Keston Province Organization in The Lost Lands | World Anvil

Keston Province

Keston Province is no longer a province of the Kingdoms of Foere, having declared fealty to the crown of Suilley. It has always been sparsely populated and is still reeling from the devastation of the Wilderlands Clan War. The province is well-governed, but even before the war only the areas around the main roads were particularly safe or civilized, and at this point the province’s interior is no more than a sparsely settled wilderness.   The southern border of Keston Province runs due east from the intersection of the South Road with the Provincial Military Road, with an eastern boundary at the Trader’s Way, 150 or so miles to the north of Albor Broce in Exeter Province. To the west, the province officially includes the eastern slopes of the Kal’Iugus and the southern half of the Meridian mountain ranges, but these are wild areas unpatrolled save at the very edges.   Between the two mountain ranges, the Keston Border extends through the high saddle of land along the Gap Road and runs all the way to the Duchy of Saxe.  

History and People

Keston is very lightly populated, with most of its folk living in the towns and villages along the length of the South Road and the Gap Road. Few settlements remain along the Trader’s Way after the ravages of the Wilderlands Clan War of 3506 I.R. There has never been more than a scattering of hamlets and freeholds in the province’s interior or along the edge of the mountain ranges.   Before becoming a province of the Kingdom of Foere, the lands of Keston were subject to waves of Heldring raiders over the course of thousands of years. As Foere expanded, it took steps to secure the region in 2803 I.R. and established a garrison town at Kingston and drew boundary lines for a royal province. Most of the area’s inhabitants, scattered in their hamlets and tiny villages, remained completely unaware of this change in status. Local warlords were forced, one by one, to call themselves “knights” and to enter the feudal hierarchy of the Foerdewaith by pledging fealty to the same chieftains they had always followed. These chieftains, in turn, discovered themselves actually to be “barons” who paid small amounts of tax to a distant governor in exchange for not being attacked. Once the concept of “taxes” had been gotten across by the burning of a few motte-and-bailey forts, the isolated settlements of the province settled into their new titles, and life continued as before. In a very real sense, Keston Province was annexed by nomenclature rather than by armies.   In 3336 I.R., Lord-Governor Fenevic Jaounehelm (JOWN-helm) switched his feudal allegiance from the overking of Foere to the king of Suilley, following the lead of Count Catrebrasse of Toullen.   Keston Province’s recent history is dominated by the events and effects of the recent Wilderlands Clan War. Some 10 years ago, early in the year of 3506 I.R., a great horde of raiders emerged from the Wilderland Hills and burned the village of Bynum and fortified it to use as a base for ravaging the countryside. The lord-governor of Keston at that time, a veteran of several petty border wars, began assembling his forces to counter the invasion and invoked the feudal duties of his barons to provide soldiers. The army of Keston, such as it was, consisted of a core of trained infantry with the various small cavalry units ordinarily responsible for patrolling the province’s roads. Barons and their knights, accompanied by small levies of troops of varying quality, assembled in the mustering-fields around Kingston underneath the colorful pennants of the feudal lords. Their numbers were small, and the then lord-governor sent the faster-moving elements of the army forward without the levies, but ordered the less-organized and less-experienced militia force to follow behind the veterans and knights along the South Road to the Provincial Military Road and then north to the borders of the Wilderland Hills.   In the first contact between the forward elements of the army of Keston and the raider horde at the ill-fated Battle of Sontanne Hill, the Kestonfolk engaged a mixed force of hill barbarians, orcs, and ogres. Sontanne Hill might have turned out to be a decisive victory for the more-organized soldiery of Keston, but the humanoids turned out to have the unexpected support of several margoyles and their lesser gargoyle kin that flew over the human army, swooping in and out to the kill. Demoralized by the attacks from the air, the army of Keston retreated back to forested cover, leaving the raider horde in possession of the field. Perhaps even worse for morale, the lord-governor of the province was badly wounded in the rearguard action when his leg was crushed. The few prisoners taken from Sontanne Hill revealed that a clan of margoyles from the Forlorn Mountains had organized the army of raiders and hoped to seize a domain for themselves in the lowlands. Not particularly intelligent, for margoyles are not, this clan nevertheless managed to use a mix of bad ideas, persuasiveness, and brute force to raise a truly massive horde of reavers to sweep down into the civilized lands.   When groups of lost or fleeing soldiers from the defeated regular army met the advancing militias and levies on the Trader’s Way, and news spread through the militia, the second force evaporated in a panic and headed back to Kingston without officers. The few barons who had been leading the levies were unable to rally them, and the army of Keston was effectively destroyed.   Drawn by the successes of the advance force, new tribes and clans poured out of the Wilderland Hills, some coming all the way from the Forlorn Mountains to join the pillaging. The count of Toullen, always a good neighbor to Keston Province, immediately sent a contingent of his own knights and solders to shore up the collapsing defense of Keston. Too badly injured to take the field, the lord-governor appointed Sir Miltrin Cormien to reassemble and command the army of Keston, largely because the knight was related to all four of the province’s leading noble families and had demonstrated great heroism in the Battle of Sontanne Hill. This turned out to be a lucky decision, for as the war progressed, Sir Cormien’s blood relation with the great nobles of the province was far eclipsed by his unexpected military genius.   Making the correct assumption that his enemy was not a single army but rather a collection of independent clans, Cormien took the extremely unpopular step of ordering his knights off their prized Suilley destriers and out of their heavy armor and put them in much lighter armor and onto lighter riding horses. This new force — small units of heavily armed light cavalry — fanned out across the contested area in eastern Keston guided by locals. By locating isolated clans and combining together for the battle, then splitting up again, Cormien’s small army managed to check the advance of the horde, although the largest of the tribes remained undamaged by the light cavalry tactics.   By 3507 I.R., a small army raised by the king of Suilley finished mustering outside of Manas and marched south along the Flatlander Road to assist in Keston’s defense. With the arrival of these heavier troops, the war settled into a more traditional pattern, with the allied armies of Keston, Suilley, and Toullen attempting to bring the large tribes into a pitched battle where they could be decisively defeated. These attempts failed, mainly due to poor leadership of the allies by the commander of Suilley’s army, the largest in the field. After a year of watching the army get beaten back in petty defeat after petty defeat, the king of Suilley recalled his general and placed Keston’s Sir Cormien at the head of all the allied forces. Baron Nalsibert, the disgraced Suilleyn general, drank himself to death on the road back to Manas and capped off a long and incompetent military career.   With Baron Nalsibert removed from command, and with a new influx of Foerdewaith troops from Vourdon and Exeter Provinces joining the allied army as a gesture from the overking, Sir Cormien (now Baron Cormien) undertook a series of lighting advances against the horde and cut off the army of the large Wormaganth Clan in a hamlet called Onjoun and slaughtered them. The margoyle leadership of the horde now discovered that they actually had very little control over their “subjects” and were virtually unable to respond as Cormien severed and destroyed their army clan by clan. The final battle took place deep in the Wilderland Hills as the clans retreated farther into their home territory. At the ancient fortifications of Broch Tarna, the allied armies broke and crushed the remaining hill clans, bringing an end to the bloody, three-year war and sending the few surviving margoyles fleeing back to their haunts high in the Forlorn Mountains. Cormien himself fought in the vanguard of the army, losing his left arm to the infection of a wound inflicted during the battle. When the former lord-governor eventually died from the lingering wounds suffered at Sontanne Hill, the king of Suilley elevated Keston’s hero, Baron Cormien, to the position.
 

Trade and Commerce

The city of Kingston is well placed for trade, being at the crossroad of the Gap Road leading into the Kingdoms of Foere, the South Road which runs from Toullen to the Duchy of the Rampart, and controlling the Provincial Military Road leading to the Domain of Hawkmoon through Exeter Province. None of these routes is very heavily traveled, but together they make enough revenue to maintain the province well. If the province manages to rebuild the ravaged rural communities lost to the depredations of the Wilderland Clans, it will become a strong nation over time. At pres¬ent, however, the province is still struggling with the loss of farmland, villages, and rural population from the war.
 

Loyalties and Diplomacy

Keston was once a province of Foere, but in 3336 I.R., along with the County of Toullen, Keston Province rescinded its feudal obligations to the Court of Courghais and offered fealty to the crown of Suilley. The realm of Suilley has governed it indirectly ever since.
 

Government

Since declaring its independence from Foere, Keston Province has been governed as a feudal vassal to the Kingdom of Suilley, very much along the same model used by the Kingdom of Foere. The king of Suilley appoints a lord-governor for the province, but the feudal ranks below the lord-governor are hereditary. These nobles offer their fealty to the king of Suilley but report to the lord-governor as the king’s representative. Hence, travelers in the province find the usual mix of barons and knights, all with greater or lesser landholdings. Four dukes make up the governmental layer between the barons and the lord-gov¬ernor, and these four dukes are extremely powerful in the province and even in Suilley. These four families, along with the lord-governor at the time, are the ones who delivered Keston into Suilley’s hands by seced¬ing from the Kingdom of Foere. The lord-governor who engineered the secession became rich in land and titles himself, but his family is by no means as powerful as the dukes, and his descendants do not much involve themselves in the province’s government other than as ordinary members of the nobility.   Keston’s current ruler is the retired general Baron Miltrin Cormien, who was elevated to the position of lord-governor by Ulrich IX, the young king of Suilley. Cormien is a disciplined administra¬tor and staunchly loyal to the crown of Suilley, related by blood to all four of the dukes of Keston and a figure of legend among the common folk after his defeat of the Wilderland Clans.
 

Wilderness and Adventure

Other than along the roads, there is very little in Keston Province that is not wilderness. In the eastern part of the province, many secrets lie buried in the charred remains of forgotten villages. Wolves — and far worse things than wolves — howl unchallenged beneath the night skies of empty, rural Keston. Farms lie fallow, and forests claw their way back into the long-forgotten grounds of their ancestral growth. A few hardy settlements remain in these newly crafted wilds, and some new villages are springing up almost like colonies in a foreign land. Many of these new hamlets disappear in time, but some persevere and prosper.
 

Region


Keston Province

Pronunciation
KEST-un, occasionally GAST-un

Capital
Kingston

Notable Settlements
Aljun

Ruler
His Excellency the Lord-Governor of the Suilleyn Dominion of Keston Province, Baron Miltrin Cormien

Government
feudalism (vassal of Suilley)

Population
477,280 (385,150 Foerdewaith, 42,700 Heldring, 23,500 Halfling, 17,680 half-elf, 4,100 hill dwarf, 2,060 high elf, 1,300 mountain dwarf, 790 half-orc)

Monstrous
wolf, goblin, giant animal, hobgoblin, orc, aurochs, ogre-kin, ogres (plains giant mosquito, lizardfolk, bugbear, shambling mound, undead, chuul, black dragon (Creeping Mire orc, ogre-kin, giant bat, undead, mobat, quickwood, witherstench, ogre, harpy, half-ogre, vulchling, minotaur, troll (highlands giant animal, orc, ogre, mammoth, frost giant, ice troll, thunderbird, demon (mountains)

Languages
Common, Halfling, Dwarven, Elvish, Orc

Religion
Dre’uain the Lame, Mitra, Freya, Mithras, Thyr, Pekko, Mick O’Delving, Muir, Pan, Dwerfater

Resources
wool, livestock (sheep), flax, foodstuffs (apples), grain, linen, quarry stone, coal, lead

Currency
Foere

Technology Level
High Middle Ages

Parent Organization
Controlled Territories

Articles under Keston Province


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