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Anamika to an unknown settlement on Krete

To Titiku, the ruler of [...] say: Word of King Anamika: He sends this tablet to you, saying to you, be prepared, for the king comes to the land of Kapita. Be prepared!
The king comes to claim vengeance for the misdeeds of the Aiyara. All who aid him in this will be rewarded greatly. So prepare well so that the king does not find fault in you.
And prepare for the ships of the king. And prepare for his men a great deal of food, and wine, and a great deal of anything a man can want. He comes to lay his enemies at his feet.
And know that the king bears the favour of Anat and is strong like the sea. His ships are many and his soldiers are fierce.

~*~

Anamika to the Wilusans

Say to Ilu, my brother, King in the land of Wilusa: Word of your brother, the King of Alasiya; To your house, to your land, to your armies, well being.
Behold, I send to you as envoy Sima, son of Pitaya, master of the ships. He speaks with my words brother, so listen well, everything he tells to you is as though I were telling you.
I say to my brother now is the time. Now is the time for repayment of the evil deeds done by the men of Ahhiyawa. For I strike them with all my strength. They will tremble as men at sea in fear of a winter storm. So strike them now, brother, and great victories shall be had.
 
1316-1313 BCE

d3p0vVu.jpg

Wooden figurines depicting Nubian archers. From a royal grave dating back to the Eleventh Dynasty.

After a short era of retreat caused by the Amarna succession wars and other internal strife, Egypt managed to restore its focus in the Canaan. Egyptian garrisons in the core cities were quickly rebuilt, the necessary manpower attracted with massive campaigns in Egypt, often aided by the Atenist clergy. No more could Smenkhaten rely on further bands of Medjay or Kushites in general, so for the first time in a decent amount of time the core of the Egyptian policing force in the Canaan were native Egyptians, not vassals or unreliable mercenaries. Defending the prestige of the godlike Pharaoh and Atenist religion from enemies both within and outside was regarded as a pious task by many of the more fanatic supporters of the new religious policy. Thus the age of chaos in the land of Retenu came to a slow end, with the cities and towns slowly recovering from the raids of the pirates and Semitic nomads. Restoration in the region was also aided by a heavy Egyptian investment to local trade, as Egyptian vessels became a more common sight in all the cities from Gaza to Tyre, bringing in valuable goods and repairing crucial trade links. Furthermore a heavier presence of Egyptian warships and garrisons served to discourage any further pirate adventurers from Alashiya, albeit the Pharaoh also sent traders and envoys to this island of Atate.
[Trade income boost to Egypt next turn, socioeconomic situation in the Canaan slowly improving]

There was however a new source of threats, or maybe rather a resurgent one, to the Atenist establishment. In the south the hereditary viceroy of Kush, Amenhotep-Huy, had been making more and more independent moves over the past decade, questioning the actual nature of the relationship between him and Akhetaten. The truce negotiated during the War of Amarna Succession was certainly questioned when news reached the north of a mobilization and strengthening of garrisons and armies in the land of Kush. With a rapid advance due to a lack in population and effective fortresses, the warriors recently employed by the Viceroy smashed northwards, seizing large swatches of the part of Lower Nubia still under the control of the Pharaoh. After these quick and almost bloodless victories, Amenhotep declared himself King of Kush in his own right, this was in the summer of 1314. A similar declaration had been given in Kush earlier during the Amarna war, but rescinded and forfeited in the interests of peace. Now however, Amenhotep and the Kushites had seemingly had enough time to build up and prepare for a proper conflict, as opposed to the skirmishes that had been fought with them and Atenists earlier. With Kush and especially its partly Egyptian elite still ardently favoring the traditional gods, Amenhotep found a very easy way to rally his people for a renewed war. If the resources of Kush were enough to actually challenge the strong Atenist position in Upper Egypt was however quite questionable, as proven by the lack of proper advance past the first cataract. The response from the Pharaoh came the next year, with the new divisions staffed with Atenist faithful marching south down the Nile, seizing back a portion of Nubia but failing to dislodge the Kushites from all the towns and fortresses seized, mainly due to a hostile environment, poor knowledge of the region and difficulties in supplying the army. In 1313 a detachment of the Army of the Sun managed to reach the first cataract, but was encircled and devastatingly smashed by the Kushites who then proceeded to once again reoccupy large portions of northern Lower Nubia.
[Kush and Egypt at war]

A peace in the west would be remembered as last of Šuppiluliuma’s great feats of warfare and diplomacy, culminating the restoration of Hittite might in all corners of Anatolia and northern Levant. From his deathbed the Great King dictated the peace terms of the new order in the west, assigning Manapa-Tarhunta and Maskhuiluwa as vassal kings and allocating to them some Arzawan territory in return for tribute and gifts expected of vassalage. The core of Arzawa remained in the hands of Uhha-Ziti, albeit considerable territory was annexed into the Hittite province of Happalla. Spoils were divided and gifts sent to the Hittite allies and subjects who took part in the battles, and small Hittite garrisons deployed in the region to ensure a lasting peace. The retreat of the main army and the fact that Arzawa wasn’t entirely razed off the map somewhat improved the tense relations with the Ahhiyawans, who were now busy fighting the rising Alashiyan threat. In fact the Ahhiyawan colonists of Millawanda sent a delegation to Hattusa to greet the Great King with gifts, but great Šuppiluliuma had passed away by then, in the summer of 1316.
[Peace in the West, slight improvement to relations with Ahhiyawa, Seha and Mira new vassal territories]

The succession was a carefully prepared and peaceful matter, as none of the sons or generals of the Great King wanted to upset his legacy, and thus honored the wills and degrees issued by Šuppiluliuma in his last months on the throne. Arnuwanda II, having acquired strong experience as the ruler of Halab and the Syrian territories, succeeded his father in a lavish ceremony following the burial. The Syrian provinces were restructured; Piyaššili the second son was given the viceroyalty of Halab, the third son Muršili Carchemish and finally the most junior one, Zannanza, Ugarit. The splitting of the region eased administration, while also offered each prince less resources for a possible attempt at usurpation. Of these three only Piyaššili ruled in his own right, while the other and more inexperienced princes were in fact mostly under the influence of regional officials and Hittite military officers. With the Hittite military retaining its might and with Arnuwanda II recognized as a potent and powerful leader, almost equal to his father, there were little signs of sedition or rebellion. In 1314 and 1313 there were minor disturbances in the Pala and Kaska lands, caused originally by tribal infighting and disputes over cattle herds, but a quick military expedition quelled them. How long the subject peoples and foreign foes would respect and recognize the powerful legacy of Šuppiluliuma I however still remained to be seen.
[Arnuwanda II succeeds Šuppiluliuma I, restructuring in Syria, stability and peace retained so far, Hittite stability at stable]

The next move of the Babylonians was to try a diplomatic game to overcome the difficulties caused by the stiff resistance of the Hurrians of Arrapha. Kara-ḫardaš sent envoys to the city, offering marriages and freedom from Assyrian and Babylonian rule if the city casted out the Assyrian dignitaries and declared independence in its own right. After an exchange of bribes and under a threat of a renewed attack with the full might of the Kassite army, the city’s priests and king agreed. A coalition of Arraphans and Kassites marched on the crucial city of Arbail, also inhabited by Hurrians, and managed to seize it after a long siege in late 1316. The Babylonians were now in a very good position to advance into Nineveh and the surrounding plains, threatening to put an end to the nascent Assyrian independence. Doubts were cast upon the leadership of Arik-den-ili I, who resorted to ordering massive sacrifices in a desperate attempt to gain the favor of the gods in the face of an almost certain doom. But these prayers and offerings to Aššur the Great would be answered.

With the Kassite military scrambling for its spring campaign in 1315, Kidin-Hutran of Haltamti, who had bid his time for a few years now, decided to make his decisive move. Claiming that Kara-ḫardaš was illegitimate, and citing his Kassite descent by his mother, a daughter of Burna-Buriaš, Kidin-Hutran presented himself as the legitimate king of Karduniaš. He had some support of Babylonian exiles that had backed Kurigalzu too deeply, even though the exiled Elamite-linked prince wasn’t in a position to act in support. The Elamite warbands assembled and crossed into Kassite territory, with bands quickly pushing to the Tigris river. However, these movements that alerted the main Kassite garrisons of the south were a mere distraction. The main Elamite push was aimed at the land of Namri and conducted with experienced vassal troops of the East, along with local tribes. The Elamites seized the city of Halman by surprise and quickly swooped in down the river Diyala, securing an easy route of invasion through the mountainous passes and circumventing Kassite strongholds in Sumeria. In this more mountainous terrain and rugged ground the advantage of the Kassite chariot was quite well nullified, making attempts to counterattack fail, despite of the lighter and smaller composition of the armies of the Haltamti.
[Elam invades Babylonia]

The entrance of Elam to the war, unlike the past one this time against the Babylonians, gave Assyria a significant relief. From near total brink they swooped into new victories, at first marching quickly against Arrapha, and forcing the Hurrian leaders of the city to denounce their ties to Babylon. In a coup the pro-Babylonian royal family was ousted and a new one linked dynastically to Assyria installed. With a total collapse seemingly apparent in Kassite defenses along the Diyala River, the Babylonians were forced to abandon Aššur in late 1315, hastily built fortifications which required huge effort and resources left behind. Not wasting time to lament the destruction and depopulation brought upon their capital city, the vengeful Assyrians marched further south, forcing the Babylonians to abandon most of their forts and towns north of the previous border. In 1314 the Kassites managed to stop an advance by the Elamites further down the river Diyala, defeating Kidin-Hutran at the battle of Meturna. Nevertheless Halman remained occupied by the Elamites, very much threatening any further campaign against Assyria before the force could be dislodged. In the south Elamite armies occupied the sparsely populated and poor regions of Gambulu and Yamutbal east of the Tigris, but failed to take any meaningful cities or actually rich and vital regions of Babylonia proper. An attack towards Esnunna from southwest was beaten off with heavy casualties to the Elamites, allowing the Kassites time to rebuild a formidable host of troops. Assyrians in the north managed to launch a powerful attack on Kar-Ištar, once again seizing the city due to tacit aid from Elamite armies keeping the Kassites occupied. The attrition caused by fighting two enemies at the same time was however getting rather costly for Karduniaš, despite of the defeat of the initial Elamite invasion attempts of her core regions. The Elamite rear, on the other hand, was harassed by the warriors of Zamua and Gutium, but with the Zamuans too few in manpower and the Gutians in a state of decay, this didn’t amount to much, apart for tying up a crucial part of the Elamite military to allow the Babylonians to prevent them from reaching the Tigris in the north.
[Assyrian incomes restored, 50 % chance of stability hit to Babylonia next turn, trade income loss to Elam and Babylonia]

Shuttarna III proved out to be a far more active ruler than his father Artatama II, who had mostly resigned from public after assuming the throne with the help of Hittite arms and did only a few large construction projects or declarations. Shuttarna III however, almost immediately begun to reintroduce and reinforce the reforms and changes begun during the era before Hittite takeover. The question, of course, was how much control the king had over these events, as seemingly a certain court clique, consisting of both Hittite officers and most loyal Mitannian nobles and most brave mariyannu warriors rose into prominence. Most importantly the bureaucratic reforms aimed at restoring provincial administration that was still in shambles was pushed forward by the new king. This along with the recovering trade in Hittite territories west of the Euphrates, as well as a general stability and peace in the vast countryside, allowed the land of Mitanni to continue its slow recovery. The Mitannians also conducted a short campaign in the northern region, forcing back the Išuwan exiles, despite of some of his courtiers arguing for the usefulness of these Hurrian tribesmen if employed as troops or frontier guards. Nevertheless, they were dispersed to the desolate regions now owned by Hayasa-Azzi, or to Hurrian land of Alshe and Nihriya.
[Mitanni tax income set at Mid, royal income to Mid in two turns, 50 % chance of stability boost next turn]

The Alashiyans decided to answer back to the Ahhiyawans in a similar way. In a show of force a grand fleet of Alashiyan warships set sail for Kaptara, or Keftiu as known to the Egyptians. The navy embarked off the shore of the old palatial site of Dikta in the western part of the island, and by 1314 an Alashiyan colony had been founded at the city, with the local Minoan citizens subjugated to Alashiyan rule. This further bolstered Alashiyan standing on the island, allowing them to further expand their influence over the principal trading hub of Konoso, as well as on other sites. With a swift series of naval expeditions, aided by locals, Alashiyans managed to almost completely eradicate the traditionally heavy Ahhiyawan presence and influence on the island. Needless to say, a response was swift, and all Alashiyan shipping venturing too close to the islands of the Ahhiyawans came under brutal attack. To bolster his forces, King Anamika gave a decree ordering that taxes, tributes and dues could now also be paid by having men serving in the Alashiyan armies, an offer extending to various subject peoples of the island. This provided Anamika with a considerable force to use against the Ahhiyawans, both on seas and the contested island. Another front of this struggle for influence opened up in the Hittite vassal principality of Wilusa, but due to an intervention from Hattusa Prince Ilu refrained from taking a side, as after all Hittite relations were sour with both actors.
[Alashiya and Ahhiyawans (yes Mycenaeans) at war]
 
hAGmIXp.png

1312 BCE

Egypt – Noco19

Ruler: Pharaoh Smenkhaten
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): High
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Mid
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Absolute Monarchy
Military: Large Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Amurru, Byblos, Tyre, Sidon, Jerusalem, Further Canaanite States
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Arzawa, Alashiya, Tyre and so forth
Hostile:
At War With: Kush

Hittites – Harpsichord

Ruler: King Arnuwanda II
Treasury: Wealthy
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): High
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Huge Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Halab, Carchemish and Ugarit as princely viceroyalties, Hayasa-Azzi, Kizzuwatna, Lukka, Kaska, Alalakh, Seha, Mira, Arzawa Nominally Wilusa, Pala
Alliances: Hayasa-Azzi, Mitanni, Babylonia
Trade Partners: Alashiya, Wilusa, Mitanni
Hostile:
At War With:

Babylonia – baboushreturns

Ruler: King Kara-ḫardaš
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): High
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Large Levy, Mid Royal Guard
Stability: Serene
Subjects: Dilmun (Viceroyalty played by OPEN)
Alliances: Elam, Hittites
Trade Partners: Gutium, Zamua
Hostile:
At War With: Assyria, Elam

Assyria – Dadarian

Ruler: King Arik-den-ili I
Treasury: Poor
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Hegemonic Kingdom
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Mitanni, Elam
At War With: Babylonia

Elam – Olligarchy

Ruler: King Kidin-Hutran
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Hegemonic Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Assyria
At War With: Babylonia

Mitanni – Rolman99

Ruler: King Shuttarna III
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects: Alshe
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners: Hittites
Hostile: Assyria, Amurru
At War With:

Alashiya – Keinwyn

Ruler: King Anamika
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Tribal Hegemony
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Serene
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Egypt, Hittites, Arzawa, Wilusa, Ahhiyawa
Hostile: Tyre, Byblos
At War With: Ahhiyawa

Amurru – Shynka

Ruler: King Aziru
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): None (Temporary hit due to piracy)
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Tribal Hegemony
Military: Mid Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects: Niye, Qatna, Qidsu, Byblos, Damascus
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Tyre, Mitanni
At War With:

Tyre – Shebedaone

Ruler: King Yariḫ-gabru
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: City Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small City Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Egypt
Hostile: Amurru, Alashiya, Egypt
At War With:

Alalaḫ – Maxwell500

Ruler: King Idrimi II
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: City Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Hittites
Hostile: Alashiya
At War With:

Wilusa – OPEN

Ruler: Ilu
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): None
(Trade): Mid
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Hittites, Ahhiyawa, Arzawa, Lazpa
Hostile:
At War With:

Hayasa-Azzi – Mathrim

Ruler: King Hakkani
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): None
(Trade): Mid
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Tribal Federation
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners:
Hostile:
At War With:

Arzawa – OPEN

Ruler: King Uhha-Ziti
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Federation
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Chaos
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Wilusa, Egypt
Hostile:
At War With:

Kush – MastahCheef117

Ruler: King Amenhotep Huy
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Kingdom
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile:
At War With: Egypt

GM NOTE: Orders due (next)Thursday. The game is far more fun when you send orders, just so that y’all know.
 
A cache of correspondences between King Shuttarna III and a maryannu-sukkal (effectively a warrior-official) named Kartamitra (compare to Sanskrit kṛtamaṅgala-Mitra, "blessed by/of Mitra", Akkadian cuneiform,
ZVrSOjJ.png
ka-ar-ta-mi-it-ra), along with tablets between Kartamitra and the resident Hittite general of Washukanni, Ḫalpašulubi, along with various other recorded acts of gift-giving between Kartamitra and the nobility seem to strongly suggest that Kartamitra was a close and powerful advisor of Shuttarna, or perhaps was even running Mitanni
de facto as a court powerbroker and puppetmaster of Shuttarna. Below are a selection of his tablets to various figures, regarding various topics.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shuttarna, my great king, I prostrate myself before you seven times on my back and seven times on my belly in the dust at your feet.

May all in your palace be well. All is well on my estate. I send to you my loyal slave Zigil-muza, the one with the great black beard to bear you this tablet, he will have the mark of me and my house and my people, my red and yellow sash, upon him. Treat him well and give him wine and food, treat him as you would me, o king. In this slab I write to you this: I have returned from the valleys up north. There I have felled many Hurrim shepherd-kings and their hosts. They will trouble you no more, my king. For their lives I have ended and those survivors I have banished back to Ishuwa, but I removed a hand from all those I captured so that the world may see that they are vanquished.

More news I bring to you, Shuttarna, my great king, whom I prostrate myself before seven times and seven times again. For I have spoken with the sukkalim and the maryannim and they all say that they shall serve you most loyally, and that they shall serve the post you give them. the sukkalim bring you their taxes. The maryannim will fight for you whenever asked. I have brought them to you as brethren, and their wives and children to you as if you were their own husband and father, my king. Those who work not for you be cursed by high Mitra, keeper of treaties, and by Indara, king of gods and men alike, for those who go against their lord are of a treacherous sort. Never will they see the palace of the gods or a new, better life upon the earth when life-giving Indara deems it to breathe their souls into flesh anew.

That is the news of which I tell you. Kartamitra, who prostrates himself seven times and seven times more before great Shuttarna had this written for you, to tell of the work he has done before his king and that Zigil-muza the loyal slave will deliver the slab unto your hands there in Washukanni.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ḫalpašulubi, good agent and warrior of Arnuwanda, ruler of Hatti, I speak this to you.

May all your men and yourself be well. May your family back home be well. My estate is well. I sent this tablet to you in the night by my slave Taḫi, who bares the red and yellow sash of my house and my people. Molest him not. He has left the slab in the spot where you usually find it.

As I have said to you my friend, we ought to be brothers. Shuttarna is my king, yes, but he is a drunk and fat one, not a good king. Therefore, I must assist him whenever I must. I seek your help in this, for a man with many brothers and those willing to help is sure to prosper in the world, will he not? Think, the king will be sure to grant us rewards for providing such help to his lazy self. Many in the court of Shuttarna all say that I am a good advisor, and that they will follow me as a leader for now. Do the same, my good friend and brother. Do the same.

The wise sukkal and fearsome maryannu Kartamitra sends this tablet to your barracks, brought by Taḫi the slave.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pir-kinnu, I speak this to you, you trustworthy trader friend of mine.

Zigil-muza the bearded slave brings this slab to your house, and his red and yellow sash will show you he is mine, the one of my house and the people in employ of my house. Molest him not and feed him and give him beer or wine if you wish. He furthermore brings you two chains of silver and a chain of bronze. The silver is payment for the wine from the west that I bought from you, and the bronze is a gift from me as a brother to you. I ask of you as a brother to tell the other traders of me, both as a buyer and seller, and one that may fund their trips for wealth for all those who work before me most wisely. May the Gods bless us both with prosperity and eternal friendship.

So says your partner and friend Kartamitra, who sends this tablet to you with his slave Zigil-muza.
 
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A rather modest, 7-foot tall stele was erected in a valley on the border between Mitanni and Ishuwa in celebration of their defeat of the "shepherd-kings". The engraving on the stele depicts men in chariots bearing down upon foes who appear to be armed with spears and slings, and are dressed in commoners' tunics. An Akkadian inscription reads as follows.

Here in this valley the shepherd-kings were slain.

Here in this valley King Shuttarna and all his maryannim sent many multitudes of men into the gods' deep, and took their wives and daughters as trophies.

Those womenfolk came chained to the hall of Washukanni.

Here in this valley the Shuttarna struck off the heads of Kutti and Tamaku-mena and Šanin-naya, and his maryannim and hurrim felled Kutti and Tamaku-mena and Šanin-naya's men.

And so let it be known forever that the names of Kutti and Tamaku-mena and Šanin-naya, those shepherd kings, were snuffed out with ease at this spot.

The vultures feasted. The ground drank the blood by the pitcher.

The great herds of sheep and goats Shuttarna too took from their fallen masters. Made them his own. Dined upon the lamb.

Such is the fate of those who trifle with the King Shuttarna, chosen of great King Indara, who rules over man and god alike.
 
inanna171.jpg

To King Enlil-Nirari of Assur,

The bloodshed has once again gone on long enough, your people have proven their merit in battle once more. Let us be brothers again and live as brothers should in peace. Let my lands be your lands and let us share the fruits of the Gods together King Enlil. I offer to you the city of Kar-Istar and the hands of my sister's children as spouses. I hope that you may find this agreeable, may peace reign down upon our lands.

-King Kara-ḫardaš of Babil
 
inanna171.jpg

To King Enlil-Nirari of Assur,

The bloodshed has once again gone on long enough, your people have proven their merit in battle once more. Let us be brothers again and live as brothers should in peace. Let my lands be your lands and let us share the fruits of the Gods together King Enlil. I offer to you the city of Kar-Istar and the hands of my sister's children as spouses. I hope that you may find this agreeable, may peace reign down upon our lands.

-King Kara-ḫardaš of Babil

ls75mJF.jpg
 
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1312-1309 BCE

lPjAJCS.jpg

A late bronze age fresco depicting the campaigns of Anamika against the Myceneans and their allies on Crete.

After the destruction of the Army of Sun in the south after a hasty campaign, Smenkhaten took a more cautious approach to the war in Kush, slowly seizing back settlements and tribal allegiances over the next years, using the new Egyptian-Atenist Medjay troops to successfully police the region. Nefertiti also used her sway over the Pharaoh, managing to convince him on the need of a lenient restoration of Egyptian authority in the region. The self-claimed Kushite king Amenhotep Huy faced increasing troubles to maintain the loyalties of his tribesmen, and after failing to issue clear orders and losing a considerable part of his military, including the royal guard, in northern Nubia, he was poisoned and succeeded by his son Paser, who was nothing but a puppet to the Kushite nobility. It was rumored that the hand of the pharaoh or his wife might have been behind the plot. However, these men now ruling Kush from behind the palace walls were still staunch believers in the old system of gods and advocates of a continued Kushite independence from the new Atenist Pharaoh, and thus didn’t even respond to peace emissaries arriving from Akhetaten. However, thanks to the advice of his courtiers, Smenkhaten decided to wait and see the situation unfold, as a plague and a drought hit Kush badly around 1310, further hurting the economy and especially the stability of the nascent Kushite kingdom. A new viceroy for Kush was also announced, from amongst the surrendered members of Amenhotep-Huy’s royal guard, but he temporarily only ruled from Swenett and was considered barely nothing more than a figurehead, even though he at least was a native Kushite.
[Paser now king of Kush, slow Egyptian progress, Kushite economy and stability hits]

Great King Arnuwanda II faced his first real crisis, when a war broke out in Syria between two of his brothers. Despite of its short conclusion, it and the following tensions prevented him from beginning the work on a royal road connection Hattusa and Halab. Piyaššili, the strongest and oldest of the three brothers ruling viceroyalties in the region, decided to march on Ugarit, which he saw as belonging to his direct sphere of influence, considering that Zannanza was still not fully ruling the domain himself. Officially justifying the campaign in order to prevent the city from falling to brigands, such as the Amorites, due to the weak leadership, Piyaššili easily seized the city and had Zannanza imprisoned in Halab. As tension had gradually been growing between the Hittites and Alalaḫ over the rising economic status of Ugarit, Piyaššili ran into conflict with the Yamhadite ruler of this vassal kingdom next. As Idrimi II obstructed trade caravans and march of armies between the cities of Halab and Ugarit, Piyaššili started to prepare for war. But Idrimi II wisely interpreted the situation and approached both Hattusa and Carchemish, marrying a daughter to Muršili who held the other Syrian power center. Not ready to fight both the Yamhadites and possibly his both brothers, Piyaššili stood down and instead started to plot another expedition to better link his two domains. The fact that Aziru of Amurru passed away and his son Ari-Teshub was deemed as a weak minded and militarily and administratively incapable leader might have been a strong indicator of his plans. In the south the Amorites already lost their influence over Damascus, whose ruler invited in Egyptian troops to replace the Habiru warbands guarding it against nomads.
[Some fun trouble down in Syria, Ari-Teshub rules in Amurru now, Amurru stability loss]

The rapid loss of Kar-Ištar and the following imminent threat posed towards Dur-Kurigalzu was enough to convince the Kassite nobility of Karduniaš on the necessity of reaching an immediate peace with the Assyrian foes, to focus the entire might of the armies of Babylon on the more pressing and existential Elamite threat. The border fortress itself was ceded to Arik-den-ili, but much of the booty from Aššur was not returned and instead retained in Babylon, greatly souring and disrupting the Assyrian victory celebrations, and failing to restore proper and peaceful ties within the countries, and thus also negating Babylonian attempts at restoring crucial trade links, after the loss of eastern trade that had been disturbed by the war with Elam. The peace treaty therefore left much to desire on both sides, and was pretty much regarded just as an extended truce.
[Babylon and Assyria at peace]

But the war against Kidin-Hutran continued with even more ferocity than before. With the peace concluded with the Assyrians, in 1310 Babylonians went on the offensive, their armies bolstered with new recruits. But the Elamites hadn’t wasted time or resources either, hiring thousands of mercenaries and recruiting peasants from Elam proper, as well as occupied regions of Babylonia. The arrival of experienced tribesmen from the land of Shimaški also allowed Kidin-Hutran to rout the nomad trouble causing havoc in his rear, allowing him to focus his armies solely against the Kassites. Despite of the fierce defiance and skilful leadership of the Elamite armies, in the southern Mesopotamian flatlands the Kassite chariot was a foe that could not be overcome. At the battle of Deru in 1309, the Elamite army was decisively routed and forced to abandon Yamutbal and Gambulu in entirety, turning void any dreams of conquest of Babylon. Kidin-Hutran rallied his forces back towards Susa, and a Kassite attempt to advance into Elam proper was successfully beaten back, mostly due to simple exhaustion of the manpower base and resources of Karduniaš. The Kassite however managed to gain several forts and cities in the land of Yadburu, even sacking the city of Madaktu, not far from Elam. In the north, by miracle, the Elamites held Halman, even managing to defeat and force the Karalla land out of the war, seizing several Kassite strongholds in the region, and defeating an army from Zamua. But with the Elamite heartlands threatened, these victories were likely to be only short-term.
[Treasury hit to both parties, stability hit to Elam next turn]

In the court faction backing the rule of Shuttarna III a strongman rose to dominate its ranks. His name was Kartamitra, a bright warrior and statesman, friend of the Hittites and of the Aryan maryannu class. It was very likely that he had royal ambitions to his person, but Hittite interference and the fear of losing the support of some of the nobles, who might very well wish to attempt the same, made him decide against such an endeavour. However, the Hittites were more than content with allowing him to seize over practically all remaining royal power, with Shuttarna III reduced to a mere puppet at his hands. Likewise, the Hittite commissioner at Waššukanni allowed him to start rebuilding and strengthening the badly depleted and devastated Mitannian military.
[Mitanni levy set to Mid next turn]

In 1311 and 1310 Kartamitra successfully campaigned against the Nairi tribes in their land of Nihriya, forcing them temporarily to again turn into vassals of Waššukanni. However, the authority and might of Kartamitra is dealt an almost decisive blow after a hasty campaign against the remaining Nairi, who by now allied themselves with the tribes of Uruatri, who call themselves Biainili. Despite of the military reforms initiated by the strongman, the campaign ends in a crushing defeat, with the Mitannians betrayed by border tribes and most importantly some of the Nairi and many army detachments and famed maryannu warriors vanishing in the mountains. Maybe the underlying weaknesses of the badly depleted and reduced military, the generally still faltering status of the kingdom or simply the overtly enthusiastic goals were to blame. Nevertheless, Kartamitra’s popularity had risen and collapsed in a matter of years, and he was soon forced to retire due to an internal power struggle in the court faction. But his military and administrative reforms would certainly be remembered for times to come, albeit their apparent successes might in part have made him decide in favour of far too impatiently attempting to exploit them. After the campaign the Urartians also made overtures to Anniya, the new king of Hayasa-Azzi, fearful of resurgent Mitannian expansion in their region.
[Nihriya subdued to some extent]

Unsurprisingly King Anamika decided to take revenge for the attacks on Alashiyan shipping by the Ahhiyawans by focusing a new series of raids upon the islands colonized by them. The Alashiyans sailed towards the island of the Telchines with a mighty fleet, sacking and destroying all Ahhiyawan colonies. Around 1310 the Ahhiyawans responded with an equally sized fleet, reinforced by ships sent by the largest Ahhiyawan states, under the leadership of the city of Mukanai. This mighty fleet attacked, besieged and destroyed the city of Dikta in the island of Kaptara, but the site was quickly reoccupied by Anamika. He later took revenge by attacking and looting the city of Konoso, which had offered aid to the Ahhiyawan fleet, fearing total Alashiyan domination of their home island. The fact that Anamika spent barely any time on the Alashiyan home island forced local notables and chiefs to send their sons away to serve within his ranks, to gain sway and influence over their overlord. The absence of the king and most of his military also meant a slow collapse in the authority of the city of Alashiya, with some chiefs in the most distant hills even going so far as to stop paying tribute, citing that they had already sent enough men to serve in the wars across the seas. Of course, coupled with the fact that much gold, copper and silver was needed for the war, this meant that Alashiya was bound to experience economic troubles quite soon.
[Major disruptions to trade in the Aegean, treasury loss next turn, tax drops to low]
 
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sEqyiU8.png

1308 BCE

Egypt – Noco19

Ruler: Pharaoh Smenkhaten
Capital: Akhetaten
Treasury: Average
Income: High
(Royal): High
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): High
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Absolute Monarchy
Military: Large Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Amurru, Tyre, Sidon, Jerusalem, Damascus, Further Canaanite States
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Alashiya, Tyre and so forth
Hostile: Amurru
At War With: Kush

Hittites – Cleeque (During the absence of Harpsichord)

Ruler: King Arnuwanda II
Capital: Ḫattuša
Treasury: Wealthy
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): High
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Huge Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Halab and Carchemish as princely viceroyalties, Hayasa-Azzi, Kizzuwatna, Lukka, Karkissa, Kaska, Alalakh, Seha, Mira, Arzawa Nominally Wilusa, Pala
Alliances: Hayasa-Azzi, Mitanni, Babylonia
Trade Partners: Alashiya, Wilusa, Mitanni, Arzawa
Hostile:
At War With:

Babylonia – baboushreturns

Ruler: King Kara-ḫardaš
Capital: Dur-Kurigalzu
Treasury: Poor
Income: Mid
(Royal): High
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Large Levy, Mid Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Dilmun (Viceroyalty played by OPEN), Zamua
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners: Gutium, Zamua
Hostile: Assyria
At War With: Elam

Assyria – Dadarian

Ruler: King Arik-den-ili I
Capital: Aššur
Treasury: Poor
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Hegemonic Kingdom
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Mitanni, Elam, Babylonia
At War With:

Elam – Olligarchy

Ruler: King Kidin-Hutran
Capital: Ŝuŝa
Treasury: Poor
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Hegemonic Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Karalla
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Assyria
At War With: Babylonia

Mitanni – Rolman99

Ruler: King Shuttarna III
Capital: Waššukanni
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects: Alshe, Nihriya (to some extent)
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners: Hittites
Hostile: Assyria, Amurru, Urartu
At War With:

Alashiya – Keinwyn

Ruler: King Anamika
Capital: Alašiya
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Tribal Hegemony
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Serene
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Egypt, Hittites, Arzawa, Wilusa
Hostile: Tyre, Byblos
At War With: Ahhiyawa

Amurru – Shynka

Ruler: King Ari-Teshub
Capital: Sumuru
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Tribal Hegemony
Military: Mid Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects: Niye, Qatna, Qidsu, Byblos
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Tyre, Mitanni, Halab, Egypt
At War With:

Tyre – Shebedaone

Ruler: King Yariḫ-gabru
Capital: Ṣur
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: City Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small City Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Egypt
Hostile: Amurru, Alashiya, Egypt
At War With:

Alalaḫ – Maxwell500

Ruler: King Idrimi II
Capital: Alalaḫ
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: City Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Hittites
Hostile: Alashiya, Halab
At War With:

Wilusa – OPEN

Ruler: Ilu
Capital: Truisa
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): None
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Hittites, Ahhiyawa, Arzawa, Lazpa
Hostile:
At War With:

Hayasa-Azzi – Mathrim

Ruler: King Anniya
Capital: ?
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): None
(Trade): Mid
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Tribal Federation
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners: Urartu
Hostile:
At War With:

Arzawa – OPEN

Ruler: King Uhha-Ziti
Capital: Apasa
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): None
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Federation
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Wilusa, Alashiya, Hittites
Hostile:
At War With:

Kush – MastahCheef117

Ruler: King Paser
Capital: Napata
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Kingdom
Military: Mid Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile:
At War With: Egypt

GM NOTE: Orders due (next) Sunday. Please note that I will sadly be quite busy this month. I will also be cleaning the roster of inactive players this turn, so if you want to stay in the game, send those orders. Those interested in openings should contact me via PM or on IRC.
 
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From Ari-Teshub to the traitors of Damascus,



News of your cowardly retreat from my southern border has reached my ears and while your undignified flight and the betrayal of some of your comrades should be punished justly with death, I will in my infinite grace and mercy grant you a chance to redeem yourselves and gain back your pride.

It is my will that once again the proud sons of this land, who under my grandfather ruled all the eye could see, and then ruled farther still under my father, secure the bastion of the south. We have always been a loyal servant to the King of the Sun and now we must secure back his treasured city from those coward bandits of the sea that took it from us.

You must reorganise the warbands and await until I and my host come south to meet you; we will attack the city from both sides at the dawn of a new day, and overwhelm its defenders from outside. My father previously gave the city much mercy, but now their treason will be repaid tenfold, and every warrior will carry out of the city as much gold as he can carry.


 
20120208-Arge_aus_Babylonien.jpg

An inscription found on the tomb of a dead Kassite soldier dated to around 1310 BCE.

Here lies Akash son of Agum, a warrior for all the ages. He fought the foul beastmen of Elam and was struck down in his glory at the battle of Deru in service to King Kara-ḫardaš.

His brother Rattaš will continue to watch over his wife and children.
 
Starur4.jpg

In the name of Khaldi the God of our friends, the lord Anniya, heir to Hakkani sent this present to the valourous Urartians. By the help of their God they held the enemy at bay and protected even the valleys of Hayasa and Azzi and I, Anniya, heir to Hakkani, the mighty king who rule the between the lands of the Hittites and those of the Urartians, give them my thanks.



The relations between the Urartians and the Hayasans had been somewhat strained over the last decades as both their expansionisms made them antagonists. However the arrival of the Mitanni whose armies were beyond counting was a threat that couldn't be ignored and differences were set aside, at least for a while. Anniya soon after ascending to the throne notably sent the Urartians presents including iron weapons to foster better relations.
 
images


And they fetched up, and brought out of Egypt a chariot for six hundred shekels of silver, and a horse for a hundred and fifty; and so for all the kings of the Hittites, and the kings of Aram [Syria], did they bring them out by their means. (2 Chronicles 1:17, Holy Bible)


Kinslaying is the greatest crime before the gods, the greatest insult to yourself, and the greatest betrayal to your ancestors - quarreling between brothers by blood, broodmates of Great Kings is a spit in the face to all that walks upon the Earth. The Great King Arnuwanda Second of His Name, outraged at the behaviour of his vassals a stray, by legend, stormed out his castle and called upon all young righteous men to follow their King to the Levant - to bring order to his Kingdom, to save their compatriots from certain demise and eternal shame from Gods and Folk. The King rode with a fire unseen in him before, rage in his heart and with his men behind him - the earth shuddered with his step. It is said, that in his golden cave even the lion god Sandas has wok n from his holy slumber, from his inshakeable dream, to ride with the King of Hittites, to Glory and Fulfilment.

"The Lion has awoken."
reads an inscription on one of Anawanda's spears.
 
1308-1305 BCE

oBuOA0t.jpg

A later Kassite relief depicting the eviction of the residents of an unidentified Elamite town during the campaigns of Kara-ḫardaš.

The volatile and instable situation in Kush, cited by Smenkhaten as a divine sign, allowed the Egyptians to rapidly reconquer the kingdom, or at least most of it. By 1305 BCE only a rump Kushite state existed centered at Napata, ruled by the increasingly more and more unpopular Paser. The fate of the Egyptian, or maybe rather Atenist, control of the region very much depended on the religious approach taken by the new viceroy and other officials and bureaucrats dispatched to the region by the Pharaoh. A native revolt was still quite very likely, despite of the attempts to re-establish the famed corps of Medjay. The easing of the situation in Kush also enabled the Pharaoh to turn his attention to the matters in the land of Retenu.
[Kush almost reconquered, though remains rather unstable and on verge of a new revolt, more tributes]

Infuriated by the family disputes going on in the recently-won possessions, Arnuwanda called the cream of the Hittite military into arms and marched at the head of the mighty host consisting of his royal guard and thousands of warriors towards Halab. The army was obviously far larger than required, as Arnuwanda wished to resolve the dispute peacefully after all, but it certainly served as a good tool of intimidation, showing to his brothers that Arnuwanda was serious about remaining the Great King with the last say on matters in the viceroyalties. Calling his siblings to meet him at his army’s camp site north of Halab, Arnuwanda was able to reprimand the renegade Piyaššili, who was forced to release Zannanza and give him back Ugarit, along with a decent treasure as compensation. Furthermore Arnuwanda commanded him to start constructing the royal road linking the principal city of the Hittite possessions in Syria with the capital of the Hatti, at the expense of his viceroyalty’s treasury. Peace was restored for now, but Piyaššili was, justifiably, quite unhappy.

Having spent quite much of what had remained in the Elamite temples and treasuries to fund the thousands upon thousands of mercenaries marching to defend the realm of Haltamti from the north and east; King Kidin-Hutran was now forced to institute a new tax in order to keep paying these troops. Albeit quite unpopular, the Elamite population understood that the opportunistic war against Karduniaš was on the verge of turning into an irreversible disaster for the tribes of Haltamti. Thus the king got his taxes and the army continued fighting. Meanwhile in the north the Assyrians were busy rebuilding, both their cities and temples, but also their badly depleted military. The King Arik-den-ili I lavishly paid for new regiments of his royal guard, and made sure that thousands upon thousands of peasants could be brought into arms commanded by able nobles and officers, if something were to go sour with the southern neighbors. Certainly, it was wise to be worried about the fate of the Elamites.
[Royal Guard increased, treasury stays at poor]

The Kassites similarly faced difficulties related to manpower. The king and his officers met with the partly still native high priesthood of the Babylonians, Kara-ḫardaš speaking almost in a trance about a divine mandate presented to him by Marduk in his dreams on the battlefield. Massive prayers and sacrifices were ordered, and the whole land of Babylonia was told to pray to the goddesses Ištar, Mirizir and many other local deities and spirits, in order to ensure that the king was provided with the thousands of proud sons required to fulfill Marduk’s orders of a world conquest. Similarly taxation was changed to provide benefit to peasant families with the most children, or in reality sons. Of course if this ‘pious’ act was to have any effect would remain to be seen in a decade or two, too late to win the Elamite war. Meanwhile the king was more successful on the diplomatic front, gaining an immediate source for new warriors, as the badly beaten land of the Zamua agreed to become a vassal of the Babylonian crown. Thousands of experienced tribal warriors, natives of the mountains, thus flocked to participate in the next Babylonian campaigns.

Knowing very well the reality of the extensive manpower problems, Kara-ḫardaš took a very careful approach, almost tricking his adversary Kidin-Hutran into believing that the Kassites were content with simply throwing out the Elamites from their territory. Only in 1306 did the Babylonian army campaign in great numbers again, as Kidin-Hutran had kept wasting money on troops that weren’t earlier even needed. In a fast and successful campaign quite much relying on the support local tribes and the Zamuans, he managed to recover Halman along with all the forts up the river Diyala, striking deep into Karalla land and sacking their cities, in revenge for siding with the invaders. Land and captives in the region were allocated to the Zamuans, and with this frontier cleared and safe, Kara-ḫardaš could campaign against Elam proper the next year. Striking south, along the Gulf, and bypassing the more defended localities at Susa and Dur-Untash, the Kassite army dealt a massive blow to the Elamite economy, as farms and settlements were burned and population taken into slavery, many of them sent to populate distant garrison towns against the Assyrians and Ahlamu tribes. The campaign of 1305 culminated in the sack of Hidalu, and Kara-ḫardaš returned to Dur-Kurigalzu as a prestigious victor. Meanwhile in Susa many of the advisers of Kidin-Hutran, along with a considerable segment of the nobility and clergy, were pressuring the king to make a peace with the Kassite as soon as possible, now that they still could negotiate.
[Zamua becomes a Babylonian vassal, Zamua beaten out of the war, extensive economic damage to Elam]

Accepting the challenge presented against his military might and prestige, and certainly not discouraged by the resumed presence of Egyptian garrison troops and a commissioner in Damascus, Ari-Teshub assembled his bands of Habiru and marched on the city. Luckily for him, most of the Egyptian garrison and the city’s own warriors were busy dealing with Sutean raiders to the southwest, enabling the Amorite to march on the city almost unopposed. However, as he rushed to immediately storm the city upon arrival, a tragedy befall Amurru and her proud warrior-king. Ari-Teshub, who had insisted on leading the charge against the city’s walls himself, was cut down by a Damascene arrow, ending another chapter in the war-like history of the kings of Amurru. The army immediately cut short the siege and returned back north, and for a few years it remained to be seen how the already tense relations between Akhetaten and the vassal kings of the north would proceed after this latest transgression. The land of Amurru itself was thrown into chaos for a number of years, with rival bands of Habiru, subjugated cities and Sutean and Ahlamu bands all marching along its countryside, albeit defeated one after one. The Pharaoh issued an edict promising many of these kings and cities land at the expense of Tuppi-Teshub, but most were defeated, apart for those of Niu and Biruta, whose kings now requested the pharaoh to actually send aid, facing almost certain defeat against the mighty Habiru of Amurru.
[Ari-Teshub dies, income hit to Amurru, new king is one Tuppi-Teshub]

The Mitannian king Shuttarna III perished to a dangerous and long fever in 1307 BCE, never having properly recovered the control of his kingdom from the Hittites and their favorite palace courtiers. He was succeeded by a relative, either a son or a brother named Artatama, and little changed in the realm otherwise. Economically the Mitannian kingdom was already in a far better shape, but politically its independence and might was just a shadow of the former days of glory. This was further proven by the alliance concluded between Hayasa-Azzi, a Hittite vassal state quite much like Mitanni too, and the Urartians, essentially preventing any further Hurrian campaigns in that direction, and also threatening the hold over the vanquished tribes in the region, who were still quite independent minded and were hopeful of Urartian assistance.
[Artatama III follows Shuttarna III]

The battles for the control of the Aegean continued with an Alashiyan and allied attack upon the Mycenaean colony of Kinidia on the Anatolian coast. This peninsula was extensively settled by the Mycenaeans, and provided them with a good base for operations and solidified their hold on the nearby islands. The battle for the control of the city was bloody, but in the end the Alashiyans managed to overcome the defenders and sack the settlement, enabling them to raid far deeper into the Ahhiyawan territory. But alas, King Anamika became far too eager and impatient after this latest victory, and set sail towards the great city of Millawanda, the capital and main base of the Ahhiyawan colonists. Outside this city his fleet was defeated, the king himself among the casualties Luckily this news of the warrior-king’s death weren’t able to reach Alashiya straight away, as succession to him was very likely to be a bloody affair, for Anamika had failed to designate a clear heir.
[Anamika dies, what happens next remains to be seen]
 
zQfFHBU.png

1304 BCE

Egypt – Noco19

Ruler: Pharaoh Smenkhaten
Capital: Akhetaten
Treasury: Average
Income: High
(Royal): High
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): High
(Tributes): High
Centralization: Absolute Monarchy
Military: Large Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Viceroyalty of Kush, Amurru, Tyre, Sidon, Jerusalem, Damascus, Further Canaanite States
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Alashiya, Tyre and so forth
Hostile: Amurru
At War With: Kush

Hittites – Cleeque (During the absence of Harpsichord)

Ruler: King Arnuwanda II
Capital: Ḫattuša
Treasury: Wealthy
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): High
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Huge Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Halab, Ugarit and Carchemish as princely viceroyalties, Hayasa-Azzi, Kizzuwatna, Lukka, Karkissa, Kaska, Alalakh, Seha, Mira, Arzawa Nominally Wilusa, Pala
Alliances: Hayasa-Azzi, Mitanni, Babylonia
Trade Partners: Alashiya, Wilusa, Mitanni, Arzawa
Hostile:
At War With:

Babylonia – baboushreturns

Ruler: King Kara-ḫardaš
Capital: Dur-Kurigalzu
Treasury: Poor
Income: Mid
(Royal): High
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Large Levy, Mid Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects: Dilmun (Viceroyalty played by OPEN), Zamua
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners: Gutium, Zamua
Hostile: Assyria
At War With: Elam

Assyria – Dadarian

Ruler: King Arik-den-ili I
Capital: Aššur
Treasury: Poor
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Hegemonic Kingdom
Military: Mid Levy, Mid Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Mitanni, Elam, Babylonia
At War With:

Elam – Olligarchy

Ruler: King Kidin-Hutran
Capital: Ŝuŝa
Treasury: Destitute
Income: Low
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Hegemonic Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Assyria
At War With: Babylonia

Mitanni – Rolman99

Ruler: King Artatama III
Capital: Waššukanni
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Organized Kingdom
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects: Alshe, Nihriya (to some extent)
Alliances: Hittites
Trade Partners: Hittites
Hostile: Assyria, Amurru, Urartu, Hayasa-Azzi
At War With:

Alashiya – Keinwyn

Ruler: King ???
Capital: Alašiya
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Tribal Hegemony
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Serene
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Egypt, Hittites, Arzawa, Wilusa
Hostile: Tyre, Byblos
At War With: Ahhiyawa

Amurru – Shynka

Ruler: King Tuppi-Teshub
Capital: Sumuru
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): Mid
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: Tribal Hegemony
Military: Mid Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects: Qatna, Qidsu, Byblos
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile: Tyre, Mitanni, Halab, Egypt
At War With: Biruta, Niye

Tyre – OPEN

Ruler: King Yariḫ-gabru
Capital: Ṣur
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): Low
Centralization: City Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small City Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Egypt
Hostile: Amurru, Alashiya, Egypt
At War With:

Alalaḫ – OPEN

Ruler: King Idrimi II
Capital: Alalaḫ
Treasury: Average
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: City Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Hittites
Hostile: Alashiya, Halab
At War With:

Wilusa – OPEN

Ruler: Ilu
Capital: Truisa
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): None
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Hittites, Ahhiyawa, Arzawa, Lazpa
Hostile:
At War With:

Hayasa-Azzi – Mathrim

Ruler: King Anniya
Capital: ?
Treasury: Average
Income: Mid
(Royal): Mid
(Tax): None
(Trade): Mid
(Tributes): Mid
Centralization: Tribal Federation
Military: Mid Levy, Small Royal Guard
Stability: Stable
Subjects:
Alliances: Hittites, Urartu
Trade Partners: Urartu
Hostile:
At War With:

Arzawa – OPEN

Ruler: King Uhha-Ziti
Capital: Apasa
Treasury: Poor
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): None
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Federation
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Faltering
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners: Wilusa, Alashiya, Hittites
Hostile:
At War With:

Kush – OPEN

Ruler: King Paser
Capital: Napata
Treasury: Destitute
Income: Low
(Royal): Low
(Tax): Low
(Trade): Low
(Tributes): None
Centralization: Tribal Kingdom
Military: Small Levy, No Royal Guard
Stability: Chaos
Subjects:
Alliances:
Trade Partners:
Hostile:
At War With: Egypt

GM NOTE: Again, terribly sorry for this quite far too delayed update, but as said previously I have been awfully busy and exhausted by real-life. Should get easier in the next weeks, so hopefully there is still some interest left in the game.

Edit: Orders due Wednesday.
 
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Ip Ida Telal

The Sons of War

With the inclusion of the Zamuan Kingdom into the greater Babylonian realms around 1305, the Kassites gained access to a large pool of herdsmen and hunters perfectly suited for the invasion of Elam proper,which had been in the making for years. For years the Zamuans had fought with the Kassites, first against Assyria and then against Elam. Their troops had long distinguished themselves for their hardiness, and ability to live off the land. Many normal Babylonians especially those in old Sumeria regarded these men as savages, and the division between those who lived on the farms and those who lived as shepherds went back to the epic of Gilgamesh. Leading to some animosity towards the Zamuans among the Babylonian regular army. Despite this the Kassites were largely impressed, they too had once been mountain dwellers and, had only recently settled into the Mesopotamian plain adopting the customs of its native inhabitants. There was something about the Zamuans that reminded them of their recent past, and many nobles were happy to see the holdings of Zamua grow as the Karallans were kicked out of the war.

In late 1304 King Kara-Hardaš reached out to the Zamuan warriors. Veterans from years of battle, and experienced in the art of mountain warfare, he announced the formation of a new division. The Ip Ida Telal or The Sons of War when translated from Sumerian, the new force was supposed to be the best of the best light infantry in the whole Kassites army. Trained as mountaineers and foragers the force was to always be maintained at 5,000 men, able to quickly and efficiently put down rebellions or stem invasions, in conjunction with the Kassites charioteer corps and the now aging Sons of Babili. The Ip Ida Telal would differ from the other elite corps of the Babylonian army in a few different ways however. Perhaps most significantly they would be almost entirely 'foreign' raised in the Kingdom of Zamua few would've known a time when Babylon held such influence over the land. Secondly they would remain mobilized at all times, come peace or war they would be there. The charioteer corp by contrast was generally demobilized during peace, its nobles sent home to live at their estates. Finally the Ip Ida Telal would be raised from common men, not nobles. They would face grueling training and the demands of them would be high, but they would also be extremely well rewarded for their work. They would distinguish themselves for the first time during the Elamite War and would continue to enjoy a long and storied history in the decades to come after it.
 
solomon-judgement.jpg

Arnuwanda and the two Farmers

The Great King Arnuwanda has remained in Syria to restore order and justice on his subjects and vassals.

One day, in the height of the harvest season, the legend speaks, the Great Ruler was sitting in the gardens, watching the Hittites toil the fields around Aleppo, when two farmers - a fat one and a skinny one cometh before him.

There was a piece of land the two contested, both provided ample evidence it's theirs, both said they have grown their wheat and herd their cattle on it for generations. Both cried for generosity, both offered the hand of their daughters if they could only, only have their righteous land.

"Alright said the King, if it belongs to both of you - then it belongs to none of you."

"If it belongs to no one, than we can simply burn it."

The Great King turned to see the reactions of the two farmers. One simply stood and shrugged, not exclaiming the smallest of peeps.The other one, however, bent on his knees and kissed the fat one's ring.

"It shall go to the skinny one, it is his land. No farmer would want the land he walked upon for generations burned into ashes, even if it is to belong to someone else."

And so, Arnuwanda gave the land to the Skinny one - showing his eternal wisdom and justice to the people of Syria once more.


 
The Sack of Assur

For almost twenty years proceeding the First Assyro-Babylonian War the Kassites prepared their next move. Under Kara-Hardaš and his father Burna-Buriaš the Kassite army was massively expanded and professionalized. During the first Assyro-Babylonian war the Kassites had been surprised by both the talent of the Assyrian generals and the spirit of their troops which led to a series of humiliating defeats to the Assyrians, including the destruction of the entire Babylonian chariot division. These humiliations never left the minds of the Kassite elite, many of whom had lost family members or friends in the war.

Under Kara-Hardaš the military reforms dreamed up by his father were completed in about 8 years, and by 1319 the Kassite army was ready for battle once more. In the Spring of that year Kara-Hardaš led his troops north, quickly overrunning several Assyrian border forts, he put their garrisons to the sword before continuing his march north. In late Spring the army arrived around the holy city of Assur only to find the city mostly abandoned by a scattered and surprised Assyrian military. Yet the Babylonians still faced considerable odds, Assur had long been held as one of the greatest fortress cities in existence. Sitting astride the banks of the Tigris, Assur was protected from any attack on land by a semicircle of brick walls which were wide enough and thick enough to withstand normal siege techniques of the era. On the other side of the city sat the Tigris which ensured that no attacker would be able to assault the city from the rear, or so the Assyrians thought.

When the Kassites arrived outside the gates of Assur they immediately set up camp outside the city. Sorrounding it in a motley blockade Kara-Hardaš made a great show of making preparations to assault Assur from its land side as a conventional attacker. However what the Assyrians did not know is that the Babylonians had brought vast supplies of timber with them and while the main host of the army set up camp outside Assur's gates, several hundred professional soldiers trecked several leagues up the Tigris and made camp there. In the next few weeks dozens of boats were constructed, fit to sail down river the boats were outfitted with little more than sails and a rudder to steer them. When the boats were completed Kara-Hardaš waited with him his host for a moonless night when the visibility of the Assyrian guards would be low. On one such night he ordered the attack, leading a general assault against the city from the land side, his men also brought their boats to bear and floating down the Tigris in the dead of the night, slipped into Assur's, harbors unnoticed. By the time the Assyrians realized what happened it was too late.

In the ensuing slaughter tens of thousands were killed and almost the entire city depopulated. The Assyrian treasury fell and her renowned temples those dedicated to Ashur especially were raided and raised to the ground. The wagons of loot going back towards Dur-Kurigalzu were said to stretch on for leagues however, King Arik-den-Ili and his family managed to escape. The war would continue for almost a decade following the sack of Assur and only through the intervention of the Elamite hordes would complete disaster be averted for the Assyrians. Yet the third sack of Assur would come to mark a shift in Babylonian as well as Assyrian history, for the Babylonians it would come to mark the beginning of a new age of imperial glory, while for the Assyrians it would mark the beginning of an age of temporary decline.
 
Ultimatum to the King in Assur

Assurbanipal_lion_hunt.jpg


" The King in Assur has a 100 moons to pull his hordes out of the land of Sargon and Akkad - 1oo moons to pull his warriors out of Assyria - a 100 moons to stop the war. We advise his highness to obey the calm advice of the Great King - else there shall be 10,000 Hittites in Assur before the end of autumn. "

" A hundred moons
to call your goons

else you shall feel
the Hittite zeal "