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By May 1698, Friesland’s two main field armies had been working their way across Prussia and northern Poland, providing mutual support if attacked. They had been liberating Scandinavian provinces in Prussia and occupying Polish ones as they worked east, with Inowroclaw taken on 6 May 1698.
nice and methodical

And in July, Scandinavia had finally concentrated a large army to start retaking enemy occupied territory in western Finland, while a smaller Bohemian army was besieging the fort of Viborg to the south-east.
finally

The Frisian demands were harsh. In addition to Stade, Magdeburg must cede Verden (to complete the Hamburg Corridor) and Celle to Friesland and Poland would be forced to relinquish Upper Guelders (subject to an existing Frisian claim). As a bonus for Bavaria, which had contributed so much to the cause in Bohemia, they were allocated Plzen.
so we can indeed take provinces which weren't war goals and on which we don't have claims (I assume probably would cause some extra badboy?)

The Treaty of Magdeburg was signed on 3 October 1698. The Coalition had ended up suffering over 330,000 casualties, more than half in attrition. Of these, Friesland had lost 52,000 men – all of them in sieges, having never participated in any land battle during the war.
excellent result, nicely done good job!

The long-sought land corridor to Hamburg had finally been won after many decades of striving towards that end, with Stade and Verden being the first two provinces Friesland would begin to integrate into the Republic.
what is the status of the small minors (Liege, the purple and two different shades of yellow to its east) between France, Franconia and Austria? maybe they can be gobbled after this batch is digested.

On 8 March, the misery finally ended for Naples when they surrendered to the Ottomans, who expanded their foothold in Southern Italy – and took all but one province remaining to Genoa in the Crimea.
:eek: hope they go after Russia next

With the end of the war in October 1698, the Government of the Republic took stock of its affairs. First, the large influx of developed cities following the annexations boosted Friesland beyond the level of total development needed to trigger completion of the ‘Imperial Conquest’ mission. Frisian prestige was greatly boosted and separatism would be decreased for a few decades at least.
what interesting missions are there in the horizon?

If you claim a province, it costs less to core when taking it, takes less time to core, and doesn't cost any dipl points in a peacedeal. However, you can take unclaimed provinces too, you just don't get those other benefits when integrating it.

So claims are nice to have, but not necessary except to get a CB if you don't have one.
this answers a lot for me. what does wargoal do except for supplying us with a CB? What changes if the war starts with a single province as a wargoal or let's say due to an insult etc is there a penalty to add more provinces?
 
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(I assume probably would cause some extra badboy?)
Surprisingly, claims don't do this (though you'd think they would). I guess for game balance reasons?
this answers a lot for me. what does wargoal do except for supplying us with a CB? What changes if the war starts with a single province as a wargoal or let's say due to an insult etc is there a penalty to add more provinces?
The wargoal mainly is what gives you ticking warscore during a war. It also can give you extra warscore from certain things (like winning battles) depending on the type of wargoal used, decrease the cost for things in the peace, or disable/enable certain peace options.

So I'll try the example you used, a single province wargoal vs. an insult. In the first instance, the claimed province would be your wargoal. If the wargoal ticks up fully (either for or against you) that's 25 warscore. If you can occupy the province, it ticks in your favor, if you can't it ticks against you.

For the insult war, taking land is disabled. You can only take money, humiliate your enemy, etc. The wargoal for this war is "show superiority" which means it's less about occupation and more about winning battles. If you win enough battles, the warscore will start ticking to 25.

When claiming a province, you have to build a spy network. It takes 20 spy network strength to claim a province (30 in the HRE) and each additional claim costs 5 more so with Friesland being inside the HRE it would be (30, 35, 40, etc). Also, once a claim is built, the spy network goes back to 0, so you have to rebuild it from that point for each claim.

No explicit penalty other than the increasing cost and that the diplomat doing that could've be doing something else instead.
 
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For the insult war, taking land is disabled. You can only take money, humiliate your enemy, etc. The wargoal for this war is "show superiority" which means it's less about occupation and more about winning battles. If you win enough battles, the warscore will start ticking to 25.
is there a "break up empire" wargoal like vicky2?
 
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is there a "break up empire" wargoal like vicky2?
No. But you can release individual nations/cores in peace. Though if you really cripple a nation, the rebels might break them up anyway.
 
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Was the building boom also partially financed by the massive amounts of gold gained from the peace treaties with the more minor states? If not, what are you doing with that gold?

Ending your alliance with Savoy for an alliance with Britain might be a good idea. A British Alliance would be useful, especially against France, and Scandinavia is a good ally to have.
 
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I'm enjoying your AAR. Though I've had EUIV for a while, I haven't had a chance to crack it open. Your trials and tribulations, along with the FB, is very informative. Keep up the good work.
 
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So many excellent comments and discussion, so I'll do the feedback for those before I embark on the next play session.
Thank you for updating. Great WAR! Ottos and France, Scary,Scary.
It did go well. Quite expensive in attrition, but worth it for the expansions. May have to tone it down for a little while in Europe to let things settle, but there are other opportunities ...
It's strange how easy Africa is to colonise, maintain and control. Esepcially away from the absolute on the coast territory.
I guess so, though my holdings there are quite small. I wonder if the game will do anything to challenge such big colonies as the Spanish have there, or Portugal in South America, later on (as we get towards the revolutionary phase of the end-game). I don't know myself, not having played the game before.
If you claim a province, it costs less to core when taking it, takes less time to core, and doesn't cost any dipl points in a peacedeal. However, you can take unclaimed provinces too, you just don't get those other benefits when integrating it.

So claims are nice to have, but not necessary except to get a CB if you don't have one.
Yes, that confirms my (limited) playing experience so far.
I think this is it.
Ah, right. I won't worry about it too much then.
Were these peace offers that the AI sent you that you then accepted? Or did you do the separate peaces yourself? I tend to not take whatever the AI offers, since they can include random things (like pillaging a state) that aren't worth the AE.
Yes they were, but iirc I then filled them up as much as I could (though I now can't be certain, it's been a little while since that bit of gameplay o_O ). I didn't want to take any of their territory, so was happy to take money and prestige etc.
Prestige and direct gold is shared, but war reparations, usefully, are only given to the war leader.
Oh right, an interesting distinction.
Also if you are concerned about AE, you can try and peace out in December before the January-tick decreases the amount you have.
Hmm, that's a thing, eh? A fixed point per year rather than, say, an anniversary of the conquest.
Does Portugal have any allies that you could attack to get them in a war away from France?
There's a sneaky thought. :p I'll have a look ... and I reckon we could launch a sea-borne invasion of the Portuguese homeland, too. Would have to largely rely on the subject states in New Friesland and Australia to defend themselves I think, though the FIE army and navy could help with the latter if necessary. Hmm ...
Only if it gives you an extra merchant. Just enable it for a month to see if the merchant arrives. If not, turn it back off again.
Right. Will tuck that none away for a later experiment.
nice and methodical
Once the allies had largely defeated the enemy field armies in Bavaria and Franconia, the rest became a grim matter of siege mathematics for Friesland, anyway.
I guess they do have a very geographically dispersed realm to look after. And the AIs in these games often seem to have problems dealing with multiple, distant fronts.
so we can indeed take provinces which weren't war goals and on which we don't have claims (I assume probably would cause some extra badboy?)
Yes indeed, the price being the increased BB.
excellent result, nicely done good job!
Thanks! We'd had a large-ish colonial war or two in the East Indies, and as a minor participant in some large European conflicts (ie the last one between Savoy and Mantua), but this was the first big one we had instigated. Worked out well (as long as we don't get some unexpected backlash).
what is the status of the small minors (Liege, the purple and two different shades of yellow to its east) between France, Franconia and Austria? maybe they can be gobbled after this batch is digested.
They are on the target list for the future - if no opportunity presents to take more of the French-occupied Low Countries any time soon.
:eek: hope they go after Russia next
Yeah: they are just too big to contemplate for now. We need them to do a bit of internal combustion!
what interesting missions are there in the horizon?
Not a lot of practically achievable ones for now, iirc. Mainly colonising/conquering areas we never really got too, and the as yet unstarted branch that starts with uniting the Low Countries. But I'll have another look soon.
this answers a lot for me. what does wargoal do except for supplying us with a CB? What changes if the war starts with a single province as a wargoal or let's say due to an insult etc is there a penalty to add more provinces?
Surprisingly, claims don't do this (though you'd think they would). I guess for game balance reasons?
The wargoal mainly is what gives you ticking warscore during a war. It also can give you extra warscore from certain things (like winning battles) depending on the type of wargoal used, decrease the cost for things in the peace, or disable/enable certain peace options.

So I'll try the example you used, a single province wargoal vs. an insult. In the first instance, the claimed province would be your wargoal. If the wargoal ticks up fully (either for or against you) that's 25 warscore. If you can occupy the province, it ticks in your favor, if you can't it ticks against you.

For the insult war, taking land is disabled. You can only take money, humiliate your enemy, etc. The wargoal for this war is "show superiority" which means it's less about occupation and more about winning battles. If you win enough battles, the warscore will start ticking to 25.

When claiming a province, you have to build a spy network. It takes 20 spy network strength to claim a province (30 in the HRE) and each additional claim costs 5 more so with Friesland being inside the HRE it would be (30, 35, 40, etc). Also, once a claim is built, the spy network goes back to 0, so you have to rebuild it from that point for each claim.

No explicit penalty other than the increasing cost and that the diplomat doing that could've be doing something else instead.
is there a "break up empire" wargoal like vicky2?
No. But you can release individual nations/cores in peace. Though if you really cripple a nation, the rebels might break them up anyway.
All interesting info!
Was the building boom also partially financed by the massive amounts of gold gained from the peace treaties with the more minor states? If not, what are you doing with that gold?
The ducats from the peace treaties were not that large - about 30 from Goslar and 45 from Mainz. So really, it was more the existing savings from income and the big windfall that funded the building boom(s). A buffer for contingencies/emergencies will be left.
Ending your alliance with Savoy for an alliance with Britain might be a good idea. A British Alliance would be useful, especially against France, and Scandinavia is a good ally to have.
This is at front of mind, but we'll likely only go for the British alliance play if/when it becomes immediately necessary, as I don't think France is going to be attacking us soon and allying with them now might drag us into a bunch of unwanted wars not of our choosing. But it is a tempting prospect ...
I'm enjoying your AAR. Though I've had EUIV for a while, I haven't had a chance to crack it open. Your trials and tribulations, along with the FB, is very informative. Keep up the good work.
Thanks so much for the kind words and joining in the Dream! It took me years of prevarication to make the plunge to buy EUIV and start playing. And of course I had to turn that experience into a gameplay AAR (it's my thing, Ive discovered! :D Do let us know if you take the plunge and try it out. :)
 
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Chapter 38: An African Safari (1698-1702)
Chapter 38: An African Safari (1698-1702)

♥♥ ♥♥♥ ♥♥

European Affairs

Following victory in the Frisian-Magdeburgian Nationalist War of 1696-98, Friesland looked to consolidate in Europe and try to ride out the wave of local regional antagonism its actions would inevitably generate.

However, with some policy advocates having discussed the possibility of a future conflict with Portugal, in October 1698 the prospects there were analysed. Of interest, Portugal had at some point recently ended its alliance with France, though it did maintain one with Frisian ally Aragon – and rival Kilwa. They remained in a colonial war in the East Indies but were not performing very well.

14Rutc.jpg

However, Portugal’s directly ruled empire generated a force of 276,000 soldiers and 125 ships, with a healthy manpower reserve. Then its six colonial subjects could contribute another 417,000 troops and 204 ships. This would dwarf the military support of Friesland and its own two colonies by an enormous margin.

Unless their empire started to fragment or they became involved in a very major war, there seemed little prospect of taking on Portugal in the near future.

Austria demanded Verden be returned to the HRE as ‘unlawfully occupied territory’ on 30 December 1698. This was of course ignored but the opprobrium of this ‘illegal occupation’ would further inflame local German opinion, though Frisian allies Franconia and Bavaria remained supportive.

In April 1699, One of Friesland’s diplomats was sent to Liege to establish a spy network. Its two provinces of Liege and Loon were part of the Low Countries region, so a network and possible later claim may one day prove of use.

In November, news came that Magdeburg had finally lost its attempt to overrun Brunswick. Not only did they lose but they were forced to hand over Braunschweig and then Altmark broke free under a re-established state of Brandenburg. With these recent losses, Magdeburg was reduced to a single province.

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However, the new regime in Altmark was soon challenged by a noble rebellion. In January 1700 young Count Johann Georg I of Brandenburg’s forces were destroyed in a battle with the Rebels and Altmark placed under siege.

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The Rebels would win their siege in late October and force Count Johann Georg to submit to their demands (for more influence in the Estates, provincial autonomy and a large grab of crown land) on 1 November. The horror!

On 3 November, long-standing Frisian ally Scandinavia was acclaimed as having entered a Golden Era that would last for another 50 years. Then on 1 January 1701, the Frisian claim on Bremen lapsed: the threat of Austrian entry, dragging in Great Britain and other allies to oppose any Frisian attempt to annex it, had prevented the Burghers of Leeuwarden from ever acting on it.

♥♥ ♥♥♥ ♥♥

Home and Colonial Affairs

In early October the colonist working on settlement growth in Hamburg had been swapped to Oldenburg instead, then the other two from Friesland and Amsterdam (both at 5% improvement chance) were transferred to Meppen (24.2%) and Cleve (12.3%), along with Oldenburg (25.5%).

With the national mission to unite the Lowlands still prevented largely by French obstruction in Flanders and Brabant, the possibility of chartering the WIC was revisited. This would involve taking at least two more provinces in the Guinea region – with Granada being the obvious target.

WMAswN.jpg

That would then lead to the easy fulfilment of subsequent ambitions in the Caribbean and North America.

Manpower recovery after the recent war remained a pressing factor limiting Frisian preparedness for more ventures (colonial or otherwise), when army growth was also on the agenda. In late October, the reserve was just above 42,000 men out of over 98,000 maximum with a gain of around 860/month. New training fields in Osnabrück and Indrapura began construction and would take a year to complete.

The monthly balance was under 100 ducats and with the war finished almost half the forts in areas believed to be at lesser immediate threat were mothballed in January 1699, delivering a large saving to fort maintenance and improving the budget bottom line.

6TnM1Y.jpg

The Estates were well in hand by this time and Burgher loyalty was increased even further when the completion of the stock exchange in Hamburg fulfilled the Diet agenda.

ZxlCpd.jpg

A major milestone was reached in the progress of Frisian ideas of state with the institution of marcher lords in February 1699. Given Frisia had no vassal states at this time, the major benefit was the completion of the influence ideas branch and the opening up of a new policy option, where a ‘free slot’ was available under administrative ideas.

nTWc5r.jpg

Of the two such now available, overseas dominions was chosen, which would at least increase tariffs across the board.

With 2,276 ducats in the treasury, another major round of building works was commissioned on 20 June. Universities were started in Oversticht and Geldern, a counting house in Makassar, conscription centres in Swellendam and Zeeland and a military administration in the Banten area.

With all the recent and anticipated demands on administrative power, when Friesland was able to change its national focus again, it was switched to administration in August 1699.

xAgBtK.jpg

One of those demands was in the conversion of recently annexed territories into core provinces. That work started on Upper Guelders (68 admin power) in August 1699 – which would eventually be completed in December 1700. Stade (February 1700) and Verden (April 1700) became core provinces and work started on Celle (118 admin, as there had not been a legitimate claim) began when Upper Guelders finished in December 1700.

Republican tradition and the loyalty of the Estates was boosted in August 1699 when the Diet was summoned again. Once more, the Burghers’ agenda was adopted. It would take four and a half years to build the required plantation in distant Frisian Papua.

elJITc.jpg

Starting in late August 1699 and stretching through to July 1700, 12 new regiments would be trained up, with two infantry in Friesland, five infantry and one artillery in Frisian Guinea and four infantry in South-West Africa, gathering in Inhambane. The policy here was to begin creating armies in both those locations that would suffer no attrition through transport, as had worked well in the FIE for many years. Of course, this slowed down reserve manpower accrual but was deemed necessary for future contingencies.

A series of economic events – none of them favourable and not always offering choices of response – were dealt with from September 1699 to April 1700. The most significant of these was a corruption scandal – which Potestaat Stiensma decided to sweep under the carpet to avoid destabilising the government, though at an ongoing cost to the economy.

eoYGxG.jpg

By November 1699, the maximum manpower reserve limit had increased to 105,000 accruing at 927/month, but the expansion of the army had caused the reserve to fall to just 33,163. It would take some time to get it back up again – especially as a few more army builds (noted above) were made after this point.

♥♥ ♥♥♥ ♥♥

The Enlightenment Dawns

As the new century began, the first stirrings of the Enlightenment were detected, starting in Naples. The days of Absolutism were (literally) numbered, with about ten years left to run. Though only embraced in Naples so far, the Enlightenment had begun to spread more widely – and in a few places in Frisian territory.

3jUQMK.jpg

Meanwhile, the monthly balance was back down to around 100 ducats, with trade showing the largest decrease in income (for reasons not explored in detail by Frisian economists at the time). Nonetheless, there was enough money available for another university – this one in the capital Leeuwarden itself – in February 1700, given this would help boost the embracing of the Enlightenment there, for example in Utrecht (also in seven other Frisian provinces in Europe), with the universities in Brügge and Gent also nearing completion.

QaRBqc.jpg

By May, the spread of the new school of thought was spreading more quickly around the country, including in Geldern, celebrated at the birthplace of the printing press. In the FIE, Indrapura’s university was also (more slowly) spreading the Enlightenment there.

VWD00A.jpg

The increased focus on administration in the Republic allowed the Potestaat to increase stability [to +3 for 173 admin] in November 1700.

More government decisions were made in the following months, the most significant being to reject the the minting of new higher purity coins, at the cost as heft increase to inflation. Republican tradition was only just now recovering from a previous hit. Instead, it was decided to immediately counteract the inflation increase through a state administrative intervention.

09fgvm.jpg

Finally, engineers advised in August 1701 that the Dutch Polders in Amsterdam could be upgraded again [from ‘Noteworthy’ (Level I) to Level II], but to do so would cost almost all the current treasury reserve of 2,300 ducats. The idea was shelved for now, as those cash reserves may be needed for other contingencies …

♥♥ ♥♥♥ ♥♥

The FIE and Asia

Friesland was still eyeing off extending its Javanese holdings at the expense of Sunda in October 1698. But Malacca’s continued involvement in a local war in Borneo meant it would most likely not be available to assist a Frisian war of aggression there and thus not be available to offset the power of Ayutthaya and Sunda’s other smaller allies of Palembang, Kutai and Lanfang. Given Friesland only had its FIE naval and army detachments available in this theatre, war now (with manpower reserves still quite low) was not considered prudent.

But this did not stop the Potestaat from using his considerable spy network in Sunda to create two new claims, to add to that on Kotagede, in September 1699. For when a suitable opportunity may arise.

yDtmwE.jpg

With military manpower a key concern during this period, some ‘benign neglect’ allowed a long period of increased recruiting in Demak to begin in July 1700.

ABhPcF.jpg

In regional news, Portugal concluded a white peace with Sunda in August 1700, leaving them at war with Blambangan, now alone against the colonial superpower – but still ahead in this small corner of the East Indies.

In a divided China, Shun and its ally Korea were forced to accept a punishing peace imposed by Russia in November 1700, allowing the Tsar to annex 14 Shun and 9 Korean provinces!

ZOFqqO.jpg

But in better geopolitical news for Friesland, not long after Portugal agreed to a humiliating peace with Blambangan, having to pay reparations for ten years and actually ceding the island of Sumba to the small Javanese country. At this stage, the whole world was almost at peace, with the Malaccan-Berau war and a small border war in Africa being the only two known international conflicts in the world. This would not last, of course!

VUGokz.jpg

Indeed, in March 1701 the spy network in Sunda reported (due to the ‘loose lips’ of Sunda’s indiscreet ruler) that they were planning to attack the much-persecuted Scottish expatriate state. This rumour was proven true in early June 1701.

The once-great (and Imperial) but now much reduced Kingdom of Wu was reported in July 1701 to be beset by internal strife that would plague it for the next ten years.

3DM6jn.jpg

And the opportunistic Ayutthaya proved that a jackal was always ready to attack a wounded animal when they declared an imperialist war on Wu just a month later.

a3GpPs.jpg


♥♥ ♥♥♥ ♥♥

Developments in Africa

With further expansion in Europe on the back-burner and the time not ripe for war in Java in October 1698, consideration of the WIC Charter Mission led to a new appraisal of the situation in the Granadan expatriate realm on the Ivory Coast.

WM3w5h.jpg

For now, its reasonably sized army (23 regiments) and powerful African allies Tunis and Morocco both still mitigated against a war of expansion in Guinea. But as noted above, this did not stop Frisian planning for a future conflict, with a local colonial army soon under training in Frisian Guinea.

In order to provide some time to react in case of a Kilwan thrust into Inhambane, the small colonial army being built there would be supported by the construction of a castle there, with three manpower development increases [42, 43 and 45 military power] and an expansion of infrastructure [46 admin power] allowing construction to commence on 22 December 1700. The same was planned for Bonny on the Granadan border in Guinea, but there was insufficient power available to start this yet.

Then in March 1701, the situation in Africa began to change radically. First, Morocco declared war on the small coastal realm of Jolof. The very same day Aragon launched a ‘Holy War’ against Tunis, creating a much wider conflict that brought Castile and Portugal in against Tunis and its major allies Morocco and Granada.

Vbv3Xw.jpg

This changed the equation considerably and, hoping to exploit this major distraction, Friesland began to assemble an expeditionary force to send to Guinea as soon as word reached them of the broader wars. A combined battle and transport fleet would rendezvous with 22 regiments in Den Haag.

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And having learned from past lessons, a willing Castile was asked for and granted basing rights for passing Frisian fleets, to break up the long journey and lower seaborne attrition.

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In addition, it was ensured that only coastal routes were used, to again minimise the toll on the troops being transported, who left port in mid-March aboard the combined 2nd Fleet.

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In the period from late March to early June 1701, Kaabu, Granada, Kanem Bornu and Morocco all asked for military access to Frisian territory (presumably to get at the Castilians in South Africa). All these requests were rejected, or course. But a Castilian request for the same on 6 June was happily approved.

When 2nd Fleet docked in Coruña, only 1% of the 22,000 troops embarked had succumbed to attrition. But a longer voyage was now at hand all the way to Guinea on 1 May, as the inimical Portuguese would not countenance a similar basing arrangement. [Game note: They started on the 1st of the month to get as much time on the monthly ‘attrition clock’ as possible.]

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By 6 June they were half way past Morocco and had suffered another 1% attrition. Leger van Geldern pulled into Bonny on 9 August, having lost only 1,100 men since leaving Coruña (5%). They would combine with the colonial force already in place and use the rest of the month to recuperate from their voyage.

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The fleet returned to Friesland straight away, in anticipation of another contingent being sent.

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War with Granada

Not wishing to waste any time, war was declared on Granada soon after the army in Guinea had fully recovered its strength. They were soon marching across the border to Warri. As expected, Granada’s allies came to their aid – though Frisian planners were betting on the existing distractions in the north to prevent major interventions in Granada by Morocco or Tunis.

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But in an unexpected bonus, Savoy offered to join the war although pre-war consultations had not been so promising. The invitation was gladly issued and promptly accepted. Their favourable views of Friesland just outweighed the distance of the war and the foibles of Savoy’s ruler.

oe5byP.jpg

This would considerably rebalance the total forces on either side and gave the Potestaat a far greater sense of confidence that the opportunistic gamble would pay off.

My mid-September, the 2nd Fleet was able to identify the main Granadan army moving north-west through Portuguese Guinea, just as Leger van Geldern was about to enter Warri unopposed.

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By 2 October, the Granadans were in Sierra Leoa and the bulk of the Moroccan army was there and to the north.

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Savoy had started with a range of useful blockades of enemy ports, though not all of these would be maintained in coming weeks. They would however later engage in a couple of large sea battles.

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And the other African war had already seen Moroccan and Tunisian territory taken in the north as large Portuguese and Castilian armies advanced.

Two weeks later, a Castilian colonial army of 13,000 men entered southern Frisian Guinea, taking advantage of their military access agreement and were in Cameroon by the 18th. That day, Warri fell to a short siege. Eight days later Leger van Geldern started its siege of Benin.

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Benin was duly occupied a month later as the army pushed on to the capital, Ijebu, which was reached on 6 December. An large artillery barrage was ordered soon after arrival, considerably advancing the siege on the rudimentary capital fort.

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The 2nd Fleet reached Den Haag on 5 January 1702 and immediately embarked another 20,000 troops for the long voyage to Guinea. Things there may have started well, but the Potestaat wanted some additional insurance for his invading army so far from home.

The war’s progress was considerably advanced just three days later with the fall of Ijebu and assistance from a New Frisian fleet of 14 frigates blockading Granadan ports also helped the cause, as did some renewed blockades by Savoy and some battles at sea won by the Savoyards. The Castilian army had moved further east to do some besieging of its own of Granadan territory.

ki6yCm.jpg

The first phase of the war had gone off like clockwork. But a long way lay ahead before Frisian objectives – the annexing of at least two Granadan provinces in Guinea – could be realised.

Endnote: I played somewhat past this point in the session, but will not spoil re what comes next when replying to comments.
 
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In a divided China, Shun and its ally Korea were forced to accept a punishing peace imposed by Russia in November 1700, allowing the Tsar to annex 14 Shun and 9 Korean provinces!
I hope Ottos go after the Russians soon

The once-great (and Imperial) but now much reduced Kingdom of Wu was reported in July 1701 to be beset by internal strife that would plague it for the next ten years.
Taiwan is at the end of the VOC mission chain, just saying!

For now, its reasonably sized army (23 regiments) and powerful African allies Tunis and Morocco both still mitigated against a war of expansion in Guinea. But as noted above, this did not stop Frisian planning for a future conflict, with a local colonial army soon under training in Frisian Guinea.
Would Granada join if you declared on Kanem Bornu? Do they have strong allies?

This changed the equation considerably and, hoping to exploit this major distraction, Friesland began to assemble an expeditionary force to send to Guinea as soon as word reached them of the broader wars. A combined battle and transport fleet would rendezvous with 22 regiments in Den Haag.
Oh no need for the above, things seem to sort on their own :)

started its siege of Benin.
a good province to eventually take
 
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Of interest, Portugal had at some point recently ended its alliance with France, though it did maintain one with Frisian ally Aragon – and rival Kilwa.
Good for you that the France-Portugal alliance sorted itself out. Now you could either attack Kilwa, attack Portugal, or have Aragon break their alliance with Portugal using favors.
However, Portugal’s directly ruled empire generated a force of 276,000 soldiers and 125 ships, with a healthy manpower reserve. Then its six colonial subjects could contribute another 417,000 troops and 204 ships. This would dwarf the military support of Friesland and its own two colonies by an enormous margin.
As long as you're sure you can get naval supremacy, the colonial troops are less scary than they seem. They only have so many transport ships.
That would then lead to the easy fulfilment of subsequent ambitions in the Caribbean and North America.
A good plan.
Given Frisia had no vassal states at this time
You can look in the macrobuilder to see if any nations are willing or close to accepting vassalization. It's a nice peaceful way to expand.
Republican tradition and the loyalty of the Estates was boosted in August 1699 when the Diet was summoned again. Once more, the Burghers’ agenda was adopted. It would take four and a half years to build the required plantation in distant Frisian Papua.
You should probably also seize land when summoning the diet to get more crownland.
Kaabu, Granada, Kanem Bornu and Morocco all asked for military access to Frisian territory (presumably to get at the Castilians in South Africa). All these requests were rejected, or course. But a Castilian request for the same on 6 June was happily approved.
Military access isn't mutually exclusive. So giving access to one nation, gives access to all nations in the war.
As expected, Granada’s allies came to their aid – though Frisian planners were betting on the existing distractions in the north to prevent major interventions in Granada by Morocco or Tunis.
It might've been a good idea to let Morocco and Tunis fight the Castillians a bit first. Any war exhaustion, debt they accrue means they could break their alliance with Granada.
But a long way lay ahead before Frisian objectives – the annexing of at least two Granadan provinces in Guinea – could be realised.
And hopefully you take more than that.
 
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Was the building boom also partially financed by the massive amounts of gold gained from the peace treaties with the more minor states? If not, what are you doing with that gold?
The ducats from the peace treaties were not that large - about 30 from Goslar and 45 from Mainz. So really, it was more the existing savings from income and the big windfall that funded the building boom(s). A buffer for contingencies/emergencies will be left.
Interesting, now realised that part previously missed while reading.

Checked back the images again and it seems to be conscription centres were built on Cameroon, Calabar, Gorontalo, Soppeng, Pagarruyung, Poso, Mamuju, Cirebon, and Flores provinces.

Err... apparently missed a lot, have to ask:
Sorry are these provinces not assigned to trade companies?
 
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This new war against Granada seems like a good opportunity to expand in Africa.

Poor China. I'm interested in what a potentially reunified China might do about the territories lost to Russia and Ayutthaya.
 
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Still here. I'm up to page 10. Frisia has done well for itself. Shame that England stumbled out of the gate early on, giving France carte-blanche in the New World. Guess I'll have to brush up on my French.
 
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Finally caught up! :)

It's so interesting to see West Africa be thoroughly colonized by Morocco, Tunis, and Granada. It is perhaps somewhat fitting that you do so in turn to them, or perhaps just a morbid reminder of inevitable decline.

Nonetheless, this war seems like an excellent decision for the expansion of Frisian freedom. It certainly helps round out a tidy little empire...
 
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Just finished the marathon session called Page 11. I don't think I've ever seen so many graphics on one page in my life :). I was impressed with Scotland grabbing most of Central America, no doubt pissing off the locals with their bagpipes, haggis and tossing cabers off the step pyramids. That is, until England got their crap together and started ruining the fun. On to Page 12.

This is really good.
 
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I hope Ottos go after the Russians soon
That would be useful: a plague on both their houses!
Taiwan is at the end of the VOC mission chain, just saying!
:D A bit beyond my range at the moment, but we shall see what future years permit!
a good province to eventually take
Yes, one of the key targets.
Good for you that the France-Portugal alliance sorted itself out. Now you could either attack Kilwa, attack Portugal, or have Aragon break their alliance with Portugal using favors.
Was very pleased to see that, though both remain formidable and have some other allies. But yes; what I'd really like to see is both of them go against each other and perhaps some colonial break-aways. Perhaps some opportunities either in the Low Countries or America.
As long as you're sure you can get naval supremacy, the colonial troops are less scary than they seem. They only have so many transport ships.
True: my main worry is what those troops could do to my own colonies, especially New Friesland. I think our FIE base could help win over in Australia though.
A good plan.
It does give a few stepping-stone objectives to work towards.
You can look in the macrobuilder to see if any nations are willing or close to accepting vassalization. It's a nice peaceful way to expand.
Thanks for that, hadn't realised that bit was available! Just had a look and currently, there are no potential vassal or tributary states available, but I will now be checking periodically. <the Potestaat tips his tricorn hat in appreciation ;)>
You should probably also seize land when summoning the diet to get more crownland.
OK, will look at that next time - but won't it piss the estates off? Or it's worth more than any minor disapproval?
Military access isn't mutually exclusive. So giving access to one nation, gives access to all nations in the war.
Interesting. That seems a bit strange actually: I'd have though the arrangements would have been more specific.
It might've been a good idea to let Morocco and Tunis fight the Castillians a bit first. Any war exhaustion, debt they accrue means they could break their alliance with Granada.
Hmm, possibly prophetic words: we shall soon see whether that will be a factor or not in the war.
And hopefully you take more than that.
That's definitely the plan!
Interesting, now realised that part previously missed while reading.

Checked back the images again and it seems to be conscription centres were built on Cameroon, Calabar, Gorontalo, Soppeng, Pagarruyung, Poso, Mamuju, Cirebon, and Flores provinces.

Err... apparently missed a lot, have to ask:
Sorry are these provinces not assigned to trade companies?
Yes, that's right CCs. Did I say something else? Of those, only Flores is currently in a trade company. The western Java states and Flores are in the Moluccas TC, with the eastern tip of Sumatra and southern Borneo provinces in the Indonesian TC.
This new war against Granada seems like a good opportunity to expand in Africa.
The mission tree has driven it, but it seemed a good opportunity once I figured out how to better minimise that transport attrition.
Poor China. I'm interested in what a potentially reunified China might do about the territories lost to Russia and Ayutthaya.
You'd think they wouldn't be too pleased at these foreign incursions of such barbarians into the Middle Kingdom. But at the moment, Shu seems the only strong state (and they now have the Emperor). Not sure if they do or will have the strength to do much.
Thank you for the update. What is Ayutthaya doing in China? Granada's coast is yours for the taking. Granada depends on Morocco/Tunis when they have problems, Granada is very vulnerable.
I guess they're just being opportunistic with Wu weakness. Granada is vulnerable, especially if the other two are distracted. Which they should be at the moment. But will that last? Hmmm ...
Finally caught up! :)
Lovely! I've noted your progress through the back chapters via the reacts with great appreciation. :)
It's so interesting to see West Africa be thoroughly colonized by Morocco, Tunis, and Granada. It is perhaps somewhat fitting that you do so in turn to them, or perhaps just a morbid reminder of inevitable decline.
Both good points. With Castile having really sewn up southern Africa for now, the missions have driven me to look at expanding along the Guinea Coast. But even attacked so heavily from the north, Morocco in particular, which was a great power for a long time, is pretty formidable and has proved more resilient - and troublesome - than I had expected.
Nonetheless, this war seems like an excellent decision for the expansion of Frisian freedom. It certainly helps round out a tidy little empire...
Let's hope so - but the price may end up proving either steep, or hard to pay for.

To All: next chapter (the second half of the recent play session) will be up soon. With a lot happening, it will cover just one year. The joys/temptations of moving to a 'live' gameplay AAR situation! Thanks for all the comments, advice, questions and support. :D
 
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@Lord Durham I'll respond separately to your kind comments to avoid spoiling.
Still here. I'm up to page 10. Frisia has done well for itself. Shame that England stumbled out of the gate early on, giving France carte-blanche in the New World. Guess I'll have to brush up on my French.
Lovely to hear. Progress has really been quite pleasing (and a bit surprising) to date. Even if it all crashes and burns at the hands of France or some other top rank power at some point, it will have been a worthwhile first run at EU. England did start pretty poorly and France grew powerful too quickly for my fledgling Friesland to get any further south into Belgium. But as you will see England's quiver is not quite empty yet: the kippers, tea and crumpets are safe enough for now! :D
Just finished the marathon session called Page 11. I don't think I've ever seen so many graphics on one page in my life . I was impressed with Scotland grabbing most of Central America, no doubt pissing off the locals with their bagpipes, haggis and tossing cabers off the step pyramids. That is, until England got their crap together and started ruining the fun. On to Page 12.
Especially in these early game-save derived retrospective chapters there are a lot of graphics used to measure progress, events and developments in a summary form to try to reconstruct what happened (combined with a memory that can't recall them all, given the passage of time since those bits were played). But you are fast approaching my own catch-up point of 1693 when 'normal' AAR programming will be resumed and we go 'live' again, with play-and-post chapters.

A combination of bagpipes, step-pyramids, caber-throwing and Aztec blood sacrifice at expatriate highland games are indeed a thought to conjure with! :D
This is really good.
Thanks you very much. I hope the 'second phase' of the AAR will also prove as entertaining - there will be more maps, events and detail, that's for sure, as the time scale slows down somewhat with all the new material available. Also some more work put into the illustrative part of the screenshots.

Really appreciate the support and effort involved in working through the chapters. :) From one old-timer to another! ;)
 
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Yes, that's right CCs. Did I say something else? Of those, only Flores is currently in a trade company. The western Java states and Flores are in the Moluccas TC, with the eastern tip of Sumatra and southern Borneo provinces in the Indonesian TC.
Sorry to repeat; the first would be clear enough but the second part confused again. Is only Flores assigned to a trade company and rest are made a state, else are they all assigned to trade companies? Names are only flavour based on the trade nodes.

Asking to point out that a conscription centre normally adds only +2 army force limit in a state province with no local autonomy. If the province is assigned to a trade company, it will have 90% local autonomy (varies based on other modifiers by ideas and reforms, but never 0%), which reduces the gain to only 10%. So the conscription centre on a trade company province will increase the force limit by only +0,2.

So it is burning money and wasting a building slot to build a conscription centre, or barracks, temple, shipyard, docks on provinces that are assigned to trade companies. Trade buildings, so marketplace and manufactories, are not affected or the effects can be mitigated (goods produced are increased, and there are trade company investment buildings) - that is the point.
 
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Chapter 39: A Disturbance in the Force of Freedom (1702)
Chapter 39: A Disturbance in the Force of Freedom (1702)

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The Granadan War – January to June 1702

Near the end of January 1702 the fleet ferrying the reinforcement army to Guinea made port early in Cantabria on the Spanish north coast to minimise attrition. They would set sail again for another short hop to the south-west of Spain on 1 February.

Down in Guinea, Leger van Geldern was marching out of recently occupied Ijeba across to Ondo, the next target of the invasion, by 30 January. Just a couple of days later, a large New Frisian fleet doing blockade work off the Grain Coast spotted the main Granadan army and a large Moroccan one along that coast, plus a slightly smaller Granadan fleet heading their way from the east.

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Battle was joined on 9 February where, despite New Friesland having the advantage in combat vessels (even after a Granadan La Plata flotilla arrived a few days later) the enemy won a small victory, capturing one New Frisian light frigate and breaking their blockade. Perhaps the presence of three larger ships and a qualified admiral had made the difference.

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The Frisian siege of Ondo by the 28,000 men of Leger van Geldern started on 15 February and would take the province by 18 March, as the transport fleet was docking in Huelva in preparation for the long voyage south, which would not commence until they had fully resupplied on 1 April [ie the monthly attrition tick-over point].

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By mid-May, a large Moroccan field army was moving through Oyo but heading north-east, while the main Granadan army approached Ijebu from the west to support a small force from Kanem Bornu which was already working to retake it.

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Leger van Geldern was positioned in Benin, weighing up the odds for an attack while keeping a wary eye on the Moroccan army to the north and awaiting the 20,000 reinforcements en route from Europe.

They were still waiting in early June as the enemy regained Ijebu and the Moroccans heading further east, to engage the Castilians who had occupied Yola by then.

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Just five days later, any Frisian plans to push back into Ijebu to retake it were put on long-term hold. The transport fleet – with its heavy two-decker and chebeck escort – had reached the Ivory Coast on 11 June, where the small La Platan flotilla unwisely attacked them (probably blundering into them before they could turn around). But that was not the chilling news they reported by fast messenger boat …

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Virtually the whole of the remaining Moroccan field army of over 100,000 men in four separate divisions had been spotted on the Gold Coast, heading east! So while the complete destruction of the enemy flotilla was nice to report, the entire strategy for the Granadan War had been turned on its head.

The enemy now had around 170,000 troops in the Guinean theatre. The 20,000 Frisian reinforcements who would soon be arriving did not even come close to matching that level of opposition. Back home, the 40 regiments of Leger van Latgalia began relocating from Verden to Brügge in case they might be called on to send another contingent (currently limited to 22 regiments at a time) to Guinea.

This raised the question of why, when faced (along with Tunis) with a massive invasion from the north by the Aragonese Holy War, Morocco would basically be sending its whole army way south to help defend Granada, with seemingly only a small Tunisian army to resist them.

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Leger van Prignitz began disembarking in Bonny on 27 June (having lost only 800 men to attrition since leaving Spain) to a completely altered operational landscape. As the large enemy force closed in, Leger van Geldern was already falling back on Bonny to ensure it was not ambushed by a far larger enemy army.

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War in Asia

In early January 1702, a major war erupted between the Deccan Empire and Persia on the one side, making an imperialist claim on the powerful Bengal. Bengal was supported by a significant alliance, which included Frisian ally Malacca (which was still at war against Berau, in Borneo).

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This meant that Malacca would be in no position to assist any Frisian attack on Sunda even when they finally won their war against Berau and annexed the whole country on 12 July.

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Despite this, Friesland made another strategic gamble by assessing Ayutthaya, Sunda’s main regional benefactor, would be too distant and preoccupied to provide much assistance to Sunda – which would need to be rapidly overrun, just in case. A declaration of war, ostensibly to claim Kotagede but with far wider aims, was duly declared.

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This decision was taken even knowing of the approaching Moroccan army in Guinea: it was decided the forces to be used were quite separate and the Sundanese adventure could be made relatively limited and rapid, quite separate from what now looked to be a long and drawn-out African campaign.

The large army in Java had been split in two in preparation for the surprise attack. New generals were selected for both, one coming from Europe, the other being Potestaat Stiensma himself, who was a highly competent military commander in his own right.

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As they began heading to the Sundanese border in the north and south, the main FIE battle fleet set out from its base in Kalapa to patrol the Sunda Strait. Four days later, a small Sundanese force of five regiments was spotted making the crossing to Flores, which had no garrison or fort. It would be left to fend for itself as Stiensma concentrated on the ‘main game’ in Java.

The same was done when eight regiments from Lanfang invested Katapang in southern Borneo on 26 July. That province now had a large star fortress to guard it, so should be able to hold out for many months yet (if not indefinitely) against such a small and lightly equipped besieging force.

But at sea, the large Frisian trade protection fleet ambushed an Ayutthayan flotilla of light frigates off Cape Cà Mau. Two ships were captured and the rest sunk by 30 July.

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The two captured ships and eight other (slightly) damaged Frisian light frigates were sent back to the fleet base at Kalapa for repairs, while the rest of the trade protection fleet continued its business.

The first gains in Java came without challenge on 30 August and 2 September, with the two armies moving onto their next targets.

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If the main Sundanese army, by then located in Madura, decided to come across the strait to Surabaya, they could be pounced on and destroyed, so that province was left open. Sunda would not however fall into the trap. Sunda’s response was the occupation of Flores by 13 September, which Friesland continued to ignore.

The trade protection fleet had another small skirmish off the Coast of Sumatra later that month, sinking one light frigate from Lanfang and capturing the other, largely intact, from 14-17 September.

Kediri and Malang were occupied without incident from 12-14 October, with the two armies now moving to converge back in Surabaya to prepare for a cross-strait assault on the Sundanese capital of Madura.

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To enable that, the FIE battle fleet was despatched to the Straits of Lombok to secure the way across when the army arrived in Surabaya on 20 October.

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The Sundanese fleet did not oppose the move, staying in port as the army began to cross on 12 November. The battle began the 21st, with General Stellingwerf’s army arriving a little earlier than Stiensma’s. But all the Frisian troops were engaged by 28 November, as a comparison of the characteristics of the standard infantry regiments on both sides was made of the Frisian musketeers against the Asian Musketeers of Sunda. The Frisian regiments had a slight advantage on a man-to-man basis.

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A solid victory was won by 8 December and the losing enemy army had no avenue of retreat, forced to surrender or melt into the countryside. In an interesting side note, both armies had been commanded by their respective heads of state.

Stiensma stayed on to conduct the siege of the capital’s fort, ordering an artillery barrage to speed up the process while the other army crossed back to Surabaya.

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The war was swinging firmly in Friesland’s direction and would continue to do so as Kotagede was retained and the capital was eventually taken. Casualties so far had been relatively light, a mix of battle and attrition losses.

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The Coalition

On 7 February 1702, the Austrian Holy Roman Emperor demanded that Celle be returned as unlawfully occupied territory, which (as it had before) Friesland rejected. This further soured regional opinion and by mid-July the very small independent realm of Berg announced it was initiating a coalition against Frisian aggression.

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In the days and weeks ahead, a series of North German countries would join this Coalition: Dortmund and Münster in July, the larger Cologne plus Strasbourg and Bremen in August, followed by Aachen and then Brunswick in September. The latter’s views of Friesland illustrated some of the trends Friesland had to confront, plus the complication of Hannover’s sacking but then liberation.

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The unlawful holding of Imperial territory and recent aggressive expansion more than outweighed religious commonalities for Brunswick and many other local powers. However, neither of Friesland’s German allies Franconia or Bavaria showed any sign yet of defecting.

The Palatinate joined the coalition on 14 October but no more did by mid-December. The red-shaded countries below formed the nine-power coalition by 8 December 1702.

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It was partly this threat that stopped Friesland from sending any more troops to Guinea when the fleet returned a week or so later. The other factor related to the situation that had developed by that time down in Africa.

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The Granadan War – July to December 1702

The Leger van Prignitz arrived in Bonny on 18 July, joining Leger van Geldern there – and causing local supply shortages. At that time, the first Moroccan army had reappeared to Frisian view to attack the badly outnumbered Castilian army in Yola.

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As the main Moroccan army approached along the coast from the west, Leger van Prignitz began a staged Frisian withdrawal south through Calabar, with the larger Leger van Geldern forming a rear guard in Bonny to minimise attrition.

The separation was achieved on 31 July, with the small army from Kanem Bornu retaking Ondo on 8 August and the main enemy armies progressed through Ijebu.

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The Granadan army had joined the Moroccans in Yola, where it appeared the Castilian army had been destroyed.

Rather than staying to liberate Yola, both those armies headed south-west to join the major push to retake Granadan holdings and pursue the withdrawing Frisian armies through Guinea. On 1 September, Leger van Geldern had come into the firing line of far larger enemy forces and was following their comrades to Calabar and then Cameroon.

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Benin was lost on 9 September as the Moroccans began advancing on Bonny – but the Frisians had moved in time and would avoid a one-sided battle. The enemy arrived in Bonny on 25 September and Warri was retaken by the enemy two days later as Friesland’s position continued to unravel.

However, the Frisians stayed ahead of the enemy advance, hoping attrition would whittle them down and perhaps the distraction of the massive Aragon-led invasion of Tunis and the northern Moroccan heartland might eventually draw them away, as the two armies’ presence temporarily overlapped in Cameroon on 9 October.

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Leger van Prignitz was in Gabon eight days later and continued south in Castilian South Africa, exercising the reciprocal rights of their military access arrangement.

As they headed back home from their second army drop-off, the 2nd Fleet encountered a large Moroccan fleet in the Lusitanian Sea on 28 October. A large majority of the Moroccan fleet was made up of transports, while the 2nd Fleet had 19 two-deckers and 14 chebecks, which had a significant tactical advantage over the outnumbered Moroccans.

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The Frisians were further aided by having the superior admiral and the arrival the following day of six Portuguese light frigates that joined in the attack on their mutual enemy. The Moroccans broke contact on 8 November, having lost four of their large escorts and a couple of transports.

Moroccan, Granadan and a recently arrived Tunisian army occupied Calabar and Bonny and then retook Idah (respectively) from 8-17 November.

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In the north, forces of the Aragonese alliance ran rampant through Tunis, with Savoyard armies (numbering over 100,000 men) now rampaging through Tunis as well, very usefully taking provinces in Friesland’s name. Aragon also had at least one army deep in Moroccan territory as others began to take some provinces on the Mediterranean coast. But would the Moroccans currently off in Guinea react as the Potestaat hoped?

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By 8 December, Morocco was showing no sign of calling off the pursuit as the Frisian armies sought refuge deep in Castilian territory as Cameroon was besieged next.

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Losses had as yet been light, all troops from attrition, with no Frisian ships lost, though Savoy had lost some vessels in their victory at the Battle of Cape Bon. In Tunisia, by that time the Savoyards had made a little more progress. And Aragonese and Portuguese armies continued to swarm against no resistance from Morocco, though Tunis tried to hold them back while greatly outnumbered.

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Domestic Affairs

In April and September 1702, the Frisian economy was negatively impacted by a merchant failure – which required a government bail-out to avoid long-term consequences for trade in the FIE – and a corruption scandal in the colonies whose remedy added significantly to inflationary pressures.

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But there was better news in October, when economic growth led to a boost in trade power that advisers expected to last for the next 15 years.

Given the diplomatic problems Friesland was suffering in digesting the recent gains in North Germany, in early September increased administrative effort was put into bringing Celle – which had not been one of the existing claims during the recent nationalist war against Magdeburg and its allies – fully into the Frisian Republic.

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The financial burden of the war had significantly increased military maintenance costs, including [automated] actions to bring all fortifications back to full readiness. For the Navy, the ships captured in various battles during the year had raised its strength to a little over its maintenance force limit. The budget remained in surplus, but the bottom line had been heavily reduced.

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Action would be taken to review fort maintenance to see if savings could again be prudently made. But first up, the Potestaat moved to rein in inflation again after September’s ‘Viceroy Scandal’, though it remained at 1.45%.

Finally, the Enlightenment was slowly spreading across almost all of Friesland’s European provinces, though it had not yet been fully adopted in any of them. This also affected Friesland’s standing as a world power: its ranking slipped by one to eighth when Scandinavia became the first of the great powers to embrace the Enlightenment. Friesland’s naval and trade power continued to be its strongest suits.

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On the pop-up included above, it talks about ‘extra costs incurred’ as a result of not yet achieving the institution. But I can’t work out what this actually relates to. Anyone know?
 
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