Craeperia Citerior

From The League Wiki
Revision as of 23:22, 1 April 2024 by Creeper3 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox former country | conventional_long_name = Craeperia Citerior | common_name = Craeperia | iso3166code = omit | era = Classica...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Craeperia Citerior

110 BC–193 AD
StatusClient state of the Romanyan Republic, later Romanyan Empire
Common languagesOld Creeperian
Demonym(s)Craeperian
GovernmentConsular republic
Consul 
• 110 BC (first)
Servilius Geminus
• 193 AD (last)
Juliu Curtito Falx
Caeso Calinio Flavillo
LegislatureSenate
Historical eraClassical antiquity
• Established
5 October 110 BC
• Declared independence
4 April 193 AD
CurrencyDenarius
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Siuatlampa Kingdom
Craeperian Republic
Today part ofCreeperopolis

Craeperia Citerior (literally "Nearer Craeperia") was a client state of the Romanyan Republic and the later Romanyan Empire from 108 BC until 193 AD when it declared independence as the Craeperian Republic. Craeperia Citerior was the only Romanyan client state to exist south of the Creeperian Range.

The state was established in 110 BC under Servilius Geminus by Romanyan survivors of the Battle of the Xichútepa River. The state pledged its allegiance to the Romanyan Republic in 108 BC once several Romanyan legions dispatched south of the Creeperian Range found the Romanyan survivors. Craeperia Citerior's consuls managed to negotiate that the region would remain a client state rather than a province, arguing that exerting full provincial control over the territory would be difficult.

In 193 AD, when news of the death of Emperor Commodus and subsequent outbreak of a civil war, the consuls declared full independence from the Romanyan Empire as it recognized Commodus' successors as usurpers. The Craeperian Republic defeated Romanyan soldiers at the Battle of the Vadum River in 197 and assured the new republic's independence from the Romanyan Empire.