I told you it wasn't dead.
721:
Chindagild III orders the baptism of all Jews in Visigothia, specifically baptism in the Catholic rite of Christianity; the autonomous Arian chieftains naturally refuse, providing Chindagild a casus belli for war
With the return of Umvahidan forces to Thracia, a Turkbudun army augmented by Serbi auxiliaries marches into formerly Ostrogothic territory; the campaign is complicated by the increasingly-entrenched presence of Morduinos warlords and would-be warlords in the region
Eutychius succeeds Sabinian as Catholic Pope
722:
Chindagild defeats a Gallaecian army near Cascantum [Cascante]
The cultivation of manamelitus [21] is introduced to Aigyptos from across the Erythrean Sea [Indian Ocean] via Axumite traders [22]
Turkbudun and Umvahidan forces clash inconclusively near Helice [Ikliman]; both armies restrategize and turn their attentions to the lesser roaming bandits and war bands in order to consolidate their respective positions
Zeugitana throws its support behind Chindagild III, launching a devastating naval attack on the city of Valentia
723:
Purported year of completion of the Nicephorian [23] Corpus of Hayyan al-Himyari, known as Kaian to the West; this corpus will serve as the foundation for (al)chemical study in the Mu'min world with its application of early scientific method to Aristotelian ideas on the nature of matter
Troops from Baetica easily capture the city Bastia [Baza], located just over the border in Cartaginensis; Chindagild III successfully brokered an alliance with the Baetican chieftain by playing to anxieties about the powerful union of Lusitania and Cartaginensis
An Allemanian army defeats a Severi war band near Elis [Palaeopoli]; Allemania will go on to establish control over a large portion of the Pelopennesus [24]
A Lusitanian naval force attempts to enter the Mediterranean, but an allied fleet of Baetican and Zeugitanan ships sends most of it to the sea floor at the Battle of Barbesula [Torre Guadiaro]
724:
A Carpetanian force captures the Baetican city of Contributa Julia [near Medina de las Torres?]; with no support from its southern neighbour, Gallaecia suffers a defeat at the hands of Regnal forces in the Battle of Varia [Varea]
After establishing a presence in northern Euboea, Severi raiders begin using the city of Histiaea [near modern Istiaia] as a pirate haven
The arrival of the Veleti on their northeastern border prompts Italia to send a garrison to the old Roman fortress at Juvavum [Salzburg], effectively rejuvenating a frontier town that had almost declined into oblivion after the collapse of the Roman Empire
Disgusted with the lack of aid from the Autonomists to the west, troops in Cartaginensis revolt and put forth a popular noble as a pretender to the chiefdom; Chindagild III recognizes the usurper, and fighting in the region mostly dies off as erstwhile Lusitania loyalists realize which way the political winds are blowing
A Turkbudun account of the campaign in Thracia remarks on the uzengiler [stirrups] of Morduinos cavalry archers, the first definitive mention of the technology in Europa; historians speculate that the Morduinos learned about the equipment from contact with the Seganto [25] to the east
725:
Baetican forces score a major victory over Lusitania at the Battle of Rarapia [Ferreira], where the chieftain of the latter dies rather ignominiously in combat
Umvahidan forces advancing westward along the Ægean coast successfully besiege Thessalonica [Thessaloniki]
Upon the death of the king of Mierce, his two sons split the kingdom between them; the eldest rules Mierce proper, whereas the youngest rule over a restored [26] South Rheged
The last major battle of the latest Visigothian civil war takes place as forces from Cartaginensis emerge victorious at the Battle of Valeria [Cuenca?]; the ensuing peace solidifies the geopolitical gains of Regnal Visigothia while leaving the casus belli of the entire conflict unaddressed
A revolt against the taxation of non-Mu'mins breaks out in Sardis [Sart], quickly spreading across major cities in Anatolia; this prompts Yusuf to pull troops back from Thracia to deal with the insurrection
-------------------
[21] Manamelitus is supposed to be a Latinization of manna melitos, which hopefully translates to 'honey powder'; this will be the term ITTL for (cane) sugar
[22] IOTL the Arab conquest of Persia introduced sugar production to the rest of the Muslim world, but a surviving Ashinid Persia ITTL manages to keep the details of its cultivation to itself; ITTL a revitalized Axum continues oceanic trade between India and Egypt, creating an alternate vector for the lucrative trade good to enter the Mediterranean world
[23] Named after Nicephorium [al-Raqqah], which didn't get renamed Leontopolis ITTL for reasons that should be obvious to the astute reader
[24] A region they had controlled the western half of not even 2/3 of a century prior
[25] Labeled on a previous map as the Xueyantuo, which I decided would probably be Latinized if said group moved westward
[26] Not to mention expanded and less Brythonic