Difference between revisions of "Imperial Warrant"
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| − | An [[Imperial Warrant]] is an instrument of power issued at the highest levels of [[government]]. A warrant is a written or electronic document provided to trusted agents of the {{Imperium}} as a method of bypassing the bureaucracy. Typically, a warrant is provided by the [[Emperor]] to an individual who utilizes the power it provides to accomplish some mission. Missions may include establishment of colonies in areas requiring development, the assumption of military command in the midst of a crisis, and the unilateral establishment of new noble lines to administer provinces which have suffered from war or economic collapse. | + | [[File:Traveller Imperial Royal Family Sunburst logo.svg|100px|right]] |
| + | An [[Imperial Warrant]] is an instrument of power issued at the highest levels of [[government]]. | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Description ([[Specifications]]) == | ||
| + | A warrant is a written or electronic document provided to trusted agents of the {{Imperium}} as a method of bypassing the [[bureaucracy]]. Typically, a warrant is provided by the [[Emperor]] to an individual who utilizes the power it provides to accomplish some mission. Missions may include establishment of colonies in areas requiring development, the assumption of military command in the midst of a crisis, and the unilateral establishment of new noble lines to administer provinces which have suffered from [[war]] or economic collapse. | ||
| + | == History & Background ([[Dossier]]) == | ||
The enabling act for Imperial warrants is [[Imperial Edict 97]]. [[Imperial Edict 3097]] allows [[archduke]]s to issue similar warrants of lesser scope. Other statutes allow [[duke]]s to issue their own warrants, though the scope of such warrants is limited to the dukes' respective areas of responsibility. | The enabling act for Imperial warrants is [[Imperial Edict 97]]. [[Imperial Edict 3097]] allows [[archduke]]s to issue similar warrants of lesser scope. Other statutes allow [[duke]]s to issue their own warrants, though the scope of such warrants is limited to the dukes' respective areas of responsibility. | ||
| + | == See also == | ||
| + | {{Referral-Tree-Third-Imperium}} | ||
| + | == References == | ||
{{Metadata}} | {{Metadata}} | ||
| − | {{ | + | {{Intermediate}} |
| + | {{Detail}} | ||
{{Sources | {{Sources | ||
| − | | | + | | {{Ludography cite|name= The Kinunir|page=40}} |
| − | | | + | | {{Ludography cite|name= Library Data (A-M)|page=32}} |
| − | | | + | | {{Ludography cite|name= Nobles |page=61}} |
| + | | {{Ludography cite|name= Agent of the Imperium}} | ||
| + | | {{Ludography cite|name=The Third Imperium|page=54}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
| − | {{LE|Imperial| | + | {{LE|Imperial|Regulation}} |
Latest revision as of 08:58, 1 March 2024
An Imperial Warrant is an instrument of power issued at the highest levels of government.
Description (Specifications)[edit]
A warrant is a written or electronic document provided to trusted agents of the Imperium as a method of bypassing the bureaucracy. Typically, a warrant is provided by the Emperor to an individual who utilizes the power it provides to accomplish some mission. Missions may include establishment of colonies in areas requiring development, the assumption of military command in the midst of a crisis, and the unilateral establishment of new noble lines to administer provinces which have suffered from war or economic collapse.
History & Background (Dossier)[edit]
The enabling act for Imperial warrants is Imperial Edict 97. Imperial Edict 3097 allows archdukes to issue similar warrants of lesser scope. Other statutes allow dukes to issue their own warrants, though the scope of such warrants is limited to the dukes' respective areas of responsibility.
See also[edit]
Third Imperium
- Government
- Imperial Government
- Imperial Leadership
- Imperial Law
- Imperial Symbols
- Demographics
References[edit]
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| This article is missing content for one or more detailed sections. Additional details are required to complete the article. You can help the Traveller Wiki by expanding it. |
- Marc Miller. The Kinunir (Game Designers Workshop, 1979), 40.
- John Harshman, Marc Miller, Loren Wiseman. Library Data (A-M) (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 32.
- Loren Wiseman. Nobles (Steve Jackson Games, 2004), 61.
- Marc Miller. Agent of the Imperium (Far Future Enterprises, 2015), .
- Christopher Griffen. The Third Imperium (Mongoose Publishing, 2021), 54.