Normark campaign (1717–1720)
Normark campaign (1717–1720) | |||||
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Part of the "Vulturing of Keltia" | |||||
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Belligerents | |||||
Raspur Pact | Confederacy of the Dispossessed | ||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||
Phakchay Chaupin | |||||
Units involved | |||||
Keltia Command
| Leagues of Haifan Keltiania (remnants)
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Strength | |||||
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The Normark campaign (1717–1720), known within Normark as the Liberation of Dalen, began as a campaign by the Nordhær of Normark to restore Norse government, sovereignty and administration in Dalen, after the Haifo-Pallisican–Bassarid occupation of Dalen (Jangsong) appeared to have collapsed.
Whilst the old Bassarid garrison had numerically outmatched the Nordhær and its predecessors in the years subsequent to the War of the Harpy it had been hoped that the chaotic unravelling of the Bassarid dominion in Keltia would have led to a perceptible melting away of the League of the Northern Strait, the opposite effect appeared to have occurred - with the distant restraining hand of Corum removed many warbands now felt emboldened to begin to organise, and the attempt by the Nordhær to conduct a reconnaissance in strength into the Jangsong Pocket served as the trigger for a general rising of the dispossessed in the boreal regions of northern Keltia. Of the estimated 105,807+ regulars and 151,152+ reservists maintained by the New Zimian War League, 176,270 armed and motivated fighters would ultimately answer the call to arms made by the piratical elders of Jangsong. Worse yet, of those fighters, roused to fury and their own ambitions of conquest, it would subsequently transpire that a full 117,513 of these so-called dispossessed were already within the enclave and underarms when the first armoured vehicles of the Nordhær crossed the frontier. Distressing reports that would swiftly reach Elijah's Rest brought the dire news of risings and massacres gripping the northern coastal regions and boreal islands of the Kingdom, as long concealed fighters and cultists shed their cover and came out into the open, their hearts set upon the most joyful slaughter of their unbelieving neighbours. The nightmare that had been the War of the Harpy was set to replay once more - all thanks to the reckless folly of Tarjei Thorgilsson and Arnold Christianssønn Einhorn trying their luck against a foe of whom they had remained fundamentally ignorant until it was too late. With the refugees that would subsequently stream into the capital came estimates that anywhere between fifty and sixty thousand rebel fighters were loose in the countryside, raising havoc.