Difference between revisions of "Aurician Social Classes"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Trismegistus (talk | contribs) m (spelling) |
Trismegistus (talk | contribs) m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | Aurician society is socially stratified both legally and culturally. The City of [[Aurice]] is the dominant pattern and the [[over- | + | Aurician society is socially stratified both legally and culturally. The City of [[Aurice]] is the dominant pattern and the [[over-province]]s and cities elsewhere in the empire are similar to this pattern. |
Revision as of 02:06, 19 April 2014
Aurician society is socially stratified both legally and culturally. The City of Aurice is the dominant pattern and the over-provinces and cities elsewhere in the empire are similar to this pattern.
Social Order | Description | Remarks |
---|---|---|
Duke Senator | Highest members of Senate; hold all principle power in the Senate and entitled to all the highest offices of government; wealthy land-owners | |
Baron Senator | Mid-level Senators; hold almost all the prestige of Duke Senators, but little of the power; wealthy land-owners | |
Metropolitan Senator | Low-level senators; little true senatorial power; considerable prestige; wealthy merchants | |
Metropolitan | Prestigious rank of nobility; no power in senate; commercial interests; wealthy merchants | |
Knight Gentry | Formerly pledged to the sometime Grand Duke of Aurice; they now pledge service to the city or to an officially recognized order; post-ducal knights often drawn from professional mercenary captains who want prestige; many officers in the military are Knights-Gentry | Knights-Magi of Aurice also fit into this class |
Landed Gentry | Officially recognized bourgeois—recognized for skilled profession or accomplishment; able to hold lesser governmental offices by virtue of land-ownership | Samoyat Rhaurvace |
Landless Gentry | Officially recognized bourgeois—recognized for skilled profession or accomplishment; able to hold lesser offices by virtue of inherited status | |
Free Commoners | Untitled freeman, not tied to manor lord, but typically clients of someone else; Commoners come in a wide range of wealth, from dirt poor to moderately wealthy | |
Serfs | Land-tied peasants. This class was officially abolished in 2576 by decree and all serfs were elevated to free commoners, above. | Decree of Universal Emancipation throughout the Grand Duchy of Aurice (2576) |
See Also
This article is a stub. It requires further development by the creator. |