Might be my longest so far :) I'm almost up to date now, and I think that's key to keeping me interested in writing about it as much as playing it!
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Chapter 15: War with the Ptolemaioi
The war between the Kingdom of Pontos and the Ptolemaioi began at the end of 244 BC. Hystaspis Kianos had retired to the city of Tarsos for the winter months, leaving the royal army to guard the road to Antiocheia, and the opposing Ptolemaioi force chose this season to attack across the bridge. Hystaspis would take part in the battle only as part of the reinforcements led by Ariarathes Herakleotes, the old governor of Tarsos. And although the Ptolemaioi had reinforcements of their own, they had still attacked a superior force. It is not known why they chose to fight at such odds, although it is interesting to note that the entire war, with all of its bloodshed and destruction spread across so many years, resulted from an initial combat between two mere captains.
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Chapter 16: The Siege of Antiocheia
From the beginning it was obvious that the siege of Antiocheia would be a long one. Although the once-proud city had been comprehensively sacked and looted by Pontic forces 20 years earlier, it still retained its high stone walls, and its new Ptolemaioi garrison included many phalangites, who could form an immovable wall of spearpoints behind any gate. Hystaspis therefore resigned himself to starving the defenders into submission, while simultaneously fending off Ptolemaioi attempts to relieve the city. The first such attempt came almost immediately, from local Syrian forces. They attacked across the bridge from the north as a diversion, relying on Antiocheia's defenders to sally and attack Hystaspis from the south.Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
Nice, FriendlyFire! Keep on going!
Great updates!
Chapter 17: The Syrian Wars, 242 - 225 BC
The loss of Antiocheia in 242 BC seemed to stun the Ptolemaioi, and for two years they sent only diplomats to its walls, demanding that the kingdom of Pontos surrender its sovereignty. These diplomats did not enjoy long and healthy lives after delivering their messages.
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Great AAR FriendlyFire! Keep it up!
Good job, FF. I like your screenshots very much, especially those "Fields of Death" ( the ponorama of the second one, with the two mountains in the background is really cool - would be a nice pic for the next contest, i´d say :) )
Magnificent.:dizzy:
Brilliant read, keep it up
So when is the next update?
Chapter 18: Into The Heart of Egypt, 234 BC - 225 BC
Even as Hystaspis Kianos fought the Ptolemaioi to a standstill in Syria, it was obvious that the war would rage for as long as they retained control of their heartlands in Egypt. The king Arsames Kianos therefore ordered the creation of a new Pontic army, which would travel by sea from Antiocheia to avoid interception, and would strike at the vulnerable coastal cities of the Ptolemaioi. The plan was for this army to devastate the training grounds and barracks of the elite troops of the Ptolemaioi, setting back their war effort by a decade or more. And even if the raids failed, they would still act as a diversion to take some of the pressure off Hystaspis. Arses Kianos, a young scion of the ruling family who was eager to prove himself, would lead the army. And the troops themselves would be Galatians from Ankyra, and Thracians from Nikaia - in this way any failure would not be felt deeply in the Pontic homelands of Amaseia.
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Excellent! I was beginning to get worried, but no need!
Once again, great chapter!
Chapter 19: The End of the Syrian Wars
Hystaspis Kianos's first act as king was to move his capital to Antiocheia. This reflected both his obsession with the Syrian wars against the Ptolemaioi, and the vital role that the troops from Antiocheia played in these campaigns. His second act was to authorize the raising of a second army, to allow him to go on the offensive instead of constantly rushing the royal army to relieve one siege after another. The idea was simple: both armies would march south, besieging Hierosolyma and Bostra. Hystaspis would then lead the royal army north to Palmyra, while the second army would continue to the south, taking the town of Petra in the Sinai, and opening a land route to Arses Kianos's force in the Nile Delta.
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Nice update, I really liked the montage of battles to show how you knocked the Ptolies out. If you feel like it, could you show a map of the world so far?
There's a fairly recent one at the end of chapter 18 - I'll add another in the next update
Edit: Can't post one right now because I haven't yet described what was happening at the same time on a different front, so if I posted a current world map it would be a spoiler :)
I am guessing that you invaded Greece.
hmmm I must have completely skipped Chapter 18 woops :D But I would guess the same as Populus, epic war in Greece.
Likely to be taking pergamon from the macedones? That looks like a worthwhile front to open up. Otherwise not sure, doubt you would have expanded into greece just yet. Only other options would be bosporus or more wars against the Hai.
Great pictures, really like how you described the Syrian wars and the ultimate defeat of the Ptolemai.
It probably is a war against Makedonia, because he allied with the KH.
In fact if he wants to role play the revival of the persian empire he may choose to attack hayasdan.
So many options, but I'm not at any of those yet. All I meant was the other front against the Ptolemaioi - sorry guys :) One more update tonight, and then I'll catch up on Sunday.
Chapter 20: The Gauls of the Nile
While the new king Hystaspis Kianos was campaigning against the Ptolemaioi in Syria, he sent word to Arses Kianos in the south. Arses and his Gallo-Thracian army still held the great cities of Alexandreia and Memphis that they had taken from the Ptolemaioi, and after several years had now begun to train some of the local people to fight for Pontos. Meanwhile, the Ptolemaioi still had only weak garrisons in their surrounding heartlands, and were sending almost all of their resources towards the fighting in Syria. Hystaspis therefore sent word that Arses was to take his army on a march of conquest around the Nile delta, to never allow the Gauls to settle in one place, and to use whatever loyal troops he could raise from Alexandreia and Memphis to garrison captured towns and cities.
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I've just noticed that when I put pictures inside spoiler tags, they're automatically reduced in size. That only happens here on forums.totalwar.org - in my crossposted copy of this AAR at twcenter.net the pictures show up full-size inside spoiler tags.
Anyone know how I can fix this?
In my experience all screenshots above 800px wide (or so) are resized here, regardless of spoiler tags. It was probably a limit made when people still used 1024x768 resolution or so. If there is a workaround I don't know it, sorry.
It annoyed me a little bit too.
Chapter 21: The Two Sons
After the seemingly never-ending battles of the Syrian and Nile wars, the next few years saw relative peace for the kingdom of Pontos. Of course, the Ptolemaioi refused to give up quite so easily, and a few of their armies tried to take back the newly-conquered towns of Palmyra and Paraitonion, but since they sent neither a sufficient quality nor quantity of troops, the result was always the same.
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