Xisheng: Difference between revisions

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From 1750 to 1830 approximately fifty new towns were founded on the territory, important cities such as the port of Yuzhen in the Bay of Honghai, Tuzicheng and Luwei on Chimor territory, Goumao and Chouma southeast by the Ajaw lands and Hewen as a garrison town northeast of Rixis. Rixis itself was completely transformed from the former capital of [[Ixa'Taka]] into a center of Qian power, the majority of its original population was pushed outside the city boundaries and later pushed even further into outlying villages to farm there and work the new mines and plantations. The Pinghai Department at this time also became one of the main 'tributaries' that fed the vast stream of slaves that were sent into the [[Southern slave trade]]. Slavery became a mainstay of the economy of coastal Xisheng until limitations were put in place, too many native men of working age were being sold away and shortages of labor were affecting the profitability of many local enterprises. The extension of formal slavery to Xisheng carried out serious consequences for the colony in the form of slave revolts. The excessive cruelty of the settler slavers erupted in rebellions in 1812, 1835, 1875 and a last great slave uprising in 1892.
From 1750 to 1830 approximately fifty new towns were founded on the territory, important cities such as the port of Yuzhen in the Bay of Honghai, Tuzicheng and Luwei on Chimor territory, Goumao and Chouma southeast by the Ajaw lands and Hewen as a garrison town northeast of Rixis. Rixis itself was completely transformed from the former capital of [[Ixa'Taka]] into a center of Qian power, the majority of its original population was pushed outside the city boundaries and later pushed even further into outlying villages to farm there and work the new mines and plantations. The Pinghai Department at this time also became one of the main 'tributaries' that fed the vast stream of slaves that were sent into the [[Southern slave trade]]. Slavery became a mainstay of the economy of coastal Xisheng until limitations were put in place, too many native men of working age were being sold away and shortages of labor were affecting the profitability of many local enterprises. The extension of formal slavery to Xisheng carried out serious consequences for the colony in the form of slave revolts. The excessive cruelty of the settler slavers erupted in rebellions in 1812, 1835, 1875 and a last great slave uprising in 1892.
===Autonomy under the Army of Conquest===  
===Autonomy under the Army of Conquest===  
The military requirements of the campaigns of the Qian dynasty in [[Australis]] and internal revolts in the mainland necessitated by 1770 the gradual withdrawal and redeployment of regular Qian forces from Xisheng. To maintain a sufficiently strong force of deterrence in the colony, the Qian bureaucracy empowered the Governor-General, the local elites and the [[Xisheng Trading Company]] to recruit and equip its own military formations. Ostensibly under the authority of the Ministry of War, in practice these private armies were obedient only to whoever armed and paid them. After a period of tension and skirmishes, a realignment of the interests of local actors led to a process of centralization that coalesced all disparate armies into a single entity dubbed the [[Army of Conquest]]. By the 1850's the power of the [[Army of Conquest]] began to outpace the capacity of the factions that created it to maintain their control over it. The military authority of successive Governor-Generals crumbled away as they only had direct control over at most two thousand troops, the [[Army of Conquest]] numbered some 30,000 at this point. The impetus to construct the [[Great Arsenal]] allowed the army to build its own arms factories and foundries in Xisheng to equip its forces, becoming an entirely self sufficient native military force. With private financial support, the [[Army of Conquest]] founded the Xisheng Military College to train its own officer cadres independently from the Qian army. This institution recruited from all the layers of settler society regardless of class and instructed them in the army's political goals of territorial expansion, strategic autonomy from the mainland and local hegemony over civilian authorities. The most famous alumni of this institution was [[Hong Huanxiong]] who eventually rose to the highest rank attainable in the army, that of Great Marshal.
[[File:Yuan Shikai in uniform.jpg|thumb|Hong Huanxiong, Great Marshal of the [[Army of Conquest]] in the early 20th century.]]
[[File:Yuan Shikai in uniform.jpg|thumb|Hong Huanxiong, Great Marshal of the [[Army of Conquest]] in the early 20th century.]]
The military requirements of the campaigns of the Qian dynasty in [[Australis]] and internal revolts in the mainland necessitated by 1770 the gradual withdrawal and redeployment of regular Qian forces from Xisheng. To maintain a sufficiently strong force of deterrence in the colony, the Qian bureaucracy empowered the Governor-General, the local elites and the [[Xisheng Trading Company]] to recruit and equip its own military formations. Ostensibly under the authority of the Ministry of War, in practice these private armies were obedient only to whoever armed and paid them. After a period of tension and skirmishes, a realignment of the interests of local actors led to a process of centralization that coalesced all disparate armies into a single entity dubbed the [[Army of Conquest]]. By the 1850's the power of the [[Army of Conquest]] began to outpace the capacity of the factions that created it to maintain their control over it. The military authority of successive Governor-Generals crumbled away as they only had direct control over at most two thousand troops, the [[Army of Conquest]] numbered some 30,000 at this point. The impetus to construct the [[Great Arsenal]] allowed the army to build its own arms factories and foundries in Xisheng to equip its forces, becoming an entirely self sufficient native military force. With private financial support, the [[Army of Conquest]] founded the Xisheng Military College to train its own officer cadres independently from the Qian army. This institution recruited from all the layers of settler society regardless of class and instructed them in the army's political goals of territorial expansion, strategic autonomy from the mainland and local hegemony over civilian authorities. The most famous alumni of this institution was [[Hong Huanxiong]] who eventually rose to the highest rank attainable in the army. In 1891 Hong secured the governorship of Xisheng in exchange for a payment of two million silver coins to the Grand Vizier and a notarized promise not to seek more autonomy, thus finally combining the nominal supreme political authority of the Governor-General and the military power of the Great Marshal of the [[Army of Conquest]], he also ignored the eight year limit for serving as governor. Hong's authority was now so great that he began enacting a program to disempower the [[Xisheng Trading Company]] by seizing many of the critical assets it had built or acquired for decades, including railways, factories and ports; in this way Hong began securing the productive and economic base for himself and was no longer beholden to the approval of the plutocrats. The sudden and forceful loss of its vast holdings in Xisheng led the [[South Seas Development Company|South Seas Trading Company]] into a downward spiral that forced it to divest itself of other assets in order to raise funds to survive, one such asset was the [[Harmonious Flotilla Invincible]] which it could no longer afford to operate autonomously; the fleet was sold to the Qian navy at a significant loss.
In 1891 Hong secured the governorship of Xisheng in exchange for a payment of two million silver coins to the Grand Vizier and a notarized promise not to seek more autonomy, thus finally combining the nominal supreme political authority of the Governor-General and the military power of the Great Marshal of the [[Army of Conquest]], he also ignored the eight year limit for serving as governor. Hong's authority was now so great that he began enacting a program to disempower the [[Xisheng Trading Company]] by seizing many of the critical assets it had built or acquired for decades, including railways, factories and ports; in this way Hong began securing the productive and economic base for himself and was no longer beholden to the approval of the plutocrats. The sudden and forceful loss of its vast holdings in Xisheng led the [[South Seas Development Company|South Seas Trading Company]] into a downward spiral that forced it to divest itself of other assets in order to raise funds to survive, one such asset was the [[Harmonious Flotilla Invincible]] which it could no longer afford to operate autonomously; the fleet was sold to the Qian navy at a significant loss. By 1905 Huanxiong was interested in expanding his territory to northern [[Varshan]], specifically the land inhabited by the sedentary Ajaw people. Nominally subordinate to the emperor in [[Daxia]], Hong telegraphed the mainland to 'request permission' for his plans, a mere formality in his eyes. The answer that came back in the name of Emperor [[Zhishun]] not only denied his request but also rebuked him for engaging in unsanctioned adventurism, insufficient deference to the imperial court and for expelling imperial auditors. In fury Hong delayed returning a response for six months and began making serious preparations to create his own dynasty and secede from Qian control (albeit nominal at this point). Given their vastly modernized [[Great Arsenal|armed forces]], the Qian were in no mood to negotiate with their unruly vassal and were confident of defeating him and retaking Xisheng by force. Hong began making preparations to crown himself as the emperor of the new Shan dynasty, made overtures to [[Varshan]] to create an anti Qian alliance and began planning an operation to take over [[Cao]] to prevent any naval movement towards Xisheng. The march to war was interrupted with the sudden death of Huanxiong to stomach cancer and a struggle to succeed him among the top ranks of the [[Army of Conquest]].  


By 1905 Hong Huanxiong was interested in expanding his territory to northern [[Varshan]]  
The internecine conflict lasted until 1909 when general [[Pan Zexian]] sidelined his rivals for control and reestablished contact with Qian officials. What followed was a period where Zexian began walking back some of the most extreme autonomist policies of his predecessor and nurtured back ties with the mainland, including welcoming back imperial civil officials. [[Pan Zexian]] was received in [[Mirzak]] and formally appointed as Governor-General in 1911. Zexian did not walk back however the economic and military domination of Xisheng by his army which would continue to function as a state within a state for the next 50 years and neither would his successors let their grip slip of the two highest offices in the province. Zexian maintained the territorial status quo, at times propping up [[Nanzitolclatl|Nanzitolclatl]] as a buffer with [[Kiravia]]n colonial territory; he also established working contacts with the Malan-Zar clan of north [[Varshan]] to help him manage the Ajaw raiders. The outbreak of the [[Second Great War]] brought a degree of economic deprivation as [[Urcea]]n naval forces managed to severe communication between Xisheng and the mainland in the later stages of the war. The [[Army of Conquest]] prepared itself for naval invasion that never came about, spending a great deal of resources on fortifications that served no ultimate purpose. The economic plantation system employed locally rapidly decayed during and immediately after the war due to the temporary severing from its main market, the [[Daxia]]n mainland. This in turn led to an economic decline of the province's economy and a hole in the budget that the top brass was unable to fill without the assistance of the central bank. Using the threat of withholding critical funds and closing of the mainland markets to tighten the screws on the [[Army of Conquest]], coupled with heavy losses during the [[March into the mountains]] campaign, the post-Qian government managed to finally get the army back into a position of subordination by 1962.
===The Deluge===
===The Deluge===
attack western territories of [[Nanzitolclatl|Nanzitolclatl]], addition of southern territories
 
===Modern period===
==Government==
==Government==
===Executive===
===Executive===
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Xisheng is home to many local ethnicities whose ranges of habitation have fluctuated over time; their locations affected by various [[Daxia]]n policies designed to acquire richer and more geographically advantageous land for settlement and limit their material prosperity. The Ixa'Takan people dominated most of present northwestern Xisheng before the arrival of [[Daxia]] forced them inland. Their population of some four million currently reside near exclusively within the borders of the [[Ixa'Taka|Ixa'Taka Autonomy]] and have been granted limited forms of autonomy to conduct their affairs. Following them in numbers are the Chimor people who inhabit the region of [[Chimoche]] which abuts [[Mid-Atrassic Crona]]. At a population of 3.7 million people they are the second most numerous indigenous people on the region. The Ajaw, Nuun and Varshani peoples are more recent additions, the Ajaw falling under Daxian domination in the 18th century after the [[March into the mountains]] and the Nuun and Varshani being added after the territories they lived in were cut off from [[Varshan]] and attached to Xisheng  at the end of [[the Deluge]]. There are plans to carve an autonomous region for the Nuun and transplant all the remaining Varshanis inside it so the Nuun majority keeps them in check.
Xisheng is home to many local ethnicities whose ranges of habitation have fluctuated over time; their locations affected by various [[Daxia]]n policies designed to acquire richer and more geographically advantageous land for settlement and limit their material prosperity. The Ixa'Takan people dominated most of present northwestern Xisheng before the arrival of [[Daxia]] forced them inland. Their population of some four million currently reside near exclusively within the borders of the [[Ixa'Taka|Ixa'Taka Autonomy]] and have been granted limited forms of autonomy to conduct their affairs. Following them in numbers are the Chimor people who inhabit the region of [[Chimoche]] which abuts [[Mid-Atrassic Crona]]. At a population of 3.7 million people they are the second most numerous indigenous people on the region. The Ajaw, Nuun and Varshani peoples are more recent additions, the Ajaw falling under Daxian domination in the 20th century after the [[March into the mountains]] and the Nuun and Varshani being added after the territories they lived in were cut off from [[Varshan]] and attached to Xisheng  at the end of [[the Deluge]]. There are plans to carve an autonomous region for the Nuun and transplant all the remaining Varshanis inside it so the Nuun majority keeps them in check.


Xisheng has never been as widely and intensively settled as [[Cao]] was. [[Daxian people|Daxians]] constitute a mere sixteen percent and are outnumbered by [[Crona]]n ethnicities by a proportion of 4 to 1, yet have the majority of the land. Daxians mostly live on the coast and in fortified cities dotted across geographically advantegous locations such as hilltops.
Xisheng has never been as widely and intensively settled as [[Cao]] was. [[Daxian people|Daxians]] constitute a mere sixteen percent and are outnumbered by [[Crona]]n ethnicities by a proportion of 4 to 1, yet have the majority of the land. Daxians mostly live on the coast and in fortified cities dotted across geographically advantegous locations such as hilltops.