Anglasweorc

The Anglasweorc (literally "Ænglish Work") is a series of fortifications that were built across the historical western borders of medieval Anglei as protection against various Gothic peoples. While its primary function was as a military defense, the Anglasweorc more commonly served as a form of border control. Its existence allowed for the Ænglish monarchy to control flow of traffic and trade between Gothica and the Holy Levantine Empire.

Origins and construction
The earliest border defenses in what would become modern Anglei were erected by Great Levantia in the first or second century BC. The northwestern boundary of Great Levantia ran through the region, but its defensive strategy relied on the use of nearby Levantine legions, rather than complex static defenses, to protect against threats from Gothica. While these defensive works are not traditionally considered part of the Anglasweorc, they served much the same function. Some of these structures, or dilapidated remains of them, were incorporated into the Anglasweorc once work began on it. As Great Levantia declined and the availability of manpower decreased, the area became under-garrisoned and subject to frequent Gothic incursions, serving as both a corridor of invasion and settlement within Levantia as well as a convenient area to raid. Historians have noted with considerable irony that it is likely that the ancestors of the Ænglish people were likely most responsible for the final undoing of Great Levantia's border defenses in the region.

Centuries later, following the establishment of the Levantine Empire and its successor kingdoms, the Ænglish people were firmly settled in modern Anglei as part of an effort to protect the borders of those kingdoms from Gothica. The establishment of the Ænglish March in 1042 solidified the responsibilities of Ænglish rulers of protecting the Empire's borders. Despite this, the border remained relatively porous for the next century, as Ænglish lands were raided and Ænglish lords counter-raided as part of an overall strategy of defense against the Goths. In 1121, the third Margrave of the Ænglish - Margrave Cuthbert I - began construction of the Anglasweorc in an attempt to solidify the border and increase settled agricultural viability in the country. The "first" Anglasweorc, also called the Cuthbertweorc, included watchtowers along the March's river borders as well as a series of earthworks along land borders and a sparse variety of fortifications and hillforts. By the end of the 12th century, the first stone castles were built in Anglei, all of which were part of the Anglasweorc. While these castles were still largely linked by earthworks, the porous border of the past had been sealed. The Ænglish now controlled the Empire's northern border with Gothica and began to levy large tolls on traders coming and going through the weorc. The revenue would lead to an age of prosperity for the Ænglish that would last several centuries.

Golden age of the Anglasweorc
Significant efforts were made to strengthen the weorc by the end of the next century. Due to the wealth and prestige the weorc afforded the Ænglish, the Ænglish realm was elevated to a Kingdom in 1278. The first King of the Ænglish, Wilfred I, greatly invested in the weorc. The Wilfredweorc for the first time built stone walls between fortified points, and other changes to the castles along the boundary were implemented. Additional walls and fortresses were constructed on potentially weak points behind natural features, and by around 1300 nearly all of the well known routes to bypass the weorc had been sealed. The new stone walls lining the weorc were polished, leading to the Ænglish realm gaining the name "weizrik" among Goths - "White Kingdom". The Wilfredsweorc was built upon and largely replaced with larger, sturdier walls which soldiers could stand upon and shoot down at oncoming Goths throughout the 1360s and 1370s during the reign of Wilfred II; these additions are traditionally grouped in as part of the Wilfredsweorc, partly due to 19th century misconceptions about which Wilfred built what part of the wall.

Vandalism by Yonderians
During and after the Great Confessional War, mercenaries from Yonderre traveling through the divided Ænglish duchies to other parts of the Holy Levantine Empire would readily destroy or otherwise vandalize portions of the wall, greatly accelerating the natural decline of the structure of the preceding century. Many mercenaries returning home would also take bricks of the weorc as a souvenir where they would be carved into other objects once reaching Yonderre, ranging from prized bowls and goblets to toys and other stone trinkets. The Weorcbrick Musèe in Collinebourg retains a large number of artifacts from this period related to this practice.

Course
The Anglasweorc runs north to south, with its northern terminus being the Vandarch and its southern terminus being Lake Roseney.

Small parts of the weorc are located in Hollona and Diorisia and Yonderre.

Characteristics
The Anglasweorc is not, despite popular misconceptions, a single wall running from Lake Roseney to the Vandarch. In every iteration the weorc took, natural topography was the primary feature used to impede travel and assault, and even in its final form extensive areas along the weorc were riverine boundaries with only wooden watchtowers or other "light" structures interspersed at varying intervals to watch the bounday. The most iconic and labor intensive portions of the weorc do include thick walls of brick, sourced largely from the Vandarch area, which connect medieval castles as well as ancient Great Levantine incorporated within the defense. Most of the physical portion of the weorc likely included earthworks and moats infront and directly behind the line of walls, and in some places these are still visible.

Legacy
The Anglasweorc is viewed as a national symbol of Anglei and appears on the hundred Taler note as the iconic structure of Anglei. In Yonderre, the structure is viewed negatively and "the weorc" is often used as a derisive for Anglei or its government.