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  1. #1

    Default Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    After the fall of Ipsos in 270 BC, Ariobarzanes Kianos did not allow his small army any rest, but instead marched them eastward along the coast and besieged the Ptolemaioi town of Tarsos:
    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    Just like that of Ipsos, the garrison of Tarsos was large but lightly armed. With no general to lead them, the Ptolemaioi troops were unable to withstand the Pontic phalangites, and the town fell easily:






    And thus by the end of the campaign in 269 BC, Ariobarzanes Kianos had raised Pontos to be the sole great power in Asia Minor. The only imminent danger was from the Seleukids in the east, but they could be held at bay in the mountain passes near Mazaka, and the bridges of Tarsos. As word spread of Pontos's expansion, other peoples asked for help. Across the Bosporos, the city of Byzantion requested aid in their defense against Epeiros:


    Beyond Byzantion lay the lands of the Getai. Feeling threatened by the growing power of Epeiros, their king quickly agreed to an alliance with Pontos:


    And from far across the Pontos Euxinos, the Hellenic peoples of Chersonesos offered the use of an army, if Pontos would only send a good general to rid them of the raiding parties of the Sauromatae:


    Finally and most importantly, the Ptolemaioi agreed to an end to hostilities and a restoration of trade rights. Both Pontos and the Ptolemaioi had a far larger enemy in Arche Seleukeia: for now their old enmity could wait.


    However, all requests for aid would also have to wait. Ariobarzanes still had barely enough troops to garrison his newly-conquered towns, let alone send them off on expeditions overseas. Besides, the new members of the royal family hardly inspired great confidence in their potential abilities as generals. His first-born son was a particular disappointment, for although Mithridates Kianos was the namesake of his grandfather, he showed none of the same qualities, and took no action without first asking his chief advisor what he should do:


    And thus after three years of relative peace, when the first Seleukid army appeared in the mountains near Mazaka it fell to Smerdis Phabdaios the Galatian to repel it:


    In truth this was little more than a skirmish, with the Seleukid army testing the response when they besieged a Pontic border fort. Shocked at being confronted by a Pontic army twice the size of his own, the Seleukid captain sacrificed 1/3 of his men to cover his retreat. But Ariobarzanes was to use this small incursion as an excuse for bloody retribution against the Seleukids, even as he readied a new army to expand his holdings in Asia Minor.
    Last edited by FriendlyFire; 01-26-2011 at 17:44. Reason: Added spoiler tags

  2. #2

    Default Re: Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    You´ve reminded me how much fun a Pontus game is, especially in the beginning, when you struggle with your finances, beeing pressed from multiple sides by far superior enemies. So, i´ve started a new game couple of days ago, and though i´ve attacked and took Mazaka on the first turn ( spy opened the gates, as usual.. lol ), i´ve taken a bit different way this time, and didn´t wipe out the Seleucids from Asia Minor too soon. When the time came, i did what i had too, but meanwhile i´ve managed to let Karkioherta (sp?) rebell ( twice^^ ), and got "cease fire" offer from the greyish faction right the turn after, without any force diplomacy. Now, i´m free to slowly grab Asia Minor, avoiding a too long common boarder with Seleucids, who became too busy fighting Ptoleys ( and the rest of their neighbours. Just some info, for the case... Keep writing, i´m curious to compare your advancements with my own ( H/M, like yours ), and good luck. Looking forward for more :)
    - 10 mov. points :P

  3. #3

    Default Re: Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    Suggestion:

    Send Mithridates Kianos, the worthless firstborn son, to answer the call of Chersonesos for aid against the Sarmatians. Don't give him any troops, just give him enough gold to hire several units of mercenaries once he gets there. Then he will be forced to fight for his life against a superior enemy! He will either return a new man, reforged and tempered in the fiery furnace of combat - or he will not return at all. Either way, the problem he poses to the succession will be resolved.

  4. #4

    Default Re: Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    Suggestion:

    Send Mithridates Kianos, the worthless firstborn son, to answer the call of Chersonesos for aid against the Sarmatians. Don't give him any troops, just give him enough gold to hire several units of mercenaries once he gets there. Then he will be forced to fight for his life against a superior enemy! He will either return a new man, reforged and tempered in the fiery furnace of combat - or he will not return at all. Either way, the problem he poses to the succession will be resolved.

  5. #5
    U14 Footballer Member G. Septimus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    ah, Pontos. Magnificent work Friendly Fire I will keep in touch in this AAR. many screenies
    x2


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    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
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  6. #6

    Default Re: Chapter 6: A Restless Peace

    @vollorix: Cool - let us know how your campaign goes! I find that the Seleukids always come for me sooner rather than later, especially if they negotiate a ceasefire with the Ptolemaioi, so I like to quickly grab a secure base in Asia Minor. I'd be interested to hear how long it takes them to turn on you :)

    @Titus: Don't worry, we'll see lots more of the hopeless Mithridates Kianos later on. I'm actually in danger of running out of the Kianos royal line, so every last one of them must be put to use... even if their powerful advisors might not always be acting in the best interests of the kingdom.

    @Gaius: Thanks - lots more screenshots below for you!

  7. #7

    Default Chapter 7: Retribution

    Chapter 7: Retribution

    In the summer of 266 BC, the new king Ariobarzanes Kianos besieged the independent town of Ankyra, seeking to subdue the Galatian inhabitants and add them to his expanding Pontic kingdom. The army he commanded for the siege was an entirely new one, with fresh phalangites levied from Amaseia flanked by the new thureophoroi troops, and supported by Caucasian archers from Mazaka. Their increased wages had once again brought the Pontic economy to a standstill.
    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    To the south-east, his faithful brother-in-law Ariarathes Herakleotes the Hellen defended the newly-conquered town of Tarsos, and sent spies to the east to keep watch for any threats. In the fall, one spy brought back startling news - the young governor of the neighboring Seleukid city of Antiocheia, confident in his own powers and those of his bodyguard, had dispatched his small garrison force by sea to the island of Kyprus. Eager to fulfill his king's desire for retribution against Arche Seleukeia but suspecting a trap, Ariarathes moved most of his small garrison force to the border, and ordered his spies to once again scour the countryside around Antiocheia for any sign of other Seleukid armies. Finding none who could reach the city within a season, he ordered his own men to march across the border, lay siege and quickly build just enough ladders to get over the walls.


    For Antiocheia had stone walls and large buildings, and at the time was in every way a greater city than any in the kingdom of Pontos:


    As soon as the ladders were completed, Ariarathes ordered the assault to begin, but at the last moment he gave command of the army over to a trusted captain of the phalanx. For while Ariarathes what had to be done, he was at heart an optimistic soul, and did not want to be personally involved in the destruction of so great a city.


    Gaining easy entry over the walls, the Pontic raiders found the governor on the great square of Antiocheia. There the slingers wrought terrible destruction on his armored bodyguards, before the phalanx marched slowly to the attack. Soon they had surrounded the governor and hacked at him with their axes, winning a brutal victory.




    Obedient to his general's parting order, the Pontic captain now put Antiocheia to the sword, and ordered the destruction of much of the city's great military and economic infrastructure. Garrisons, docks, and armories, all were burned and looted.


    The following season, the captain's men continued their wanton destruction, looting the markets, granaries, and sanctuaries of Antiocheia, even removing the piping from its sewer system and the galleries from its playing fields. All that was cartable was transported west into Pontos; all that was not was burnt or broken to rubble.


    Then the Pontic army returned to garrison Tarsos, leaving the few remaining citizens of Antiocheia to nurse their wounds and bemoan their fate. A diplomat was sent to Arche Seleukeia to negotiate a ceasefire, but warned of terrible further retribution "in the manner of Antiocheia" if Seleukid armies were to again breach Pontic borders.


    The loot from Antiocheia was vast: the equivalent of over 20,000 Mnai was funneled into a new wave of construction across the Pontic kingdom, and the slaves were immediately put to use in digging out new mines in the mountains around Mazaka.

    Meanwhile, after over a year of siege, the Galatian inhabitants of Ankyra poured forth to confront their besiegers. The long period of starvation had reduced the size of their army by a third, although their individual warriors were fierce and their leader Cacumattos remained defiant. Ariobarzanes Kianos almost missed the battle, having been called away to oversee the bridge defenses at Mazaka. He had to force-march his bodyguards to return in time to take over from Phabdaios, and his new army was unsure of their king's command - short rations were an ever-present feature of early Pontic campaigns.




    As the Galatians sallied forth from their barbarian hill-top town, the Pontic infantry formed a thin defensive line, and the Caucasian archers got to work.


    The lightly-armored Galatian swordsmen and naked spearmen were easy pickings, but the fanatical wild-men were a different matter, tearing the arrows out of their bodies as they charged forwards. They even ignored the javelins hurled at them by the thureophoroi just before they crashed together.


    The neat battle line immediately broke up as the conflict stretched beyond the right end of the Pontic line. The thureophoroi were separated from the phalanx as they tried to prevent it from being flanked, while further away both Pontic generals fought the heavy cavalry bodyguard of the Galatian commander.


    Eventually Cacumattos saw that all his bodyguards were dead, and despairing of the fight, he fled for the gates of Ankyra. He had almost reached it when a volley of Caucasian arrows brought him crashing to the earth.




    With the death of their general, and weakened by hunger, the remaining Galatians now surrendered outside the gates, saving their town from further destruction. The new model army had done well.


    As a token of respect for their valor, the Galatians were allowed to keep some of their old forms of government, although they would now be required to levy local troops for Pontic armies.


    This battle also confirmed what some in his army had already come to suspect: Ariobarzanes Kianos was now a bloody warmonger, eager for the sounds of battle and the thrill of conquest.


    And the mines of Ankyra and Mazaka could now fund another army to serve him. Asia Minor would tremble at his coming.

    [I had to use force diplomacy to get the Seleukids to accept Antiocheia, because they really didn't want it after I'd wrecked all its infrastructure. And I love a warmonger king - it makes the role-playing so much easier :)]
    Last edited by FriendlyFire; 01-26-2011 at 17:47. Reason: Added spoiler tags

  8. #8

    Default Re: Chapter 7: Retribution

    Quite a blitz campaign! I didn't take Tarsus so early in my Pontos campaign, was quite happy to let the Seleucids and Ptolemies fight over it for a while. The Seleucids left me alone until after they'd taken Tarsus, even though I was still at war with them.

    I see you're not taking any chances with the battles, your army always seems to outnumber the enemy.

  9. #9

    Default Re: Chapter 7: Retribution

    Quote Originally Posted by Titus Marcellus Scato View Post
    Quite a blitz campaign! I didn't take Tarsus so early in my Pontos campaign, was quite happy to let the Seleucids and Ptolemies fight over it for a while. The Seleucids left me alone until after they'd taken Tarsus, even though I was still at war with them.

    I see you're not taking any chances with the battles, your army always seems to outnumber the enemy.
    Yeah, this turned into an anti-clockwise blitz after I realized that I still had enough phalangites left to kick the Ptolemaioi out, which would leave me with a nice protected empire. Don't worry, things slow down later :) And the Seleukids do seem to have a weird obsession with Tarsos - in other campaigns I've taken both Tarsos and Antiocheia, and then watched as they've marched stacks past Antiocheia, just to get to Tarsos. Plus they will ALWAYS send spies there.

    As for troop numbers, I didn't outnumber the two Ptolemaioi armies, but I did have better troops to even the odds. And I was a bit surprised that the Galatians didn't immediately sally - with the wild-men at full strength, and if their general had charged my line instead of trying to flank, the battle could easily have gone a different way.

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