Excerpt: 14: The Century That Changed Everything - Christian Saldmare, Dragon's Hill Press, AD 2002
Ibn Al-Najjar had found the Central Algarvian Valley civilizations in 1357. It took scarcely a decade for even the passive touch of Andalusian presence to throw the entire region into chaos.
The effects of virgin-field diseases were devastating for the Otomi and Nahua-speaking peoples of the valley complex, driving various city-states into various reactions: The Otomi began to dabble in Islam, while the Tepanecs dismissed the Muslims as foreign sorcerers.
The harshest reaction, however, came from the Caxcan, recent arrivals who had settled to the south of the Great Lake and founded the
altepetl of Teocaltillitzin. They had brought their god with them - a sun god they referred to simply as
Theotl, likely analogous to the diseased sun god Nanahuatzin and the more obscure northern Chichimeca deity Huitzilopochtli. Speakers of Nahuatl, the Caxcan were notably more fervent in their religious practices than their neighbours, and they responded to the arrival of New World diseases by assuming they were the result of insufficient piety in the form of sacrifices to strengthen the sun god and forestall the end of the world.
As cities throughout the valley struggled with illness, relations between the Tepanecs and their Caxcan tributaries broke down. The Caxcan leader, Tonatiuhtlacati,[1] had given his daughter in marriage to the brother of the Tepanec ruler, Xiuhtlatonac. When news came down in 1363 that the illness had killed her, Tonatiuhtlacati furiously denounced Xiuhtlatonac for being so weak of faith to allow disease to punish his daughter. The Caxcan refused to continue paying tribute to the Tepanecs. Calculating as ever, Xiuhtlatonac responded by capturing 200 Caxcanes and sacrificing them all as a display of piety. Enflamed by the gesture, the Caxcanes geared up for war, and Xiuhtlatonac mobilized the Tepanec military and its tributaries against its angry vassals.
War among the Nahua took heat off the Otomi to the north. The cult of N'ahahontho continued to spread among the Otomi and the north end of the lake, though it would be followed by the more prominently-situated arrival of mainline Maliki Islam. In Dähnini, K'eñänjohya died in 1363, succumbing to smallpox. His son, the 22-year-old Hñunxuni,[2] acceded in 1365 to the approaches of the scholar Abd al-Qadir al-Mufassir and recited the Shahada along with his court, adopting the name Abdullah ibn K'eñänjohya al-Otomi.[2]
The decision to convert to Islam came in part to give the Otomi in Dähnini access to what help the Muslims could provide. In 1364, an attack on the island city by Nahua-speakers from Cuauhtitlan was repelled with help from a cadre of 50 mounted Berbers, likely part of the garrison from Makzan al-Thariya. No one in the Central Valley complex had access to horses or steel weapons and armour, and mounted Berbers were more than they could handle, along with the support of crossbowmen on foot. Conversion gave Abdullah Hñunxuni friendlier relations with the Muslims and the ability to buy in mercenaries who were impervious to the strange diseases, and it allowed him to buy steel weapons for his own men and even explore equipping some of his troops with horses. While these numbers were not large, they combined with the island position of his city-state to give Abdullah Hñunxuni a strategic edge - and converting also convinced many of his subjects that he was working to appease the strange god which had sent the sicknesses in the first place.
The war between the Tepanecs and the Caxcanes, at least, ensured the Otomi's position for the time being. Cuauhtitlan itself could not defeat the Otomi stronghold, and its Tepanec allies were busy and likely to be ground down somewhat. As more and more able-bodied men died, it became harder for individual city-states to project power - and with the Otomi already in a defensive crouch, they were better prepared to withstand than Tepanecs, for whom tribute and hegemony were critical.
Only the brilliance and ruthlessness of Xiuhtlatonac held the Tepanec tributary network together. By 1369, he had dealt a crushing defeat to the Caxcanes, defeating their armies and outright sacrificing Tonatiuhtlacati before a massive fire ceremony in Azcapotzalco. The victory cowed the grumbling and misery among the Tepanec tributaries - but it did nothing to slow the brutal toll of epidemic disease.
The Otomi received another benefit: An influx of Muslim conversos. While the numbers of converts were not great at first, the city gained a few hundred people as early dabblers in Islam - and those accused falsely of sorcery and spreading plague - fled persecution by the Caxcanes and Tepanecs, finding relief in Dähnini. Others would flee north, to the Otomi city of Nzi'batha/Metztitlan.
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Back in the Old World, meanwhile, the continent had largely rebounded from the Great Plague 150 years prior, leaving nations and kingdoms better able to mobilize - and increasing pressure for expansion. Nowhere was this more clear than in the Haemus, where Bataid advancement into southern Europe increasingly placed core kingdoms under threat.
Hungary had long served as Europe's eastern bulwark, holding dominion over both the Carpathian basin and Croatia. That dominion was challenged beginning in the 1350s as the Bataids of Rumaniyah began to push harder against Christian strongholds in their northwest. The reign of Al-Mansour the Great (1303 - 1335) saw the Bataids crush the Roman remnant in Greece. The most pivotal battle in that campaign was the Battle of Orchomenus, around July 7, 1324. It took place northwest of Athens, where 40,000 Bataid troops confronted a similar number of forces allied with the Romans - in fact a Greek core bolstered by Cuman, Epirote and Italian mercenaries. Al-Mansour himself led the Rumani forces onto the field, opposed by forces led by Emperor Stylianos II Vlastos and the Normano-Epirote leader Simon of Durres.
The battle was one of the largest in centuries in the western Supercontinent, and certainly the largest since the Great Plague west of the Steppes. While both forces could bring similar numbers to bear, the Rumani forces were better-led, with Al-Mansour himself being recognized as one of the greatest military leaders of his time and his commanders chosen from a multicultural selection of Patzinaks, Anatolian Turkmens and Islamic conversos of Greek and Bulgarian heritage. The Rumani cavalry were similarly more versatile and better-trained, bolstered by several thousand Cumans as well. Personally leading a cavalry charge at a decisive point in the battle, Al-Mansour managed to break the will of the Cumans, many of whom fled or defected, leaving the Roman core unprotected. Stylianos himself was unhorsed and lost in the shuffle before having his head severed by an Anatolian soldier, one Mahmud ibn Rashim[3] of Iconium.
The death of Stylianos and the capture of his son Christophoros triggered a general rout. The Epirotes quickly withdrew after suffering severe casualties, leaving the Greeks to bear the brunt of the attack by the Rumani cavalry. The battle left fully 25,000 of the Roman host dead to less than 12,000 of the Rumani, with many of the Roman survivors coming from the mercenaries or Epirote faction - units unlikely to be able to defend Hellas.
The Battle of Orchomenus marked the end of even the rump Roman Empire. By the end of August, Athens was in Al-Mansour's hands, and by the year's end the cities of Morea had surrendered to the Muslims. The Romans simply had nothing left to defend themselves with. The battle similarly left the Epirotes weakened, and in subsequent years Rumaniyah would simply steamroll them before pushing into Sirmium. By the end of his reign, Rumaniyah had swallowed Hellas, Epirus, Sirmium and most of Armenia.
The death of Al-Mansour in 1335 brought his son Al-Mansour II to the throne. While less of a martial man than his father, he was able to resist a concerted attack from the Papacy, Venice, Hungary and the Knights of Saint Stephen, turning them back at the Battle of Trauvunija in 1336 and a series of smaller skirmishes. But Al-Mansour II did not engage in a vast campaign of his own, obligated instead to spend several years suppressing Greek and Sirmian rebellions in the Haemus and clashing with the rising Mezinids over the bones of Van.
Al-Mansour II died in 1347 without an adult male heir, and his infant son Suleiman was overthrown within a year by his regent, Al-Mansour's brother, Abdullah Aslan - a ruler infamous in Christian histories.
It was under Abdullah Arslan that the Bataid threat crystallized in the minds of Europe. In 1355, the Bataids launched a massive push for Croatia, waging a series of battles over three years. The conflict reached a decisive culmination in 1359, at the Battle of Bihac, in which a Hungarian-Italian army of 30,000 was soundly crushed by 25,000 Bataids, including 8,000 Cumans (Cumans in fact fought on both sides of most conflicts at the time). The defeat, in which Hungarian Prince Gaspar was captured, forced Hungary to withdraw from Croatia, ceding the Bataids a swath of Adriatic coast up to Fiume and inland to Agram.[4]
Long accustomed to focusing on its own affairs, the Holy Roman Empire began around this time to view the advancing Bataids with increasing alarm: Not only had the Muslims consolidated in the former Roman Empire, but they were devouring Hungary and within striking distance of the Osterreich. Raids by Anatolian Turkmens into German and Italian territory began to step up in this period, exposing the underbelly of Christendom to the predation of Rumaniyah. Without the shield of the Havasok Mountains[5], the Bataids had the ability to strike into the heart of Hungary and raid up the Danube into German territory itself.
Into the 1360s, the conflict was carried out in the form of back-and-forth raids, many on the Christian side led by the Church Knights. Gradec was sacked by Rumani forces in 1364, while Venetian ships carrying French and German mercenaries captured Zadar in 1368, which they would hold for several years.
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Al-Andalus was by no means immune to the tides of war, and while Husayn is well-remembered as the Hajib who led his polity to discover the Gharb al-Aqsa, he's also notable for being the leader who reversed the steady decline in Andalusian territorial fortunes which had been going on for centuries. The profits from new trade routes in gold, spice, sugar and Indian goods flooded Husayn's treasury with revenue, and while much of it went to infrastructure, a large part of it went to one of the most important consequences of his reign: An overall improvement in the quality, training and manpower of the army.
The quality of Andalusian metallurgy had steadily increased with the advent of new technologies, particularly the advent of blast furnaces and waterwheel-powered forges almost a century before. But with more revenue on hand, the Caliphal administration could afford to purchase equipment which made the most of refinements to the technology. The
Saqaliba and Black Guard fighters of the time were equipped with higher-quality iron equipment. Andalusian weapons and armour tended to be more durable and easier to produce than comparable European versions, resulting in more Andalusian troops with high-quality equipment and more reliable weapons.
The mailshirt-wearing
Saqaliba of past centuries had given way to Black Guardsmen,
Saqaliba and elite Andalusians wearing breastplates and armour skirts, while horse armour increasingly began to incorporate plate. Helmets gradually extended further down the cheeks to better protect the face. The increased weight of the armour saw Andalusian cavalry transition away from the riding of mares towards larger, stronger stallions, noisier but better able to carry the weight of an armoured soldier. While armour would never quite reach the level of full plate favoured by the French and Germans, the Andalusians of the 14th century went into battle much better protected than their forebears, riding powerful Andalusian warhorses that tended to be larger and more muscular than those of their neighbours.
These advantages became clear in the 1360s, when the elderly Husayn, then around 70, faced off against his northern neighbours once more. An attack by the Knights of Saint James saw Santiagonian troops sack the outskirts of Batalyaws in 1365. The elderly Hajib gathered his men and launched a punitive campaign northward.
The ensuing campaign would demonstrate the advantages of Andalusian equipment and horsemanship. While the Church Knights could equal the Andalusians in skill, Andalusian equipment and horses were more advanced and more numerous, and the real advantages came in the better quality of weapons and armour carried by the standard Andalusian soldier. This was best demonstrated in 1368, at the Battle of Almeida.
The battle saw an Andalusian army of 15,000, led by Husayn's son Abd al-Qadir, ambushed by Headmaster Alfonso de Vilalba of the Knights of Saint James, leading 20,000 Christians with the Knights at the head. Alfonso was able to catch the Muslims by surprise and attack the Andalusian flank, composed mostly of regulars from the new
junds. However, despite being mostly on foot and outclassed in training, the regulars managed to hold and fight back with crossbows. The flank took losses but did not collapse, enabling Abd al-Qadir to lead his cavalry around to attack a surprised Alfonso and inflict losses of his own. The reversal forced Alfonso to regroup, leading to a battle in which the Knights of Saint James and their Santiagonian cavalry allies basically neutralized the
Saqaliba and Black Guard - leaving the fight to be decided by the Andalusian regulars, who largely had better equipment than their Christian counterparts and inflicted casualties at a rate of about two to one. The Christians were forced to pull back, their rear savaged by pursuing Berber cavalry for two more days.
Bloodied by the battle, Abd al-Qadir quickly took advantage. The Christians were unable to reinforce several cities, and the Andalusians swept north to capture Porto. Braga was soon besieged, falling the next year, and the Andalusians settled in.
The gain of land west of the Duero and as far north as Braga represented a reversal in Andalusia's fortunes: Long pushed back in western Iberia, the battle marked the reclamation of land which had been lost over past centuries. Santiago was again forced to pay tribute, enflaming existing tensions within the kingdom, while Andalusia entered the next decade with the wind in her sails even as the aging Husayn advanced into the waning years of his life.
[1] "Sun-born"
[2] "Three hawks."
[3] Muhammad son of Erasmus.
[4] Rijeka and Zagreb.
[5] The Carpathians.
SUMMARY:
1324: The Battle of Orchomenus. Ar-Rumaniyah destroys the rump Roman Empire in Hellas, killing the last Emperor, Stylianos II. Greece comes under Bataid control. The last remnants of the Roman Empire are annihilated, save a tiny remnant in Cyprus.
1359: The Battle of Bihac. The Bataids defeat a Hungarian army and gain control of Croatia.
1363: K'eñänjohya of Xaltocan dies. Meanwhile, an outbreak of smallpox leads to war between the Tepanecs and the Caxcanes.
1364: An attack on Xaltocan is repelled with the aid of Muslim mercenaries.
1365: Hñunxuni of Xaltocan, converts to Islam.
1368: The Battle of Almeida. Better-equipped Andalusian troops defeat an army of Santiagonian troops led by the Knights of Saint James. The victory allows Al-Andalus to take Porto and Braga in their first gain of territory in generations.
1369: The Tepanecs crush the Caxcanes in a decisive battle. Tepanec tlatoani Xiuhtlatonac sacrifices his counterpart, Tonatiuhtlacani, in a massive ceremony.