Post-Covenant War conflicts: Difference between revisions

m
→‎Continuing Jiralhanae-Sangheili hostility: specifying which wars, and fixed grammar
(Undo revision 1172184 by 99.248.155.195 (talk) The sentence is trying to convey that there were no Forerunners left on Requiem.)
m (→‎Continuing Jiralhanae-Sangheili hostility: specifying which wars, and fixed grammar)
Line 43: Line 43:
With Truth dead, ''High Charity'' destroyed, and the Ark heavily damaged after Installation 04B's firing, some of the remaining Jiralhanae forces tried to rebuild their tattered strength to continue their war of conquest.<ref>'''Halo 3''', multiplayer level ''[[Assembly (level)|Assembly]]''</ref> Even though the Jiralhanae eventually collapsed into various civil wars, they still posed enough of a threat that Sangheili commanders kept up the offensive against them for at least another six years, even as they continued to lose irreplaceable warships and the war continued with no end in sight. This forced the [[Swords of Sanghelios]] and their [[United Nations Space Command|UNSC]] allies to fight in a two-front war, one was the [[Blooding Years]] against other Sangheili who remained loyal to the [[Covenant religion]] and the other was the continued conflict against the Brutes, whom were also engaged in numerous civil wars.<ref name="Evolutions">'''Halo: Evolutions''', ''[[The Return]]''</ref>  
With Truth dead, ''High Charity'' destroyed, and the Ark heavily damaged after Installation 04B's firing, some of the remaining Jiralhanae forces tried to rebuild their tattered strength to continue their war of conquest.<ref>'''Halo 3''', multiplayer level ''[[Assembly (level)|Assembly]]''</ref> Even though the Jiralhanae eventually collapsed into various civil wars, they still posed enough of a threat that Sangheili commanders kept up the offensive against them for at least another six years, even as they continued to lose irreplaceable warships and the war continued with no end in sight. This forced the [[Swords of Sanghelios]] and their [[United Nations Space Command|UNSC]] allies to fight in a two-front war, one was the [[Blooding Years]] against other Sangheili who remained loyal to the [[Covenant religion]] and the other was the continued conflict against the Brutes, whom were also engaged in numerous civil wars.<ref name="Evolutions">'''Halo: Evolutions''', ''[[The Return]]''</ref>  


The Covenant had strategically settled Jiralhanae populations on resource-rich worlds as a planetary garrison force to protect the worlds from potential raids. While the Jiralhanae continued to inhabit these worlds after the dissolution of the Covenant, they were unable to mine or utilize the resources because of their own lack of sufficient technology. With the Covenant's supply chains gone, the Jiralhanae quickly found their supplies near depletion. This was one of the primary reasons for their raids on Sangheili colonies after the war; despite quite literally living on top of plentiful resources, the Jiralhanae were entirely dependent on the already processed supplies of other races due to their technological backwardness. However, the Jiralhanae could not sustain themselves via raiding alone in the long term and their supplies began to wear thin, leading to an impending species-wide famine in [[2558]] and an increase in Jiralhanae attacks across Sangheili and [[Kig-Yar]] colonies as a result. During this crisis, the [[Jiralhanae Chieftain]] [[Lydus]] was willing to initiate peace talks with the Arbiter and the UNSC.<ref name="escalation1">'''[[Halo: Escalation]]''', ''[[Halo: Escalation Issue 1|Issue #1]]''</ref> However, the negotiations were interrupted by Covenant mercenaries hired by the [[New Colonial Alliance]].<ref name="HE5">'''Halo: Escalation''', ''[[Halo: Escalation Issue 5|Issue #5]]''</ref>  
The Covenant had strategically settled Jiralhanae populations on resource-rich worlds as a planetary garrison force to protect the worlds from potential raids. While the Jiralhanae continued to inhabit these worlds after the dissolution of the Covenant, they were unable to mine or utilize the resources because of their own lack of sufficient technology. With the Covenant's supply chains gone, the Jiralhanae quickly found their supplies near depletion. This was one of the primary reasons for their raids on Sangheili colonies after the Human-Covenant war; despite quite literally living on top of plentiful resources, the Jiralhanae were entirely dependent on the already processed supplies of other races due to their technological backwardness. However, the Jiralhanae could not sustain themselves via raiding alone in the long term and their supplies began to wear thin, leading to an impending species-wide famine in [[2558]] and an increase in Jiralhanae attacks across Sangheili and [[Kig-Yar]] colonies as a result. During this crisis, the [[Jiralhanae Chieftain]] [[Lydus]] was willing to initiate peace talks with the Arbiter and the UNSC.<ref name="escalation1">'''[[Halo: Escalation]]''', ''[[Halo: Escalation Issue 1|Issue #1]]''</ref> However, the negotiations were interrupted by Covenant mercenaries hired by the [[New Colonial Alliance]].<ref name="HE5">'''Halo: Escalation''', ''[[Halo: Escalation Issue 5|Issue #5]]''</ref>  


The Jiralhanae were supplied with powerful new weaponry by their [[San'Shyuum]] leaders. When the San 'Shyuum went into hiding, The Jiralhanae began to lose order and started to fight among each other. This ultimately gave the upper-hand to their Sangheili opponents. As of 2559, the Sangheili are currently winning.<ref name="TheReturn"></ref>
The Jiralhanae were supplied with powerful new weapons by their [[San'Shyuum]] leaders. When the San 'Shyuum went into hiding, The Jiralhanae began to lose order and started to fight among each other. This ultimately gave the upper-hand to their Sangheili opponents. As of 2559, the Sangheili are currently winning the war against the Jiralhanae.<ref name="TheReturn"></ref>
   
   
{{Clear}}
{{Clear}}
7,301

edits