rdfs:comment
| - The War of Thyllanorian Aggression against the Moonlyt Peaks, far better known in present-day as Callen's Folly, was a bloodless war declared between Thyllanor and the Moonlyt Peaks in 596 BC. War was never officially declared, and the Thyllanorians were eager to catch the Moonlytes off-guard. It is not sure why Callen II Karthmere, the current king of Thyllanor at the time, wanted to attack the Moonlyt Peaks; they were hardly more than a political entity at the time, united only by region rather than identity. Regardless, the men came to the beck and call of Doven III Stone, then-proclaimed King Under the Mountain of the Moonlyt Peaks, and they prepared for what seemed to be a bloody conflict ahead of them.
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abstract
| - The War of Thyllanorian Aggression against the Moonlyt Peaks, far better known in present-day as Callen's Folly, was a bloodless war declared between Thyllanor and the Moonlyt Peaks in 596 BC. War was never officially declared, and the Thyllanorians were eager to catch the Moonlytes off-guard. It is not sure why Callen II Karthmere, the current king of Thyllanor at the time, wanted to attack the Moonlyt Peaks; they were hardly more than a political entity at the time, united only by region rather than identity. Regardless, the men came to the beck and call of Doven III Stone, then-proclaimed King Under the Mountain of the Moonlyt Peaks, and they prepared for what seemed to be a bloody conflict ahead of them. A bloody conflict it would be; but not for the Moonlyte people. Along the treacherous winding paths, canyons and valleys of the Moonlyt Peaks, the Karthmere soldiers, unused to the climate, became tired, weary, and homesick. Many attempted to desert, and many succeeded; it was a better fate than what was to be destined for the rest of the soldiers. For the near 100,000 soldiers -- almost all of Thyllanor's standing army in the time period -- that started on the campaign to Highmountain Hall, only 60,000 were representing Thyllanor for what the present day calls Thyllanor's greatest military disaster ever; the Disaster at Dimlight Pass. Within a day or two, an army reported at over 50 thousand strong just a week ago all vanished into thin air. It is now known that nearly all 60,000 men were buried by an avalanche on a thin, narrow path overlooking a 150 foot drop full of crags and sharp stalagmite-like growths, likely impaling several men who were first subject to the fall. Most of them fell to their deaths or suffocated under the massive embankment of snow, and with the amount of displacement required to discover the bodies, it was easy to see why they went undiscovered for all this time. It had puzzled historians for nearly a thousand years as to what truly happened at the pass, and when they had vanished. No one had ever heard from the battalion again, and they became referred to as the Lost Lion Brigade, or simply the Lost Lions. King Callen himself was travelling with the army, but his body was never discovered; it seems to be that he has been reported as missing in action for nearly a thousand years. He was declared dead in absentia by the Thyllanorian government, finally acknowledging the events publicly for the first time, on January 30th, 189 AC, still to not know what happened until about 150 years later when the bodies would be discovered. Needless to say, without a standing army, Thyllanor was forced to quickly surrender, with both sides completely unbeknownst as to what happened to 60,000 men, who all seemed to vanish. The Moonlytes were able to establish dominance in the region that Thyllanor had held de jure territory in, and new borders were drawn as a result of the failure; Thyllanor was pushed further east, coming closer to the borders that exist today. There was no good to come out of this war for the Thyllanorians; it did not serve as a wake-up call for them and they spent nearly a whole generation trying to regain the same amount of men to serve in the army. This disaster and the sudden disappearance of the whole army discouraged many young men to enlist for hundreds of years. Because of the nature of the failure, the disaster was not acknowledged by the Thyllanorian government for nearly 800 years. It is now almost universally agreed, Thyllanorian or not, that Callen's war truly was folly.
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