docs: update HBW/Eirus/Concalian-Empire/Concalian-Culture

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MortenGM 2024-04-30 20:12:01 +00:00 committed by Strix
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title: Concalian Culture
description:
published: true
date: 2024-04-30T20:11:51.591Z
date: 2024-04-30T20:11:59.783Z
tags: game-master, concalia, concalian culture, concalian empire, concalian
editor: ckeditor
dateCreated: 2023-01-06T16:53:59.820Z
@ -29,7 +29,6 @@ dateCreated: 2023-01-06T16:53:59.820Z
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<h1>Governance</h1>
<p>The Concalian Empire was governed by a pseudo-democratic system, divided among three main bodies: the Centuriate Assembly, the Senate, and the Magistrates. An additional influential force was the Clergy, which, though officially advisory, wielded considerable soft power due to the empires deep religiosity and the populaces reverence for divine will.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>The Centuriate Assembly</h2>
<p>The Centuriate Assembly functioned as a democratic forum for those who had served, or were currently serving, in military or civil capacities. It convened biannually in the capital to vote on legislation proposed by the Senate and to elect Magistrates from candidate lists also provided by the Senate. The laws it enacted formed the bedrock of Concalian legal code, only amendable by another Assembly vote.</p>
<p>Voting within the Assembly was stratified by military rank and public service role, with each rank or role being allocated a set number of votes. Participants belonging to the same rank or role would be divided into a number of groups equal to the number of votes their rank or role held, where each group had to come to an agreement on how their vote would be cast. This structure inherently favored higher ranks and those able to influence through persuasion or wealth, particularly as the sum of votes held by officers and equivalent civil positions outnumbered those held by lower ranks. Magistrates and Senators were barred from voting in the Assembly, preserving a degree of separation between legislative and executive powers. The duration of each Assembly session varied, lasting from a few days to several weeks, depending on the volume of matters to address and the time needed for groups to reach agreement on their votes.</p>