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Antiscamp

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I just won my first war in CKII. Since I'm a really crappy player, this is good news. It was an exciting experience and fun. I am playing the Duchy of Swabia, a little fairy tale kingdom in the south of Germany. I had wrestled with Pisa before, and they were seriously weakened after fighting a series of useless wars against the whole of the Holy Roman Empire. They still kept the little holding of Aargau, near my frontier, and I was eyeing it, since it looked like easy prey. So I deployed my talented Chancellor there, the Count of Nordgau, to fabricate some claims upon it, and it didn't take long before he was successful. My Duke was old and fragile and near death, so it was now or never. I pressed the claim in February 1081 and raised my levies, an army of 1500 men, sufficient for such a small invasion.



The First Levies.​

So The Duke of Pisa called in his ally, the Duchess of Tuscany. That wasn't planned for, but I called my best pal the Duke of Savoie to keep Tuscany at bay. That wasn't enough, since Tuscany was soon fielding 2000 men in Italy. Half of my army was engaged in Aargau, besieging it and that would take time. I deployed the rest in the pass over the Alps, hoping that Tuscany would turn on Savoie first, but no, they marched their superior force against me instead. I gave a fight in that mountain pass, in August 1081, losing half of my effective fighting force and the Tuscans then invaded my Duchy, starting sieges in the south of my land. In the meantime, Aargau fell to our force though, so all was not lost.

ck22012-02-1920-56-48-91.jpg

After having conquered a province in the south of Swabia, the Tuscans were harrassed by the Savoians, which gave me an opening. I sent 600 men south towards Pisa itself. I needed to capture Pisa to conclude a good peace. White peace was out of the question. It was conquer or die. All my counter attacks on the province the Tuscans had conquered failed, but I was still holding Aargau firmly. The main Tuscan army, now 1800 strong, fought successively against Swabian and Savoian troops sent against it and did serious damage, but the opening was the siege of Pisa which was begun by my smaller force down in Italy. If I could take Pisa, I could win the entire show.



The Tuscan Army pressing over the Alps.​

The Tuscan army then turned around and marched south. At Pisa they defeated my besieging force and all would have seemed hopeless. But not so. I raised all my levies and also recruited a mercenary company of Italian mercenaries. With this as backbone, I merged the armies, now counting 2400 strong, a proper match for the Duchess of Tuscany, and marched them south into Italy towards Pisa. My state coffers were dwindling and I would not be able to keep my expensive mercenaries for long.



The Battle of Monza

The Tuscan army that had threatened us for the whole duration of the war, 1800 strong, met my forces at Monza in Lombardia. At the Battle of Monza in June 1083, the Tuscan army was soundly defeated. It stood no chance against my mercenary centre. My own heir was leading one of the divisions at Monza. Tuscany's offensive power was exhausted and the road completely open south into Italy and to Pisa. My army had not even started marching south before the Duke of Pisa sued for peace. He did not know that I would probably have had to disband the mercenaries in a few months and that I would have had a difficult time to take his province. All's well that ends well though. Swabia gained Aargau in the peace treaty, a small and insignificant province, which we spilled a lot of blood over.

ck22012-02-1922-10-41-77.jpg
 
And Losing Aargau...

After taking Aargau, the old Duke soon found himself in trouble with Bavaria as well. The Bavarians were conspiring to usurp the Duchy of Swabia and in the mid 1080's they began a military offensive. The old Duke died during the First Bavarian War and gave over to his son Rudolf, who completed it with a White Peace, thus leaving the Bavarians with their claim on Swabia. Duke Rudolf only pushed the problem off into the future, and it was his young daughter who was to inherit it. Duke Rudolf died of illness at the very young age of 27, leaving the Duchy to his minor daughter, the only child in the Duke's marriage, Duchess Dorothea. The entire family line now hung in balance as she was only two years old when she took the lead under a Regency of her mother's.


Swabia's government and status was in top-condition though. The Bavarians tried again in the Second Bavarian War (1090-94), and it was believed that Swabia was near destruction. That was not the case though. The Swabian armies trampled Bavaria with the help of a mercenary company and pushed home the victory. The Bavarians were forced to give up their claims on Swabia in the glorious peace treaty that was signed. The victorious arms of The Duchess of Swabia then went on to conquer a province in the south as well, defeating Lombardy in a quick war. When Dorothea fell ill, the whole continuation of the game hung in balance, but she recovered.


When the Duchess had come of age, the German Empire was experiencing great troubles in the South West. Several Counties fell away from the empire and a row of wars were fought. Swabia also got its fair share of the turmoil. As The Uncle of the Duchess, the Count of Aargau, was conspiring against her, she tried to imprison him, with fatal results. The Count revolted against her rule and brought two provinces with him in the rebellion.


The Great Disorder​

The Great Disorder (1108-12) that followed saw the Duchess' armies defeated one after the other by superior rebels. I don't know where they got their numbers from. When she tried to recruit a mercenary regiment, the state coffers all of a sudden and without reason showed minus 23, although it should have been safe, meaning that the mercenaries went home. So, fighting the rebels with blood, sweat, toil and tears to a conclusion was really hard. The only thing that saved the Duchy was the fact that Baden dropped away from the rebellion with its thousand man strong army. As the Duchy's troops invaded Aargau and put it under siege, all of a sudden the war ended inconclusively and Aargau fell away from the Duchy. I don't know why. There was no explanation. The whole war was a great disaster of random events and in the end, although we did well at the end phase, came to a bad conclusion. Dorothea had lost the province her grandfather had gained back then.

I want it back - it has become, in fact, the whole purpose of my game!

ck22012-02-2121-41-47-60.jpg

Duchess Dorothea of Swabia​
 
I checked in-game what the reason for the inconclusive end to the war against the Count of Aargau might have been. My guess now is that it was ended by the Holy Roman Emperor. The Count is behind bars, and the Emperor himself has taken over Aargau, indeed invalidating the war. Oh well, now I need to find a way to outmaneuvre the Emperor from Aargau, so I can take it back. I can only hope that the breakdown of the Holy Roman Empire continues as it should.
 
Duchess Dorothea is in her early fourties when all of a sudden her vassal the Countess of Breisgau starts plotting to take over the Duchy. That is in no way going to be accepted, and when Breisgau refuses to be imprisoned, war is declared and Breisgau tries to break free. The Countess of Breisgau also has her own husband on another county throne, ripping Swabia asunder as he takes his St.Gallen and also declares war on the Duchy. For the Duchess Dorothea, this is most fortunate. She crushes the rebellion easily.

In the meantime, Savoie also joins the fight on the rebel side and Nordgau also rebels, but the Swabian army makes short business of them both, the main battles being fought against the Savoians. The Swabian chancellor finishes his claim on Aargau during this war, and after peace has been signed with Nordgau, forcing its count into prison, Dorothea marches her troops into Aargau to finally retake it. Savoie again joins the fight on Aargau's side, frightened of the growing Swabian power and Swabia again defeats all opposition. aargau falls easily, and the Savoian resistance is dealt with during defensive battles in the Alps.

The Wars of 1127-28 are a total success. The Swabian armies are successful in separating all enemies from joining up, march straight into their lands and defeat them one-by-one. After the war, Dorothea installs her own children on the county thrones of the rebel territories and also takes control of Aargau once more. Swabia's territorial expansion is back to where it was when she took the Duchy throne. Eyes are now turned east, towards Bavaria.


(Yeah, I'm a slow player. I'm modding Skyrim too you know.)
 
Swabia started eyeing the eastern lands. Österreich (Austria) was at that time involved in a losing war against Bohemia, which was great, since Dorothea had a claim on the Austrian enclave of Baden. In support of Bohemia, Swabia launched an attack and conquered Baden from the Austrians. Austria took Lombardy with it and fought back, but to no avail; the Bohemian-Swabian alliance had them under control. In the peace treaty, Dorothea took over Baden, expanding the Duchy. This was in the beginning of the 1130's.

Dorothea's last years of reign were mostly happy and a time of growth, only dotted with courtly intrigues. Her old duke died (in prison, in fact!), and I married her off to a younger bloke for her pleasure. Unfortunately, her heir died as well and was succeeded to that position by the heir's imbecile son. I couldn't risk letting an imbecile ascend to the ducal throne, so I actually had her assassinate her own grandson. That was fun.

The Emperor of Germany liked old Dorothea though and awarded her the Duchy of Dauphiné, which was great, but I stupidly enough gave it away to her son, the heir, splitting the Duchy of Swabia in two. Oh well, no matter, I thought, she was in her late sixties then and on her way to the graveyard already, and her son would indeed get all of Swabia after her death, which would again reunite the great Duchy. Her son, the heir, was quite a warrior though, and participated in a mutiny against the Emperor, which did not go well, so he lost one province.

At Great Duchess Dorothea's death, at the respectable age of 76, in 1163, he inherited the rest of the Duchy, which became the Duchy of Dauphiné. Good enough by me; nothing had been gained, but nothing much lost either in the succession. God, the stories this game creates! I could go on forever! William III is now the Duke of Dauphiné. I had lots of fun playing Dorothea; she was great. Rest in peace, girl.

 
Duke William III proved to be a good ruler of the Duchy. During the Succession Crisis 1164-67 he defeated an alliance of Italian states that joined up with the people within his Duchy who revolted and tried to usurp his crown. He ended the crisis by defeating his niece, Dorothea of Württemberg, who also rebelled against him and she was put behind bars, like all the other traitors.

William III is most remembered for being very fertile and a letcher. He had numerous lovers. One tried to plot against him and he threw her into the dungeon and later ended his relationship to her. When his old wife died, I married him off to a 22-year old Polish Princess, which was, against all odds, a happy marriage, which produced two children. The old geezer.

William III spent most of his time building stuff in his demesne provinces and googling babes. He died in 1184, having fulfilled a good, honourable career. He was succeeded by his impopular son, Ademar I.

 
Duke Ademar I of Baden was initially impopular among his vassals, but it turned out he had taken his father's culture, which was Norman, so I immediately turned him German, like his other lords. This was a good move, and the German lords of his Duchy slowly started liking him more. He arranged a few feasts and kept them happy with useless titles and gifts, and there never were any problems with mutinies or rebellions.

That was all good and well, for in 1192-97 he took on the whole might of the Holy Roman Empire. His aim was to reconquer the lost province of Breisgau, and seeing that all of south western Germany was rebelling against the Emperor, he thought, now or never. Duke Ademar's first war against the Empire was brilliant. Supported by his rebel allies, he executed a successful guerilla war on his own soil, while he sent the bulk of his army north, to conquer the Emperor's own demesne-lands. The Emperor was tied up in battle on several fronts, and although the forces sent against Baden were sufficient, they were cut off and beaten one-by-one. In the meantime, the Emperor's holdings in northern Germany fell, and he was compelled to make peace and give Duke Ademar Breisgau. Ademar wasn't done with the Emperor though.

During the peacetime, Ademar got married. To the Duchess of Toscana, in fact, which was a great marriage and produced several sons. Ademar also married off his unmarried relatives; one of his sisters became the Queen of Denmark, which led to an alliance with that country.

The Second War against the Emperor began in 1203. Ademar was sending out forces to quell enemy troops rebelling against the emperor and besieging holdings in Baden. The Emperor was in no condition to protect Baden from these incursions, and it was up to Ademar himself to protect his land. This caused rage at the court in Baden, and Ademar declared Baden's independence from the Holy Roman Empire. The war was executed like the last, or so was the plan, but this campaign ended up being bloodier and longer.

Ademar sent his main force north and started taking Imperial lands. Although his troops in the south won battle after battle, there was no increase in warscore, which was alarming, but things slowly started developing Ademar's way when the enemy castles started falling. Because Saxony, Savoie and other smaller counties were fighting at his side in this rebellion, Ademar, worked with them to keep the Emperor's armies at bay. He took castle after castle and marched his main army south, ripping through Germany. All of a sudden an imperial army of 5000 strong appeared and defeated his main army in Meissen in 1211, but at the same time, the old Emperor died and the new one sued for peace. Ademar's Duchy had been saved by Divine Intervention.

Ademar's Duchy was, when the dust settled under the New Emperor, the only independent Duchy in Germany. The other ones failed their rebellions. His son Carl, was now the Duke of Toscana, since Ademar's Duchess had died, and this son would inherit all of Toscana as well as the Duchy of Baden upon Ademar's death. Succession was secured and the continuation of the family's greatness. Ademar married the Emperor's sister, who he fell desperately in love with (the both have 100 towards each other), and produced several children. He instated his unlanded sons as rulers of their own counties within Baden. Ademar also got the name "The Proud", so history will recall him as Ademar the Proud of Baden.

I am only nervous that my hard-won independence will go lost upon succession, since the heir Carl is Duke of Toscana and also has the Emperor as a liege. No matter, I'll enjoy independence for as long as I can.

 
Ademar the Proud ruled over a happy peaceful realm after the wars of independence. The only time the glorious era of peace and prosperity was broken, was when Ademar tried to take over the Count of Württemberg's title as the Count of Aargau. Ademar planned to give Aargau to one of his unlanded sons. The Count of Württemberg mustered his army and took with him all his three counties, including Aargau. In the war of 1233-35, Ademar the Proud made short work of the Count of Württemberg, usurped Aargau and imprisoned the count. The count was kept imprisoned for a month and then released. After that, Ademar and the Count became best pals, surprisingly. Weird medieval relationships.



The War of 1233-35​

After that, Ademar the Proud ruled unopposed until his death in 1252. Ademar built castle keeps and other impressive structures in his domains and spent his time building the state treasury, for he knew that his son, the Duke of Toscana, would surely need the money upon his accession. Upon his death, Ademar left an independent Baden to his son Reinhard of Toscana, a Baden in top-condition ready to face the world. Reinhard inherited Baden as well as Toscana; the independence from the Holy Roman Empire went lost, but the Reinfelden dynasty's holdings had never been greater.



Duke Reinhard's holdings in 1252​