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Rump state
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rump_state" .
A rump state is the remnant of a once-larger government , left with limited powers or authority after a disaster , invasion or military occupation .
For example, the Seleucid Empire , which once controlled most of the Middle-East, was reduced drastically in size by the rise of the Parthian Empire in its eastern provinces because of a regional rebellion. What was left of the once large empire was a rump state composed of little more than Antioch , Damascus , and an area roughly equal in size to modern Syria .
Some other states labeled as rump states, or that today would be considered rump states, at one point or another are listed below.
Ancient
Late Antiquity
Early Middle Ages
High Middle Ages
Srivijaya from the Chola invasion of 1025 to its conquest by the Majapahit Empire in 1365.
The Ghaznavid Empire from its loss of Khorasan to the Seljuq Empire in 1040 until its liquidation by the Ghurids in 1187. See also Battle of Dandanaqan .
Denmark after the death of King Harthacanute and the resulting dissolution of the union between itself and England in 1042, until the reign of Valdemar the Great in the mid-12th century. [38]
The Zirid and Hammadid Empires of North Africa from the Bedouin invasion circa 1049 to their liquidation by the Almohad Empire in 1152. [39]
The Ghana Empire from 1062 to its conquest by the Almoravids in 1076.
The Deccan empire of the Western Chalukyas because of Chola aggression from 1064 to 1115 and from 1126 to its dissolution in 1180.
The Fatimid Caliphate from 1070 until its conquest by Saladin in 1169. [40]
The Kingdom of Navarre from the late 11th century to its liquidation by Aragon in 1516. [41]
The Pagan Kingdom of Myanmar from the late 11th century until its Mongol conquest in 1289. [42]
The Chola Empire of southern India from 1118 to its liquidation by the Pandyan Kingdom in 1279. [43]
China because of the progressive loss of its northern lands to the Jurchen Manchus from 1126 until the Mongol conquest of the following century. [44] [45]
The Kingdom of León from the secession of Portugal in 1143 to its union with the Kingdom of Castile in 1230. [46]
France during the loss of the majority of its territory to the Angevin Empire from circa 1154 to 1214. [47] [48]
Albania from the late 12th century to its Ottoman conquest in 1385. [49]
The Seljuq Empire after its loss of Syria to Saladin in 1174 and the secession of Georgia and Armenia .
The Kingdom of Jerusalem after the Third Crusade , from 1192 to its liquidation in 1244. [50]
The Sultanate of Rum as the successor to the Seljuq Empire after the loss of its eastern lands to the Khwarezmid Empire in 1194. [51]
The Kingdom of Castile from its defeat by the Almohad Empire at the Battle of Alarcos in 1195 until its defeat of the Almohads in the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212. [52]
The Byzantine Empire after the Fourth Crusade as the Empire of Nicaea (also Empire of Trebizond and Despotate of Epirus ). [53] [54]
The Angevin Empire as the dual monarchy of England and Aquitaine from the revolt of the Lusignans and its loss of NW France in 1202 to its dissolution in 1214.
Wales because of English aggression from 1211 to 1218 and 1241 to its final conquest in 1535 [55] . See also Statute of Rhuddlan and Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542 .
The Latin Empire from circa 1215 because of successive losses of territory to the Despotate of Epirus [56] , Bulgaria [57] , and the Empire of Nicaea [58] until its Nicaean conquest in 1261. See also Peter of Courtenay .
The Despotate of Epirus from 1230 because of successive losses of territory to Bulgaria [59] , the Empire of Nicaea [60] , and the Serbian Empire [61] until its Serbian conquest in 1358.
The Kingdom of Georgia from the Mongol invasion of 1236 until its liquidation by Russia in 1804. [62]
Poland [63] , Lithuania , Hungary [64] , and the Sultanate of Rum during the Mongol aggression of the mid-13th century.
The Ayyubid Caliphate because of Mamluk aggression, from its loss of Egypt in 1250 to its conquest in 1334.
The Duchy of Pisa from its loss of Corsica and Sardinia to Genoa in 1284 until its conquest by Florence in 1406. [65] See also Battle of Meloria .
Late Middle Ages
The Tu'i Tonga Empire from the secession of Samoa circa 1300 to its dissolution circa 1800.
Cambodia as the successor to the Khmer Empire from the early 14th century. [66]
The Nasrid Kingdom of Granada in the 14th and 15th centuries until the capture of Granada by the Kingdom of Spain in 1492. [67]
The Hoysala Empire from the invasions of the Sultanate of Delhi circa 1318 until its dissolution circa 1346, and then the Vijayanagara Empire as its successor until its consolidation of power in southern India in the late 14th century.
France during the Hundred Years' War against the English, Flemish , Basque , Portuguese, and Burgundian , from 1337 to 1453. [68] [69] [70] [71] [72]
The Serbian Empire from 1356 after the death of Stefan Dusan until its conquest by the Ottoman Empire in 1459. [73] [74]
Mongolia as the successor to the Yuan Empire , after China regained its independence in 1368 under the Ming Dynasty . [75] [76]
The Khanate of the Golden Horde and its successor khanates from the late 14th century until their conquest by Russia and the Ottoman Empire in the late 16th century. [77]
The Mali Empire from the mid 15th century to its liquidation by the Bambara and Fulbe in 1670. [78]
The Sultanate of Delhi from the invasions of Timur in 1398 until its liquidation by Mughal forces in 1526. [79]
The Ottoman Empire during the occupation of its eastern lands by the Timurids from 1400 to circa 1414 [80] . See also Ottoman Interregnum .
The Byzantine Empire in the 15th century, from the Ottoman invasions until its conquest in 1453. [81]
Albania during the revolt of Skanderbeg from 1443 to 1478. [82]
The Vijayanagara Empire during renewed Islamic invasions from circa 1446 to 1486.
The Kingdom of Burgundy from 1453 to the conquest of Burgundy proper by France in 1477 [83] , then the Burgundian Netherlands as its successor [84] until its incorporation in the Habsburg Empire after the death of Queen Mary of Burgundy in 1482.
The Duchy of Prussia as the successor to the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights , from the Second Peace of Thorn (1466) with Poland-Lithuania in 1525 until its 1618 union with Brandenburg . [85] See also Thirteen Years' War .
Early Modern
Royal Hungary as the successor of the Kingdom of Hungary under Austrian suzerainty from 1541 until circa 1700 [86] .
The Jaffna Kingdom of Sri Lanka because of Portuguese aggression from 1505 until its conquest in 1621.
The Munhumutapa Empire of present-day Zimbabwe and Mozambique because of Portuguese aggression from 1505 until its conquest in 1629.
Oman during the occupation of Muscat by the Portuguese from 1508 to 1650.
The Sultanate of Malacca from the Portuguese capture of Malacca in 1511, and the Sultanate of Johor as its successor from 1528 until the complete Dutch conquest in 1641.
Denmark-Norway after Sweden broke away from the Kalmar Union in 1523. [87] See also Stockholm Bloodbath of 1520 and Swedish War of Liberation .
The Inca state of Tawantinsuyu which survived the initial Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire in the Vilcabamba area from 1532 until the final Spanish conquest in 1572.
Poland-Lithuania [88] , Russia , and Austria [89] at times during the height of Ottoman and Crimean Tatar [90] advances. See also Russo-Crimean Wars , Siege of Vienna , and Battle of Vienna .
The Livonian Confederation during the Livonian War , from the Russian invasion of 1558 to its liquidation by Poland-Lithuania and Sweden in 1561 [91] , and then the Duchy of Courland as its successor under Polish suzerainty until its Russian conquest in 1795 [92] .
The Vijayanagara Empire from its 1565 defeat by the Deccan Sultanates in the Battle of Talikota until its liquidation circa 1646.
The Netherlands during its struggle against Spanish rule in the Eighty Years' War (1566–1648.) [93]
Mongolia from the rise of the Qing Manchus in the early 17th century until its conquest in 1634.
Denmark-Norway during the occupation of Jutland by Austria and its Catholic League allies in the Thirty Years War from 1627 to 1629, as well as by Sweden in the Hannibal War of 1644.
China because of Manchu aggression from 1630 until its conquest and resultant formation of the Qing Dynasty in 1644.
Poland-Lithuania from 1648 to 1662, during its struggle for survival in the war of The Deluge against Ukrainian Cossack insurgents and Russian, Swedish, Turkic, Transylvanian [94] , and German invaders. [95] [96]
Denmark-Norway during the occupation of the Trøndelag region from 1658 to 1660 by the Swedish Empire during the Northern Wars [97] . See also Treaty of Roskilde .
Oman during the occupation of its coasts by the Ottoman Empire from 1659 to 1741 and by the Afsharid Empire from 1743 to 1746.
Poland-Lithuania from 1701 to 1711 and Russia in 1708 and 1709, during the Swedish occupation of large areas in the Great Northern War . [98]
The Mughal Empire in the 18th century, after the death of Aurangzeb in 1707. [99]
Sweden after its defeat and loss of Baltic hegemony in the Great Northern War in 1721 [100] , and more so after the Russian seizure of Finland in the Finnish War of 1809.
Safavid Persia from 1722 to 1738 because of Afghan and Ottoman aggression.
The Sultanate of Mataram in Java from 1749 to its Dutch conquest in 1816. [101]
Prussia from 1758 to 1762 during the Seven Years' War .
Siam because of Burmese aggression from 1766 to 1802.
Poland-Lithuania , progressively after the first two Partitions of Poland in 1772 and 1793 until its liquidation in 1795. [102]
Durrani Afghanistan after its loss of the Punjab following the death of Ahmed Shah Abdali in 1773.
The Maratha Empire because of British aggression from 1775 to its conquest in 1818. [103] [104]
The Iroquois Confederacy from the Sullivan Expedition of 1779 to its annexation by the United States in the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua .
The Republic of Venice after its partition between France , Austria , and the Ottoman Empire in 1797, and the inclusion of Venice proper into the Austrian-ruled Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia [105] by the Congress of Vienna until 1866. See also Cisalpine Republic .
19th Century
Serbia from its initial autonomy from the Ottoman Empire in 1804 until the creation of Yugoslavia after World War I . [106] [107]
Austria , The Netherlands , and Prussia under Napoleonic occupation. [108]
The Duchy of Warsaw [109] and Congress Poland [110] , from 1807 to 1831 under French and Russian hegemony, respectively.
Portugal during its Napoleonic partition under the Treaty of Fontainebleau from November 1807 to August 1808 and with renewed French aggression from March to June 1809 and during much of 1810.
Denmark after its granting of independence to Norway in January 1814, which Sweden took control of in August 1814 [111] . See also Norway in 1814 .
The Kingdom of Saxony after its loss of 40% of its area to Prussia in the Congress of Vienna [112] , until its 1871 incorporation into the German Empire .
Muscat and Oman from the early 1820s, because of the progressive loss of possessions in the Persian Gulf , Zanzibar , the Indian Ocean coast of Africa, and Baluchistan to the British as well as Germany, Portugal, France, and Italy, until the formation of the British protectorate of 1891.
Myanmar because of British aggression from 1824 until its conquest in 1886 [113] . See also First Anglo-Burmese War , Second Anglo-Burmese War , and Third Anglo-Burmese War .
Morocco because of French aggression from 1830 until its conquest in 1912. [114]
The Netherlands from 1831, after Belgium won its independence in the Belgian Revolution . [115]
Colombia after Venezuela and Ecuador seceded from Greater Colombia in 1831, and more so after Panama seceded in 1904. [116]
Mexico after the progressive loss of almost half of its area to United States interests from 1836 to 1848 [117] [118] and during the French invasion of the Pastry War in 1838 and early 1839. See also Texas Revolution , Mexican-American War , and the Gadsden Purchase of 1854.
The Khanate of Khiva from the mid-19th century until its Russian conquest in 1873. [119]
The Papal States [120] from 1860, and particularly Vatican City as their successor after the Unification of Italy in 1871.
Denmark after its loss of Schleswig-Holstein to the Prussian (later German) Empire after the Second War of Schleswig in 1864. [121] [122]
Siam from 1867, because of progressive territorial losses in Cambodia and Laos to the French. [123]
Honduras from the Guatemalan invasion and overthrow of José María Medina in 1876 until 1891.
Iran from 1918 to 1946, because of British and Russian aggression. Map of the partition plan of the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 used during World War I [124] See also Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran .
Paraguay , after losing vital territory to Argentina and Brazil , as well as having lost the majority of its population, in the War of the Triple Alliance in 1870 until winning the Chaco War in 1935. [125]
World War I and aftermath
Russia from 1917 to 1921, particularly under the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk [126] and during the Western, Polish, Romanian, and Japanese intervention of the Russian Civil War (see also Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War .)
Ukraine from 1917 to 1921. [127]
The Democratic Republic of Armenia (from 1917 to 1922), since Turkey remained in control of the majority of its pre-World War I homeland. [128]
The Azerbaijan Democratic Republic from 1918 to 1920, since Iran remained in control of the majority of the Azeri historic homeland. [129]
German Austria , from the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire by the Treaty of Saint-Germain until the Anschluss (its annexation by Nazi Germany ) of 1938. [130]
The Ottoman Empire as envisioned by the Treaty of Sevres [131] , and then Turkey as recognized in the Treaty of Lausanne [132] after becoming a republic. See also Turkish War of Independence .
Hungary after the Treaty of Trianon [133] , particularly during intervention by Romania and Czechoslovakia against the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic in the summer of 1919 [134] .
Poland during the summer of 1920, while Soviet Russia occupied the majority of its area in the Polish-Soviet War . [135] [136]
World War II
Since World War II
See also
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