From the notes of Grandmaster Philibert de Naillac1400-1401Having incurred heavy debts, we put our forces to rest. The Rhodian mercenaries we hired have been disbanded under threat of arms, for it is unwise to depend too much on hired swords when good Christian men can defend our lands and expand the dominion of the Lord. We are slowly recruiting more men to build a second division of infantry, but even with the added forces Ancona provides we are still short on men.
The good news is that because of our chapters across Europe and the good, strong rule of the aristocracy over the serfs, we have a strong and plentiful diplomatic corps and so are free to harry the nations of Europa for new allies. Support has been less than forthcoming, and many powers consider us beneath their interest. We have managed to acquire alliances with the Holy Father and the island of Sardinia, though.
The Knights produce 6-8 Diplomats per year! Theocracy, catholic, maximum aristocracy. I find myself spending them on military access all the time just to keep below 5 dips. At war, we spike to 8 dips/year. It's astounding.Mid 1401At last, a good honest war! Sardinia has been set upon by the arrogant Aragonese and requests our aid. As a bonus to the effort their other ally, Genoa, has been pulled into the war. There is a chance that both Savoy and England may yet intervene, though. We could always renege on our alliance...
Hah. As if we would besmirch our honour so.
The Lord be praised, the English have stayed out of the fight. Of course, there is still the Aragonese gryphon to contend with and they have clear naval superiority over all of us combined. Our primary hope is that they do not take this war too seriously and only commit a minor force to the attack.
The Savoyards on the other hand present an excellent opportunity. They border our 'ally', Genoa, and are a ripe target for invasion. We haven't a chance of breaking Aragon in this war, but we certainly can make Savoy pay through the nose for a peace.
Late 1401Scum and villains! Someone in the Order is a traitor and has been spreading rumours and sending missives to the courts of Europa to imply we are nothing more than ruthless aggressors! I will have their very head on a platter for this insult!
From the journal of Grandmaster Thomas I of the Knights of St. JohnEarly 1402Whilst on campaign in Savoy, Grandmaster Philibert was assassinated. Evidence points to supporters of Brother Marcus, who he had executed for treason after last year's scandal. The shock has permeated through our states, destabilising much of the good work the late Grandmaster put into effect, but we will recover.
The Order's council has appointed me as new Grandmaster without a full vote, as we are in a time of crisis. It is my hope that whilst I may not have the military experience of the late Grandmaster, my long years serving as the head of our diplomatic corps and liason with the European chapters will prove of use.
A very, very nice admin/diplomat. Shame about the military, and since we cannot afford generals I have no choice but to employ him as one. Still, Philibert was Admin/Diplo 3/3, so this is a big improvement all around - especially regarding infamy loss.Mid 1402We have made a small amount of headway in this war. Genoese forces keep losing battles, but with our help they have managed to evade the enemy and capture the province of Nice. Sardinia has unexpectedly managed to capture the Baleares from Aragon, but they may not be in the war for long; Aragon has all but completed their siege on Sardinia itself. We have not the forces or ships to relieve them, alas. I fear our ally may become a part of Aragon after all.
Sardinia fell, but Aragon wanted the Baleares back without issue. They made a peace that broke Sardinia's alliances and cost them their treasury, but kept the province out of Aragonese hands. The primary official aim of the war (securing Sardinia's independence) has been achieved, albeit in an unintended way. Aragon has made no attempts so far to attack Genoa seriously and we are too far away for them to bother. God be on our side, they will not change their minds.
Late 1402In a strange twist, Luxembourg's has been excommunicated. Rumour suggests that Brabantian cardinals pressured the Pope to make this happen. The reason this is strange is that the king of Luxembourg
is the king of Brabant. This appears to be a kind of quiet rebellion on the part of the king's clergy.
Savoy has begun offering peace deals. Not surprising; their capital Piedmont and Nice are captured by Genoa and we are on the verge of taking Savoy itself. On the other hand, they have taken the Genoese capital. We rejected their initial offer for a white peace on the grounds we need the money from the war to boost ourselves. They recently made another offer; a deal of ducats for peace. This is sorely tempting, but now that we are here I see another possibility.
If we take their last province and free Liguria, we can force them into vassalage. Their powerful armies would aid us much more than any of their rebellious provinces (especially since in a deal most of them would go straight to the Genoese, who are not even our direct allies!), though the loss of the cash deal will hurt us in the short run.
Would my predecessor have taken this risk? We stand to lose our armies and face defeat if we fail. Yet I say that God is on our side; with such fortune to date, how can He not be? We will press our sieges and take Savoy in the name of the Father.
Early 1403We are trapped in a fight in Piedmont that neither we nor the Genoese can win. I am ordering retreats to Switzerland and Milan where the Savoyards do not have military access; once they settle in for a decent siege of one of their provinces we can move in to Liguria to relieve it.
Late 1403After months of cat-and-mouse, fortune has intervened. The Burgundians (who are also at war with Savoy) came to deal a killing blow in Piedmont, bringing their superior armies to bear against the Savoyards. After a series of fierce battles the wretched Savoyard army fled to Savoie and accepted a swordpoint truce from Burgundy for most of their treasury. It looks like we won't have the option of a cash truce anyway, but at least we don't have to defend a new vassal from one of the greatest land powers on the continent.
Early 1404After the crippling defeat at Piedmont, our combined forces finally achieved a victory against the Savoyards! We beat them in Piedmont in late January and finally hounded the last of their forces into surrender by mid March. With the Savoyard army utterly obliterated, nothing remains but to liberate Liguria.
Or does it? Genoa is a powerful nation, with colonies bordering the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. If we were to pull out of Liguria now, force them to restart the siege themselves, it might give Aragon time to finish besieging Kaffa and extort some harsh penalties from the Genoese for a truce. Not the most salubrious of tactics, and one that Gransmaster Philibert would have frowned on, but I am not as chivalrous a knight as he was - I am a diplomat.
Mid 1404Under the pretext of reinforcing our troops against an Aragonese strike on the captured provinces I pulled our forces out of Ligoria and occupied the Genoese-occupied Savoyard provinces. In an interesting spot of foreign affairs, the latest casualty on the Austro-Venetian war that is wracking southern Europe is Venice's ally Switzerland who have been forced into vassalage to Austria.
Not long after, Aragon conquered Kaffa and delivered their demands to Genoa, which capitulated easily. Genoa has released its provinces of Azow and Corsica as the sovereign states of Zaprozhie and Corsica respectively, gaining Aragon a couple of new allies. Of course, nobody wants to make Aragon stronger (especially now that we are the sole combatant against them in the war) but this has dropped Genoa to a meagre two provinces. If we can find an excuse to war against them, we could take Genoa itself and control one of the key ports of trade in the Mediterranean.
Late 1404 - Mid 1405Savoy's remaining provinces (recently vacated by the Genoese occupation) fall and they agree to come under our protection. Aragon is unwilling to accept a white peace or even token concession of defeat, so we will just have to fight their small attack forces until they grow tired and accept a peace.
There is a strong argument for the reduction of religious freedoms; the openly Orthodox capital makes our new vassals uneasy. We accept motions to improve the state of missionary drives to convert them, but sadly just cannot afford the costs of a fully-fledged campaign in Rhodes just yet.
I take the liberty of leading our forces back to Ancona to drive out the Aragonese. There is little contest; our troops are highly disciplined and they are outnumbered regardless.
In line with our ongoing policy of repressing the heretics, Savoy is no longer a kingdom or even a duchy; the former King Amedeo VIII is now Bishop Amedeo. Practically, not a lot has changed for him. He still has direct authority, he still keeps any members of the cabinet either we or he hasn't killed, and he even keeps the palace. If he's smart he might even be able to fudge things so that his son is appointed the next bishop. If he's smart and loyal.
We have also taken the liberty of enforcing laws regarding the awkward matter of blasphemy. We need to make things a little more affordable for our missionaries, so this should make their lives easier, though it risks making the country harder to stabilise in the long term. No matter; the price is worth it to convert those misguided heretics back to the truth path.
Well, that certainly could have gone worse. We're still at war with Aragon, but they are barely committed to the war and it's only a matter of time before they accept a peace. One of the cool things about being a Theocracy or republic (not a noble republic, perhaps) is that you don't have to worry about losing Legitimacy when you lose a war. As a Grandmaster I can buy off awkward enemies with a Concession of Defeat (most of the time) or money when a white peace won't work. If I try that as a monarchy, I get revolts all across the country as I take an immediate -20 hit to legitimacy.
Now, let's talk about the future. Should we try to manufacture some sort of CB against Genoa? Wait for a CB to arise naturally through an ally? Lay off the wars and focus on trade?
Trade's difficult as we're still heavily Mercantilist, but if we took Liguria we could just stay that way and have a better compete and placement chance (but we'll never get the +10 trade efficiency from full Free Market, mind). Again, decision on whether to pursue Free Trade as a long term strategy or just take CoTs.
Finally, any other advice or strategy you might care to provide is welcome. Sooner or later we need to take coastal provinces for ourselves, though. We need them for ships and men.