Occupied Territory Revolted

I was inside the borders of a territory I was attacking, but not yet made it to the center of it. After removing the occupied center with mobile artillery, the territory revolted and joined a nearby country I was not at war with. Is this a bug? I cannot enter into the borders of a country I am at peace with, but do not have rights of passage in danger of going to war. So, how can I have troops within the borders I am attacking and they revolt. I could had moved the troops to attack the region's center after the revolt, and the warning of starting a war did not occur. ?(

3 Replies

Hello!

This is not an error, if you are in a war against another nation and you have recently conquered the territory of an enemy, the province may rebel and move on to another nation. To avoid this, I recommend let troops in the cities conquered with low morale.

A greeting.


"I came, I saw, I conquered" Written in a report to Rome 47 B.C., after conquering Pharnaces at Zela in Asia Minor in just five days; as quoted in Life of Caesar by Plutarch; reported to have been inscribed on one of the decorated wagons in the Pontic triumph, in Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius, by Suetonius.
"Alea iacta est" Gaius Julius Caesar.

Max, he didn't conquer the territory yet.

Audie, by eliminating the garrison you eliminated the troops that may have prevented the province from revolting to a neutral, third country.

Also, it doesn't matter if your units are in the territory of an enemy, friend, or neutral country before, during, or after a revolt as far as impacting or preventing the revolt.

It also usually doesn't matter if your units were "caught" in the territory as a result of the revolt. This usually won't cause a war w/ the new owner if you remove the troops fairly promptly (and without going through the new owner's town/city if you don't have RoW).

I Patton wrote:

Max, he didn't conquer the territory yet.
Ah, ok. Thanks for the information.

"I came, I saw, I conquered" Written in a report to Rome 47 B.C., after conquering Pharnaces at Zela in Asia Minor in just five days; as quoted in Life of Caesar by Plutarch; reported to have been inscribed on one of the decorated wagons in the Pontic triumph, in Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius, by Suetonius.
"Alea iacta est" Gaius Julius Caesar.

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