From: Nick Brooke (Nick_Brooke@btinternet.com)
Date: Thu 13 Apr 2000 - 09:48:54 EEST
FWIW, this is an edited extract from my past correspondence re: who *really*
runs the Lunar Empire, presented here for your viewing pleasure.
MOONSON is an absolute ruler within the Empire; ruling beneath him are his
appointed Satraps, Sultans, Governors, and others. All power is ultimately
awarded by Moonson, and can be revoked at his pleasure. If Moonson chose, he
could shut down government departments, close ancient temples, or condemn
office-holders to death and disgrace. These things don't happen all that
often, and are remarkable when they do. Although Moonson is a God, there are
limits on his power, knowledge and willingness to act:
POWER: Moonson has not *single-handedly* performed any feats of gross
destructiveness (massacring cities, frex) -- he is able to do these things
because, as Emperor, he has lots of powerful people working for him. The
Moonburn happened because Moonson told his priests and sorcerers to do it,
not because he waved his arm and the forest burned down. When Moonson uses
his personal heroic and magical prowess (Nights of Horror, Fall of Boldhome,
Jannisor's Siege, wrestling with Sheng), history shows that he tends to get
twatted, even against opponents who are *not*, on the face of it,
first-generation divine entities with the magical resources of an entire
Empire to draw upon.
KNOWLEDGE: The isolation of the Emperor from the common folk of the Empire
and the restricted access to His Sacred Person are important themes for
scenario writing and campaign plotting: there are zillions of exciting
things you can do if Moonson's information is -- or appears to be -- limited
(tip him off, dramatically expose the plotters, scheme to bring nefarious
deeds to light), all of which which are less plausible if Moonson is (1)
mystically well-informed about everything and (2) inhumanly unwilling to
intervene even if he knew what was going on.
WILLINGNESS TO ACT: Incidentally, striving for months to reveal something
THE EMPEROR'S PROXIES each think that they are the Emperor, unless Moonson
(Note that most people in the Empire don't know what's happening in the
dastardly and *then* learning that Moonson not only knew about it all along
but is also unwilling to do anything about it is, IMO, an excellent campaign
twist. But it should not be something everyone assumes from the start, or
else nobody would ever strive for months to reveal dastardly schemes. Frex,
I think the Lunar Coders assume their investigations have a purpose: that
they are learning things people higher up the chain of command (a) do not
know, (b) would like to know, and (c) will take action upon. The fact that
each of (a), (b) and (c) could *demonstrably* be false in the late, decadent
Lunar Empire is Prime Character-Building Stuff for the "Good Servants of the
Evil Empire" campaign theme.
himself is telling one of them otherwise. When an Emperor dies, the Proxies
assume one of their Proxies has died, and that they must continue ruling;
they then see "rival" Proxies as false claimants to be put down. I prefer to
think of the Proxy Wars as a Horrible Mistake between equally-loyal,
equally-Lunar factions, myself. Note that Moonson Argenteus is not known to
have active Proxies, though again this could be a good campaign twist.
highest Imperial circles, including some of the people in those circles. The
interregnal period between recognised Masks of Moonson is thus terribly
confusing for people used to doing what Moonson tells them to. And when
confusing things happen, we get good game stuff out of it).
THE IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD (which is run by the Imperial Chamberlain) controls
access to Moonson, and therefore has a degree of power and influence.
Remember that when Moonson wants something done, he tells someone who tells
someone who orders someone to do that something. And the reason he wants
something done is that someone was able to tell him something. It is
therefore very important to consider his sources of information. (And,
currently, Argenteus' rather laid-back attitude to the nitty-gritty everyday
business of rule).
GREAT SISTER counts as a member of the Imperial Household, I suppose,
although she despises her brother and is usually resident in her city of
Graclodont. (She considers his current mask the most ineffectual she has
seen. Remember that Great Sister hasn't changed since the Fifth Wane, so she
saw the dynamic post-Sheng empire at its best under Magnificus, and has
lived through the decline into decadence ever since). She has adoring
worshippers and a private army, so don't mess with her.
THE IMPERIAL SENATE advises Moonson, but its powers are highly
circumscribed. It is more a talking-shop and supreme court than an executive
parliament. NB: I think the Senate had *more* power under Takenegi [i.e.
Moonson of the First through Third Wanes] than under any previous Yelmic
Emperor: this way, the "old Republicans" strain of thought -- cf. "I,
Claudius" and Lindsay Davies' "Falco" books for examples -- can be more
vibrant in the contemporary Empire.
THE SULTANS meet as a collegiate body in the Court of the Silver Gate.
Moonson is a member of this group (as Sultan of Silver Shadow), but seldom
attends. This is not a "House of Lords" (or some such -- the Senate is
nearer to this IMO): the Sultans all possess great wealth and private
armies, and their collective influence (if they can agree on an agenda) is
considerable. Nowadays, Issaries' authors probably have to pretend that
nobody has ever called the Satraps of the Lunar Empire "Sultans": let's pity
them.
THE PRESIDIUM: when a Mask of Moonson is uninterested in mundane affairs (as
e.g. under Argenteus), rule may be wielded in his absence by an executive
council of those who have direct control over the military, economic and
spiritual power of the empire. This Presidium is not a formal institution,
and its existence is symptomatic of the Empire's decadence. A more involved
and interventionist Moonson would take on himself many of the
responsibilities currently handled by others.
In our games, the members of the Presidium (and their power bases) were:
Moonson Argenteus Emperor (usually doesn't attend)
Bellex Maximus Red Army: all military forces
Grand Master Orsorkhon Black Army: internal security
Marshal Volkhovos Blue Army: military intelligence
Tatius the Bright Field School of the Lunar College
Red Dancer of Power Directress of the Imperial Economy
Great Sister Emperor's interfering Sister
THE ARMY does not run the Empire, but its generals can have great influence.
The "Proxy Wars" of the early Seventh Wane show that in times of turmoil the
Army is always loyal to the true Mask of Moonson (translation for cynics:
that the "True Mask of Moonson" is the one the Army backs!). The Army
(including the Field School of the Lunar College of Magic) is directed by
the Imperial Warlord, Bellex Maximus; Moonson Argenteus is the titular
commander-in-chief, of course, and could order Bellex around if he wanted
to.
THE ECONOMY of the Empire is directed by the Red Dancer of Power, who
controls (inter alia) the collection of Tribute, the awarding of Imperial
Monopolies, and the work of the Imperial Revenue Service. Luckily, she is
completely round the twist and has an innate understanding of the economic
cycle. There are lots of very fat and wealthy people in the Empire, who can
buy anything they want. Including power, natch, so lots of them are Senators
or Nobles nowadays.
THE SECRET SERVICES (in our games, the Black Army and Blue Army, plus the
Spoken Word; David Gadbois suggested several in an old Codex article;
traditionally, the "Blue Moon Assassins" and other branches of the emperor's
secret police) have absolutely no political power or influence. Why, that
would be quite unthinkable! They are all utterly loyal to the interests of
the state (not their political masters' more narrow interests), and have no
interest in shaping policy. Of course not! The very thought!
THE NOBLES of the Empire provide many or most of the Senators, Satraps,
Sultans, Governors, Judges, Generals, etc., though others can rise to these
roles on merit. This is less common now than in the Fifth and Sixth Wanes,
again a symptom of decadence.
LOCAL POTENTATES: there are lots of local nobles, khans, cults, tribes,
councils and dynasties, centrally-appointed magistrates and roving
investigators from Glamour, military governors, and the like. But let's not
go into those. Some are local and regional (e.g. the Buserian Temple is huge
in Yuthuppa, but it isn't one of the "rulers of the Lunar Empire"; likewise
Shargash in Alkoth, or Pavis in Pavis); others will ultimately derive their
power from rulers of the Empire proper (e.g. our Red Tribunes are agents of
the Imperial Cult, deriving their authority from the Imperial Senate, the
Household, and ultimately from Moonson himself; a soldier is a member of the
Lunar Army and can trace his authority back through his officers to the
commander-in-chief).
THE ALLIES are *not* part of the Empire, and are not ruled directly by
Moonson. Their relations with the Empire are determined by treaties and
personal relations between the rulers. (This includes the Thrice Blessed,
the Char-Un, the Sable Riders of the Hungry Plateau, as well as more minor
or temporary allies like the Red Earth Alliance or the Praxian Oases and
Sables).
THE REDLANDS and ARROLIA are not even allies of the Empire, but they contain
Lunar societies of Pelorian origin so it's probably worth making this
completely clear. They pay no taxes to Moonson, but their religion shares
common roots and there are often religious links between the disparate
groups (e.g. Redlander priests studying in Torang; Arrolian tribute sent to
Great Sister for the Goddess).
THE GODS: Cultic figures like the Egi, the Red Goddess, the Seven Mothers,
etc. do *NOT* have any role in the day-to-day running of the Empire. To put
it another way, the Lunar Empire is directly ruled by its gods to about the
same extent that the Yelmic Empire before it was. (That is to say, not
noticeably except in extreme, miraculous and temporary circumstances). The
Emperor is that aspect of Divinity which directly concerns itself in the
running of the Empire. Therefore, almost by definition, no other entities of
the Pantheon routinely play a part in this vitally important task.
The gods do not provide information or resources to Moonson except through
the normal operation of their cultic functions. (Examples: Moonson may have
a prophetic dream, but this must be interpreted in the mundane world.
Senators worship the Egi, and hope thereby to be able more perfectly to
emulate and advise their Emperor. The powers of the gods are made manifest
through their cults' and devotees' actions, not through gross and regular
displays of divine power. The High Priests of the cults worshipped within
the Empire represent their deities to the public and to the Imperial Court).
Manifestations of divine beings are miraculous, not routine -- the examples
which spring to mind are (1) Moonson himself, divine ruler of the Empire;
(2) the Twin Stars who may return to save the empire in its hour of greatest
need; (3) the various Inspirations of Moonson; (4) a handful of special
cases (the Red Dancer of Power, Great Sister...); and that's about it. The
Empire is ruled from the city of Glamour, not from the surface of the Red
Moon.
THE EMPEROR'S CULT is written up in Tales #16. Each new Mask is a
A note on hero cults of the imperial cult -- we've speculated that the
theological revelation. And there are some very irritated (and partly
rehabilitated) ex-priests of the imperial cult whose sacred treatises about
Masks that turned out to be proxies or false emperors are now considered
heretical texts.
ancestral shrines to Moonson Imperator maintained by various Sultans'
households are (of course) shrines to the particular Mask which was their
Ancestor, and perhaps this shapes the powers and outlooks of those Sultans
and Nobles. (E.g. descendents of Ignifer may get zippy war or command
magics, unavailable nowadays through worship of Argenteus). One for the mix?
:::: Email: <mailto:Nick_Brooke@btinternet.com>
Nick
:::: Website: <http://www.btinternet.com/~Nick_Brooke/>
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