Warlord 11
04-02-2008, 07:54
The Gallic Expedition
http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/5/5e/180px-Ac.ptolemy.jpg
Ptolemy I, founder of the Ptolematic Empire
Byzacena, 232 BCE
As the ships approached the harbor town of Byzacena, Philadelphos could already see how the region had changed since he had conquered the area, so many years ago. The ruins of the old harbor town were nearby, which he had systematically sacked and burned back in the first African war. The new town, build by the Carthaginians after the war, also showed signs of its past. Much of the western part of the harbor showed a definite Carthaginian architecture. Here the signs of war are faint indeed: Philadelphos' son was certainly more lenient on the traitorous Carthaginians than Philadelphos. Pity the Macedonians had killed him; he would have made a great king. In the eastern, newer, sections of the town, Greek architecture reigned. The town had certainly grown since its capture in the third African war. Legally, the region was ruled by a local government allied with Alexandria. None but the densest really believed it. Even the local government contained numerous Hellenes from Sicilia. The port itself was the personal property of the King, and contained significant numbers of military colonists from Macedonia, Hellas, and Galatia.
https://i77.photobucket.com/albums/j53/King_Jake/King.jpg
Philadelphos Ptolemaios
Philadelphos was here to see the younger son of his own dead son. Pumiathon had the makings of a great leader. Philadelphos knew. Philadelphos was the greatest leader since Alexander himself, surpassing even his illustrious father. But Philadelphos was getting too old to lead the royal army. He could not risk dying mid-campaign and leave his army without a proper leader. Yet the situation in Gaul was critical. Philadelphos could not allow Carthage the wealth of that country to use against his people. The Iberian tribes, loyal allies to the Empire, have succumbed already. The Aedui could not stand on their own against both Carthage and the invaders from the north. Yet Alexandria was not at war with Carthage. It was into this delicate situation Pumiathon was to be thrust into. The king sincerely hoped his grandson could handle it.
https://i77.photobucket.com/albums/j53/King_Jake/picture001-4.jpg
"The situation in Gaul was critical"
https://i77.photobucket.com/albums/j53/King_Jake/picture008.jpg
Pumiathon Ptolemaios
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So this is my first AAR. As you can probably tell by now, I will be following the story of Pumiathon of the Ptolematic Empire, leader of the Ptolematic Royal Army, in his quest to assist his allies in Gaul against the Casse and Averni, and through that, indirectly aiding them against Carthage. I am going to try to do this without sending any reinforcements, to make it somewhat challanging.
I had the idea for this AAR rather late in this game to spice it up a bit for myself (I am playing on M/M for realism in diplomacy and battle, but as the Ptolematic Empire it is really easy). Feel free to point out any inconsistencies, historical errors, or constructive criticism on my writing.
:egypt:
http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/5/5e/180px-Ac.ptolemy.jpg
Ptolemy I, founder of the Ptolematic Empire
Byzacena, 232 BCE
As the ships approached the harbor town of Byzacena, Philadelphos could already see how the region had changed since he had conquered the area, so many years ago. The ruins of the old harbor town were nearby, which he had systematically sacked and burned back in the first African war. The new town, build by the Carthaginians after the war, also showed signs of its past. Much of the western part of the harbor showed a definite Carthaginian architecture. Here the signs of war are faint indeed: Philadelphos' son was certainly more lenient on the traitorous Carthaginians than Philadelphos. Pity the Macedonians had killed him; he would have made a great king. In the eastern, newer, sections of the town, Greek architecture reigned. The town had certainly grown since its capture in the third African war. Legally, the region was ruled by a local government allied with Alexandria. None but the densest really believed it. Even the local government contained numerous Hellenes from Sicilia. The port itself was the personal property of the King, and contained significant numbers of military colonists from Macedonia, Hellas, and Galatia.
https://i77.photobucket.com/albums/j53/King_Jake/King.jpg
Philadelphos Ptolemaios
Philadelphos was here to see the younger son of his own dead son. Pumiathon had the makings of a great leader. Philadelphos knew. Philadelphos was the greatest leader since Alexander himself, surpassing even his illustrious father. But Philadelphos was getting too old to lead the royal army. He could not risk dying mid-campaign and leave his army without a proper leader. Yet the situation in Gaul was critical. Philadelphos could not allow Carthage the wealth of that country to use against his people. The Iberian tribes, loyal allies to the Empire, have succumbed already. The Aedui could not stand on their own against both Carthage and the invaders from the north. Yet Alexandria was not at war with Carthage. It was into this delicate situation Pumiathon was to be thrust into. The king sincerely hoped his grandson could handle it.
https://i77.photobucket.com/albums/j53/King_Jake/picture001-4.jpg
"The situation in Gaul was critical"
https://i77.photobucket.com/albums/j53/King_Jake/picture008.jpg
Pumiathon Ptolemaios
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So this is my first AAR. As you can probably tell by now, I will be following the story of Pumiathon of the Ptolematic Empire, leader of the Ptolematic Royal Army, in his quest to assist his allies in Gaul against the Casse and Averni, and through that, indirectly aiding them against Carthage. I am going to try to do this without sending any reinforcements, to make it somewhat challanging.
I had the idea for this AAR rather late in this game to spice it up a bit for myself (I am playing on M/M for realism in diplomacy and battle, but as the Ptolematic Empire it is really easy). Feel free to point out any inconsistencies, historical errors, or constructive criticism on my writing.
:egypt: