Vel’s Celtic AAR – CtP2
Part, the First
We are the Celts. A small tribe. A humble people. Our history and our fate has, for as long as any among us can remember, been tied to the whims and wills of those stronger than we.
All that changed with the ascension of Oc’tur to the Celtic throne. As you all know, through the filter of massed centuries of history, our language has undergone a great many changes, and modernized, Oc’tur becomes ‘Arthur’ of legend.
The very first thing King Oc’tur did was to declare that the Celts would no longer be beholden to any other nation or tribe, and in declaring our independence, he took the bold step of founding a purely Celtic city. One that was not ruled over by our powerful neighbors (the Americans east, The Rus to the north, or the Dutch to the south).
Needless to say, the neighboring tribes did not take kindly to the formation of an upstart Celtic nation in their midst.
The Americans even went so far as to try to play the role of Lord and Master to us, demanding that we turn over half of our tribal wealth (donations from the People to help get our new and tiny kingdom on a paying basis).
It is said that King Oc’tur boldly told the American war leader to go….well, we probably couldn’t print the exact message, even if we knew what it was, but you get the sense, from looking at our history, and the history of abuses the Celts suffered at the hands of our neighbors, that the response was negative in the extreme.
The American counter-response was a promise that every Celtic freeman alive would be enslaved and his women raped. The message lit a fire in the soul of the Celtic People, who were known to be a willful strong-minded lot, even if they lacked power. It is said though, that you could feel the pulse of our fledgling nation quite clearly on the night that the first War Council met.
We had never organized for war before, so this was all new, and yet, we knew that our giant neighbors would not long stand for a free Celtic nation in their midst. Our ancestors were given the derisive title of “Barbarians,” and we were generally lumped into that same category by the more advanced, more “civilized” nations. Often these “civilized” folk would send slavers into our villages and make off with our women and young. And yet, WE were considered the barbarians. Pah! We are the Celts, a FREE people, and with one voice and one united cause, we vowed to fight to remain free.
Our assets and advantages were few. We Celts began as religious people….worshippers of the Mother Goddess. We prided ourselves on song, and dance, and prayer. We worked the land and were one with the land, and though we did not enjoy imposing our will upon others (the notion of slavery curdled the stomachs of every free Celt), we had a lust for life and battle. If the Americans wanted a fight, we were determined to give them one that they would NEVER forget!
Plans were made. War drums were fashioned. And bows. Crude swords (the more advanced weapons of the “civilized world” were beyond our simple needs and understanding), and the ranks of our fledgling army swelled with row upon row of free Celts who vowed that a Celtic nation WOULD exist, and it would remain free and uncontrolled by our neighbors.
Time passed, and with the passage of that time, the Americans, in their arrogance, seemed to forget the threat they made against our people and our freedoms. We, however, did not forget. We are the Celts, a vengeful people, and woe to those who would threaten our freedoms! Quietly….silently, we built our army, husbanded our strength, and even founded a second free Celtic city (Callevah, Numantia being the capitol of the Free Celtic nation).
There was rejoicing at this proud achievement, but the rejoicing was a shade subdued, for we knew that unless our newly formed army met with resounding success against those who would threaten our freedom, our tiny nation would soon join the countless other “barbarian tribes” who would be remembered only in the footnotes of the pages of history.
We had to send an unmistakable message to the civilized world that we WOULD NOT be ignored. No longer were Celtic lands to be viewed as slave hunting grounds. No longer would we be derisively dismissed as barbarians. We would be heard!
And so our army marched on an unsuspecting America.
The Celts square off against an angry America
The Americans were having none of it.
They plainly saw our approaching army and arrogantly decided to beat us to the punch. Or, perhaps they had been preparing all along to make a foray against Numantia. The truth of that will never be known, and is now lost in the fog of the ancient past. What IS known, however, is that in the forests outside of the American city of Atlanta, the army of the Celts was attacked by an equal sized American army. Our force consisted of an even mix of stout-hearted warriors and keen-sighted archers. Theirs consisted of a mix of Hoplite and Warriors, a small band of archers, and a much-despised slaver.
The battle raged for nearly a fortnight, and when the dust settled and the blood had finished soaking into the ground, the Celts were victorious! And not simply victorious, we had dealt a devastating blow to the enemy, destroying his army entirely, while ourselves losing only two companies of warriors! There was much rejoicing in the land of the Free Celts, and it is said that the sounds of our war drums could be heard all the way to the distant English city of York.
Totally unopposed, our army marched into Atlanta, and we claimed the city as our own. It’s people subject to OUR laws. This came as quite an unexpected shock to the Celts. In our bid to secure our freedom and confirm our independence, it never dawned on our leadership that we might bring enemy cities under our control (and by extension, gain control over the people who lived in them). It sent the leadership into a state of shocked disarray, as we who value our personal freedom so much suddenly became a conquering people, but there it was. We were the Celts….a conquering people.
Relying on momentum, our army remained in Atlanta only long enough to train some raw recruits who proved sympathetic to our cause to hold the city, and we were on the move again, with reinforcements approaching from Numantia and Callevah. Our leadership knew that compared to our tiny nation, America was vast and populous. We had wounded the tiger, but unless we acted with all speed to make the most of our unexpected good fortune, our gains would be wholly undone as America more fully prepared for us.
Time was very much our enemy in this fight. We had to deliver a knockout blow, and we had to do it quickly!
So the army marched, and soon we found ourselves at the gates of Boston. Having arrived prepared for the worst, our army was almost disappointed at the pitiful garrison placed to defend this second American city. They barely put up a fight at all, and now our tiny nation had doubled in size! Even better was the fact that the stout walls of the American capitol was within easy marching distance of Boston….such a tempting target, but surely it would boast far better defenses.
Did we dare?
The leadership of our tiny nation was all in an uproar, and fierce debate (that twice broke out into swordplay, if ancient texts are to be believed) which lasted DAYS as the leaders of the Free Celtic nation struggled with what to do.
In the end though, the matter was decided for them.
Having tasted victory….having proved themselves on the field of battle, our warriors KNEW they could take Washington, and so, leaving a token garrison in Boston, they struck out again, only to find themselves outnumbered (11 units vs. 12) in the battle that raged there.
Our army was in tatters and badly damaged by the assault (5 units remaining), but once again, we were victorious, and a second major American army was utterly destroyed by our fierce warriors.
The loss of a second army, coupled with the loss of their capitol to our series of swift and unrelenting attacks had the American nation reeling, and so it was that they came, humbly, with hat in hand, asking for a cessation of violence between our two peoples.
Having suffered grievous losses of our own, and with no further reinforcements en route (not that the Americans knew this detail tho!), we accepted the agreement. America had been hurt, but so had we, and it was time to regroup and rebuild.
We are the Celts….a careful people, who had taken their first tentative steps toward greatness.
-=Vel=-
Part, the First
We are the Celts. A small tribe. A humble people. Our history and our fate has, for as long as any among us can remember, been tied to the whims and wills of those stronger than we.
All that changed with the ascension of Oc’tur to the Celtic throne. As you all know, through the filter of massed centuries of history, our language has undergone a great many changes, and modernized, Oc’tur becomes ‘Arthur’ of legend.
The very first thing King Oc’tur did was to declare that the Celts would no longer be beholden to any other nation or tribe, and in declaring our independence, he took the bold step of founding a purely Celtic city. One that was not ruled over by our powerful neighbors (the Americans east, The Rus to the north, or the Dutch to the south).
Needless to say, the neighboring tribes did not take kindly to the formation of an upstart Celtic nation in their midst.
The Americans even went so far as to try to play the role of Lord and Master to us, demanding that we turn over half of our tribal wealth (donations from the People to help get our new and tiny kingdom on a paying basis).
It is said that King Oc’tur boldly told the American war leader to go….well, we probably couldn’t print the exact message, even if we knew what it was, but you get the sense, from looking at our history, and the history of abuses the Celts suffered at the hands of our neighbors, that the response was negative in the extreme.
The American counter-response was a promise that every Celtic freeman alive would be enslaved and his women raped. The message lit a fire in the soul of the Celtic People, who were known to be a willful strong-minded lot, even if they lacked power. It is said though, that you could feel the pulse of our fledgling nation quite clearly on the night that the first War Council met.
We had never organized for war before, so this was all new, and yet, we knew that our giant neighbors would not long stand for a free Celtic nation in their midst. Our ancestors were given the derisive title of “Barbarians,” and we were generally lumped into that same category by the more advanced, more “civilized” nations. Often these “civilized” folk would send slavers into our villages and make off with our women and young. And yet, WE were considered the barbarians. Pah! We are the Celts, a FREE people, and with one voice and one united cause, we vowed to fight to remain free.
Our assets and advantages were few. We Celts began as religious people….worshippers of the Mother Goddess. We prided ourselves on song, and dance, and prayer. We worked the land and were one with the land, and though we did not enjoy imposing our will upon others (the notion of slavery curdled the stomachs of every free Celt), we had a lust for life and battle. If the Americans wanted a fight, we were determined to give them one that they would NEVER forget!
Plans were made. War drums were fashioned. And bows. Crude swords (the more advanced weapons of the “civilized world” were beyond our simple needs and understanding), and the ranks of our fledgling army swelled with row upon row of free Celts who vowed that a Celtic nation WOULD exist, and it would remain free and uncontrolled by our neighbors.
Time passed, and with the passage of that time, the Americans, in their arrogance, seemed to forget the threat they made against our people and our freedoms. We, however, did not forget. We are the Celts, a vengeful people, and woe to those who would threaten our freedoms! Quietly….silently, we built our army, husbanded our strength, and even founded a second free Celtic city (Callevah, Numantia being the capitol of the Free Celtic nation).
There was rejoicing at this proud achievement, but the rejoicing was a shade subdued, for we knew that unless our newly formed army met with resounding success against those who would threaten our freedom, our tiny nation would soon join the countless other “barbarian tribes” who would be remembered only in the footnotes of the pages of history.
We had to send an unmistakable message to the civilized world that we WOULD NOT be ignored. No longer were Celtic lands to be viewed as slave hunting grounds. No longer would we be derisively dismissed as barbarians. We would be heard!
And so our army marched on an unsuspecting America.
The Celts square off against an angry America
The Americans were having none of it.
They plainly saw our approaching army and arrogantly decided to beat us to the punch. Or, perhaps they had been preparing all along to make a foray against Numantia. The truth of that will never be known, and is now lost in the fog of the ancient past. What IS known, however, is that in the forests outside of the American city of Atlanta, the army of the Celts was attacked by an equal sized American army. Our force consisted of an even mix of stout-hearted warriors and keen-sighted archers. Theirs consisted of a mix of Hoplite and Warriors, a small band of archers, and a much-despised slaver.
The battle raged for nearly a fortnight, and when the dust settled and the blood had finished soaking into the ground, the Celts were victorious! And not simply victorious, we had dealt a devastating blow to the enemy, destroying his army entirely, while ourselves losing only two companies of warriors! There was much rejoicing in the land of the Free Celts, and it is said that the sounds of our war drums could be heard all the way to the distant English city of York.
Totally unopposed, our army marched into Atlanta, and we claimed the city as our own. It’s people subject to OUR laws. This came as quite an unexpected shock to the Celts. In our bid to secure our freedom and confirm our independence, it never dawned on our leadership that we might bring enemy cities under our control (and by extension, gain control over the people who lived in them). It sent the leadership into a state of shocked disarray, as we who value our personal freedom so much suddenly became a conquering people, but there it was. We were the Celts….a conquering people.
Relying on momentum, our army remained in Atlanta only long enough to train some raw recruits who proved sympathetic to our cause to hold the city, and we were on the move again, with reinforcements approaching from Numantia and Callevah. Our leadership knew that compared to our tiny nation, America was vast and populous. We had wounded the tiger, but unless we acted with all speed to make the most of our unexpected good fortune, our gains would be wholly undone as America more fully prepared for us.
Time was very much our enemy in this fight. We had to deliver a knockout blow, and we had to do it quickly!
So the army marched, and soon we found ourselves at the gates of Boston. Having arrived prepared for the worst, our army was almost disappointed at the pitiful garrison placed to defend this second American city. They barely put up a fight at all, and now our tiny nation had doubled in size! Even better was the fact that the stout walls of the American capitol was within easy marching distance of Boston….such a tempting target, but surely it would boast far better defenses.
Did we dare?
The leadership of our tiny nation was all in an uproar, and fierce debate (that twice broke out into swordplay, if ancient texts are to be believed) which lasted DAYS as the leaders of the Free Celtic nation struggled with what to do.
In the end though, the matter was decided for them.
Having tasted victory….having proved themselves on the field of battle, our warriors KNEW they could take Washington, and so, leaving a token garrison in Boston, they struck out again, only to find themselves outnumbered (11 units vs. 12) in the battle that raged there.
Our army was in tatters and badly damaged by the assault (5 units remaining), but once again, we were victorious, and a second major American army was utterly destroyed by our fierce warriors.
The loss of a second army, coupled with the loss of their capitol to our series of swift and unrelenting attacks had the American nation reeling, and so it was that they came, humbly, with hat in hand, asking for a cessation of violence between our two peoples.
Having suffered grievous losses of our own, and with no further reinforcements en route (not that the Americans knew this detail tho!), we accepted the agreement. America had been hurt, but so had we, and it was time to regroup and rebuild.
We are the Celts….a careful people, who had taken their first tentative steps toward greatness.
-=Vel=-
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