia then asked if Estatius brought anyone back with him from Scottria. Sir Franconius Bagonius, who was already fully dressed, responded: "Only a handful, Ma'am, at Laurasia Prime." The Command there had already sent word of Estatius's stop to Nonsuchia Palace. The Empress then demanded to know if his military forces were still in Scottria; Bagonius told her yes. Aurelia's voice raised again: "Almitis that he should do this to me! By whom he had so many favors!" The Empress then turned back to Cecilis. She now commanded him to summon Estatius to her presence, in the Presence Chamber of Nonsuchia Palace, when he was awakened, dressed, and fully prepared. Bagonius asked for permission to withdraw, not wishing for his friend to see him at the audience. Aurelia angrily rejected this: "No, you do not have my permission. You can stay and watch your little friend! It is time to find out who is with us, and who is against us! Cecilis!" With this summons, the Chancellor followed her again, and preparations were now underway for the audience. The Empress then quickly completed her toilette.
    • At 11:00 a.m. that morning, of September 28, 1799, the Empress, Chancellor Cecilis, Bagonius, and the members of the Privy Council (hastily summoned, including Lords Husadarania, Cobhamia, Northius, and Sir Willanius Knollysis), formally gathered in the Presence Chamber. Estatius, who was now dressed and "professional in appearance" once again, entered the chamber. He was surprised that he was summoned there. Upon entering the chamber, he saw the Empress, in her official robes and sitting on her throne, whispering to Chancellor Cecilis, who was donning his official Robes of Office and Chancellor's Hat. He also saw Bagonius and all the other councilors and courtiers next to the Empress. Estatius now assumed a haughty tone, and said: "Whispering to your mistress, Pigmy. The Universe will think your sharing secrets."
    • The Empress concluded her conversation with the Chancellor, and moved her head to look directly at Estatius. Estatius spoke again, with a somewhat less confident tone of voice: "I did not expect so many to be present at our meeting, Ruelia." This shocked all, that he dared to refer to the Empress by her nickname in public, and not by her official title. Even Leicesterius would have never done such a thing. Aurelia, however, kept her composure, and adopting a steely gaze of iron, told Estatius in a firm and harsh voice: "Well, sometimes it is advisable to have witnesses to conversations, my Lord." Cecilis was similarly harsh; it was now evident to all that Estatius was in serious trouble. Estatius, who was growing fearful and nervous, asked the Empress why she was being so cold. Cecilis now took over, and in an authoritarian voice, very similar to that which his father had once commanded, bellowed: "The charges against the Earl of Estatius are as follows: That he has been contemptuously disobedient to Her Majesty's instructions by returning to the Court. That on several occasions.."
    • Estatius begged Cecilis to halt for a moment, and with a look of bewilderment and shock on his face, asked: "Is this a trial? Have I done something to offend Your Majesty?" In his tremor, he did not even notice the Valedictorian Guards now assembled at a distance behind him. The Empress once again spoke, and with no display of concern, only of anger and resolute: "You have come unannounced into my chamber. You have returned from your commission with no victories gained nor peace imposed upon the governorates of Scottria." Raising her voice, she continued: "You have had private conversation with the notorious traitor Tyrone, whose submission or death are the only things that we require of him! You have made free with our person! You have vouched to touch the scepter of a prince, which is a thing not commendable to you!" This was the Empress's condemnation of his forgetfulness of his "place" and of his disrespect towards the autocracy, which she had tolerated for many a year.
    • Estatius's voice trembled, and he responded: "I have come here only seeking your help and support in return for the services that I have offered you." Aurelia ignored this, and turning her head towards the councilors, commanded: "Take him under guard to Estatius House! The Earl is to be confined there until our pleasure dictates otherwise." He was now to be placed under house arrest for his disobedience, until his conduct could be investigated further. It was Bagonius who summoned the guards; this too was on the Empress's initiative, she wishing for Estatius's own friend and ally to punish him. The Valedictorian Guards, wearing their ceremonial mails of armor, marched forward. Estatius was now utterly terrified of his own life, and too late realized what he had done. That which could be raised could also be destroyed. He pleaded, saying: "Ruelia, Ruelia, you said that you loved me!" He was at that point being dragged away by the guards. But Empress Aurelia jumped up from her throne.
    • She shouted: "I ever loved you well! I never did you service, but I no longer recognize the thing I loved." Somewhat lowering her tone, with the guards having stopped instantly, the Empress continued: "Love ought when it alteration finds" an old Brethalian saying which meant that love would be confined when one committed an offense. Estatius trembled, saying "You said, you would never.." The Empress shook her head, responding "I said, I said, more than I should have. The government of the tongue is a science that you have never learned well, my Lord." Estatius looked at Bagonius, astounded that he was there. Bagonius, with an uncomfortable look on his face, avoided his gaze. Aurelia merely remarked that "the way to great office is by a winding stair." She then looked at the Earl again, and in a flash of anger, commanded the guards: "Get him out of my sight!"
    • They hastened him away, and disappeared he did from the chamber. Estatius looked at her pitifully while the Guards were handcuffing him and dragging him out; the Empress looked at him with a gaze of "steel", and then turned back to her throne. Within hours, Estatius, under heavy guard, and with an imperial escort surrounding his transport, had been taken from Americana, back to Laurasia Prime. He arrived at Estatius House during the early hours of September 29, 1799. Further instructions now arrived from the Empress: Estatius was to be permitted only a few servants, and he was not to receive any visitors, not even his wife. He would not be allowed to head from the House unless if explicit permission were given, and he was escorted by a corp of guards. He was also forbidden to conduct any communications or to receive any correspondence, whether by Holonet or by communique. Rumors now flowed at the Imperial Court, with many believing that the Empress would not keep him confined for long. This time, however, Aurelia was determined.
  • October 3-
    • Immediately following the dramatic audience at Nonsuchia Palace, and the Empress's consignment of the Earl of Estatius to house arrest at Estatius House, on Laurasia Prime, the Imperial Laurasian Government erupted into a burst of activity. The Empress was absolutely enraged that Estatius had so brazenly defied her orders, by returning from the Scottrian Governorates. He had overstepped his commission of jurisdiction over the Governorates by making a truce with the Earl of Tyrone, and by suspending military operations. Immediately after Estatius's consignment was ordered, the Empress formally annulled the Capitulation of Bellaclinthe Ford, declaring that its "conclusion ran counter to the aims of this government, and that His Lordship acted out of bounds." She now ordered Lieutenant-General Sir Horacius Verus to assume the temporary supreme command of the Empire's military forces in the Scottrian regions, and for Sir Antiochus Harringtia, the Earl of Southerton, and others among the Earl's intimate associates to return back to the Imperial Court promptly.
    • Harringtia was fully aware that the Empress knew of his presence at the truce conference with Tyrone, and he knew of the consequences of disobedience. Nevertheless, he and Southerton departed from Cahir (September 30, 1799), arriving at Nonsuchia Palace on Americana two days later. The Empress did not even wish to see Southerton, and ordered for him to remain at his estates on Tarravania and Little Mexicana until further notice. Harringtia, however, was summoned to an audience. Once there, Aurelia leaped from her throne, hit him upside his head, and grabbed him by the girdle. She now exclaimed: "By the Son of Almitis, I am no Empress! This man has presumed to be above me! You are all idle knaves, for having wasted your time, and having defied my imperial commands so willfully." She then ordered Harringtia to leave, and to retire to Kelstonian Colony on Tyndaris. Harringtia was relieved that the Empress did not punish him as she had Estatius.
    • After an interval of some days, he sent his wife to plead his case with the Empress, instructing her to say, pointedly, that she kept her husband's love by showing her love for him. This analogy was not lost on Aurelia, who replied: "Go to, go to, mistress, you are wisely bent, I find; after such sort do I keep the goodwill of my husbands, my good subjects; for if they did not rest assured of some special love towards them, they would not readily yield me such good obedience." She then permitted Harringtia to return to the Court (October 6, 1799). When he did so, he was brought before the Empress again. She, however, was not done with him, and threatened to imprison him at the Post Settlement of Hepudermia. Harringtia replied poetically that, coming so late into the military service of the Empire, Her Majesty would not "press him into the penal service of this government." Aurelia laughed at this, and, proclaiming herself accuser, judge, and witness, cleared and "graciously" dismissed Harringtia. He had survived; the Empress's affection for her godson meant that he would not share in Estatius's disgrace. In the meantime, the Empress had resolved herself to punish Estatius further, not satisfied with mere house arrest.
    • On October 3, 1799, the Imperial Privy Council was summoned to an extraordinary session by the Empress. Having received from General Verus all of Estatius's transmissions, and learning of his talk about defending himself against the Cecilis faction, they supported Her Majesty in her demands. Aurelia herself declared that "Such contempt ought to be publicly punished." The day before, the Empress had shared with the Franconian Ambassador, Nicolas de Bastrand, Duke d'Enghien (1752-1809), that she was determined to show Estatius who held power in the Empire. Had her own son committed such a like act of treason, she asserted with passion, she would have placed him in the strongest fortress within her realms. The Empress also confided to Ambassador d'Enghien that she had not revealed the full extent of Estatius's disobedience, believing that he had conspired with Tyrone directly. On October 8, 1799, the Empress formally dismissed Estatius from his posts as Governor-General and Magister Militum of the Scottrian Governorates; deprived him of all grants, annuities, and military honors conferred on him since 1790, including those of Field-Marshal and the Order of St. Honorius the Liberator; and suspended him from carrying out the duties of all his other offices (Imperial Marshal, Master of the Empress's Vehicles, Master of the Imperial Ordnance). On the advice of Bagonius, whom she had come to respect (begrudgingly), she decided not to directly deprive him of them at this time; a public hearing, concerning Estatius's grave offenses, would be held, and his offenses would be proclaimed to the Court, before such a move was taken. Nevertheless, vigorous action was taken yet further on the theater of war in the Scottrian Governorates.
  • October 14-On October 14, 1799, Fleet Admiral Sir Theodosius Ushavious, 1st Baron Ushavious of Fidonsi (he had been raised to the peerage by Empress Aurelia in March 1799, as a reward for his victories in the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War and the Second Spamalkan War), one of the most successful and prominent military commanders of the Laurasian Empire during the eighteenth century, died at his estate, Alexandra House, on Thornton in the Northern Reaches. He was fifty-four years old at the time of his death. Ushavious had, like his compatriots Surovius, Raleghia, and Notthamia, overseen the withdrawal of the Laurasian Empire's military forces from the various combat zones in the Great Amulak Spiral. After receiving his barony in March of that year, however, his health entered a rapid decline, and he attempted to take the spas of Baden, in the Holy Austarlian Empire. In spite of this sojourn (June-July 1799), the Fleet Admiral's health declined further, and on August 7, he had requested permission to retire to his estates in the Northern Reaches, which had been granted. Ushavious was then diagnosed with the incurable Tomes syndrome, and he now refused all further medical treatments. His death, which came in the midst of the Empress's predicament concerning the Earl of Estatius, was received with much regrets at the Imperial Court, and much mourning throughout the Laurasian Empire. Empress Aurelia ordered the Imperial Court into a day of mourning; issued a proclamation hailing Ushavious's virtues; and extended her condolences to his widow Desdemona (1742-1825). Because Ushavious had no children of his own, his barony became extinct upon his death, just months after its creation. He was buried at St. Attalus's Cathedral on Kherson, in a ceremony which was conducted on October 28, 1799.
  • October 19-
    • As was mentioned above, the Empress had ordered Lieutenant-General Sir Horacius Verus to assume the temporary supreme command of the Laurasian Empire's military forces in the Scottrian Governorates, pending the naming of a permanent successor. During the early days of October 1799, in the aftermath of the Empress's rejection of the Capitulations of Bellaclinthe Ford, Tyrone was able to make some gains against government garrisons. From Madelaine, Tyrone impounded a government convoy near Albemaine, in the Battle of the Albemaine Approaches (September 31-October 2, 1799). On October 5, Albright, which had been blockaded by rebel forces immediately upon the Empress's announcement, capitulated to the Earl of Donaugh. Donaugh and Tyrone then expelled Laurasian garrisons from Boyle and Roscommon, compounding the earlier rebel victory over General Cliffordia in the Battle of the Curlew Nebula. On October 9, 1799, rebel agents lowered the shields of Montrose, one of the Laurasian Empire's more significant military bases in the Ediania Governorate. Within hours, the stronghold had fallen into the possession of Tyrone's Rebellion; Tyrone had more than 30,000 Laurasian troops executed. Then on October 11, he and Donaugh combined together to repel an offensive by the Earl of Ormond against Kerry; the defenses of Baltinglass were then secured; and on October 14, General Verus failed in an offensive against Merchinston.
    • Glerbevie fell into the possession of Donaugh (October 17, 1799). It was this recent series of reverses that convinced Empress Aurelia of the absolute necessity to assign a experienced and talented military commander to the Scottrian theater. Her eyes now alighted upon the Laurasian Empire's greatest military hero, victor over the Spamalkans, Marasharites, and Dejanicans: Field-Marshal Lord Surovius of Rymnik. By October 1799, the withdrawal of the Empire's military forces from the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions, the Durthian Duchies, Franconia, and the Spamalkan Colonial Territories (including those conceded to Franconia and Durthia) had been completed. Surovius had suppressed raiding operations by Maltan and Mailan forces against Morocco and Portugallian Guinea, pushing those allies further into the camp of the Laurasian Empire. He had also been engaged in overseeing the exchange of prisoners of war, and of the restoration of all occupied systems back to their proper authorities, in accordance with the arrangements of the Treaty of Vervins. As the sole undefeated military commander of the Laurasian Empire in history (a status he was destined to retain through his last conflict, Tyrone's Rebellion), Surovius was obviously the man to crush Tyrone and his forces.
    • On October 19, 1799, Surovius was ordered to return to the Imperial Court on Tudoria (the Empress had moved there on October 14, seeking an escape from the scene of her confrontation with Estatius), and to receive his orders. The Field-Marshal, himself eager to crush the rebellion, in spite of his own failing health (he was now approaching his seventieth birthday), obliged quickly. He departed from Bordeaux the following day, and proceeded promptly to the Caladarian Galaxy. Arriving on Tudoria (October 23, 1799), the Field-Marshal was greeted with a series of festivities and ceremonies by the inhabitants of the world, and by the personages of the Imperial Court. He was hailed for his accomplishments; conferred an honorary annuity of €30.3 billion dataries a year; and blessed by Chief Procurator Whitshiftus and the Imperial Court. Surovius was subsequently presented to the Empress. It was then that Aurelia announced her intention to appoint him to the Governor-Generalships and Magisteriums of the Scottrian Governorates. Furthermore, for his feats in the military conflicts of the past three decades, and for never having been defeated in battle, a feat unparalleled in the history of the Laurasian Empire, Surovius became the first military commander in all of Laurasian history to be promoted to the rank of Generalissimo of the Laurasian Empire, a six-star rank which was higher than that of Field-Marshal.
    • This effectively made him the highest-ranking commander in the entire Imperial Military, with even higher precedence than Fleet Admiral Notthamia (who was Chief of the Imperial General Staff), and with only the Empress herself above him, as Supreme Commander-in-Chief. Furthermore, the Empress decided to reshuffle the minor military commands, to account for the deaths of Generals Norria and Cliffordia. Lieutenant-General Verus was now placed in charge of the defenses of Ediania. The Earl of Ormonde retained his command over the Outskirt Districts (he was now promoted to the rank of Field-Marshal, making him Surovius's second-in-command), and, on October 25, 1799, she appointed Lieutenant-General Sir Georgius Caranius (1741-1816), a veteran of the War of Drury's Intervention, the First Desmonian Rebellion, the First Spamalkan War, and the Kosciusko Revolt, as Surovius's main battlefield subordinate, with charge for offensives into the Munsterian Provinces and Lower Dumbarton. Major-General Sir Arthurius Chichestrius (1760-1826), a veteran of the Fifth Laurasian-Marasharite War, War in Defense of the Constitution, and the Second Spamalkan War, assumed command of offensives in Upper Dumbarton, and to the Galactic Void. Caranius and Chichestrius were already stationed on Ediania, and assumed their commands by October 27. Generalissimo Surovius, on his part, departed from Tudoria (October 28, 1799), proceeding rapidly to the Galactic Void. Arriving at Branxholme the following day, Surovius did not waste any time in assuming direction of the offensives.
  • November 5-
    • The arrival of Generalissimo Surovius, known for his tactical brilliance and his ruthlessness towards the Empire's enemies, changed the whole situation in the Scottrian Governorates. Tyrone and Donaugh were alarmed when they learned of Surovius's arrival. The advantage now shifted to the Empire's forces. Generalissimo Surovius himself fortified the defenses of Trinity Kirk, Leith, and Canongate (October 29-30, 1799), and on October 31, he repelled a rebel offensive against Burgh Muir, in the Battle of the Muir Moons. From Burgh Muir, Surovius stormed Gallow's Star and Cragmillar (November 1-3, 1799), preventing Tyrone from taking advantage of his control of Glerbervie, Corgaff, and Merchinston to threaten Laurasian positions in the Outskirt Districts. At the same time, General Caranius stormed the rebel garrison of Howth Head (November 2, 1799), capturing more than 55,000 rebel mercenaries, including Spamalkan and Germanian conscripts.
    • This would later be the cause of diplomatic tension between the Imperial Laurasian and Holy Spamalkan Governments. Then on November 5, 1799, having secured the garrisons of Derry and Carrickfergus from rebel units (with more than half of the rebel officer corps being tortured and executed on his orders), the Generalissimo, with Generals Caranius and Chichestrius commanding his armored squadrons, and Admiral Sir Valentinian Serius (1743-1810) his naval units, advanced to Dundalk. He now sought to regain Armagh, which rebel forces had held for more than a year. At Dundalk, the Generalissimo gained a appraisal of the rebel forces. Employing surprise and reconnaissance tactics, he was able to defeat Tyrone's ambushes and to gather intelligence information about the defenses which awaited the Laurasians. Then on November 9, 1799, Surovius departed from Dundalk, intending to proceed to Newry, and from thence, to Armagh.
    • Two days later, the 67th Imperial Fleet and 50th Imperial Army approached the Moyry Asteroids, where Tyrone had erected a series of barricades, minefields, and defensive outposts, attempting to bar a Laurasian advance. Surovius ordered for his mobile starfighter squadrons and Marines to harry the Scottrian rebel lines. While they exhausted the strength of Tyrone's defensive corps, General Caranius and Admiral Serius made a sortie into the Asteroids, encircling several of the Scottrian operational garrisons and identifying a gap in their lines. Following this, Laurasian units under Commodore Sir Samuelis Bagenallia (1736-1804) advanced upon the Asteroids, breaching the first barricade. Fleet Captain Sir Thomasius Bourania (1759-1835) launched a frontal assault against the second line; the Scottrians managed to hold the Laurasians off. Tyrone, on his part, threw all of his forces into an effort to harry Laurasian offensive lines, intent on confusing the enemy formations and forcing their retreat. Generalissimo Surovius, however, was prepared for this, and he had his defensive warships arrayed in an arch formation, to repel Scottrian assaults. Furthermore, the assault against the barricades was a diversion, for Surovius himself now led a substantial detachment of automated transports, mobile frigates, and his lead battleships in a brilliant hyper-jump maneuver around the Asteroids.
    • Within hours, he appeared from behind the Scottrian units, having executed a flanking move which cut Tyrone's offensive units off from his barricades. By the early hours of November 12, 1799, the Battle of the Moyry Asteroids ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. More than 500,000 Scottrian military personnel died in the confrontation, compared to just 55,000 Laurasian personnel, both of the Imperial Laurasian Navy and Marine Corps. Surovius employed the superior firepower, weaponry, and coordination of his professional units to overwhelm Scottrian land positions; Tyrone found his supply lines isolated; and he was forced to retreat. Thirty of the fifty Scottrian harquebuiser squadrons were destroyed, and another six were captured. With the Moyry Asteroids in his possession, Surovius quickly secured Newry (November 17-19, 1799) and then, on November 21, blockaded Armagh. The Siege of Armagh continued for five days. The stronghold's fall (November 26, 1799), dealt a heavy blow to the rebel position. The following day, General Caranius and the Earl of Ormonde repelled a rebel counteroffensive in the Battle of Fathom's Star, and then expelled them from Madelaine, Albemaine, and Huntly. By the end of November 1799, Merchinston and Montrose were both under siege from government units; on November 31, Surovius defeated Tyrone in the Battle of Lough Lurcan, forcing him to abandon that base.
  • November 17-
    • Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court celebrated the forty-first anniversary of her reign with great pomp and ceremonial at the Gilbertine Palace on Tudoria (November 17, 1799). In spite of the recent events with the abandonment by the Earl of Estatius of his military command, of his hasty arrival at Nonsuchia Palace and in the Empress's bedchambers, and his own public disgrace (ending in his being placed in house arrest), the Empress appeared to be relatively unconcerned at the Accession Day's ceremonies. She watched over the jousts, now presided over by Empress's Champion Sir Cleon Presius (1760-1828) conducting herself in a "gracious, kind, and benevolent manner." She praised the military accomplishments of her commanders in the Scottrian Governorates. Generalissimo Surovius was recognized in a proclamation from the Imperial Court as a "hero of the Laurasian Empire, and blessed by the Lord Almitis in all that he undertakes." Later, the Empress attended a massive ball held in her honor at the Galactic Opera, and she then toured the residences of several of the most prominent officials, gentry, and clergy of Laurasia Prime.
    • These included the Mayor's Mansion of Christiania, where Sir Parmenion Billinglsey, 1st Baron Billingsley (1738-1812), Praetorian Mayor of Christiania since 1796, resided; Lambathian Palace, official residence of Chief Procurator Whitshiftus; and Stranthan House, the Christiania residence of the Earl of Duana. But underlying all of this was the Earl of Estatius's illness. Previously, the Earl's bouts had occurred so as to induce the Empress to forgive him for some transgression or another. This time, however, the Earl broke under all the pressures and all the humiliation he had endured during the preceding months. On October 24, Estatius first complained of intestinal issues and of difficulty with his urination; he then developed a high fever, pains in his feet, hands, and back, and a searing headache. By November 2, Estatius had been confined to his personal bedchambers. The physicians quickly discovered that he had contracted the Xerlite malady, apparently whilst he was returning from his post in the Scottrian Governorates. Estatius's suffering increased through November 1799, although for the longest time, Aurelia refused to believe that he was actually in pain. He began experiencing kidney stones and recurring bouts of feral gout.
    • Still under the same constraints as before, Estatius despaired at the lack of company, and his desperate communiques to the Empress, with much submission and begging for forgiveness, elicited no response from her. Even Harringtia, allowed by the Empress to contact Estatius once (on November 14, 1799), dared not to convey any messages from the Earl to Aurelia, for he had barely recovered her favor and had "no wish to be wrecked upon the Estatius Planet." Many of the Laurasian Empire's subjects, however, continued to have faith in Estatius, even in light of his almost treasonous truce with Tyrone, and his desertion from duty. Their sympathy grew when word leaked out about his physical condition. Laudatory pamphlets were circulated over secret channels, asserting his innocence; graffiti insulting Cecilis (blamed for poisoning the Empress's mind against the Earl) appeared at public locations on Laurasia Prime and elsewhere in the Purse Region; and in pulpits throughout the Galaxy, as well as beyond, priests offered up prayers for this champion of the Almitian faith, imploring the Empress to show clemency. All of this disturbed Aurelia greatly, who was still jealous of the affection that Estatius commanded. Nevertheless, she resolved to move forward with her punishment of him. On November 28, 1799, the Empress herself, accompanied by the Earl of Worcestria (1751-1835; Neuchrus Tamanies, 2nd Earl of Worcestria) and the Duchess of Venasia Prime (1770-1845; Aurelia Dedmania, 8th Duchess of Venasia Prime), paid a brief visit to Estatius House, in order to ascertain Estatius's condition.
    • She did not see the favorite himself, but was informed by his physicians that he was in no fit state to attend a public condemnation of his crimes. Nevertheless, the following day, the Privy Council, Governing Senate, Holy Synod, and Court of the Imperial Star Chamber gathered at the Senatorial Palace. Procurator-General Egertonia and Chief Justice Pophamia of the Star Chamber presided over the session. The Procurator-General then delivered a speech to the Councils of State, the Star Chamber, and to the Empire's subjects who watched the proceedings (transmitted over the Holonet). In his speech, Estatius was accused of mismanaging the Scottrian campaign (despite the Empire's overall success in that theater), of squandering public resources, making a dishonorable and illegal "truce" with Tyrone, and of abandoning his command against the express orders of the Empress. These were the offenses which would have been read in full by Chancellor Cecilis, at Estatius's "audience of disgrace." Following the publication of Estatius's offenses, the deprivation of his military offices and honors was formally announced, and as custom demanded, his achievements at his honorary stall, within the Heraldry Chambers of the Senatorial Palace, were torn down and dropped onto the Pit of Traitors, on Jadia. Furthermore, it was announced that Estatius was to be formally arraigned and questioned "as soon as his illness was past." The proceedings then concluded, while Estatius remained under house arrest, pending further action.
  • December 14-
    • December 1799 witnessed substantial progress by the government forces of the Laurasian Empire, under the direction of Generalissimo Surovius and of his immediate subordinates, against those of Tyrone's Rebellion. As was mentioned above, Merchinston and Montrose were both under threat from Surovius's forces at the beginning of the month. Surovius now focused his efforts on sundering all supply lines to the star system, and on securing rebel bases in the vicinity of Lough Lurcan. On December 2, 1799, the Generalissimo and the Earl of Ormonde destroyed a rebel force, under Hugh O'More (1764-1804) and the Sugan Earl of Desmond, in the Battle of Rallcranth. Within two days, Surovius had stormed the rebel garrisons of Faughart, Carrickban, and Mountnorris. A counteroffensive by Tyrone and the Sugan Earl of Desmond, launched against Caithness, Morton, Mar, and Huntly, was decisively defeated by Surovius in the Battle of Aberdeen (December 7, 1799), re-securing that stronghold for the Laurasian Empire.
    • Surovius then imposed a blockade of the Montrose star system, utilizing his mobile starfighter squadrons to harry its outer defenses, and keeping his automated transports in reserve, so as to surround and seize any Scottrian commercial or mercenary vessels which attempted to slip through the lines. Montrose was besieged beginning on December 11, 1799. In spite of all the efforts of the Sugan Earl, and of Scottrian General Donal MacCarthy (1769-1801), to break the siege, Montrose ultimately capitulated to Generalissimo Surovius (December 14, 1799). Surovius subsequently stormed rebel positions at Carlingford (December 15-18); repelled a move by Tyrone against Philip's Colony (December 19), and on December 20, launched a surprise offensive against the outskirts of Merchinston. Merchinston's garrison, commanded by the O'Roughs, who had become allies of the Earl of Tyrone two months earlier, proved unable to resist the Generalissimo's brutal, decisive frontal assaults. Merchinston fell (December 22, 1799), inflicting a severe blow on rebel positions in the Lower Dumbarton Governorate and in the outskirts of the Edianian Governorate.
    • At the same time all of this was ongoing, Lieutenant-General Caranius vigorously pursued the offensive in Munster. Sligo, which had eluded General Cliffordia, fell on December 1, 1799. Caranius then advanced through the garrisons of Clonmel, Ennis, and Tralee (December 2-5, 1799), defeating the Earl of Donaugh in a series of pitched confrontations, preventing him and Tyrone from reestablishing uniform communications lines, and capturing more than 250,000 Scottrian rebel troops. On December 8, he approached the outskirts of Donegal, which served as a major rebel transit terminal, hyperspace jump point, and an intelligence outpost in front of Ballyshannon, which had been the other goal of Cliffordia's offensive. Although Donaugh's troops continued to harry the outskirts of the Curlew Asteroids, they were unable to break Caranius's counter-advances, and ultimately proved unequal to the task of hurling his units back from the outskirts of Donegal. The Siege of Donegal nevertheless lasted for ten days, as the Scottrian and mercenary forces of Niall Grave O'Donnell (1769-1826), the cousin of the Earl of Donaugh, fiercely resisted Caranius's troops.
    • The Laurasians sustained more than 200,000 casualties in the course of four landings upon Donaugh's surface, and the Scottrian harquebuisers harried their supply lines relentlessly. Ultimately, however, Caranius used his superior firepower, and his command of the immediate systems, to force Donegal's garrison into surrender (December 18, 1799). Niall Grave O'Donnell was captured, and under interrogation by Laurasian troops, revealed the secret about the rebel defenses of Castleroy, Balloghan, and Longford. Using this information, Caranius launched a surprise move against the three strongholds, diverting Donaugh's attention by also assaulting Bresharia (December 21-24, 1799). By December 24, the three above strongholds were all in Laurasian hands, and from Longford, Caranius (receiving reinforcements from General Chichestrius, who had subdued Mons Graspicus (December 7-15, 1799), swept into Ballyshannon. Ballyshannon capitulated on December 29, 1799. Then on New Year's Eve 1799, Generalissimo Surovius defeated Tyrone in the Battle of Smwerick, reconquering that major base and paving the way to government offensives against Bandon, Tiperrary, Kerry, and Kinsale. Brechin was also under siege by General Chichestrius's forces at the close of 1799.
  • December 25-
    • By early December 1799, Empress Aurelia's attitude towards the Earl of Estatius had somewhat mellowed. The Empress could not ignore the continued streams of information which she received, concerning her favorite's horrendous physical condition, and she did not wish to seem to her subjects, who still adored the Earl, as treating him too harshly. That would go against her persona of benevolence, which she had now striven to maintain for forty-one years. Therefore, on December 4, 1799, the Empress permitted Estatius's wife, Countess Franconia, to visit him that day at Estatius House. The Countess did as obliged. Genuinely concerned about her husband's condition, and still maintaining her earlier attraction to him, Franconia quickly made note of what she observed. Following her visit to her husband, she was ordered to come to the Fountain Palace of Venasia Prime, to which the Empress and the Court had retired on November 31, 1799, for the celebration of Ascentmas, Twelfth Night, and New Year's. The scene which then ensued (December 6, 1799) was a demonstration both of the Empress's inner turmoil, and of her fleeting concern for Estatius. The Empress was sitting in her private reading room, with her ladies gathered about. She was reciting, in Old Laurasian, the Poetica of the 1st century BH Laurasian poet and author Horace (65-8 BH), when the Countess appeared. She was dressed in black funerary clothes. Aurelia stopped reading and got up from her seat. She greeted the Countess and took note of her clothes, asking: "Are you in mourning for your husband's reputation?" The Countess responded: "I wear your colors, Ma'am." Aurelia then claimed that Franconia had always been a good girl.
    • She responded: "As I love him Your Majesty, I wish him to love you." The two women began proceeding down the hall, with the Empress deliberately holding Lady Estatius's hand in a gesture of "friendliness". The Empress then asked the Countess about the Earl's health. She responded that he was not well. Aurelia said in response, in a feigned tone of concern: "Oh, we are sorry to hear about that." Lady Estatius replied that she believed so. Aurelia then declared that the Earl should have company; Lady Estatius dutifully agreed with this. The Empress followed up by asking if her husband had been conducting any communications with Mountjaria or anyone else, fully aware that by her own command, he was forbidden to do so. Lady Estatius replied that her husband "had not heard anything from Scottria of late." Aurelia remarked: "Perhaps its a good thing to not be in touch with those with military responsibilities." Lady Estatius, slightly alarmed at this, asserted her husband's loyalty. They now approached a bench, and the Empress directed Lady Estatius to sit down near her. She then asked Lady Estatius, in a whisper, whether her husband had at any point in the past, "heard anything from the Earl of Hannah." The Countess turned her head, in a mode of fright: how could Her Majesty be asking her such a question? Keeping up her demeanor, the Empress continued: "You can tell me, Franconia. We know that he has had dealings with him from before. If we are to prevent him from being a danger to himself, we must know of these things. You know, I speak out of love for him, Franconia." Thus cowed, the Countess said this, effectively incriminating her husband: "The Earl has a black pack in his chambers. It never leaves his sight. I believe they do contain communiques from My Lord of Hannah."
    • At this, the Empress had a flash of emotion, and jumped up from her seat. Lady Estatius bowed her head and shook with fear. Chancellor Cecilis, who had been listening in on the conversation from the other side (as ordered to do so by the Empress), now joined her as she marched down the hall. Raising her voice, Aurelia exclaimed: "Hannah! Communiques from Hannah I knew it! The man's a traitor!" This now encouraged the Empress in her belief that his dealings with Tyrone had been treasonable, and that he had been thinking about the succession. This anger, however, was underlaid with sadness. Following her "conversation" with Lady Estatius, Aurelia decided to send her physicians from the Imperial Hospital to attend Estatius. She then allowed for Estatius to be moved, under guard, to the Quencilvanian Palace Hospital Quarters, dispatched a message to Estatius personally (with hopes for his well-being), and even permitted for Estatius, upon recovery, to go about his properties and take the air. Lady Estatius, however, was on the Empress's orders kept at the Imperial Court. Estatius's physical condition slowly began to improve, as he was now receiving treatments from the Empress's own physicians.
    • By December 19, in spite of rumors circulated on Laurasia Prime that he had died (which caused a temporary surge of emotional outpourings for his soul), he was able to sit up in bed, to take regular meals, and even to move his legs. Aurelia, on her part, hearing that Estatius was beginning to recover, now distracted herself with entertainments. Ascentmas Day (December 25, 1799) was celebrated with much merriness. The Empress appeared in good spirits, playing cards with the Earl of Doracia and Chancellor Cecilis, watching her ladies perform elaborate Venasian dances in the Great Court of the Fountain Palace, and being greeted to a series of Ascentmas delicacies by the Venasian cooks and servitors of the Queen Mother's City. There was even talk of the Earl of Drea's son, the young Sir Willanius Habania (1779-1848), of becoming the new imperial favorite. Eventually, however, that talk subsided, for he displayed no ambition, and Aurelia showed no interest whatsoever towards him. Then on Twelfth Night (December 30, 1799), Spamalkan Ambassador Alvardo de Villagrosa, Count de Ruyes (1760-1814), who had arrived at the Imperial Court in January 1799, marking the restoration of diplomatic relations between the Imperial Laurasian and Holy Spamalkan Governments after an interlude of fifteen years, and had been received by the Empress with great decorum, remarked in his report to the Council of State that "The Empress held a great feast, in which the Head of the Imperial Almitian Church and the Autocrat of All the Laurasians was to be seen in her old age dancing three or four gallards." 1799 ended with the Laurasian Empire on the way to firmly suppressing Tyrone's Rebellion, and in a state of peace and prosperity in all its other regions.

1800

  • January 1-
    • 1800, the 100th and concluding year of the eighteenth century, witnessed the Laurasian Empire of Aurelia I atop its position as the preeminent power of extra-galactic civilization, ruling over a far more expansive, populous, and developed dominion than any of the powers in the Great Amulak Spiral, Little Amulak Cloud, or Crone Galaxy. As the eighteenth century moved to its close, the Empire found itself considerably strengthened, in economic, political, and military terms, as compared to its state at the beginning of that century. In 1701, the Laurasian Empire's jurisdiction had extended over thirty-eight million star systems throughout the Caladarian Galaxy, across a distance of 115,000 light years. By 1800, that jurisdiction encompassed seventy million inhabited star systems, throughout the Caladarian Galaxy, Great Tesmanian Cloud, and Angelina Spiral, and over a distance of more than 200,000 light years. The Empire had conquered the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria and the Vectorian Empire through a series of coordinated military campaigns, extending from 1702 to 1779; it had annexed the Haynsian Despotate (1783), just nine years after that entity's independence from the Marasharite Empire was acknowledged in the Treaty of Kuchuk Kaynarca; it had stripped the Marasharite Empire, through five wars during the century, of all of its territories in the Galactic Borderlands, Galactic Void, Angelina Spiral, and Great Tesmanian Cloud; and it had taken the leading role in the partitions of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, seizing all of the Commonwealth's trans-Amulak territories (that is, Dejanican Lavella, Belarania, Ukraine, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and the Dejanican Duchy of Northania and Semigallia).
    • The Empire's acquisitions in the satellite galaxies had all occurred during the reign of this monarch, who sat atop the throne of the Empire at the close of the century: Empress Aurelia I, the Great. She had now ruled for forty-one years, having surpassed her father's record on the throne in 1795, and was the third-longest ruling sovereign in Laurasian history (surpassed only by Honorius the Terrible and Seleucus the Victor). She was now considered to be the equal to such great Laurasian rulers, of both the Stellar Kingdom and the Empire, such as Arasces the Founder, Augustus the Great, Perseus the Savior, Flavius Aetius the Warrior, Honorius the Liberator, Leonidas the Restorer, Seleucus the Victor, Antiochus the Great, Antiochus the Conqueror, Demetrius the Fat, Antigonus the Conqueror, Lysimachus the Cultivated, Antoninus Pius the Consolidator, Antigonus the Philosopher, Demetrius Severus the Warrior, Aurelian the Savior, her grandfather Neuchrus the Reformer, and her father Antigonus the Extravagant.
    • She was also the most popular and well-respected of any of the sovereigns of the Neuchrian Dynasty, and enjoyed great prestige at foreign courts. They were all aware of the Empress of Laurasia's military power and of her diplomatic influence; the Laurasian Empire's alliances with Durthia, Franconia, Portugallia, Morocco, and Masacavania further secured its position, and made it difficult for potential enemies to attempt to blunt its position in the future. Economically, the eighteenth century had also seen great progress. Of the thirty-two million star systems acquired by the Laurasian Empire during the century, 75% (24,000,000) had been discovered or colonized, whether by the initiative of the Imperial Laurasian Government; by the patronage of nobles, corporations, or prominent guilds; or through the efforts of private consortiums, subjects, and local authorities. An average of 240,000 star systems a year had been cataloged and colonized or explored by imperial expeditions.
    • The galactic economy more than quadrupled during the eighteenth century, exceeding more than €1.3 quindecillion dataries in worth by 1800. The volume of galactic commerce rose by more than 2000% during the century; that of extra-galactic commerce, by more than 4000%. Numerous trade routes, wormhole corridors, and hyper-communications links now connected the Caladarian Galaxy with its satellite galaxies and with the civilizations of the Great Amulak Spiral. The most prominent of these by 1800 were the Bug Trade Highways; the Barbarossa Wormhole; the Peldavian Gateways; the Great Windwawa Wormhole; and the Masacavanian Galactic Void Corridor. More than 12,000 hyperspace routes were blazed within the Empire's dominions during the century, constituting the addition of more than 2.3 million light years worth of distance; population densities throughout the Galaxy rose exponentially, from an average of 120 to 790 individuals per inhabited star system during the century; and Laurasia Prime's population, which had entered the century at 1.2 trillion, exceeded 3.2 trillion by its close. It had crossed the 3-trillion landmark in 1793, barely a century after it had cleared the 1-trillion mark (1695). Birth rates rose by more than 50%; mortality rates fell by more than 30%; and numerous diseases, such as the Angrames malady and Marsian fever, were virtually extinguished during the last decades of the century.
    • The Imperial Laurasian Military also increased in size: by 1800, it had more than 1 trillion Imperial Army Troopers, 755.5 billion Imperial Navy personnel, 9.98 billion Imperial Marines, and more than 200,000 military warships (along with over a million starfighters). Finally, the Empress of Laurasia herself commanded vast resources. By the last year of the eighteenth century, the Imperial Laurasian Government had more than three billion officials and employees throughout the Caladarian Galaxy and its satellite galaxies; the Imperial Ministry of Defense had the largest (600 billion), followed by Space & Transportation (550 billion); Labor & Commerce (470 billion); Sentient Services (435 billion); Regional & Provincial Admnistration (400 billion); Education (374 billion); Planetary & Energy Resources (311 billion); and Imperial Works & Holdings (300 billion). The Imperial Household alone employed more than 200 billion employees, and the Empress's personal servants numbered in the tens of millions. The Empress herself had a small cadre of four hundred ladies-in-waiting, two thousand maids of honor, and five hundred gentlemen of the Imperial Privy Chamber, but these were only the most intimate of a vast horde. The Household owned more than 100,000 residences, estates, and properties throughout the length and breath of the Empire; all of the old residences of former galactic monarchies were in imperial possession. The Empress, wealthier than any other personage in her Empire, and the ultimate suzerain of all of its resources and revenues, sat upon a solid financial state. Thus, as 1800 began, the Empire seemed destined to close the eighteenth century out in a prosperous manner, and to enter the following century on a firm foot.
  • January 13-On January 13, 1800, four years after being compelled to abdicate from the Northanian throne, and nearly two years following the death of his former suzerain, King Stanis Vorrust I of Dejanica and Lithuania, the ex-Duke of Northania and Semigallia, Peter von Bironia, died at Gellenau Palace on Gellenau, in the Mitau Governorate, aged 75. The former Duke's health had entered a serious decline following his retirement to Gellenau in 1796. Although he had been granted a substantial imperial pension by Empress Aurelia, and provided with all of the comforts to which he had previously been accustomed, ex-Duke von Bironia nevertheless sank into a severe depression. He considered himself to be oppressed by the confines of his residences, and believed that the Empress's agents were watching his every move. Bironia grew so paranoid that he would not leave his residence without being escorted by a troop of guards, and demanded that his food be vetted before he ate it. Eventually, it grew to the point that by October 1798, the ex-Duke would even have guards in his bedchamber, and he would arm himself with a blaster. This behavior both amused and "saddened" the Empress, who from time to time would send notes of "sympathy" to the Duke, have him entertained by many of her own personal performers and musicians, and confer upon him further titles, decorations, and estates in order to whet his appetites. None of this satisfied Bironia enough, and he was utterly devastated in November 1799 upon the death of his only son, former Northanian Prince Charles von Bironia. His health had then descended from there; he fell into a coma on New Year's Day 1800, and died, virtually ignored by the galactic media. Nevertheless, Empress Aurelia expressed her sincere regrets concerning the death of the Duke, in a proclamation to the Imperial Court; sent condolences to his daughters, Northanian Princesses Wilhelmina (1781-1839), Pauline (1782-1845), Johanna Katharina (1783-1876), and Dorothea (1793-1862); and ordered the Court into a day of mourning on his account. On the Empress's orders, Bironia would be given a memorial service at the Westphalian Cathedral (January 17, 1800). He would ultimately be interred at the Ducal Crypt of Jelgava Palace, on Mitau (January 24, 1800).
  • January 25-
    • As mentioned above, while the Laurasian Empire in general resided in a state of great unity and economic prosperity at the beginning of this, the last year of the eighteenth century, events continued to proceed with Tyrone's Rebellion in the Scottrian Governorates. Generalissimo Surovius, whose own health continued a slow decline, nevertheless pursued with vigor the continuing military campaigns. On January 1, 1800, Surovius inflicted a serious defeat upon Tyrone and the Sugan Earl of Desmond in the Battle of Fermoy. By January 4, government units had secured Blarny, Clonakilty, and Carrick en Suir, all of which had served as major rebel supply outposts. The following day, Lieutenant-General Sir Horacius Verus repelled a surprise raiding expedition by rebel units under Donal MacCarthy in the Battle of the Trinity Kirk Outposts, and on January 6, 1800, Surovius (with General Caranius and Admiral Serius under his command), defeated Tyrone again in the Battle of Bandon. That stronghold now fell into the possession of the Laurasian Empire.
    • Surovius then repelled a rebel counteroffensive against Merchinston (January 7-8); secured the defenses of Newry and Sligo (January 9); and on January 12, 1800, intercepted and destroyed the Earl of Connacht's advance squadrons in the Battle of Murch. That Earl (1759-1805; Sian O'Donnell, 2nd Earl of Connacht), who had pledged his loyalty to Tyrone a year before, was captured, bound in chains, and then flared on Surovius's orders. On January 14, Surovius launched a coordinated offensive with his combined land and naval forces against Kerry, which was one of the most important strongholds in the hands of Tyrone's Rebellion. With a population of 22 billion (1797), it was one of the most populous and economically important systems in the Angelina Spiral, commanding the Dumbarton-Dumblaine Corridor and controlling access into the Galactic Void. Kerry's agricultural reserves, procession facilities, and factories would prove vital to any force which controlled it. Surovius knew that the conquest of Kerry would be essential for retaking Tipperary and Kinsale.
    • Tyrone, on his part, sought to harry Laurasian supply lines and to force the Empire's military forces into general retreat. He therefore stationed his harquebuiser squadrons and his armored reserves in the fronts of the star system, intending to cut into the Laurasian lines, and overwhelm the Laurasian armored vessels with sheer force of numbers. Surovius, however, anticipated this, and he now ordered Admiral Serius to station a decoy force. Serius did as commanded, and he launched a number of thrusts against the outskirts of the Kerry star system. Tyrone was fooled into believing that this was the actual Laurasian assault; he sent his harquebuisers forth, and they quickly pushed through a gap in the 67th Imperial Fleet's lines. At that same time, however, Surovius executed a pincer maneuver and a running assault against the garrison of Kerry, with his transports and frigates boldly appearing above Kerry's shields.
    • Tyrone was forced to divert his units back into the system to confront this force, and it was then that General Caranius arrived, cutting off the rebel line of retreat and storming several of Kerry's outposts. Tyrone, finding himself crunched between Surovius and Serius, was forced to retreat; on January 16, 1800, Kerry surrendered, marking a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. The conquest of Kerry was followed by the swift surrender of Tipperary (January 18, 1800), and the following day, with Generalissimo Surovius's effortless seizure of Bresharia and Carrigafoyle. Brechin, besieged since the latter days of December 1799, finally surrendered (January 22, 1800). Niddry was then stormed by Generals Caranius and Chichestrius (January 25, 1800), and on January 29, Caranius humiliated the Sugan Earl of Desmond in the Battle of Cathallfaon, thereby recovering that stronghold for the Imperial Laurasian Government. Ballyduff and Balloghan were both firmly in government hands at the end of January 1800, as Surovius pushed his forces against Kinsale.
  • February 8-
    • Whilst the Empire's military forces were making progress against Tyrone's Rebellion, Empress Aurelia continued to grapple with the Earl of Estatius's predicament. On January 7, 1800, the Empress had confided to Chancellor Cecilis her doubts about the favorite, and her concerns over her subjects' support for the Earl. The Chancellor, cautious and pragmatic as ever, advised the Empress that she should not relax the conditions under which Estatius was held, but that she should nevertheless explain to her subjects, and to her Court, the reasons for the Earl's confinement. Aurelia responded to this by declaring that she had already done so, with a publication of Estatius's offenses during his service within the Scottrian Governorates. Cecilis, however, pointed out that there was still dissension, and that many of her subjects still firmly believed in the Earl's innocence. Therefore, on January 19, 1800, the Empress authorized for Procurator-General Egertonia, in a official speech at the Public Council Chambers of the Quencilvanian Palace, to introduce Estatius's questionable communiques, and the evidence of his meetings with the Earl of Tyrone. The reaction was as Cecilis had anticipated: public support for Estatius began to wane, and the Empress was now freer to move against him.
    • Aurelia, nevertheless, was vexed by the pleas of Estatius's sister, Lady Richius, for her brother's sake. Lord Mountjaria had been recalled back to the Empire in November 1799, and for some weeks, the Empress had him confined at the Fortress of Baureux. Immediately following his release, Mountjaria had resumed his adulterous affair with Lady Richius, and he, along with Southerton (now allowed to move about from his estates), and Estatius's friend, Sir Carolus Danveria (1768-1801), tried to figure out how they could best help Estatius. They considered enlisting the support of the Dukes of Christiania and Briannia, of the Duchess of Venasia Minor, and of other magnates at the Court, in order to blunt and limit the influence of Chancellor Cecilis. The nobles named, however, displayed no interest in involving themselves in such a matter, and the plan was shelved. Mountjaria and Southerton, nevertheless, continued to think about the succession, and they exchanged communiques with the Earl of Hannah, who was gaining ever-increasing support in his claims to be the Empress's successor.
    • Estatius, on his part, recovered through January 1800; by February 1, he had finally emerged from his bed. On February 8, Empress Aurelia announced her plans to proceed forth with a public trial. She then relented however, especially after Bagonius suggested that she secure the Earl's private submission. The Empress therefore canceled the trial, and Estatius was permitted to write her a humble communique (February 12, 1800), in which he declared that "The tears in my heart have quenched all the sparkles of pride that were in me." During February 1800, the "Empress's displeasure towards the Earl of Estatius lessened", according to Sir Thomasius Whyrtia (1764-1838), a courtier of the Imperial Household. On March 3, the Empress ordered Chancellor Cecilis to relax the Earl's guard; to permit him visits from more of his associates at the Imperial Court; and to increase the number of his servants. Estatius was also given a new guardian, Sir Antiochus Berkelania (1752-1828), but was still forbidden to receive correspondence (in spite of being allowed to write communiques to the Empress) or to live with his wife. Estatus became ever more submissive in these communiques. On March 9, he declared that: "Almitis is witness to how faithfully I vow to dedicate the rest of my life to Your Majesty." Vice-Admiral Raleghia, on his part, fully engaged once more in his role as Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners, warned Cecilis: "I am not wise enough to give you advice, but if you relent towards this tyrant, you will repent it when it shall be too late. His malice is fixed and will not be eliminated by any of your mild treatments towards him. Do not lose your advantage. If you do, I can see your destiny. He will ever be a threat to the Empress's estate and safety. I have seen the last of her good days, and all ours, after his liberty."
  • April 3-
    • As mentioned above, by the beginning of February 1800, Generalissimo Surovius and his military forces were poised to instigate a siege of Kinsale. At the same time, the Earls of Tyrone and Donaugh, seeking to forestall any further Laurasian advances, instigated a vigorous reorganization of their military resources and forces. In January 1800, 50,000 mercenaries from the Spamalkan Kingdom of Naparia, which had been hired by Tyrone during the preceding four months, arrived at Kinsale. They were commanded by the Spamalkan adventurer and Head of the Trisos Bechios Mercenary Corps, Alonso de Campo (1740-1800). Campo, who was a veteran of the Second Cyprian War and the War of the Portugallian Succession, had then established the Bechios Mercenary Corps in 1783 and fought for the Grand Duchy of Masacavania in the Sixth Breffal War (1788), before participating in the campaigns of the Holy Austarlian Empire in Serbia and Olthenia (1789-90). He was therefore an experienced military commander, and quickly proceeded to fortify the Scottrian colony of Baltimore, to withstand Laurasian units.
    • Generalissimo Surovius, on hearing of the arrival of these Spamalkan mercenaries, decided to enhance his own position ahead of Kerry and Tipperary. He strengthened the garrison of Oysterhaven (February 2-9, 1800) and on February 15, seized the Scottrian fortifications of Tramore, preventing a possible counteroffensive by Tyrone against Mallow and Killarney. Five days later, Surovius's forces began their advance towards Kinsale. Tyrone and Donaugh now hastened from Baltinglass to Kinsale, being forced to support the Spamalkan mercenaries, at the risk of their being cut off. The rebel naval corps were commanded by Donal Cam O'Sullivan Beare (1761-1800), who had become "Laird of Waterhaven", on Tyrone's initiative, in October 1799. The Siege of Kinsale commenced on February 21, 1800, as Generalissimo Surovius secured the Farther Kinsale Approaches and used his turbocannon to harry the star system's defenses. At the same time, Admiral Serius's warships blunted assaults by O'Sullivan Beare and prevented any further reinforcements from reaching the star system. Tyrone, from his command headquarters on Belgonny, launched numerous assaults against the Laurasian supply lines. Although he did manage to storm the 7th and 9th Laurasian Operational Outposts in the Kinsale Straits, Surovius and Serius were able to maintain their communications lines.
    • Tyrone, Donaugh, and General de Campo now decided to launch a surprise assault upon the Laurasian lines, striking from Belgonny and from Kinsale simultaneously, in hopes of breaching their formations. Surovius's reconnaissance units, however, were aware of their plans, and the Generalissimo decided to allow enemy forces to proceed, whilst he would station his transports and frigates on both the northern and southern victors of Kinsale. On February 26, Tyrone launched his maneuver, and for a time, drove forth from Kinsale. He managed to break Laurasian siege positions at Kinsale Barricade, and to capture twelve Laurasian couriers. Donaugh, however, rashly assaulted the Farther Kinsale Barriers; as a result, Surovius was able to send his Marines and transports forth. Donaugh was therefore separated from Tyrone, and the rebel commanders found their lines of communication broken. Spamalkan General Ocampo then found himself flanked by Surovius, who drove his troops onto Belgonny Outpost and blockaded him there. General Caranius arrived, and forced O'Sullivan Beare, along with his subordinate Dermot Maol MacCarthy Reagh (1760-1812), to retreat towards the Kinsale Straits. The Siege of Kinsale, however, dragged on into March 1800. Ultimately, on March 11, Caranius finally stormed the Kinsale Straits Stations. O'Sullivan Beare was killed in action, while Dermot MacCarthy Reagh was captured. He would be bound in chains and flared on Surovius's orders, while all of the other rebel officers and personnel were either imprisoned or executed.
    • On March 16, the Generalissimo forced Tyrone and Donaugh into retreat, and now fully encircled Kinsale. General de Ocampo, neutralized at Belgonny, could not prevent the star system's final fall. Kinsale finally surrendered to the forces of the Laurasian Empire (March 20, 1800). Belgonny was then seized two days later, but de Ocampo committed suicide before he could be captured by Laurasian troops. By March 27, all resistance in the Kinsale system had been subdued, and the world was firmly in the Empire's possession. More than 230,000 military personnel of the Imperial Laurasian Forces died during the Siege of Kinsale, compared to virtually all of the Spamalkan mercenaries and 750,000 rebel troops. Surovius then repelled a rebel counteroffensive against Cork (March 28-29), and on March 30, 1800, General Caranius besieged and conquered the rebel garrisons of Dursey and Dunboy. Donohill was then secured (April 1, 1800), and on April 4, Donaugh suffered a further disastrous defeat in the Battle of Aughrim. Two days later, General Caranius pursued the Sugan Earl of Desmond to Glinsk and Letrim. The Battle of the Glinsk Straits (April 7-11, 1800) and the Skirmish of the Upper Letrim (April 14, 1800), ultimately ended in victories for the Laurasian Lieutenant-General. The Sugan Earl now found himself at the end of his resources, and his chief stronghold of Ballincollig was blockaded by Laurasian units. Baltimore was subsequently recovered by Generalissimo Surovius (April 15, 1800), and on April 19, Spamalkan mercenaries were expelled from Castlehaven. Corgaff then surrendered (April 22, 1800), and four days later, the Battle of Craibstone ended in a decisive victory for Surovius and the Earl of Ormond. On April 28, 1800, Mavhill was secured by General Caranius and Admiral Serius, following the defeat of the Earl of Tyrone in the Battle of Auchindoun. By the end of April 1800, Blackverigh, Dumblaine, and Dumbarton were all under threat by government forces.
  • April 21-On April 21, 1800, Archleutan Count Otto von Stackelberg, Ambassador of the Laurasian Empire to the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1773-90), died at the age of 64, at his estate, Cronn House, on Selena. Following his dismissal from the Laurasian Embassy of Dejanica Major (June 1790), Stackelburg had eventually re-ingratiated himself with Empress Aurelia and with the Imperial Privy Council. In particular, he found an ally in then-Secretary Sir Robertius Cecilis. Cecilis promoted the Archleutan Count's rise back to favor, and in 1791, he had been granted a barony in the nobility of the Laurasian Empire, becoming 1st Baron Stackelburg of Selena. In October of that year, Stackelburg was appointed as the Laurasian Empire's ambassador to the Grand Duchy of Masacavania. He served in that position for more than two years, becoming a well-respected figure at the Court of Moscow; a trusted foreign confidant of Great King Feodor I; and was responsible for improving the Empire's commercial ties to that region. Stackelburg had then resigned from his position as Ambassador (November 1793), was granted an pension by the Empress, and in February 1794, became the Chancellor of the University of Archleuta. He served in that position for five years, until his retirement in April 1799. Stackelburg's health had entered into serious decline during the last several months of his life, and he rarely moved from his estate. On Empress Aurelia's orders, he would be buried at St. Michael's Church in Cranch City, Selena (April 24, 1800). The Empress herself had contended with two other deaths of great personal resonance. Her beloved friend, Lady Norria, had died on December 12, 1799, at her family estate on Darsis, Norrian Mansion, aged 75. She had been followed by Dr. John Deesius, 1st Baron Deesius of Osraninpolis, Chancellor of the University of the Laurasian Empire for two decades, the Empress's "favorite academician", and the man who set the date of her coronation (January 25, 1800). Deesius was 73 at his death. This latter death particularly affected the Empress, but on her orders, both these personages had been interred at the Westphalian Cathedral. Towards the end of April 1800, the Empress remarked to Chancellor Cecilis that "my Empire's dominions reside in a state of glory and of great prosperity, yet I continue to be stricken by the hand of the Anti-Almitis and of the Grim Reaper, who cull away all of my bases of support."
  • May 16-
    • The advance of the Laurasian Empire's military forces against those of Tyrone's Rebellion continued through May 1800. On May 1, 1800, Generalissimo Surovius ordered Rear-Admiral Serius to launch an immediate offensive against rebel forces at Blackverigh, so as to deprive them of that military base, inflict damage upon their supply lines, and sunder all rebel communications into the Galactic Void. Verius obliged, and he now organized the chief destroyers of his fleet, the IMS Warspite, Defiance, Merliania, and Swiftsure, into the core of his offensive battalion. The force also comprised of thirty frigates, ten automated transports, fifteen couriers, and a number of battleships, corvettes, and light dreadnoughts. During the early hours of May 2, 1800, Admiral Serius's force approached the outskirts of Blackverigh. The garrison was commanded by Fiach MacDonaugh O'Byrne (1756-1800), one of Tyrone's chief naval commanders.
    • He had positioned an eight-gun turbocannon battery at the front of the star system, and launched an immediate barrage against the Laurasian ships. Five of the couriers were destroyed, and another three suffered serious damage. Serius launched a two-pronged offensive against Blackverigh, and he used his interdictor units, equipped with ion disablers, to redirect the fire of the Spamalkan turbocannon. The Fianna, which served as the lead flagship of the Scottrian garrison, was harried by superior Laurasian Elucidator-class starfighters and suffered a catastrophic reactor overload. O'Byrne, who fought on his personal harquebuiser, was off-board when his flagship was destroyed. Three other Scottrian destroyers were scuttled after suffering hull breaches in their turn. The Defiance and Warspite proved particularly adept in combat, wrecking twelve of the Scottrian galleys and scattering the others.
    • By the early hours of May 3, 1800, after a day's worth of fighting, the Battle of Blackverigh had ended in a decisive victory for the Laurasian Empire. O'Byrne was killed when his squadron was annihilated by Laurasian ion fire, and Blackverigh's garrison capitulated to the Empire shortly afterwards. With Blackverigh now in the Empire's possession, Generalissimo Surovius ordered Serius and General Caranius to combine for a joint offensive on Dumblaine. Bearhaven had been captured by the Generalissimo (May 5, 1800), thereby giving the government forces the advantage. Richard MacGeoghen (1758-1800) commanded the garrison of Dumblaine, one of the chief remaining strongholds in the possession of Tyrone's Rebellion. The Siege of Dumblaine began on May 11, 1800, with an intensive bombardment by Admiral Serius and the isolation of the Dumblaine Ways by General Caranius. Major-General Owen O'Sullivan of Cawrenglass (1760-1834), one of the few Scottrians to have risen high in the service of the Imperial Laurasian Army, soon detected a weak spot in Dumblaine's defenses, and informed Serius of this.
    • The weakness was exploited, and by the early hours of May 14, Dumblaine's shield defenses had been breached. During the next two days, the outposts of Ardea and Dursey were stormed by Caranius's troops, who pressed further into the star system. The Laurasian General then conducted a series of landings on Dumblaine's surface, and by May 22, after bitter hand-to-hand fighting, Dumblaine Fortress had been surrounded. MacGeoghen was then killed by his own troops, who realized the futility of resistance (May 24, 1800). Dumblaine surrendered the following day, resulting in another decisive victory for Laurasian forces. Dumbarton, whose people had simmered under Tyrone's oppressions, and whose supply lines had been harried by Laurasian units from Youghal, Leitrim, and Limerick, surrendered shortly thereafter (May 29, 1800). Tyrone and Donaugh were humiliated by this defeat. Whilst the Siege of Dumblaine was going on, Generalissimo Surovius continued to press the offensive. By May 27, both Kildare and Ravar II were firmly in the Empire's hands, and two days later, Surovius blockaded Baltinglass. On May 31, 1800, General Caranius captured Hemkey, O'Vill, and Dungarven, placing Dungannon directly under siege.
  • June 5-
    • By the beginning of June 1800, Empress Aurelia was no longer willing to delay the public investigation and interrogation of Estatius which she had for so long contemplated. She believed that by this point, Estatius had been given more than enough time to reflect on his actions, and that he needed to have his humiliation broadcast to the Empire's subjects in a public forum. Therefore, on June 5, 1800, on the Empress's express instructions, the Councils of State and the Courts of Star Chamber & Chancery convened at the Public Council Chambers of the Quencilvanian Palace, for the formal public "investigation and interrogation Of His Lordship of Estatius, and the revelation of the full extent of his offenses to the populace of this Empire." Estatius was now brought before this tribunal, which was not a formal court, but had been invested with the power to mete out a punishment decided beforehand by the Empress, who devised the whole episode as a public relations exercise.
    • The tribunal was presided by Procurator-General Egertonia, with Chancellor Cecilis and Attorney-General Sir Edwardis Coxius serving on the interrogative panel. An invited audience of four hundred members, comprised of government officials, nobles, clergymen, and prominent personages from Laurasia Prime and the Purse Region, were present. The proceedings lasted for eleven hours. The prisoner was made to kneel before the panel at which the Councils of State sat, while Attorney-General Coxius read out a list of his "delinquencies". Chief of these was his gross contempt and disobedience, although it was made clear to him that his loyalty to the Empress was not in doubt (to appease those among the Empire's populace who still harbored feelings of affection for him). Then four of the Governing Senate's legal attorneys condemned Estatius's misdemeanors; Estatius was astonished and hurt to see his friend Bagonius among them. Bagonius, in fact, had begged to be excused, just as he had with the audience the previous year, but the Empress had insisted upon his presence.
    • Due to the intervention of Chief Procurator Whitshiftus, Estatius was eventually permitted to lean on a chair-back, and as time wore on, to sit. After several hours of accusations, the time came for him to publicly "apologize" for his misdeeds and throw himself on the Empress's mercy. At this point, the Attorney-General delivered a lengthy attack on the Earl, prompting Estatius to heated retaliation. The hearing quickly degenerated, but Chancellor Cecilis intervened and call a halt to the bickering. It was then that Estatius, in a "passionate and moving speech", freely acknowledged his culpability and expressed his deep remorse at having offended the Empress. He told the tribunal: "I would tear the heart out of my breast if ever a disloyal thought had entered it!" The outcome was inevitable, however, and the commissioners found Estatius guilty on all counts. Egertonia told him that, if this had been a normal court, he would have been fined and condemned to imprisonment at the Fortress of Baureux, but since it was not, and since he had abjectly admitted his faults, as well as begged for mercy, he might return to his residence to await Her Majesty's pleasure.
    • Aurelia now finally imposed the chief retaliation upon Estatius. On June 7, 1800, with the commissioner's "findings" in her hands, the Empress formally dismissed the Earl of Estatius from the Imperial Privy Council (and his seat as Minister of Regional & Provincial Administration, which he had only really held as a formality), deprived him of his positions as Imperial Marshal, Master of the Empress's Vehicles, and Master of the Imperial Ordnance, and revoked all loans granted to Estatius's estates between 1787 and 1790. She had considered releasing Estatius (on the condition that he stay away from the Imperial Court), but Cecilis and Raleghia both told her that he would scheme against her. Therefore, he remained under house arrest at Estatius House. The Empress, on June 14, then decided to deprive all those of her forces who had been given knighthoods or military decorations by Estatius in the Scottrian Governorates of those honors. Cecilis, however, managed to persuade her otherwise; Generalissimo Surovius's smashing victories over Tyrone and Donaugh eventually disposed her to clemency.
  • June 12-
    • By June 1800, the situation of the rebel forces of Tyrone's Rebellion was utterly horrendous. As mentioned above, Generalissimo Surovius, General Caranius, and Admiral Serius, along with the Earl of Ormonde and the Laurasian Empire's other military commanders in the Scottrian Governorates, had made considerable advances against Tyrone and Donaugh. Dungannon, which had served as Tyrone's chief command headquarters, and had actually been home to members of his family for more than two centuries, was now under direct threat from government forces. From this stronghold, where Tyrone commanded the greatest support, the rebel "authorities" had issued their manifestos and their proclamations to the Empire's subjects throughout the Scottrian territories, urging for a general revolt against the Empress's authority. Most of these appeals, especially in the regions intensively colonized by those from the Caladarian Galaxy and the Great Tesmanian Cloud, had been ignored. And now, there were to be no more.
    • On June 4, 1800, General Caranius besieged and captured the rebel communications outpost of Coalisland, which was located five light years to the west of Dungannon. This thereby disrupted rebel communication frequencies and signals into the Ediania Governorate. By June 8, Caranius and Admiral Serius had cooperated in storming the rebel garrisons of Bray, Lucan, Blackrock, and Navan, denying Tyrone the opportunity to send any further communiques to the remaining, scattered rebel bands in the Lower Dumbarton Governorate, and tightening the ring around Dungannon. Tyrone himself, who realized that the defense of Dungannon would be an effort of folly, now decided to make a strategic retreat from his headquarters. Both he and Donaugh were contemplating the possibility of fleeing into the Galactic Void and from thence, to the Great Amulak Spiral. They would seek to perhaps gain refuge at the court of a friendly power such as the Marasharite Empire.
    • Therefore (June 14, 1800), Tyrone and his chief operational formations instigated the retreat. The Earl, however, would not abandon the stronghold in a manner as to leave it intact to Surovius's forces. He now ordered for all spacedocks, orbital outposts, and artificial habitation facilities in the Dungannon star system to be destroyed; for the Dungannon Currency Reserves, Armory, and Estates to be comprehensively robbed and trashed; and for the chief residential, financial, commercial, and governmental quarters in Dungannon's cities to be looted, and left in a horrendous state. All of this was done, and by the time the last rebel units finally abandoned the star system two days later, Dungannon was in virtual ruins. Generalissimo Surovius immediately occupied the star system.
    • Although he punished those who had any association with the rebellion, he treated the world's distressed civilian inhabitants (numbering over 200 million) with great leniency, dispensing emergency supplies among them, forbidding the quartering of troops in their residences, and sponsoring investment in the system's economy, so as to repair the damages inflicted by Tyrone's hordes. Surovius also made sure to issue a public manifesto on the matter (June 19, 1800), condemning Tyrone's actions, and revealing to all his cruelty. As a result of this, two of the Scottrian Lords who had remained loyal to Tyrone, Brian Oge O'Rourke of Clondalkin (1753-1806) and Cuchonnhaut Maguire (1766-1808), surrendered to Surovius at Derry, depriving the rebel Earl of some of his chief subordinates. They surrendered in accordance with a pledge by the Generalissimo (June 2, 1800), that any rebel who laid down their arms peacefully, surrendered all their forces and supplies into imperial possession, and swore a renewed oath of allegiance to the Empress of Laurasia would be given clemency. Two days later, the Sugan Earl of Desmond, who had always refused to submit to government forces, was finally defeated and captured in the Battle of Shandon.
    • On the orders of the Empress (who had decided that all chief rebel leaders who were captured in battle should be publicly tried and condemned on Ediania), he would be imprisoned at Leith Castle on June 24. On June 22, 1800, General Caranius defeated the Earl of Donaugh in the Battle of Glenconkenye, forcing rebel units to abandon that stronghold. Then on June 25, 1800, Surovius and Serius (with reinforcements dispatched by the Earl of Ormonde and General Verus), launched the final offensive against Baltinglass, which had been under siege for nearly a month. In spite of the resistance posed by Tyrone and Donaugh's brother, Rory O'Donnell (1775-1808), who commanded the garrison's defenses, Baltinglass fell within hours. This inflicted a mortal blow to the rebellion. Donaugh, who was now determined to save himself, and to elude justice at the hands of imperial authorities, decided to flee into the Galactic Void on his initiative. He began his flight from Lough Neagh (June 26, 1800), and managed to depart from the confines of the Angelina Spiral. By this point, however, the Earl of Ormonde had already been informed of his departure; he now dispatched government forces under the command of Fleet Captain Sir Hephaestion Marvon (1756-1800) to intercept the rebel leader.
    • Donaugh made it as far as Bray Point, located one thousand light-years southwest of the Outskirt Districts, when he was intercepted and surrounded by government interdictor units (June 29, 1800). Marvon now demanded for Donaugh to surrender. Donaugh, however, refused, and in an act of suicidal mania, he rammed his starfighter into the bridge of Marvon's flagship, the IMS Susarria. Donaugh's starfighter, which had been equipped with high-grade neranium armor, was hit by direct fire from the Susarria, but managed to reach the bridge and to crash into it. Marvon and his entire bridge crew were killed; the flagship was effectively paralyzed. But Donaugh had also lost his life, determined not to let the Laurasians take it from him. Generalissimo Surovius received word of Donaugh's death while he was besieging Ballymanscalan and Loch Ness, the two last rebel garrisons before Mellifont (to which Tyrone had retreated, and was preparing his escape). The Generalissimo now decided to release this to Tyrone, declaring that if he did not surrender, he would face the same fate. Tyrone, at first not believing the Laurasian, would hold out for some time into July 1800. Nevertheless, by the end of June 1800 (by which time Surovius's physical decline was in evidence to all), Tyrone's Rebellion was virtually suppressed.
  • June 15-September 19-
    • On June 15, 1800, Empress Aurelia and the Imperial Court departed from the Quencilvanian Palace on Laurasia Prime to commence this, the last progress of the eighteenth century. To the Empress, this progress was particularly symbolic. Not only was it occurring in the last year of the century, it was also to the Empire's remaining Dejanican acquisitions in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, which she had not visited previously. These included the Belaranian, Ukrainian, and Swiotzeranian Governorates, as well as the Bug Trade Routes and the Barbarossa Wormhole. The day following her departure, she attended the wedding of one of her favorite maids of her honor, Lady Anna Russalia (1776-1843), to Sir Willanius Herbertia (1771-1841) at Blackfriars Estate on Kendra. A masque was performed by eight ladies of the Imperial Court in allegorical guise. Lady Didymeia Fittonia (1778-1847), another of the Empress's favorites, invited Her Majesty to dance. The Empress asked her what her costume represented. Didymeia responded: "Affection." The Empress, still pained about Estatius's "betrayal", replied: "Affection! Affection is false!" She joined in the dancing, nevertheless. The Court departed from Kendra on June 18, and proceeded along the Larkian Way, to the Corporate Sector and into the Galactic Void. Many of the older members of the Imperial Household complained about the Empress's pace; she responded that the "old may return back to Laurasia Prime and the young and able continue onwards with me."
    • This amazed many, and they all resolved to follow the Empress, burying their own complaints. She wasted no time in proceeding to the Great Tesmanian Cloud, determined to see the rest of the territories that she had expended military, financial, and diplomatic resources on acquiring. The Court reached Ostrowec (June 20, 1800), which became the first world to be visited by the Imperial Court. The star system had been inhabited as far back as the 2nd millennium BH, but did not become part of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth until its colonization by the Denkow Consortium of Prince Kacper Macjiewskia (1564). In 1613, Janusz Ostrogkia (1554-1620), a prominent statesman and member of the Dejanican Senate, became the star system's proprietor; that same year, it was granted the status of a Royal Planet. Numerous successive Dejanican families subsequently controlled the star system, following Ostrogkia's death in 1620. These included the Tarnowskias (1620-28); Czartoyskias (1628-45, 1757-85); the Lubomirskas (1645-76); the Radzwillas (1676-95); the Zaslawskias (1695-1708); the Sanguskos (1708-32); the Wielopolskias (1732-41); the Dobranzias (1741-55); and the Lubienskias (1755-57, 1785-95). Ostrowec suffered from raiding expeditions by the Haynsian Despotate throughout the seventeenth century, with those of 1621, 1631, 1639, 1646, 1652, 1659, 1676, and 1691 being the most memorable.
    • Nevertheless, by the early eighteenth century, it had become one of the most prosperous Dejanican worlds in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and by the time of its final annexation by the Laurasian Empire (1797), it had a population of more than six billion. The Empress stayed at Ostrowec for two days, being amazed by the Historic-Archaeological Museum (one of the largest state-owned institutes in the Laurasian Empire, having come under the control of the Imperial Ministry of Culture and Communications following the Third Partition) and by Gromada Resort, which contained more than 35,000 rooms and attracted clientele from throughout extra-galactic civilization. St. Michael's Collegiate Church, which had been constructed by the Imperial Almitian Church from 1619-26; the HoloCommunications Tower of Ostrowec; the Figure of Floric; and the Ostrowec Houses of Culture all received visits from the Empress. She was also entertained by the faculty of the Ostrowec Musical Academy, renowned for the quality of its performances and its emphasis on academic and artistic rigor.
    • after leaving Ostrowec on June 22, the Empress visited Statarachowice, renowned for its smelting furnaces and enormous underground forges (June 23); Kamienna, a major junction on the Lower Bug Trade Route (June 24-25); Staszow, once held by the Dasians prior to their subjugation by the Torfians in the 1st century AH (June 26); and the Malogszcz Colonies (June 28), which had been colonized as early as the eleventh century and from 1408 had enjoyed special autonomy privileges within the Crown of Dejanica. The Empress's visit to Osiek (June 29, 1800), was particularly memorable. She dined with the Dejanican Patriarch of the Swietokyrzskie Regions, Boleslaw Chobriac (1747-1825); toured the grounds of the Swiety Krzysz Cellery, which had been established by Dejanican faithful in the eleventh century; and delivered a speech from the High Tower of Stanis the Savior, a revered Dejanican religious saint and figure.
    • Among the other star systems in the Switozeranian Governorate to be visited by the Imperial Court were Stopnica, which had been colonized in the eleventh century and was one of the first systems to be granted Royal System status by the Crown of Dejanica (June 30-31); Skalbmierz, home to the renowned Skalbmierz Merchant Marine Academy (July 1); Dizaloysce, home to the Holy Trinity Church, the Imperial Almitian Church's largest abbey in the Great Tesmanian Cloud (July 2-3); and Wachok, a major producer of electronics, industrial equipment, and military supplies (July 4). From Wachok, the Empress and the Imperial Court now proceeded into the Belaranian Governorate. Wolczyn became the first system in the Belaranian Governorate visited (July 5, 1800). This star system in itself had a complicated history. Colonized in AH 1280, Wolczyn had then fallen under the jurisdiction of the Dejanican Duchy of Glogow (1294), which at that time was one of the chief dynasties in Dejanican Silania, and was ruled by Hen'ricus V (r. 1290-96). It remained under the jurisdiction of Glogow until 1312, when it passed under the control of the rival Dejanican Duchy of Oels.
    • The Duchy of Oels ruled the star system for three decades, but in 1343, it was conquered by the Duchy of Brezeg, another Dejanican dynasty in Silania, which held the star system for nearly a century. In 1436, it passed back to the control of the Duchy of Oels, under which it remained until falling under the suzerainty of first the Holy Austarlian Empire (1526-95) and then, in 1595, that of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Wolczyn was made a part of the Brest-Litovsk Voivodeship in 1628, and remained within that jurisdiction until being annexed by the Laurasian Empire in 1793, as a result of the Second Partition of Dejanica. With a population of only two hundred million by the end of the eighteenth century, Wolczyn was nevertheless a serene world, renowned for the beauty of its valleys and plains; for the cleanliness of its cities; and for the polite manners, as well as customs, of its inhabitants.
    • The Empress declared that her visit to this star system was a "sanctification to her soul." She presided over the opening ceremonies of the Meeting of Youth, an annual tradition which had begun in 1620 and was conducted by the Dejanican Order of the Caupchins. The Empress also toured the Wolczyn Central Compound and delivered a speech, in Dejanican, to the assembled elites and administrations of the Wolczyn Valleys. From Wolczyn, the Imperial Court proceeded through Kobryn (July 6-7); Pinsk (July 8); Dubrovistya (July 9-11); and Kamananiec (July 12). Kobryn, which was originally colonized in the sixth century AH, was conquered by the Yotivingian Republic in AH 990 and remained under their control until the Republic was destroyed and conquered by Vologravius I of Dejanica (1314).
    • In 1392, as part of his settlements with his rival, Lithuanian Grand Duke Vyatutas, King Jogalia of Dejanica conceded the star system and its environs to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania's jurisdiction. It remained part of the Grand Duchy until 1589, when it was restored back to the Crown of Dejanica. From 1597 to 1766, the star system enjoyed Royal Planet status within the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and served as the central meeting place of the powiat of the Brest-Litovsk Voivodeship. Kobryn was raided four times by the Haynsians during the seventeenth century (1606, 1617, 1659, 1697) and it was held by the Holy Austarlian Empire from 1656 to 1660, during the Deluge Wars. By the early eighteenth century, however, it had come to enjoy a surge of prosperity, until its final annexation by the Laurasian Empire (1793). With a population of four billion, Kobryn served as a major transportation terminal, processing facility, and naval base; the Imperial Laurasian Navy had commenced construction of the Hereidan Spaceport there in 1798, two years before the Empress's visit.
    • Empress Aurelia visited the Spaceport during her stay and toured the Kobryn Central Canal, by which goods could be shipped along the planet's waist, and then marketed in Mukhavets City. Frp, Pinsk, a major shipbuilding and agricultural colony, had been colonized as early as 1097, by the Slavic Confederation of Turau. It was seized by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1320; transferred to the Crown of Dejanica in 1569; and granted Royal Planetary status in 1581. Pinsk was occupied by the Ukrainian Kamenskies from 1633 to 1648; seized by the Holy Austarlian Empire, which held it from 1656 to 1667; and was then sacked by a Laurasian expeditionary force in 1708. But by the end of the eighteenth century, the system had fully recovered, and with a population of three billion, boasted a balance of industrial development with agricultural prosperity. The Jesuit Collegium, the Butrymowicz Palace, and the Dejanican Conduit of Barbara were all sites visited by the Imperial Court at Pinsk. Dubrovistya impressed the Court with its massive aviaries and hunting grounds; Kamananiec with its gardens.
    • From Kamananiec, the Empress proceeded to Mir (July 13-14, 1800). Mir, which was colonized in 1345, had been targeted relentlessly by foreign enemies over the centuries. It was sacked by the Breffal Federation under Hembourlaine the Lame (1395); occupied by the Marasharite Empire three times (1495-1503, 1571-75, 1671-76); raided by the Haynsian Despotate almost continuously throughout the seventeenth century (with the raids of 1606, 1618, 1627, 1633, 1642, 1655, 1667, 1676, 1686, 1689, 1692, and 1696 being the most prominent); occupied by the Autocratic Pruthian Empire from 1656-62, in 1711-14, and again from 1722-28; stormed by the Laurasian Empire in 1708, during the Dejanican Expeditionary War; seized again by Laurasian General Sir Petevius Lacius in 1733; occupied by the Bar Confederation from 1769-71; and then conquered by Laurasian forces under General Meliaria during the War of the Bar Confederation (1792). It became part of the Laurasian Empire the following year. The Empress's visit to the Mir Military Complex (erected 1535-68), was of great note.
    • She toured the Illinicz Family Mortuary, the Military Ballasides, and the Mir Defensive Towers. Mir was also renowned for its ethnic diversity, educational institutions, and trade markets. The Roma Merchantile Quarter received a visit from Her Majesty, as did the Mir Yeshiva, a major educational academy of the Jewrites, the third-largest Amulak-originated sect in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. St. Nicolas's Church, erected in 1712 by the Imperial Almitian Church, was also visited by the Empress. Nowogrodek was then visited (July 15-16, 1800), with the Empress observing the Bright Festivities at the Transfiguration Conclave of the Spamalkan Catholic Order; residing at the massive Nowogrodek Castle, which had been renovated by Vyatutas the Great; and presiding over the reenactment of the burial of Lithuanian King Mindaugas (1263). The Court passed through Slusk, Slonim, and Vaukavysk (July 17-22), and on July 23, reached Braslau. Braslau, which had been colonized by the Polatskans as early as AH 1065, had been sacked by the Donathians in the early thirteenth century, whilst they were in the process of subduing Amelianian territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, and was incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania during the late fourteenth century.
    • In 1500, Grand Duke Alexaigus of Lithuania had fortified the star system, constructing the Braslau Administrative Compound. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Braslau became known as a renowned resort colony, although it never gained Royal Planet Status. Empress Aurelia and her court toured the Administrative Compound and took much comfort at the Braslau Lakes, known for their therapeutic properties. From there, she proceeded to Voldymr (July 24-25, 1800), which had been colonized as early as 981, and from 1054 to 1349, was capital of the Ruthenian Principality of Lodomeria, long one of the chief commercial states in the Great Tesmanian Cloud. At that latter date, it was conquered by Dejanican King Casimirius the Great (r. 1333-70), in the course of his subjugation of the Galician Territories, and remained with the Crown of Dejanica to 1795 (being given Royal Planet status in 1431).
    • The Khram of Voldymr, which was allegedly the oldest residential edifice still remaining on the planet, was visited first. The Empress laid a wreath there in honor of Voldmyr the Great (r. 980-1015), the Slavic ruler who sponsored its colonization. She then toured the Basir the Great Center, erected in honor of the Byzzarian Emperor following his diplomatic conference with Voldmyr at Branich (AH 1002). The Grecian-Luderic Church, which had been constructed by a consortium of Genoan and Pisan merchants in the twelfth century AH, was also visited by the Empress, as was the Jesuit Refectory (1597), erected by Don Diego Lopez Lepag (1550-1610), a missionary of the Spamalkan Catholic Order. The Empress took up residence at the Bishops' Palace, so named because it was shaped like a mitier, during her two-day stay at the star system.
    • From Voldmyr, she proceeded to Kaminiec Podoski, formerly capital of the Podolian Voivodeship of Dejanica (July 26-27, 1800). Originally a possession of the Slavic Principality of Podolia, it was conquered by Dejanican King Casimirius the Great in 1352, being designated capital of the Podolian Voivodeship by 1387. The stronghold was constantly threatened by the Marasharite Empire, Livonian Order, and Kingdom of Hungary from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries. Hungary occupied the star system in 1399, under King Sigismund (later to become Holy Emperor of Austarlia), and held it until 1438, when it was restored to Dejanican possession. The Marasharites then assaulted it in 1444, 1456, and 1489, finally capturing the system in 1499 and holding it until 1538. From 1598 to 1725, it suffered from numerous raids by the Haynsian Despotate; between 1672 and 1699, the Marasharite Empire again held the system, as a result of the Treaty of Buchach by which it obtained Dejanican Podolia. It was restored to Dejanica in 1699 by the Treaty of Karlowitz. Kaminiec-Podolski's Central Citadel, considered one of the strongest fortifications in the Great Tesmanian Cloud, now belonged to the Laurasian Empire. Empress Aurelia received a salute from the Citadel's garrison, and was given an acclaim of honor from the Cossacks of Kaminiec-Podolski, who had been present at the system from the fifteenth century.
    • The Kaminiec-Podolski Hall of Heroes was another site visited by the Court. From this world, the Empress visited Balta (July 28); Vinnistia (July 29); Bar, the original headquarters of the Bar Confederation (July 30); and Proskurov (July 31), before then proceeding to Turov (August 1, 1800), known for its medicinal and botanical exports. From there, Rechysta, Homel, Chelm, and Charchesk were visited in turn by the Court (August 2-5, 1800). Homel, ringed by artificial installations, was known for its tingallian spice; Charchesk, for its solar-craft, sculptures, and metallic furniture. From there, the Court proceeded to Shatsk (August 6, 1800), and then (August 8, 1800), reached Minsk. Minsk, which had been colonized by the Principality of Polotsk in AH 1067, then broke away as the Principality of Minsk in 1129, and remained independent for more than two centuries, before being absorbed by Lithuania in 1342. In 1413, Minsk became the capital system of the Minsk Voivodeship, and in 1499, was granted Royal Planetary status. These arrangements were confirmed when the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth was established in 1569. By that time, Minsk had become an important economic and cultural center, with its population already in excess of ten billion by 1597. During the seventeenth century, however, it was threatened numerous times by both the Celestial Kingdom of Scottria (which occupied it from 1629-34, 1649-51, and 1673-87), and by the Haynsian Despotate (whose raids of 1612, 1672, and 1692 deprived the world of many of its important resources).
    • In 1655, it was seized by the Holy Austarlian Empire during the Deluge Wars, and remained in their hold until 1667. The world then became a bitter point of contention during the eighteenth century, with the Vendragian Confederacy (1702-04); the Autocratic Pruthian Empire (1709-14, 1727-31, 1747-54); the Serene Kingdom of Franconia (1756-57); and the Bar Confederation (1768-69), all holding it. Its annexation by the Laurasian Empire in 1793, therefore brought a return of peace. By 1800, it had a population of more than eighteen billion. Minsk was known for its production of tractors, protocol robots, repulsorlifts, household goods, and electronics. The Empress had a chance to visit the Minsk Industrial City, which was the planet's chief production center; to utilize the Minsk High-Rail system, known for its speed and sophistication; and to visit several of the world's chief educational institutes, including the University of Minsk in Culture and Arts, the Institute of Labor and Social Relations, the Linguistic Institute, and the Institute of Management (the fifth-largest privately-owned college in the Great Tesmanian Cloud). She received blessings from the Dejanican, Belaranian, and Northanian prelates of the world; paid her respects to the tombs of the Red Treasury, renowned for their antiquity; and resided at the Kuparian Palace, constructed by the Czartoyskia family from 1696-1704. The Empress stayed at Minsk for three days, and after departing it, rapidly proceeded through the systems of Barysaw (August 12); Maladyzyechna, known for its quality weaponry and industrial equipment (August 13-14); Mariyna Horka (August 15); Zhodzina (August 16); Berazino (August 18), a major agricultural colony and communications outposts; Cherven (August 19); and the Kapyl Worlds (August 20-24).
    • Finally, on August 25, 1800, the Imperial Court proceeded towards Kiev. Kolotchen became the first target (August 26, 1800), known for its ores and torblaine fuel. It was then followed by Zhaskiv, whose Mineral Caves of Karnarch were renowned throughout extra-galactic civilization (August 27); Uman, a major processing world (August 28); and Maltyn (August 29), formerly a Dejanican patrol garrison for expeditions in the Galactic Void. Talne, which had been colonized in 1646, but was known for its exotic sealife, became the next system to be visited (August 30, 1800), followed by Smila, known for its mechanical engineering sector (August 31). Proceeding through Drabiev, the Empress then visited Kaniev (September 2, 1800), ruled by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania from 1382-1569, under the jurisdiction of the Crown of Dejanica from 1569-1793, and one of the earliest Slavic colonies (inhabited as early as the 3rd century AH). It had been seized and plundered by the Marasharite Empire in 1458 (they occupied it from 1458-61, and then again in the seventeenth century from 1678-99), and raided by the Haynsian Despotate thirty times between 1580 and 1736. Kaniev was known for its massive firearms industry, for the beauty of its vistas, and for its underground smelting facilities.
    • The Empress found this star system to be a relative pleasure, and she was thralled in touring the Tract of Tereisa, a graveyard of stelae carved by Slavic colonists in the sixth century AH. From Kaniev, she then finally moved onto Kiev (September 3-5, 1800). Kiev had a long and extensive history of its own. It was one of the original homeworlds of the Slavic civilization; the Slavics are believed to have first emerged from the world in the seventeenth century BH, and as early as the eighth century BH, it was attested in accounts by the nearby Grecian and Varangian civilizations. From Kiev, the Slavic Confederation began to spread out into neighboring space during the latter half of the 1st millennium BH. Between AH 482 and 862, however, the world was part of the Khazar Imperium, ruled by the Khazars of the Barbarossa Regions, until they were overthrown and defeated by the Slavic ruler Oleg (r. 879-912) in that latter year. Kiev remained a major world of the Grand Principality of Slavia, and later of the Principality of Slavia, from the ninth to the thirteenth centuries AH.
    • It was devastated by the Northanians in 896, 899, 919, and 925; comprehensively sacked by the Pecheneg Barbarians in 969; and conquered by Prince Andrey Bogolyubsky (r. 1157-74) of the Vladimir Colony in 1169. From 1203 to 1232, Kiev was disputed between the factions of Prince Rurik Rostislavich (r. 1202-35) and the Pricians; then in 1240, it was devastated by the Marasharite Seljuks. Lithuanian Grand Prince Gediminias (r. 1316-41) attacked the Principality of Kiev nearly a century later, briefly seizing it in 1324-25 before being forced to retreat by the Second Bulganian Empire. Kiev did not fall under permanent Lithuanian control until 1362, and remained part of the Grand Duchy for more than two centuries. In 1569, upon the establishment of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth, it was transferred to the Crown of Dejanica. As early as 1482, the Haynsian Despotate threatened the star system, more than a century before they began their expeditions into the Laurasian Empire or the remainder of the Dejanican-Lithuanian Commonwealth's territories. Kiev became the capital of the Kiev Voivodeship in 1575, shortly after its transfer.
    • It had a population of four billion by 1600. It was sacked by the Haynsian Despotate twelve times between 1597 and 1696; the Marasharite Empire itself conquered the system three times (1626, 1646, 1671); and from 1654-67, it was held by the Electoral Kingdom of Pruthia. The Kamenskies also held the system (1648-55), and in 1699, it revolted under the leadership of Bogdan Termiki (1647-1706), who was not defeated until 1706. Then from 1709 to 1715, the Autocratic Pruthian Empire held the system yet again. In 1734, it was seized by the Laurasian Empire during the War of the Dejanican Succession, which maintained a diplomatic garrison there until 1757. After being disputed numerous times during the Wars of the Bar Confederation and War in Defense of the Constitution, Kiev fell under the Laurasian Empire's grip in 1793 (Second Partition of Dejanica). By the late eighteenth century, it had a population of more than twenty-two billion. Empress Aurelia entered the star system in a coordinated procession, being greeted by the Governor-General of the Ukrainian Governorate, Sir Antoninus Derius (1750-1811), and by her subjects in that star system. She visited the Kiev Gates, the Outposts of Bajur, and the Kiev Asteroid Belts.
    • The Golden Gate, the Marinskiy Palace, the Financial Headquarters of Kiev, the House with Chimeras, the Kiev Opera House, the Botanical Garden, and the Kiev Open-Air Auditorium were all toured by the Empress, who also had the chance to view the gathering of Kievan mimics, lute-performers, and bagyirtas (folk singers), in the Maidan Square. She saw a simulation of the Battle of the Blue Straits (1362), by which the Grand Duchy of Lithuania had secured the system, and she was guest to a series of chemical demonstrations at the Kiev Demonstrative Chambers. The Court stayed at the Boraderian House during its stay. Following her departure from Kiev (September 5, 1800), the Empress proceeded to Brovary, where she toured the Brovary Brewery, one of the largest alcoholic distillation plants in the Empire. Then on September 7, 1800, her sixty-seventh birthday, she reached Fastiv, known for its fruit groves, rolling hills, and placid seas.
    • The Court engaged in much ceremony for the occasion, combined with enthusiasm over the suppression of Tyrone's Rebellion (to be described below). Borospil and Bila Tsareveka were then visited (September 9-14, 1800). The Empress subsequently reached the Barbarossa Wormhole (September 15, 1800), boarding, and touring, the Wormhole Control Stations, home to a crew of more than 200,000 personnel of the Imperial Laurasian Space Exploration and Hyperspace Monitoring Corps. She then detoured to the Bug Routes, visiting several of the outposts including Avrelle, Durkella, and Apossolon (September 16-18, 1800). Finally, on September 19, 1800, having covered the whole breath of her Empire's territories in the Great Tesmanian Cloud as a result of these most recent progresses (since 1797), Aurelia finally turned back to Laurasia Prime. She would arrive at the Quencilvanian Palace on September 23, exhausted. In the meantime, other events had occurred, related to Tyrone's Rebellion and to her favorite, Estatius.
  • July 16-
    • As mentioned above, by the beginning of July 1800, the military forces of the Laurasian Empire, under the command of Generalissimo Lord Surovius of Ryminik, and his subordinates, had effectively suppressed the last embers of Tyrone's Rebellion. Tyrone himself was now at Mellifont, in vain planning on an escape into the Galactic Void, and thence, to the Great Amulak Spiral. Generalissimo Surovius had already released to Tyrone the information that his chief ally and friend, the Earl of Donaugh, had died at Bray Point. He made clear to Tyrone that the Empress "has mercy for those who submit to her authority peacefully, and without qualms", and he assured Tyrone that the Imperial Laurasian Government had only the best aims for the "prosperity and security of the Scottrian Governorates." Tyrone, however, refused to believe Surovius for a time, and throughout the early days of July 1800, launched numerous raids against government positions in his vicinity. Surovius blunted rebel assaults at Clogherheed, Dunleer, Tinure, and Annagasaan (July 1-5, 1800).
    • On July 6, 1800, General Caranius destroyed a expeditionary force dispatched by Tyrone in the Battle of Dromiskin, capturing thirty Scottrian transports and more than 25,000 Scottrian rebel personnel. Two days later, Caranius and the Earl of Ormonde eliminated the last mercenary force in the Laurasian Empire's territory, at Louth. Then on July 11, 1800, Loch Ness finally capitulated to Generalissimo Surovius. Ballymanscalan proved a more difficult target, and did not fall until July 14. It was at this point that Tyrone now attempted his break-out from Mellifont. On July 16, 1800, the rebel Earl and his remaining subordinates, on a fleet of light couriers, penetrated from Mellifont and hastened towards the Galactic Void. Surovius, however, had anticipated this, and he now took quick action.
    • Mellifont was quickly stormed by a waiting corps of Imperial Marines, thereby depriving the rebel forces of their last substantive stronghold. Admiral Serius then deployed his rapid-action Acia-class starfighter squadrons at Tulleyallen Vector, where he expected for Tyrone to make his final hyperspace jump. He proved correct, and his starfighters quickly employed their interdictor technology to drag-net Tyrone's force. Tyrone, who now found himself facing the end of Laurasian firepower, decided to heed Surovius's promises, and to surrender. On July 21, he sent a communique to Admiral Serius, offering to surrender all of his remaining bases and units, unconditionally, to the Imperial Laurasian Government. Surovius received this communique, and acting on the authority given to him by Empress Aurelia, accepted. Tyrone formally surrendered (July 22, 1800), as well as the remaining rebel garrisons of Carlingford, Ardee, Ormeath, and Tinure, resulting in the final suppression of Tyrone's Rebellion. Surovius, however, shortly afterwards reneged on his promises. On July 24, he had Tyrone and his officers bound in chains, imprisoned on a automated prison galley, the IMS Aysadratia, and then transported immediately back to Ediania. Tyrone and his fellow prisoners arrived at Edianian Fortress (July 28, 1800), where they were to be held awaiting a formal treason summons by the Empress. Surovius, on his part, now begged for leave to retire back to Laurasia Prime.
  • August 18-
    • By the end of July 1800, the health of Generalissimo Lord Surovius had entered a serious decline. As indicated above, the Generalissimo's physical condition had already begun to fray by the time that Empress Aurelia had promoted him to the highest rank in the Imperial Laurasian Military, and entrusted him with the suppression of Tyrone's Rebellion. During the Battle of Rallcranth (December 2, 1799), Surovius had complained of a headache and of back pains, but ultimately had pulled himself through that day and had carried the Empire's military forces to victory. But throughout the remainder of that month, the Gerneralissimo suffered from occasional panic attacks and back spasms; the headaches never entirely left him. By February 1800, Surovius had begun taking amphetamine medicines, in order to alleviate his pain and to suppress the symptoms from which he was suffering. He also tried his best to distract himself by plunging himself head-long into the tasks of military command, and thought of nothing but the defeat of Tyrone.
    • In April 1800, however, shortly after the conclusion of the Battle of Blackverigh, Surovius had collapsed on the bridge of his flagship, the IMS Silvrania, and had been forced to issue instructions from his personal bedchambers. He ultimately emerged within some days, but by the end of that month, the headaches and back spasms had intensified. On May 20, 1800, Surovius confided to Lieutenant-General Caranius that he doubted whether or not he could make it much more through war. Empress Aurelia herself, who had been monitoring the progress of the military campaigns carefully, and who had learned of Surovius's physical predicament, sent him medicines and encouraging communiques, declaring that she would "reward him with all of the benefits of the Imperial Household due to a hero" and that the Lord Almitis would see him through to victory. This kept the Generalissimo motivated, and despite the physical pain (which the treatments of his physicians could only alleviate), he marched on to the end. But now, with Tyrone in custody and with his rebellion effectively suppressed, the Generalissimo sought an escape.
    • On August 1, 1800, Empress Aurelia (who was then at Turov), formally granted Surovius permission to return to his residences on Laurasia Prime. He did not waste any time, and departed from Dumblaine two days later, after transferring (temporarily) his duties of supreme command to General Caranius. The Generalissimo arrived at Laurasia Prime (August 6, 1800); as per his request, he did not have to endure any exhausting ceremonies of welcome, or any throngs of admirers. He simply retired to Rymnik Place, his residence in the Residential Quarter of Christiania. Here, the Generalissimo's decline in health accelerated further, and on August 12, he suffered a massive stroke in his personal bedchambers. Surovius was now moved to St. Barthomolew's Hospital, where he was treated by the Chief Doctorian of the Hospital, Dr. Hegelochus Sarranius (1741-1806).
    • Nevertheless, in spite of this, the Generalissimo was beyond the point of recovery, and on August 16, Sarranius declared that he had done all he could for his patient. On August 18, 1800, Generalissimo Alexander Surovius, 1st Baron Surovius of Ryminik, Count of the Holy Austarlian Empire, Count Surovius of Franconia, Knight of the Durthian States-General, Lord in Portugallia, and Koening (War-Lord) of the Autocratic Pruthian Empire, one of the Laurasian Empire's most prominent military commanders in its history (and probably the best commander of the eighteenth century), died at the age of seventy. Surovius had achieved the rare, and unparalleled feat, of being the only commander in the history of the Laurasian Space Age to have never been defeated in battle. He had engaged in more than four hundred battles, skirmishes, and confrontations during his half-century of military service; his career had taken him from a mere private in 1746, when he had first enrolled in the Imperial Laurasian Army and fought during the campaigns of Lord Protector Seymouris against Scottria (1747), to Lieutenant-Colonel (1761), at the time of the Huguenot Expedition, to Brigadier-General (1768); Major-General (1774); Lieutenant-General (1782); Field-Marshal (1794); and then Generalissimo (1799).
    • The news of Generalissimo Surovius's death was received with much lamentation on Laurasia Prime, across the Laurasia Prime Purse Region, and in other regions of the Laurasian Empire. Empress Aurelia, who was now with her Court at Berazino, issued a proclamation of condolences on the death of the Generalissimo; ordered her courtiers, and the officials on Laurasia Prime, into a day of mourning; and commanded for a memorial service to be conducted at the Westphalian Cathedral, in the late Generalissimo's honor. Chief Procurator Whitshiftus ordered for bells to toil at all religious edifices throughout the Empire, in honor of this "late savior of our Empire, and servant of our Lord Almitis." Surovius's former military subordinates, and his associates, all expressed their condolences. General Caranius, who was now, in effect, supreme commander of the Empire's forces in the Scottrian Governorates, declared that he "never had the honor to serve under a more vigorous and effective commander than this one lately past." Vice-Admiral Sir Walterius Raleghia and Fleet Admiral Notthamia both expressed their regrets for the death of Surovius, with whom they had coordinated their final, and decisive, military campaigns in the Spamalkan Hereditary Dominions.
    • The Imperial Privy Council re-published the official accounts of Surovius's exploits in the Battles of Lanckorona, Kolzduzha, Focasani, Rymnik, Praga, and Blackverigh, which were considered the Generalissimo's greatest victories. Surovius's body lay in state at the Westphalian Cathedral from August 20 to August 26; his memorial service was conducted the day after his death. Then on September 5, 1800, Surovius was officially interred in the Heroes' Crypt of Westphalian Cathedral, again in accordance with the Empress's directives. Many of the chief personages of the Imperial Government and Court, including Lord Treasurer Doracia, Fleet Admiral Lord Notthamia, Chancellor Cecilis, Vice-Chancellor Sir Alcetas Braganius (1746-1821), Sir Franconius Bagonius, Procurator-General Brackelius, Chief Justice of the Star Chamber Pophamia, and the ambassadors of all foreign courts (such as Pruthian Ambassador Baron von Werclais and Austarlian Ambassador Count Coblenz), were present at the funeral. Chief Procurator Whitshiftus presided over the services, while the Empress (still on progress), was represented by Sir Antiochus Harringtia.
  • August 26-
    • As the Laurasian Empire's military forces gained the upper hand over, and destroyed, the forces of Tyrone's Rebellion, which was followed by the decline and death of Generalissimo Surovius, the situation of the Earl of Estatius took another turn. Following the hearing of June 5, 1800, Sir Franconius Bagonius, who still held sympathy for the Earl's plight, and did not seek to lose his friendship, apologized to the Earl in person (he was among the designated "associates" that the Empress permitted for the Earl to receive). Bagonius declared that his participation in "that session of humiliation" was in no way prejudicial to his opinion of the Earl, and expressed his hope that better tidings would be ahead. Estatius, for the time being, decided to accept Bagonius's apology.
    • Bagonius then suggested to the Earl that he send to the Empress two communiques, both of which had been composed by Bagonius himself, to beg for her forgiveness. Estatius adhered to his "friend's" suggestion, and sent the first of the communiques on July 13, 1800. In this first communique, it was declared: "Now, having heard the voice of Your Majesty's justice, I do humbly crave to hear your own proper and natural voice, or else that Your Majesty in mercy will send me into another realm. If Your Majesty will let me once more prostrate myself at your feet, and behold your fair and gracious eyes, it will do a service to Almitis. Even if afterwards, Your Majesty decides to punish me, imprison me, or pronounce the sentence of death against me, I will still recognize your mercy, and I shall be most happy."
    • This worked, to an extent. The Empress's attitude towards her fallen favorite had continued to mellow. On July 27, she formally dismissed Berkelania from his duties as guardian, although Estatius was at that stage commanded to keep to his residence. Estatius then sent the second communique (August 5, 1800), declaring that "nothing but loyal service to Your Majesty will appease my soul and allow me to overcome the depths of my treason." Restrictions upon Estatius were further relaxed during that month. On August 26, 1800, acting on the advice of Bagonius, the Empress finally liberated Estatius from house arrest. His ability to receive correspondence, and to maintain full Holonet communications was restored; his family, with the exception of his wife, could live with him again; and the Earl would be able to appear in public. However, Aurelia forbade Estatius from returning to the Imperial Court, and she refused to return any of the offices, honors, grants, or annuities which had been stripped from him. Estatius announced that he would retire to Wanstead Estate, and that he would stay out of the public limelight. He and his friends were still hopeful that the Empress would forgive him. From her viewpoint, however, the Earl was not humble enough.
  • October 21-
    • Following her return to Laurasia Prime from the progress to the Ukrainian and Belaranian Governorates (September 23, 1800), Empress Aurelia sought to keep herself busy. The Empress decided to tour the major cities of Laurasia Prime. Christiania, Constantinople, Columbia, Herkorim, Soriana, Osraninpolis, Gentz, Crystellum, Mendelevium, Beneventum, Ostia, Ralispont, Ravenna, Uris, Heliotrope, Jaina, Elberon, and Elkeath were all visited in turn by the Imperial Court (September 26-October 19, 1800). The Empress visited Sir Franconius Carania (1749-1813) at his residence, Bedinigtia House, in Herkorim; watched the plays Justinian the Great and The Maidens of Folly at the Galactic Theater of Drama in Soriana; and attended a consecration service at the Monastery of St. Joan's in Pavia, presided over by Chief Procurator Whitshiftus and the Archbishop of Ostia, Lysimachus Farania (1744-1812). The Empress then paid a visit to the New Forest Hunting Preserves in Florencia, and was presented with a gift of chalices at the Luxury Lakes of Pridium.
    • Yet not all was easy. While she was at Penhurstian Place, the Duke of Samarkand's residence in Mendelevium, Sir Antigonus Sidronius (1763-1831) observed her and told Harrinigtia: "She seemed to be most delighted at what the Duke and his household did for her. The Duke's son made her a fair speech, to which she gave a most gracious reply. The women of the Duke's household, and of the Imperial Household, danced before her, and the nobles present saluted her from the gallery. The Empress ate two morsels of rich comfit cake, and drank a cordial of mulberry wine from a gold cup at hand. However, she seems to be weaker and under more distress. Any mention of the late Lord Treasurer [Burghley] draws tears from her cheeks. She walks only a little, meditates alone, and sometimes writes in private to her friends. Whenever she goes upstairs, she calls for a staff, and complains of weariness when she has to exert herself. Her Majesty sometimes declares her wish that she could come another day, when she would be in better physical condition."
    • Much of this distress was over the Earl of Estatius. Estatius himself was now deeply in debt, to the tune of €1.4 trillion dataries; his creditors, especially at the Galactic Bank of Laurasia Prime, the Haxonian Bank of Pereliti, and the Imperial Nobles' Bank of the Laurasian Empire, were growing restive; and he was counting on the Empress to renew the last privilege remaining to him: the monopoly on sweet wine exports in the Galactic Borderlands. This monopoly had been granted to Estatius in 1787, on the initiative of his stepfather Leicesterius, and was the only one that had not been stripped from him by the Empress. It now accounted for 75% of his income, and was due to expire on October 22, 1800. The Empress was aware of his predicament, both because of the reports issued by the Heraldry Department of the Governing Senate on the wealth and status of all nobles and gentry in the Empire, and because of Estatius's own personal communiques over his plight. When Estatius began inundating her with a further barrage of submissive missives, she observed shrewdly to Bagonius: "My Lord of Estatius has written me some very dutiful letters, and I have been moved by them, but" (she was now laughing) "what I took for the abundance of the heart, I find to be only a suit for the farm of sweet wines." Bagonius pleaded with her to not "utterly to extinguish my Lord's desire to do her service."
    • She ignored this. Unaware that Aurelia saw through him, Estatius, who had remained on Laurasia Prime, entertained hopes that she would agree to see him. He wrote again in desperation: "Haste paper to that happy presence, whence only unhappy I am banished; kiss that fair, correcting hand which lays new plasters in my higher hurts, but to my greatest wound apply nothing." Aurelia had consistently failed to respond to any of his communiques, but she sent a verbal message to this one: "that thankfulness was ever welcome and seldom came out of season, and that he did well so dutifully to acknowledge that what was done was so well meant." October 22, 1800, came and went by without any word from the Empress about his monopoly. Two days later, Estatius made a final, despairing plea to the Empress: "My soul cries out unto Your Majesty for grace, for access, and for an end of this exile. If Your Majesty grant this suit, you are most gracious. If this cannot be obtained, I must doubt whether that the means to preserve life, and the granted liberty, have been favors or punishments; for, till I may appear in your most gracious presence and kiss Your Majesty's fair, correcting hand, time itself is a perpetual night, and the whole Universe but a sepulcher unto Your Majesty's humblest vassal." On October 27, the Empress announced that the sweet wines monopoly in the Galactic Borderlands would now be reserved to the Imperial Treasury, and to those corporations who applied for, and received, the relevant patents from the Imperial Ministry of Labor & Commerce; Estatius was now ruined.
  • November 6-
    • The Earl of Estatius was finally broken by months of ill-health, deep anxiety, and strain. As a result of this "cruel" blow, the Earl lost his "reason". He acted as a possessed man, raving with anger at one moment, and then plunging into deep depression the next. Harrinigtia, who went to see Estatius (November 6, 1800), several days after the lapse of the Earl's last annuity, noted: "Ambition thwarted in its career soon leads to madness. He shifted from sorrow and repentance to rage and rebellion so suddenly, that it would seem he had no good reason or right mind. He uttered strange words, bordering on such strange designs that made me hasten forth and leave his presence. His talk about the Empress should not be ascribed to any man with a healthy mind in a healthy body. He has untrustworthy friends, and much evil springs from this source."
    • "The Empress knows well how to humble the haughty spirit, the haughty spirit does not know how to yield, and the man's soul seems to be tossed to and fro, like the waves of a troubled sea." Estatius's anger went beyond words. From this point, spurred on by the machinations of his clever and ambitious personal secretary, Sir Antigonus Cufferia (1763-1801), who was the brains behind what was to come, the Earl was in covert rebellion. He was paranoid, convinced that his misfortunes marked the success of a master-plan by his enemies to destroy him, and that Cecilis was not only plotting to murder him, but was also conspiring with the Holy Spamalkan and Marasharite Governments to return the Empire's territorial gains in the satellite galaxies and the Galactic Borderlands, and even to install Emperor Philicus II's sister, Infanta Isabella, upon the Laurasian throne.
    • It was imperative that he warn the Empress of what was going on, so that she could rid herself of such treacherous ministers and be reconciled with himself, fully restoring him to favor. If she refused to listen, he would make her. Cufferia had convinced him that the only way to get back in to favor would be to force his way into her presence, backed by an army of his friends and those subjects who had so often expressed their love for him. Cufferia told him that honor demanded this of him: he must save his reputation. Estatius therefore began to gather around him disaffected peers such as the Earls of Southerton and Ruthania; his staunch friends, which included Sir Carolus Danveria, his stepfather Sir Christopehus Blountia, a Traditionalist Valedictorian Guard, Franconius Treshania (1767-1801), his secretary Cufferia, his Malarian steward, Sir Gellios Meyrick (1756-1801), and even his sister, Mountjaria's mistress Lady Richius.
    • Soon, the conspirators were meeting not only at Estatius House, but also at Southerton's Christiania residence, Drury House. Estatius was even contemplating breaking into the Empress's apartments, placing her under restraint, and ruling the Empire in her name. Not one of the conspirators had any idea that the Empress and the Chancellor were watching their every move. Chancellor Cecilis monitored the transmissions and correspondence of all involved; had his agents implanted at the residences of Estatius and Southerton; and kept track of any activity in their financial accounts. In all of this, he had the approval of the Empress, who had never relaxed her vigilance on crushing rebellions against her authority. Cecilis was prepared to bide his time until Estatius and his friends had woven enough rope with which to hang themselves.
  • December 26-On November 17, 1800, Accession Day was marked with much ceremonial at the Imperial Court, as Empress Aurelia's forty-second anniversary on the throne was observed with "much decorum and happiness." By this time, the Imperial Court had moved to the Villestroum Palace on Briannia, once a residence of the Kings of Briannia, and the Empress enjoyed herself with the entertainments thrown for her by the subjects and authorities of that star system. It was also on this day that Estatius wrote his last communique to Her Majesty. In his communique, he again begged to be forgiven, saying: "I sometimes think of running in the tiltyard and then remember what it will be to come into that presence, out of which both by your own voice I was commanded, and by your own hands thrust out." Empress Aurelia, whose Chancellor continued to monitor Estatius's activities, ignored this communique. By now, Estatius had built up a wide affinity of support, which included "bold, confident fellows, men of broken fortunes, military veterans, and such as used their tongues in railing against all men." Outcasts, social misfits, deserters, Unction Reformist preachers, Traditionalists, starhoppers, mercenaries, and all other manner of malcontents found the doors of Estatius House open to them. All of Estatius's supporters, even Southerton and Ruthania, were in desperate need of money; most were saddled by crushing debts and obligations of their own. They all hoped that their revolt would remedy this situation.
  • December 31-
    • In the meantime, the Court had returned to Laurasia Prime (December 7, 1800). The Empress celebrated Ascentmas and Twelfth Night at the Diplomatic Palace. Cecilis entertained her to dinner, and on December 26, she performed a coranto with Lord Drexell (1755-1817; Hiriam Pyarthis, 2nd Baron Drexell of Beneventum). Eleven plays were staged at the Imperial Court for Her Majesty's edification. The end of the eighteenth century was now at hand. On December 31, 1800, the Empress herself, along with the Court, proceeded to the Observation Tower of Christiania, from which she watched, and presided over, the ceremonies for the New Year's. A crowd of more than twenty million subjects was assembled in the thoroughfares and public squares of Christiania for the occasion; a similar scene descended in all the other cities of Laurasia Prime, and in millions of star systems throughout the Laurasian Empire. As the night descended, parties, balls, Holomovie showings, poetic readings, and parades occurred all throughout Christiania; many expressed their acclaim that they were witnessing the end of the century. The Quencilvanian Palace was ringed with electric lights, and translucent banners which read: "WELCOME, 19TH CENTURY!" It was at 10:45, Galactic Standard Time, that night when the formal ceremonies began. The Christiania Symphony Orchestra and the Imperial Court Opera staged a major performance at the Laurasia Prime Exchange; a march occurred in the Palatial and Religious Quadrants; and Chief Procurator Whitshiftus read from a script at the Westphalian Cathedral.
    • An hour later, the Mayor of Christiania, Lord Billingsley, delivered an oration at the Observation Tower, to the Court and the crowds assembled: "Tonight when the galactic clock strikes 12 a.m., the present century will have come to an end. We look back upon it as a cycle of time within which the achievements in the civilization of this galaxy and this Empire are not less than marvelous. This century has seen great progress for our civilization of Almitis; we have subdued all of our enemies from within and without. Her Majesty's reign, and the reigns of her siblings, father, and grandfather, have seen our Empire crush the savages and obtain sole dominion over known space. For the first time in galactic history, all of this galaxy is under the rule of one Empire...We have a prosperous and successful whole, a state which the Lord Almitis has blessed, and will continue to bless, irregardless of what else happens. The new century will see the consolidation of these realms, and will open the door to more success in the future."
    • Following this, and at 11:50, the last countdown began. The Christiania Ball-Drop, that tradition alluded to at the beginning of the century, occurred. The enthusiasm of the crowds, and of the Imperial Court, grew to considerable bounds. Then at 12:00 a.m., January 1, 1801, the eighteenth century formally ended, and the nineteenth century began. In her New Century's proclamation (January 1, 1801), Empress Aurelia declared that "The Lord Almitis has blessed our Empire in its geopolitical expansions of the past century, has allowed for our civilization to face down threats to its honor, and has permitted for the strengthening of our society, our Church, and our government. As we look onwards into the new century, we see that the hand of the Almitis will embrace it always, and that the Empire will never be in lack of a strong and guiding hand." Indeed, as the eighteenth century ended, the Laurasian Empire of Aurelia I ruled sixty-nine million star systems throughout the Caladarian Galaxy, Angelina Spiral, and Great Tesmanian Cloud, the first power to accomplish that feat, and seemed poised for centuries more of prosperity, glory, and greatness.

FINI.