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Ck2 worship the ancestors
Ck2 worship the ancestors








ck2 worship the ancestors

His unwavering plans have led to a schism in the clan, particularly among the Vizier and Sorcerer castes, with a collection of dissenters under al-Ashrad seeking refuge with the Camarilla. He is moving the clan towards a darker, bloodier (if that is conceivable) role, reinstating the Path of Blood as the clan's religion and terminating any dissenters with extreme prejudice. Since awakening from 18 centuries of torpor, Ur-Shulgi has been primarily devoted to purging clan Assamite of weaknesses, notably the clan's general adoption of Islam and schismatic Assamites such as Talaq and its own childe, al-Ashrad. Ur-Shulgi's only loyalty is to his sire and remodeling the clan into a form more worthy of Haqim. Black and impenetrable as the darkest night. He is dark and terrible – the fury of your heaven and the fire of your hell. There should most probably be some of that if the Kiesinger noble family isn't either relatively young or had a relatively brutal history in the not so distant past.I traveled to the land of our ancestors and faced the herald. Still, I am thinking of the "do a deep dive down the family tree with the help of genealogy scholars" type of family. But without any such malicious interference I think it is more likely than not that someone legally inherits almost any noble title available when it happens outside of plague or civil war or invasion or systematic assassination by Vampires.įorgot that. And Imperial nobility wouldn't shy away from using less honorable ploys like "losing" archives or "forgetting" to publish deaths across the Empire, or even just squatting on the land with armed forces while all the surrounding nobles get paid enough to stonewall pleas for help and justice. In the Empire there would be easier and even honorable ways to exclude such unwanted inheritors, especially since adoption is an honored tradition. To give an in-quest example: The king of Karak Hirn went through considerable length to not allow an Expat dockworker to inherit his throne. And barring some kind of laws specifically designed to not allow random people to inherit land and instead empowering the higher nobility in cases like this, far flung relatives can still inherit if they are in any position to stake their claim before anyone can successfully pretend that they don't exist for long enough to appropriate the property. But among nobility all of that stuff is often documented. Like remember that one village elder that could trace how he and Mathilde were supposedly related? In that case both were of peasant stock and the relations were of the kind of hearsay that wouldn't be considered valid by the Imperial ruling class. There should most probably be some of that if the Kiesinger noble family isn't either relatively young or had a relatively brutal history in the not so distant past.










Ck2 worship the ancestors