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Happy_Lonely

Second Lieutenant
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Mar 19, 2007
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In february, AD 1089 three magnificent things happened almost simultaneously in the life of Buriberdi, the Prince of Alania. First of all, he turned 16, becoming of age to speak on his own behalf in front of his people and the elders of his tribe. For a modest person such as Buriberdi was, this was as much frightening as it was empowering. The principality of Alania had been ruled by the tribal elders for almost a decade after the death of his well-liked yet weak father Durgulel, and now it was finally his own will and vision - both delivered by the Holy Ghost - that would guide his people through the desert and across the sea if it was God's will.

buriberdi2.png


The highlight of his birthday party was the humiliation of King of the Cumans, a formerly great and feared pagan tribe to the north of Alans. The Cumans had over two decades of constant war with its neighbours lost most of its power, and a short involvement by both Alans and Cumans in the civil war of a small sea shore county of Tmutarakan was followed by total occupation of what little was left of Cuman lands. At the height of the party, the Cuman king bowed in front of Buriberdi, handed over the mantle and sword of the Cuman kings and was sent to be beheaded outside the castle. The Alans would no longer be vassals to the Kings of Georgia, for Buriberdi was a king in his own right, by the Grace of God.

In the morning following the declaration of Buriberdi as being of age, and a king, a royal marriage was already being planned on. And no more than three weeks later, the King would marry the steward of his realm, Nada Cherven. The Cherven family had fled from their home in Constantia after Nada's father, Count Roman Cherven had entered into a dispute with his liege, Prince Nestor Tzamplakon of Karvuna. The exotic looking girl and her two sisters had risen a lot of interest in the minds of young Alans, but it was Nada's inner energy and hands-down way of doing things that finally drew Buriberdi's attention. They had known for years now, having shared most of their childhood together, first in the court of Durgulel's and after that in that of Buriberdi's. If there were tears shed at the wedding, all were of joy.

nadaa.png


A mere month from the wedding and Nada was pregnant. It was no secret that Buriberdi and every one else in the court was praying for a boy. A heir to the throne would bring stability and peace to the realm that was divided geographically as well as in terms of race and religion. But the King of Cumans was also anxious to see his first child born and his own family thus in all senses of the word formed. As a man who would uphold the sacred institution he would show the Alans, Cumans and other people of his realm that under his dynasty, a prosperous time would follow.

Truly there would be something wondrous waiting for Buriberdi in God's plans, why else would he be so blessed already at the age of 16?

(next to come: the short history of Alans under the reign of Durgulel; how they came to be a part of the Georgian Kingdom; and events leading to the establishment of an Orthodox Christian Cuman-Alan Kingdom on the mountains of Caucasus)
 
So. Welcome everyone. This is my first and very probably last AAR ever written, so a few words. Over the years I've enjoyed a lot reading these stories, the AAR's really are a genre in itself. I bought CK + DV only last summer, and haven't played a single game through. However, whenever I've played pretty much any game, I always take the longest possible game. I become attached to stories (in books as well as games) and want to follow them as long as possible.

So, expect some really crappy play. :)

In aars, I find pretty much nothing to be more boring than a WC with a OPM. It can be done, we all know that. I know next to nothing about Alans or the Caucasus region, or the Orthodox faith, so this will be based more on hunch and storytelling than fact and storytelling.

Finally, I am no storyteller. So don't expect good read. Yes, would love to improve myself in anyway possible, so any and all feedback is appreciated.

So, here are my objectives for the game:

- Make a story that I enjoy making.

A few home rules:

- avoid WC or any extensive expansion. I should not expand beyond Caucasus + Crimea.

- no reloads. If I get totally smashed by Georgians, Turks, Bulgars, Russians, Mongols or anyone, that's the end of it. But I will fight to the last piece of land.

- no usurpations/player made claims. only claims through events and such allowed. No force vassallizations on Christians.

Well, that's it for tonight, maybe.
 
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Could you please show a map of Alan Cuman realm?

My piece of advice would be lots of maps ;), they don't need to be in game maps (I colour in a blank CK map for my AAR) but it really helps for visualising the country.

Also how did you get the Cuman title? I always thought Pagan King titles could not be claimed.

Anyway good start with a veyr interesting set up. I'll be reading. :)
 
If you stay on those lands without proper expansion, the Horde shall and will eat you.
Therefore I suggest conquering and uniting all your kin in Europe, the northern nomads. Magyars, Bulgars, Pechenegs, Uzes, Khzars, Cumans, Alans and Volga-Bulgars. ;)
 
With the birth of a Cuman-Alan Kingdom on the ruins of what little remained of the Cumans and the Alanian Principality, it seemed as if there was a single Alan-Georgian Blue-Green realm that for some curious reasons was divided into two parts, each with seemingly random pieces of land within that realm. In the last decade of the 11th century, and on the map, it might have seemed to be so, but this was of course not reality.

kartta2.png


Giorgi II Bagratuni, the King of Georgians was hardly satisfied. The wars in the northern plains had left his Kingdom with more lands than before, but at the same time the secession of Alania had meant that a strong part of the former Kingdom was missing. More than that, the Orthodox Christian forces of the Caucasus were now divided into two realms and various Moslem realms were growing stronger. The fact that Giorgi II was a first cousin to Buriberdi amounted to little in these calculations. It was the very future of Christian Georgia that was at stake. So it would come as no surprise that there would be growing tension between the brothers in faith.

giorgiiibagratuni.png


Early december would find the first daughter born for Buriberdi and Nada. Not the boy that the Kingdom was hoping for, the young parents were none the less in love with their newborn, giving her name Rusudan. A month later Nada would be pregnant again. Maybe this time it would be a boy...

While Buriberdi was enjoying his life as a family man, events to the north kept worrying him and his advisors. Mid-february AD 1090 the Bulgars would finally annex the Duchy of Itil, thus becoming a solid and threateningly big neighbour to the Kingdom of Cumans. On top of that, they were Moslem, and their success in the north coupled with the steady if slow withdrawal of Byzantine borders to the west were about to create a situation in which the Christian fortress of Caucasus was surrounded on all fronts by Moslem powers.

volgabulgar.png


Meanwhile news from the Western parts of the Oikoumene where distressing, too. In Iberian peninsula the Moslem forces had reached the borders of France, though the island of Sicily was in Christian hands, again.

iberiay.png


The French were united by this outsider threat and seemed ready to confront it. The German Empire, on the other hand, had imploded, fracturing into many yet reasonably powerful duchies.

oikoumene.png


In october 1090, Nada would give birth to a second daughter, the happy parents naming her Maria. Buriberdi was beginning to become a little worried, though he knew God would surely grant him the son if he only passed this test...

But what test? Maybe he had not listened closely enough what the Holy Ghost was asking him to do?

Buriberdi's wise and always cheerful Bishop Itaz came quickly with an idea: surely God was not satisfied, as there still were Cumans who lived under their Pagan superstitions in the Crimean plains, accepting no missionaries and prohibiting all voluntary conversions by their people to the good Christian ways! How would Buriberdi call himself the King of Cumans if he allowed Cumans to live under such despicable ways? The plan for a Crimean Crusade was born...

itazpriest.png
 
Thanks for the feedback, I appreciate it! :)

Could you please show a map of Alan Cuman realm?

My piece of advice would be lots of maps ;), they don't need to be in game maps (I colour in a blank CK map for my AAR) but it really helps for visualising the country.

I once read a piece of advice stating that you should write the kinds of aars you would enjoy reading. So yes, there should be lots of maps coming. As I don't have too much time on my hands though I'll stick to screen shots.

This also means I'll try to stick to major issues, as I wan't the game to progress at some pace at least. So don't wait long conversations between the people of Alania, you'll have to invent those yourselves...

Also how did you get the Cuman title? I always thought Pagan King titles could not be claimed.

My intention was to write the history of major events in Alania until the creation of the Cuman-Alan Kingdom, before going any further with the life of Buriberdi. However, that story seems to be coming a long one, so I chose to write an update at least with some issues before taking the history tour.

Anyway, this question will be answered when we get (back) there. I believe this will be next in line.

Enewald said:
If you stay on those lands without proper expansion, the Horde shall and will eat you.
Therefore I suggest conquering and uniting all your kin in Europe, the northern nomads. Magyars, Bulgars, Pechenegs, Uzes, Khzars, Cumans, Alans and Volga-Bulgars.

Well, I hope I can survive the Horde, at least with a single county if nothing else ;) Historically the Horde was the end for Alania, so that would be a nice way to end this story... :D
 
Your borders offend my eyes! :eek:

Fix this please.

Germany, however, has turned out nice and neat. :)

You should first annex your former Georgian masters, then push back the Bulgars to their traditional lands in the North, by then you can probably become Khazaria, then Unite the Steppe Kingdom. Then fight civilised countires like Rome until the Mongols come, then the real fun ensues :D.

Also could you try not to use pics that stretch the screen out (not sure if this is happening only to me). At the moment the top pic (this update) stretches my screen so I have to scoll from right to left to read the text.
 
The Events leading to establishment of the Cuman-Alan Kingdom, part 1

By the second half of the 11th century, the Alans had established themselves in the northern Caucasus. Their realm consisted of four provinces, two of which were held directly under the Prince Durgulel himself. These two provinces were the mountainous Alania proper, where the Prince held his court at the fort in Maghas, and the plains of Kuma to the north east of Alania. The Alans had for long been staunch supporters of the Khazar Khanate, resulting in cultural and religious mixing of the people. Though the Principality eventually turned byzantineward, its rulers converting to Christianity, there was much to remind them of the old days. While in the mountainous parts the people was mostly traditionalists, holding to their ancient tribal culture as well as their beliefs in spirits of the nature, shamans and seers, in the plains majority of the people both dressed like the Khazars and held the same Judaic religion.

alania.png


To the north of these provinces lay Manych and Yegorlyk, the two counties that recognized Durgulel as their Prince. Here too the people lived like they had for centuries, worshipping idols and herding their cattle.

For some generations now Alania had been ruled by Christians, though. Seen by many as a political choice aimed at warming relations with the Byzantine Empire, Durgulel was personnally convinced that the Christian way was the way, the truth and the life. The Northern Caucasus, being a collection of various Christian, Moslem, Pagan and Jewish peoples, had generally been a relatively tolerant area. While still trying to walk the tightrope of appeasing the numerous congregations, Durgulel began a policy of religious discrimination favouring the Georgian Orthodox church while imposing various restrictions on minority churches and religions. Durgulel would later be remembered as "the Pious" among the Christian people of his lands, while the followers of other creeds would call him "the Heavy-Handed".

the Khazar affair and the beginning of the War against Cumans

For as long as memory would allow, the Alans had been supporters of their relatives and neighbours, the Khazars. However, it was clear to all that there would be no future for the Jewish realm after its lands and cities had been sacked by the raiders from Rus and other nations surrounding it. Prince Durgulel and his tribal elders were of course worried that what remained of Khazar lands would fall under the Cumans, already a power hungry and expansive power. The Alan fears became reality, when Itil was once again sacked by Cuman raiders in 1068, and only a huge tribute convinced them from annexing the Khazar lands all together. This prompted a fast response from Durgulel, the Alan forces quickly occupying key crossing points on the Volga river and marching almost unopposed to the gates of Itil.

After only a brief siege the unpopulated capital of Khazaria fell. Itil and the areas across the Volga would remain in constant unrest for the years to come, raising in open revolt almost annually.

The Cuman king was infuriated with the new of Alans now holding for Khazar lands as part of their own. This meant that the valuable trade routes along the great river Volga were on both banks controlled by Alan forces. So a day from Durgulel having returned to his "palace" at Maghas, a messenger arrived telling that a large Cuman force was raiding the northern parts of his kingdom.

durgulel.png


Durgulel was shocked at the news. He knew his forces were outnumbered and worn from the campaigning in the east, and would stand no chance against the superior Cuman horde. So he chose as his course of action to not act.
 
I still demand that you conquer your way to the Danube and Pannonia.
All the conquering nomads end up there. :p

Well, that could definitely be on way to go... :D If I end up being a OPM at the former home of the Cherven family, that would be something.

Tommy4ever said:
Your borders offend my eyes!

Fix this please.

Germany, however, has turned out nice and neat.

You should first annex your former Georgian masters, then push back the Bulgars to their traditional lands in the North, by then you can probably become Khazaria, then Unite the Steppe Kingdom. Then fight civilised countires like Rome until the Mongols come, then the real fun ensues .

Also could you try not to use pics that stretch the screen out (not sure if this is happening only to me). At the moment the top pic (this update) stretches my screen so I have to scoll from right to left to read the text.

Fixing the borders can be a bit tricky, as my homerules include 1) no grabbing/usurping titles and 2) no force vassalizing christians. :D

Unfortunately making wide pictures seems to allow text to widen up too. I suppose someone knows an easy way out, as I would rather keep combining those maps... But I'm not sure I'll bother experimenting with tags, so if anyone could help me out? :)

I'm really looking forward into those Mongols looting and burning everything down... but with the no reloads rule it's quite likely I'll never live to see that day.
 
Interesting premise! A long time ago I played in this region as the Khazars and managed to recreate Khazaria after a time. While the Alans are no Jews, seeing a Christian empire span the caucasus and the regions that once made up Khazaria will be profound. The Greeks and the Russians will make good allies against the muslims. :)