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September 787, Tunis, the Sultanate of Ifriqiya.

All was not well within the Sultanate…



The Sultan was going mad, increasingly confined within his palace, with both his guards and his senior advisors content to keep him that way while they amassed more and more of his duties and powers. Having ascended to the throne as a tender child, the young Sultan Alim had been effectively shut away by his courtiers, and his regent, the Emir Azim.



The Grand Vizier of the realm, and forty years the Sultan’s senior, it was a common saying that Alim reigned, and Azim ruled, a joke that filled the locals with much delight, for the Grand Vizier was a known quantity in the way that the young, unpredictable and frequently deranged Sultan was not. The old Vizier was a man of charm, patience and generosity. He abided by the principles of charity, and gave much of his money to the poor, and always had time to stop and speak to anyone, even the poor and lowly if they approached him with some problem or another.



So naturally, it was the Vizier who had overseen the details of the Sultan’s annexation of Sardinia, seizing it from the feeble grasp of the Roman Empire, with Constantinople roiled by religious turmoil and internal intrigues, the island’s small, poorly equipped garrison had not had either the time or the patience needed to resist a sustained assault. A brief conquest had ensued, but the Vizier had given orders that pillaging be kept to a minimum, and churches and places of other worship for infidels were spared from destruction. Only an additional tax on those who refused to convert had been imposed on the island’s inhabitants. Wars may have won empires, but clemency and mercy helped you keep them.



At least from the inhabitants, Vizier Azim reflected gloomily. For word of an outside threat now had come, the King of the Franks, with the blessing of the Christian Bishop in Rome, had authorised an invasion of the new territory in Sardinia, seeking to reconquer it. It was unfortunate timing, the levies that had partaken in the conquest had been disbanded and returned to their own homes. Many would now have to be recalled, and sellswords hired to cover the rest of them who could not be.



Nevertheless, the Vizier had begun to steel himself to his duty. The infidel had to be driven back and the island held until the work of Allah could be fulfilled. He would not fail…





Milan, Northern Italy.



Shadows lurked in the dark, this Bertrada knew. The Italian lords were up to something, whispering behind their jeweled goblets and gloved hands. Despite the wealth of Empire and conquest being shared with them as well, many among them chafed under what they saw as Frankish dominion.



But there were no named players yet, no firm leadership she could identify. Only hints and dark whispers carried on the wind by her spies. A weapons shipment going missing there, a lord who disliked another lord being spotted chatting feverishly with him in hushed, fervent whispers behind their hands at a feast. All circumstantial, yet all enough to set off the chill in her gut.



For the Empress-Mother knew her time was drawing near. Her bones chilled more easily these days, and her fires had to burn higher in her chambers to keep her warm. Winter was harsher, and the extremes harder to bear. Her mind remain untroubled, but her flesh could not hold out forever.



It was crucial to unravel this plot then, before her time was done and she went to join her husband. One last grand conspiracy to unravel, one last defence of her husband’s dream of a stronger Frankish Empire, the dream he had not lived to see done, but the dream of which she had never forgotten.



It was why she tolerated their son, even after everything. Why she helped and protected him. All for his father, all for Pepin and his dream. All for his legacy to be safeguarded and his vision to be realised.





And it would not be left to a few renegade Lombards to bring it crashing down… Not on her last breath.



She would remain in Milan a month or two longer, and then return, to await her son’s triumph in Sardinia, a triumph of a type he was very good at securing. But when it came to the more imaginative arts… well, there was a reason he kept her around…


November 787-January 788.



The voyage of the fleet to Sardinia had been fraught with difficulties. Karloman, as it turned out, had overestimated the number of ships he might be able to call upon for the campaign, forcing him to cut the numbers of his levies. His planned army of ten thousand was cut to a size of six thousand, with the others being dismissed and sent home for the season, with some grumbling at the lost prospects for booty and plunder.



But even then, his ships could barely ferry three thousand of his troops at once, and thus once this diminished force set out, it would likely be dependant on the swift arrival of Prince Pepin and the rest of the army.



For a week, the Emperor sat below deck of his own ship, trying to grit his teeth and ignore the churning, rumbling stomach that reminded him of why he so badly hated sea voyages. He made a mental note to only campaign on land in future…

Despite the discomfort however, the fleet made good time and arrived on Sardinia to make landfall by January. Within a day, his men had an army camp established with trenches and rudimentary palisades up, and the ships had been sent back to sea to Marseilles to transport the rest of the army.



And then they waited…. And waited… and waited.



Weeks past, and the planned arrival of Pepin with the reinforcements came and went, with no ships arriving. Within days of their arrival, their foragers and scouts were facing attack from local inhabitants and the Berber garrisons that had been stationed on Sardinia. Wary of being ambushed, Karloman ordered the camp to pull up stakes and shifted them to higher ground several miles further east, giving them a natural defensive point. Larger concentrations of enemy forces began coalescing, and the element of surprise the initial invasion might have had was lost as the planned reinforcements did not materialise.



What had happened to the relief force? In his darker moments of doubt, the Emperor began to fear that his son had deliberately abandoned him, left him to die alone on this godforsaken island. But he shook himself free of such doubts. Pepin would not do that, it wasn’t his way. Something must have delayed him.



But it became harder to forage in the days to come, and with no sign of reinforcement or re-supply, discontent began to swirl within the army…





What had become of their reinforcements?



Marseilles, Francia, January-May 788.



Pepin had known immediately something had gone wrong on the night the storm passed through. Within two days, only a small dozen battered ships had limped into dock, their captains telling tale of how they were scattered and blown off course en-route, their timing, and the state of the ships now throwing off the projections for the campaign.



Cursing the weather and his luck, the Crown Prince swung into action. Both to alleviate their boredom, and to get the ships they did still have into shape, he ordered his men to begin assisting with repairs, giving the army something to do. Then he began the work of finding replacements.





Finding merchant ships capable of making the crossing wasn’t easy. Convincing their owners to part with them was even harder. Eventually, frustrated by his failure to barter an adequate price for a number of Pisan barges, the Crown Prince eventually ordered them seized by force, promising the wailing owner he would be compensated with booty once the campaign was won, which didn’t appease the fellow’s anger.



He seized a number of Venetian and Greek merchant vessels as well, reasoning that he’d worry about the diplomatic complications later. If his father and the army starved to death on Sardinia, angry Venetian merchants and complaint from the court of the Empress in Constantinople about their conduct would be the least of his problems.



By April, he finally had the ships to transport further supplies… and the rest of the army, about a month later than planned, so he hurried the army onto the makeshift vessels at a cracking pace that caused even some of the hardier men to grumble about how tough a drillmaster the Prince was.



It was early May when his rag-tag mess of a fleet finally made landfall in Sardinia, several miles west of the Porto Torres… His scouts reported his father’s army had encamped on the heights further east, and so the army moved to join them.





They found Karloman’s forces virtually surrounded, sick with disease, and beginning to suffer malnutrition. Fortunately, the arrival of reinforcements prompted the enemy to withdraw, allowing Pepin and his forces to relieve the beleaguered Emperor and his army.



“And now there are six thousand”, Karloman said with a smile when his son approached. The Emperor looked thin and gaunt, clearly the shortage of food had bitten him as much as any man in the army. “More than enough.”


“Sorry we’re late father,” Pepin grinned, happy to see him despite it all. “The ships were wrecked in a storm on the way back, it took a while to find replacements.”

“I knew you would come,” Karloman replied calmly, with a small smile. “It is no matter now, I have a plan for battle.”


The enemy had drawn off at the sight of reinforcements, but the Emperor knew they were not gone. They would be shadowing the army as it marched.



“We need to draw them into an open engagement,” Karloman told his son once he and his men had eaten their fresh supplies and he could think straight without hunger, “I don’t intend to be chasing our enemy across their own ground in this god-forsaken island trying to catch them. They know the country better than we do, so we have to draw them out.”

“Sounds familiar,” Pepin replied, grinning, knowing his father preferred pitched battles. “What’s the plan?”



“Besiege a target they can do nothing but defend, force them onto open ground and crush them,” Karloman pointed west, “The Porto Torres is the most significant target on the north of the island. It controls our sea supply line, and it prevents us from being re-supplied. If it is attacked, they will march to protect it.”



“When do we begin?”


“Tomorrow”, the Emperor replied. He turned to his son, and gave a slight smile, “It feels good to be in command again,”

“It feels good to be with the army again father,” Pepin replied, with a matching grin, relieved he and Karloman seemed to be getting along for now.





But the war in Sardinia had just begun.




OOC: Lots happening here, whispers of Italian intrigue, the war in Sardinia begins badly for the Franks, and first contact with the enemy is made. Let's see if their fortunes improve from here on.
 
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Seems like most of Karloman empire trouble come from the inside rather than from outside because other realm have more trouble in their realm as well.

Ulitmately Saxon seems to be the biggest challange Karloman faces just because it's the most resistant and stable until Karloman crush it twice anyway.
 
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As it turned out, once the army arrived at the Porto Torres, the exhausted men were in no condition to fight immediately. Karloman halted several miles west of the port town to allow them to rest and forage for three days, secure in the knowledge that fresh water springs were available and, while the enemy continued to scout and shadow his movement, they made no move to direct confrontation yet.



But while he re-gathered his strength, he knew the enemy would do the same. The Ifriqiyan forces had mustered additional strength and supplied additional forces from Tunis in recent weeks.



But the siege began some days later as planned, and scouts reported increased enemy movement within hours.



Karloman’s plan had gone well. Now to await the enemy…



May 16th, 788.

Lucia Sorrenti was rather displeased with his present situation. Forced to lead an army to defend his island from invaders… at the behest of another group of invaders who had already conquered the island just months earlier.



His forces, a mixture of local levies, Berber mercenaries and the few garrisoned troops from Ifriqya itself were ill-coordinated and poorly disciplined. In truth, the Frankish invasion had been fortunately timed. Having expended the strength to conquer the island, Sardinia’s new African masters seemed less inclined to expend the same effort to defend it.



In truth, Lucia himself had begun to wonder about his position. He had been allowed to retain nominal rule over his lands, but a war against the Franks had not been part of that arrangement. And the King of the Franks, self-styled Emperor of the Romans, was not one to be trifled with. Tales of his cruel slaughter of the Saxon pagans, his conquest of Lombardy, and his victory over the mighty city of Constantinople abounded. And for all that, the Franks shared his Christian faith, which his new masters did not.



But the siege of Porto Torres could not be left unanswered, so he nevertheless collected the forces he possessed and marched them to relieve the port.





On the 17th of May, word reached them that the Franks had broken off the siege and deployed for open battle. Surveying the field, Lucia became aware that his position was not highly favourable. The enemy had anchored his left flank beside a thick forested area, meaning a flanking assault with his horsemen would be impossible over such treacherous ground. The Franks had brought few of their own cavalry, given the sea voyage, but on this ground, they wouldn’t need it.



So rather than give battle, Lucia dithered, sending out couriers to request reinforcements from Africa while fretting and stressing about his situation. Wild ideas darted through his mind, ranging from withdrawing and leaving the port to fall to outright defection to the Franks, though he did not believe Karloman would be inclined to show him mercy.



But after a week of dithering, he found a group of fed-up mercenaries barging into his tent, threatening to abandon the army, and take the treasury with them, if he did not consent to fight. They had been paid, they said, to fight, and fight they meant to, regardless of his cowardice.





Sighing, the reluctant Emir prepared to commit his forces to the field.



March 24th, Battle of Porto Torres, Sardinia.



It was, for all that manuovering, a short and rather disappointing engagement. Forced into a narrow front, the Sardinian forces faced the bulk of the most disciplined and experienced Frankish infantry near the centre of their line, veterans of the Saxon, Lombard and Spanish campaigns. Karloman himself commanded the center, one of the few people in the army who was still horsed.



The lighter Frankish infantry covered both wings and the missile troops behind them, who pelted the Sardinian infantry with arrows and small javelins as they attempted to cautiously advance. Sensing this hesitancy, the Frankish wings began to advance further, ensuring their missile troops and archers to move forward and continue hammering the Sardinians.



The small Frankish cavalry reserve, commanded by Prince Pepin, ended up taking no role in the battle. Karloman did not need them, as when the Berber sellswords, Lucia’s best mounted troops, decided to launch a charge independently of their orders, they attacked directly towards the right of the Frankish line, seeing that they were unable to hit the left due to the cover of the forest.



Karloman countered immediately, detaching several hundred of his men from the steady onslaught of the centre to counter them, which he personally left to the relief. Stiffening the resolve of the lighter Frankish troops, this reinforcing group pushed back the Berber horsemen with high casualties. After this, the Frankish centre relentlessly pressed the Sardinians, until after just two hours, Lucia gave the signal for a general withdrawal, sensing his army was on the brink of a major rout, and wanting to save his troops.





Despite the victory, Karloman knew his issues continued. His men still had no firm supply line, and the field battle had come too slowly, and had not been decisive enough, to end the fighting. Thus, the following day he gave orders for his men to storm the Porto Torres, lacking the logistics needed for a prolonged siege.



Within days, ladders and sappers alike had done their work, and by June 1st, the Porto Torres had fallen, with no further action from those who had been dispatched to relieve them. Now secure in the knowledge that the port had been captured and his supply lines secured, Karloman gave orders for his men to plunder the granaries to eat, and to sack the town for their plunder.





The first engagements were theirs, but the war was not yet won…


1637398934588.png

Emir Lucia, the Christian ruler of Sardinia, was not a decisive man, and was frequently as unhappy with his new Muslim masters as he was with the prospect of Frankish dominion. An ant sandwiched between elephants.


OOC
: The Sardinian War proceeds, as Karloman's logistics and the Sorrenti Christian Governor's divided loyalties both play their part. But the Africans have a few tricks up their sleeves to come...
 
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788. Tunis.



Word had been sent off, the new forces being dispatched to Sardinia had left their place, and the Regent had received word that the Porto Torres had fallen. Despite this, scouting had confirmed that around six thousand Franks had invaded the island, and both the Emperor and his heir were present.



“And where they are, there are other parts of the Empire that are vulnerable,”



A plan had begun to come together, which the Sultan’s regency council had been formulating. With both the timing and the logistical disadvantages, they knew they could not hope to defeat the Franks directly in the field. But they had advantages further afield, most prominently, their Umayyad Allies.



The Umayyad Sultan had recently lost Barcelona and the surrounding regions to the Franks, and the Sultan, recently come of age to rule in his own right, hungered to reclaim his lost lands. Thus, an opportunity had come, and the rulers of Ifriqiya intended to tie the Umayyads cause to their own.



Toledo, Umayyad Sultanate.

The news had come from Africa, from their allies in Tunis.



The Franks were distracted, their armies elsewhere, here was the time to avenge the failures of the Regency Council.



For the young Sultan Su’daddin, this was his chance to prove his worth. His regents had lost Barcelona to the would-be Emperor of Rome. He would regain it…





July, 788.



The fall of Porto Torres was the only major battle for the following weeks. Other towns, aware of Karloman’s sack, opened their gates and surrendered to the Franks. Since most of them were Christian, many in these towns had made the call that they were rather inclined to prefer Frankish to Moorish rule. To these towns, Karloman restrained his troops from sacking, as he hoped that the coercion caused by the sack of Porto Torres would be sufficient to ensure victory…



And then word came from the west…



Karloman was sitting alone within his tent when word came on a ship bound from Marseille. He opened the missive and read it with a growing concern, his eyes straining as he tried to make out the script. He made a mental note to ensure his scribes had proper instructions for the reformations of written script to make it more legible.



After he read it, he waited for his son to arrive, knowing that Pepin had come to discuss the plans for the next weeks.



The Prince arrived, wiping the sweat from his brow. He realised his father was holding the missive out towards him.



“Read it,” Karloman said shortly.



Pepin sat, and did so. A slower reader than his father, he had to move his lips as he read the letters. Once he finished, he stared up at his father. “The Moors…”

“Have invaded our Spanish territories,” Karloman finished, “Yes. In violation of our treaty.”

“And we have not the troops to repel them,”

“Not now,” Karloman conceded, “But I can authorise the hiring of sellswords, they can push back the Umayyads, though it will take longer.”



“Now, it’s more vital than ever that we should win quickly.” Pepin affirmed, sitting across from his father and pouring himself wine. Karloman’s eyes narrowed slightly but he said nothing, his son was fonder of the drink than he was.

“And punish the Moors of Hispania for their defiance,” Karlonman replied, in that tone of cold anger that Pepin knew well by now. He shivered slightly, whether from the taste of the wine, or the frission of fury from his father he did not know.



“Well I’m certainly prepared to make it happen, what shall we do?”

“We range across the north of the island. Sack and loot every town that does not surrender and spare those who do. I want that army lured into open battle against us and defeated, crushed, thoroughly smashed. Only a decisive victory will provide the sort of triumph we need to end this quickly to deal with events in Hispania.”


“And how goes the home front?” Pepin asked, any news.



His father looked at him in askance. “You mean how has your marriage been received?” A great shrug from the Emperor. “Our plan seems to have worked, though the Italian lords continue to grumble, but with your grandmother in Milan they have been too frightened to plot openly. Others in Francia are discontented, but for other reasons, they will have to be dealt with in time.”


“Any names?” Pepin asked, curious. He had not heard of Frankish lords dissenting against his father.



“Some,” His father acknowledged, “we’ll discuss those another time.”



And from that point, he would not be moved…



September, 788.

The Moorish army under the Sultan’s command had crossed the Frankish border in force, laying waste to frontier villages, sending hordes of screaming serfs scattering before them. It was by early September that the force of six thousand had encamped outside Barcelona, and begun to besiege it. For the small Frankish garrison, the few days they had to prepare their defenses had not been enough to craft a sustainable fortification capable of withstanding the Sultan’s army.



In October, the town fell. The Sultan’s brutal assault earned him the moniker of “The Butcher of Barcelona” among Frankish Christians living in the region, and the brutality of the sack would linger in the memory for generations. Every man, woman and child the attackers could find were slain or enslaved. The city of Hannibal was burned and razed, with only a few hundred pikes with heads adorned atop them marking the smouldering ruins where bustling streets and market vendors had once been. The Frankish Duke was executed, his head displayed next to the Sultan’s own banner when the army next marched on from the town.

With the Emperor and his army in Sardinia and the local forces overwhelmed, things in Spain seemed bleak….



Then the Frankish reinforcements arrived…





Sardinia, October 788.



The Emperor had made his dispositions, picked his preferred ground for the battle.



For Emir Lucia, reinforced from Tunis with fresh supplies and forces, he was more confident of victory on this occasion. A visit by two Tunisian commanders, sent by the Sultan to stiffen his resolve, had calmed his frantic nerves, forcing him to quiet any thoughts of defection or surrender.



The Franks had marched themselves in hollow squares west, towards the town of Sassari, one of the many that had capitulated to the Franks after the fall of Porto Torres. There, in the narrow passes and defiles, Karloman had set his men into a narrow defensive line, throwing up defensive earthworks and digging trenches, while his few cavalrymen went to harass and raid the more inexperienced Sardinian forces in their own encampments, trying to pressure them to give battle.





General Mahdi, the man who had been sent by the Grand Vizier from Tunis to lead the defense of the island, surveyed the Emperor’s preparations with a critical eye.



“No good,” he told Emir Lucia, “We can’t attack them here, they’re throwing up fortifications.”



“On my island, in my territory,” Lucia corrected, “We must do something to remove them.”


Mahdi glanced at him. How big of an idiot had he been saddled with?



“Not while they’re digging in and preparing their defenses.” Mahdi insisted, “They want us to attack them here.”



“And we’re waiting to prove that they should never have come here,” The Emir insisted. His courage had been bolstered by his reinforcements, but his lack of military experience made him reckless.



“They’ll run out of food before long, they can’t hold that position for too long. They’ll have to move to more open ground at that point, and then our horsemen can be used to better effect,” Mahdi cautioned, trying to talk Lucia down. “Have patience.”


So they waited, and for nearly ten days, they waited for the Franks to move encampment. Only they did not. Even when scouts snuck in and reported both sickness and the beginnings of starvation had begun to hurt the Franks, the army did not move.



But when it came to the 25th of October, it was General Mahdi who was forced to move. Aware of some minor dispute on one of his outlying camps, he rushed to attend to the issue in person.



Then the Franks moved… out of camp, and formed up for battle. Eager to see it done, Emir Lucia sounded the instruments and ordered his forces to be battle-ready. His own horsemen charged forward, though without full enthusiasm. His own cavalry officers had cautioned the Emir against his attack, but had been overridden.





The results were unsurprising. Many of the horsemen fell or faltered over the craggy, rocky ground before they even reached their targets. Those who met the Franks arrived in confusion and disarray, and were routed with some light prodding.



The Frankish infantry surged forward, catching the Sardinian centre off-guard. For the Franks, the trap had been sprung perfectly… Frankish missilemen pelted the fleeing horseman and the stronger infantry in the centre, led by Prince Pepin, quickly crushed through the centre line.



By the time General Mahdi had returned to witness the scene, it was over, his army routed, broken and the Franks pursued, slaughtered hundreds more in the chaos that followed. The Battle of Sassari had been a crushing, total victory for the Franks, the ease of it made possible by Sardinian miscommunication and command failures.





Emir Lucia did not stay to bear witness to the slaughter, bearing himself a horse away from the battlefield as fast as it could carry him. Intending to reach Caligari, he meant to write a letter to Tunis, where he would explain to the Sultan’s court that General Mahdi’s recklessness and foolish command of the army and lack of proper deference to his role of Emir had led to the defeat.





“Well that worked,” Was Pepin’s first remark to his father when they met after the fight. Karloman had commanded the Frankish reserve for the battle, which had not actually needed to move, but Pepin had been soaked in blood and sweat, also suffering a minor wound, his first on the battlefield, from a panicked Sardinian who managed to nick a blow with the spear as he retreated from the Frankish onrush.



“So long as Hispania is held, we should expect Sardinia to be ours within the month,” Karloman replied. Then he gave a small grim smile and a nod, “Well done.”

“My thanks father,” Pepin grinned, that praise meaning to him more than all the accolades he received from his troops. “And I’d wager once this campaign is done, we’re off to punish the Andalusians for their defiance.”


“That and more.” Karloman replied grimly. “I have something special in mind for the Sultan himself…”




OOC: Lots happening! Sardinian war going well, but Spain suddenly flares up again. And what retribution shall be exacted for the burning of Barcelona by the man who once held a literal Blood Court? Let's see!
 
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Emir Lucia did not stay to bear witness to the slaughter, bearing himself a horse away from the battlefield as fast as it could carry him. Intending to reach Caligari, he meant to write a letter to Tunis, where he would explain to the Sultan’s court that General Mahdi’s recklessness and foolish command of the army and lack of proper deference to his role of Emir had led to the defeat.
Lucia the unready : is the one that recklessly attack the franks and get smashed

Also Lucia the unready : blame all it's own fault to Mahdi instead

Granted he would have no love for the moors conqueror and would love seeing moors divided but still.
 
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Lucia the unready : is the one that recklessly attack the franks and get smashed

Also Lucia the unready : blame all it's own fault to Mahdi instead

Granted he would have no love for the moors conqueror and would love seeing moors divided but still.
He's hardly the first man to try and pin blame for a defeat on someone else...
 
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Spain, Barcelona

The Frankish reinforcements led by Duke Ado, brother-in-law of the Emperor, achieved their purpose swiftly. The burnt-out Barcelona was re-taken, the region surrounding it quickly liberated from the small garrisons the Sultan’s men had left their.



Though his army was largely sellswords, they were experienced and well-trained, and when the Umayyad Sultan heard word of this larger military force, he quickly scarpered his army back across the border into his own lands, unwilling to formally confront the Franks in open battle at this stage.



With the immediate threat withdrawing, Duke Ado set about strengthening the region, laying down new fortifications, re-building garrisons and beginning the reconstruction of various settlements. Though the Sultan’s men had caused devastation in their wake, the territory had been swiftly liberated and the Umayyads had not brought a large enough force to hold what they had taken indefinitely.





Sardinia, Caligari



Word had been sent off to Tunis, and for some days Emir Lucia had relaxed…



Until word came that General Mahdi had in fact left the island, on a ship bound for Tunis, throwing the Emir into a panic.



The possibility existed that the General might reach Tunis before his letter, and if so, his account would be believed over a written letter dictated to Emir’s scribes and then sent to the Vizier. Plus, Mahdi had the confidence of the court, if he pinned the blame on Lucia…



The Emir was now worrying constantly, thrown into a depressive funk about the possibility. If Mahdi was believed, he would lose his holdings, and probably his head as well. The Grand Vizier would show no hesitation in replacing him with a Berber governor who would move to forcibly convert the locals.



That settled it then, he had to take action to protect himself. He ordered his scribes to draft another note, found a rider willing to carry it for a fat bag of coins, and then sent him north in search of the Franks…



He arrived at Karloman’s camp to find the Franks in control of nearly the whole northern half of the island. The message given to the Franks was a clear one.



Emir Lucia wanted to talk…





Northern Sardinia, 789.

The Frankish Emperor had sent his son ahead with a small force. Lucia Sorrenti had finally come around, indicating his intention to defect. Pepin was gone for almost two days, but returned from his meeting with a broad grin on his face… and several new friends.



“Father, this is Lucia Sorrenti, he has come to offer his allegiance, and those of his people.”


Karloman’s lips quirked into a small smile, the thickset, sweating man before him quivered slightly. He had not imagined the possibility that this Frankish emperor might reject his allegiance.

“You have done well Pepin,” Karloman smiled at his son, and then turned back to Lucia, “I of course am willing to accept you and your people’s offers of fealty to Rome and to myself, in exchange for military protection from the forces of the infidel.



A translator relayed the words to Lucia, who replied with a few halting sentences. “I thank you Excellency, for myself and on behalf of my people.”

When this was relayed to Karloman, he casually dismissed his new ally with an irreverent wave of the hand. “Order your people to open the gates to my arms, and our men will assist you in fortifying the island against a renewed counter-attack. I hear the tide has turned in Hispania, so the end of the war draws nearer here on Sardinia.”



Lucia was ushered out, and Karloman’s face twisted into a grimace as soon as he was out of view. “Keep an eye on our new traitor.” He told Pepin.

“He’s our traitor now father,” his son told him cautiously.



“Aye, but a traitor once can always be one again, especially when he turned to save his own skin,” Karloman replied heavily, “I would not trust the Sorrentis to keep faith with us if things ever turned against us. But for now, we need a victory, things on the mainland deterioriate faster the longer we remain, and without Sardinia falling quickly, we may lose progress in other areas.” He shook his head. “I dislike this, but this defection is the fastest way, and if Lucia remaining in power is the fastest way to ensure it, then I will do it.”


“And maybe if you crown him King of Sardinia and Corsica, it might be a reward to maintain his fealty.” Pepin suggested.



His father glanced at him, nodded, “Not a bad idea,” he replied approvingly. “I’ll think on it once the war is done. “King” rolls off the tongue better than Emir does it not? But a King still bows before an Emperor.”



He shook his head, driving the thought from his mind. “It’s of no matter for now, we have a war to finish up.”



It took a number of weeks to accept the surrender of the remaining settlements on the island. But by November 789, the island had been conquered. The remaining opposition had been destroyed or driven from their positions. In practice, isolated bands of enemy forces would persist on Sardinia for years, but in practice, victory had been achieved. Karloman had grown tired of the island however, and the slow pace of his conquest had been frustrating, so he began making plans to return home.



But before he did so, he summoned forth Lucia Sorrenti, and crowned him King of Sardinia and Corsica, bestowing upon him a title of tremendous significance within the Empire. This bestowment would raise the Sorrenti family to prominence they would occupy in Southern Europe for centuries to come.



But events closer to home would soon consume the Emperor’s attention.



Marseilles, Southern Francia

The Duke’s party had been a long and gruelling one. The wine had flowed as free as the talk, and the feast had been a gluttonous one. The Emperor’s brother-in-law enjoyed the pleasures of life for sure, and had grown stouter than his years would suggest he really should have been.



Beside him was his wife, the Princess Gisela. The Emperor’s sister had little cause to regret her match with Duke Ado, for despite his boisterousness he was gentle with her, and doted frequently on their children, with a warm smile and a glint of humor. He made her laugh, which was good, as Gisela had always liked laughter. It reminded her of brother Karl, who had always been charming and smiling and happy.



But the gathering tonight was larger by far than usual, for the return of the Emperor was imminent, fresh from his victories in Sardinia. It was imperative, in Duke Ado’s mind, that he celebrate his own victory in Hispania before Karloman overshadowed him, for he had driven off the Moorish attack in Spain and forced them back over their border. How would things have gone had he not done so?



And so it was that the Italian lords sensed the purpose for the celebration, and used the opportunity.



“Fish?” the Duke of Milan asked Duke Ado as he offered him his plate?



“Aye, I’ll take it,” Ado greedily accepted the offer and began to gobble up the offering. He had grown more sloppy since the drink had gotten into him, and his inhibitions were now truly lowered.



For those others in the room, the Duke of Milan, of Trier and others, this was significant. It was the first time since leaving Italia that they had been able to meet in the same room. Hushed whispers and murmured conspiracies dogged the night, even as the host drifted further and further into drunkness, blissfully unaware of events unfolding.


When the Duke of Milan next excused himself and stepped outside for air, one of his fellows whispered urgently to him.



“What do you think? Is he suitable?”

He shook his head.

“Too early to say. He’s annoyed at Karloman for not formally granting him any recognition for the Spanish campaign, but ready to move against him properly?” he shrugged. “Too early to say.”


“You’ll have to find out by the end of the week, otherwise it’ll be too late to change plans.”


“I am aware of that,” the Duke glared, “Since it is my city’s coin that is financing the majority of our little effort,” his interlocuter shrank back in fright, “I am very much aware of that.”



He went back inside, to find the Duke dismissing his wife, and their three children to their bedchamber.



“The three of them eh? Lovely children?” Duke Ado slurred as he shakily poured himself another cup. “I am grateful for Karloman for that at least, his sister makes a fine wife and mother.”



“They are indeed impressive,” The Duke of Milan replied, forcing a smile, “But children are often reflections of their parents I find.”


“Yes,” the Duke’s face darkened slightly, “Though I don’t know how our dear Majesty got his nature then! By all accounts, his father was a delightful fellow.”


These were dangerous words to say aloud, and even with his allegiances the Duke of Milan glanced around urgently to make sure nobody heard. “You needn’t speak such words openly,” he cautioned, but the Duke waved his hand contemptuously.



“Ah, I’m not fool enough to believe you love our Emperor anymore than I do, he conquered your people after all.” Duke Ado looked at him, a sudden flash of recognition in his eyes. “I’m right aren’t I? Yes, the looks don’t lie, you don’t like him either.”


“He is my liege,” the Duke shifted uncomfortably, This could be a trap or test.



“But not your willing one I know, and why would he be? He hogs all the credit, and gives himself orders for a sumptuous banquet to celebrate a triumph for a campaign where he and his idiot son nearly got half their fleet drowned at sea! Then I conduct a flawless campaign against the Moors and… nothing! No recognition, no victory feast, just a curt letter with cold orders. And I! His brother-by-law!”


“Are you certain it is safe to speak of such things?” But the Duke’s heart leapt. Ado shared their view! Perhaps he would be persuaded to assist after all.



“I am the Emperor’s brother-in-law,” he waved a hand drunkenly, “What can he do to me? He could no more slay me than his own blood.” He gulped his drink down. “And if he hasn’t killed that bitch of a mother of his, he certainly won’t aim a blow at me. No,” he gave a short, bitter laugh, “We are quite safe here, I can assure you.”


The Duke of Milan cast another suspicious glance around the room. No servants, no witnesses. Perhaps it was time.



“Now that you mention it,” the Duke whispered urgently, “perhaps there is a way we can all… work out our differences with the Emperor’s recent policies.”





And with the subject broached, those who plotted and planned their rebellion gained another convert to their cause, just as the Emperor’s ships were beginning to come into sight of Marseilles…


OOC: One war ends and the outline of another takes shape! And a convert in the Emperor's own family has come along. Perhaps vengeance against the Sultan of Al-Andalus might be delayed by Italian plots for vengeance.
 
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November 788.

The plot to begin armed revolt had been building for months. The Italians, most specifically Duke (R-something?) had been the centre of the growing revolt. Once they dispersed from the celebrations in Marseilles, they put their plans into motion.



It was made easier by Imperial decree, Emperor Karloman had made clear he would be calling upon their levies soon for another campaign in Hispania. Thus, mobilisation and strengthening of their own forces would not bring undue imperial suspicion.



And now they had a formidable ally, Duke Ado, who had promised he would try to rally disaffected Frankish lords to their side as well, in the hopes that the additional leverage might dissuade Karloman from attempting a risky campaign across the Alps while he had rebel forces in the field closer to home.





But the rebels already found themselves divided on their plan for the upcoming campaign. After all, despite their distaste for him, Karloman had been proclaimed King of Italy and Emperor of the Romans by Pope Honorius II himself. Deposing him without lawful pretext would likely make them outcasts, and they had no doubt the Pontiff would back Karloman if he were fully deposed. Some wanted only to limit the Emperor’s power over Italy, while others hoped to extract from him concessions and a promise that the next King of Italy would be one of their own (which had the added bonus of meaning that each of the would-be rebels would have time to plot to ensure that King would be himself when Karloman did eventually pass). Others still wanted to force Karloman’s abdication, hoping that Prince Pepin could then be strong-armed into further concessions.



But while they dithered and bickered, they lost time to prepare. And time… and luck, would soon shift in favour of the Emperor.





November 788.

Bertrada’s alert had not gone unheeded. Karloman had sprung into action swiftly. For all his disagreements with his mother, he knew better than to disregard her on matters of intrigues. He also, for the first time, took Pepin into his confidence about the planned Italian rebellion. His son was, for better or worse, a man in his own right now, and could no longer be coddled from the dirty and murky world of Frankish internal politics.



“We have some names, dates, even places the alleged conspirators have met.” Karloman began, as he and Pepin spoke privately in the Council room one evening. “The Duke of Milan seems the focal point for the planned rebellion, the Count of Firenze, possibly support from the Duke of Benevento as well, who fears that I may decide to add the south of Italia to our own borders.” He gave a small, bitter grin, “The perils of expanding so far so fast.”


“But without proof, they cannot be arrested, lest you be named tyrant and those seeking to oppose you suddenly gaining legitimacy overnight.” Pepin replied, “I can see the bind we’re in.”


“Yes, it’s not that simple,” Karloman acknowledged, “But we do have options. We still outnumber those confirmed in involvement, and there are ways to smoke the traitors out. We just need to make use of it, and force those planning to revolt to execute their plan before they are ready. We have my mother’s information, so we’ll use it.”


“In what way?” Pepin asked, curious to see his father’s plan in action.



“I shall scribe two letters and have them sent south by courier, one for the Duke of Milan, and one for the Count of Firenze, both were present at our feast on our return from Sardinia, so our letter will be believed. I will inform both men that they have been named complicit in a plot for rebellion, and provide certain information that leads each of them to believe that the other man is the one who betrayed them. I shall also enclose an additional offer of amnesty if neither man raises his troops in arms against me… and if he should give up the names of his other conspirators.”


“Devious.” Pepin grinned, “I like it. The Duke and the Count can’t confide in each other, because they each will believe the other has betrayed them. They will have to either raise their arms against you immediately, well before they’re ready, or sit out the rebellion and name their fellows who were in on the plot.”

“That’s the idea,” Karloman replied, warming to his theme, though his face then darkened somewhat. “I especially want to know whom among my own lords have collaborated with them. I smashed the Lombards on my last campaign into Italia, and the Duke of Milan is a cautious man, who would not risk open warfare unless he believed he had some advantage that was not present last time. It only makes sense he would’ve tried to build alliances with other lords closer to home who despise me.” His face grimaced, “Sometimes you find treachery all around you, even when you bring me glory, plunder and power. Some will never stay true to you. Learn that lesson well son.”


“I am learning it better by the day father,” Pepin replied truthfully. “Though it’s one I’d rather not.”


“As would we all, but the man who doesn’t learn it will quickly find himself replaced by one who does.” Karloman warned, “Even blood is not a foolproof guarantee of loyalty.” He grimaced again, though Pepin himself did not fully see why.



“And what then? Do we abide by the promise of amnesty if they turn upon each other?” The Prince asked his father.



Karloman smiled, “Well, perhaps you should decide. Were you in my place, what would you do?”


Pepin thought for a moment. “Sometimes the guilt of sinful men can be purged only with blood.” He stated hesitantly, but Karloman waited, willing him to go on. “But in this one case, mercy in exchange for information may be the best policy, so long as the information is true. What better way to contrast the reward for loyalty with the punishment for treason than to wield both simultaneously?”


Surprisingly, Karloman laughed at that. “Aye! Well-spoken, it does seem just and sensible, when explained that way. Very well, seems as though it shall be done.”



So the trap was laid, but it’s jaws took some time to snap shut…





Duke Roamaldo of Milan was the first to receive the missive. He sprung into action, ordering his forces to mobilise in preparation for war. He then sent threatening missives to Petre, the Duke of Corsica, and Conald, the Count of Firenze, ordering them to mobilise for the rebellion. He now mistrusted all of them, but he felt it would be unlikely he could adjudge who was the traitor until he sat face-to-face along with them.



In the following weeks, all the rebels scrambled to deploy, but when they met on the plains of Cremona, it became clear that barely half of those who had originally been planned to participate had shown their flags.



“Karloman has been busy,” Duke Petre replied in answer to Roamaldo’s question about this. “Many of the lesser lords suddenly found themselves with bigger purses fat with Frankish coin in the past few weeks. Once it became clear we’d been discovered, few of them wanted to risk their new wealth by open revolt.” He spat disgustedly upon the ground. “Only the cowards and the bribed have refused to show.”


“Or the traitors,” Roamaldo replied, gritting his teeth, “The Count of Firenze is not here. He was the one who rolled over for Karloman.”


“You’re sure?” Petre asked, “How?”


“Doesn’t matter,” he replied grimly, “I know.”


“Four thousand is about all we have mustered,” Petre replied, “And word has it Karloman is marching through the Alps as we speak with twice that number…”


“Then we make our stand up at Milano, It’s more defensible that way.” Roamaldo replied, wishing in truth to defend his beloved city as his last act. He already knew now that they had lost, and he felt a strange calm about that fact.





In truth they arrived at Milan barely a few days before Karloman’s forces arrived, and the siege that followed was both perfunctory and crushing. The Franks broke holes in the walls with their catapaults and the outnumbered and over-stretched defenders surrendered en masse. Duke Roamaldo was delivered to a stone-faced Karloman by his own men, who stripped him of Milano, and most of his other possessions and ordered him sent into exile in the east. Other lords lost some land too, though less than Roamaldo. Karloman clearly had decided to reorganise his Italian domains in the wake of this rebellion, tattered and pitiful though it had ended up being.





But there was one other issue that Karloman had been forced to deal with… even as his every instinct ached to return back over the Alps to go on his new Spanish campaign. The Count of Firenze’s information had borne fruit and Bertrada’s spies had done the rest, intercepting the correspondence from Francoinia has it had arrived in Italia.



It was time for the Emperor to have a discussion with his sister’s husband…
 
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OOC: A rather short and pitiful rebellion! Amazing what a few "gifts" and triggering a rebellion before those planning to revolt are ready can do to ensure you win that war. We'll deal with the mess of the aftermath and the subsequent next campaign (Another one will get in the way before the big Spanish war that's planned, but it'll be a short one).


And on that note, it's been a year since this AAR began! I'd like to first of all thank most fulsomely everyone who has read, left a comment, remarked on the story, been invested in it's characters or anything over the year or so I've been writing. I must say I had no idea of the scope of what I was getting into when I began this project, but now I do... I still find I'm enjoying myself! As long as you are too, then I'll continue doing it!


I've only covered about twenty years of gameplay in this year though, and considering it's an earliest start date game... (gulp). that's a lot of writing, but I don't really have a planned endpoint so I'll keep doing this as long as both I and the fans and readers here enjoy the story. I also do have ideas floating around for another project I plan to write sometime in the next year, but that's a while off yet. It won't impact the upload schedule for this story, and I like having two projects at once going so I can switch between them when one gets a bit wearing. That project will be another AAR, but it won't be at all similar to this one, so I'll hold off on any further details of it for now. I'll have more to say about it sometime early next year.


This is by far the biggest story writing project I've done. We're currently at a story of around 122'000 words and approaching 460 pages on my Word doc, which means it's going to be massive by the time we end with Karloman and move into his successors. Just to give you an idea of how much this has consumed over the past year. Whenever I feel a bit bummed out by how little in-game time I've covered, I reassure myself with those figures.


Thanks once again to everyone who read, commented and supported both me and this AAR. It is for you I have done this so far, and for you that I will continue doing it. I'm amazed how much more productive it makes me to write when I know someone will be reading it:) It's down to you that It's been as successful as it has, and I hope you continue enjoying it for many many days and nights to come:)
 
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Ado should be careful on what he's about to say, I'm quite certain Bertrada's spies are already in Italia snuffing out conspiracies.
 
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OOC: A rather short and pitiful rebellion! Amazing what a few "gifts" and triggering a rebellion before those planning to revolt are ready can do to ensure you win that war. We'll deal with the mess of the aftermath and the subsequent next campaign (Another one will get in the way before the big Spanish war that's planned, but it'll be a short one).
Find an excuse to imprison potential faction rebel and watch as his fellow faction abandon his cause and become loyal subject for defeating rebellion. For a time anyway.
 
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An empire so large becomes a target from all sides, but for now, Karloman can hold it together.
It's good that the rebellion ended up being a bust but it's concerning that it got as far as it did. If the conspirators had been more devious, Karloman might have found a knife in his back.
I'm concerned about Bertrada's health but I hope that she will still be with us for a long while.

Also, congratulations on a year of this AAR! I always look forward to updates and the quality has been excellent throughout.
I expect that getting to 1453 at this pace might be a bit unrealistic but I'm very curious to see what the succession will be like. I usually use mods to make the Carolingian Empire more crumbly but it will be interesting to see how it fares here.
 
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An empire so large becomes a target from all sides, but for now, Karloman can hold it together.
It's good that the rebellion ended up being a bust but it's concerning that it got as far as it did. If the conspirators had been more devious, Karloman might have found a knife in his back.
I'm concerned about Bertrada's health but I hope that she will still be with us for a long while.
Not from all sides. Externally HRE are very secured right now because every other faction are both more weaker and divided than Karloman realm to the point that even the Eastern Roman are much weaker than Saxon threat.

So it's only threat can only come from inside and in order to get a significant rebellion it will have to be during succesion or when the noble decided for good old increase council power rebellion.
 
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