Early history of Urcea: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
Line 31: Line 31:
{{Main|Great Levantia}}
{{Main|Great Levantia}}
[[File:Roman-Road-System-1.webp|thumb|left|200px|A section of the ''Via Antonia'', an ancient Levantine road through the [[Urcean frontier]]. [[Great Levantia]] left hundreds of roads and thousands of ruins like the ''Via Antonia'' that are visible throughout Urcea today.]]
[[File:Roman-Road-System-1.webp|thumb|left|200px|A section of the ''Via Antonia'', an ancient Levantine road through the [[Urcean frontier]]. [[Great Levantia]] left hundreds of roads and thousands of ruins like the ''Via Antonia'' that are visible throughout Urcea today.]]
[[Latinic people|Latin]] cities spread throughout [[The Valley (Urcea)|the Valley]] and other parts of modern [[Urcea]]. They gradually began to come under the aegis of [[Great Levantia]], a Latin stated based in the city of [[Urceopolis (City)|Urceopolis]]. Growing from a small city-state in the 570s BC, Great Levantia would come to conquer more than half of [[Levantia]] as a whole and would spread Latin culture throughout the continent. During this period, the Valley became the heartland of a continental empire. New cities were constructed throughout the country based on the military successes and failures of the Levantine legions, and new systems of roads began to radiate outward from Urceopolis. This level of development was relatively uneven throughout what would become Urcea, however; the [[Ionian Plateau]] remained relatively free of Latins throughout Great Levantia's existence, and the [[Urcean frontier]] remained lightly populated the harsh conditions there. In the height of [[Great Levantia]], approximately around 200 AD, the propagation of the Latinic identity and destruction of local Gaelic identity was largely complete in the area of the modern day [[Urceopolis (Archduchy)|Archduchy of Urceopolis]] and to a lesser degree in the other parts of the Empire, especially not in Gaul. It was during this time that most historians pinpoint the foundations of a distinct [[Urcean people]] emerging as a regional subculture of the [[Levantine identity]] in the "suburban" cities and villages surrounding Urceopolis, which retained a "High Levantine" culture and identity well into the 6th century.
[[Latinic people|Latin]] cities spread throughout [[The Valley (Urcea)|the Valley]] and other parts of modern [[Urcea]]. They gradually began to come under the aegis of [[Great Levantia]], a Latin stated based in the city of [[Urceopolis (City)|Urceopolis]]. Growing from a small city-state in the 570s BC, Great Levantia would come to conquer more than half of [[Levantia]] as a whole and would spread Latin culture throughout the continent. During this period, the Valley became the heartland of a continental empire. New cities were constructed throughout the country based on the military successes and failures of the Levantine legions, and new systems of roads began to radiate outward from Urceopolis. This level of development was relatively uneven throughout what would become Urcea, however; the [[Ionian Plateau]] remained relatively free of Latins throughout Great Levantia's existence, and the [[Urcean frontier]] remained lightly populated the harsh conditions there. [[Cálfeld]] remained an important Gaelic center of power that resisted Latin expansion until about 300 BC, and its fall allowed the further spread of Levantine influence into modern [[Burgundie]] and [[Nova Istroya]]. In the height of [[Great Levantia]], approximately around 200 AD, the propagation of the Latinic identity and destruction of local Gaelic identity was largely complete in the area of the modern day [[Urceopolis (Archduchy)|Archduchy of Urceopolis]] and to a lesser degree in the other parts of the Empire, especially not in Gaul. It was during this time that most historians pinpoint the foundations of a distinct [[Urcean people]] emerging as a regional subculture of the [[Levantine identity]] in the "suburban" cities and villages surrounding Urceopolis, which retained a "High Levantine" culture and identity well into the 6th century.


The decline of the Empire, though, brought a reversal of fortunes for the Latinic people. Waves of Gaels who had been pushed aside nearly a millennia prior began to variously pillage, raid, invade, and settle in the Empire, bringing a resurgence of Gaelic culture - and people - into Levantine society. Additionally, [[Gaelic people]] began to stream out of northwestern [[Great Levantia]] fleeing the advance of the Gothic people in the 4th and 5th centuries, bringing large numbers of Gaelic people seeking shelter in the [[Urce River]] valley. Intermarriage between Latinics and Gaels became very common following Amadeus Agrippa's Christianization of the Empire. The sack of Urceopolis by [[Caenish people|Caens]] and Picts in 434 sent huge numbers of Latinic refugees eastward into the modern [[Deric States]], further weakening the presence of so-called "High Levantines" in Urcea.
The decline of the Empire, though, brought a reversal of fortunes for the Latinic people. Waves of Gaels who had been pushed aside nearly a millennia prior began to variously pillage, raid, invade, and settle in the Empire, bringing a resurgence of Gaelic culture - and people - into Levantine society. Additionally, [[Gaelic people]] began to stream out of northwestern [[Great Levantia]] fleeing the advance of the Gothic people in the 4th and 5th centuries, bringing large numbers of Gaelic people seeking shelter in the [[Urce River]] valley. Intermarriage between Latinics and Gaels became very common following Amadeus Agrippa's Christianization of the Empire. The sack of Urceopolis by [[Caenish people|Caens]] and Picts in 434 sent huge numbers of Latinic refugees eastward into the modern [[Deric States]], further weakening the presence of so-called "High Levantines" in Urcea.

Navigation menu