Imperial Bureaucratic Hierarchy

Imperial Council

Executive and administrative body. Authority rooted in the Sovereign; must comply with Sovereign decrees, Senate laws, and Curia decisions.

The Inquisition

Chosen and directed by the Sovereign. Handles threats from within and outside the realm: monsters, corruption, internal enemies. Led by the High Inquisitor, who briefs the Senate on their work. Also tasked with locating heirs in succession crises.

Prime

Leads the Imperial Council. Chosen by Sovereign with Senate consent. Manages Sovereign duties in their absence. Briefs the Senate on the Council's work.

Councilor of Accounts

Treasury, taxation, public contracts. Oversees the Chief Censor.

Councilor of Law

Drafts legislation for the Senate. Executive legal affairs and coordination with the Curia.

Councilor of Works

Roads, post towers, granaries, public infrastructure.

Councilor of War

Legions, garrisons, military levies from provinces.

Councilor of Intelligence

Covert operations, foreign spies, external intelligence gathering.

Councilor of Diplomacy

Foreign affairs, embassies, treaties, relations with other crowns.

Councilor of the Arcane

Magistracy liaison. Mage regulation and oversight on behalf of the Council.

The Mint Royal

Coinage and currency standards.

The Exchequer

Provincial tax receivers and auditors.

The Commissary

Procurement and vendor registries.

Chief Censor

Head of the Censor order. Recommends new Censor appointments to the Imperial Council.

aliasesCoiners

Imperial Censor

Imperial Censors are officials of the Imperial bureaucracy responsible for two things: the census and the treasury accounts. Most are recruited from merchant families or accounting guilds, since the work is fundamentally arithmetic - tracking population figures, tax registers, estate valuations, and the movement of coin through imperial coffers. The physical medium of all this record-keeping is the Red Books — hard red leather ledgers formally titled the Census incolarum et registrar de Imperio — which each Censor maintains and, once filled, ships via post tower to the central registrar in the Imperial Capital.

Appointment and Structure

Censors are appointed by the Imperial Council on the recommendation of the sitting Chief Censor, subject to the Sovereign's confirmation. They serve in pairs - each Reckoning team consists of two Censors who must both sign off on any official entry or revision, a structure intended to reduce falsification. In practice it also means that any serious error has two names attached to it, which tends to focus the mind.

There is no fixed term. A Censor serves until they resign, are removed by the Imperial Council, or die in post. Removal requires a formal motion, which is rare as the Council is generally reluctant to antagonize an institution that holds records on the Senate's own members.

The Decennial Reckoning

Every ten years, Censors are dispatched to all provinces to conduct the Reckoning: counting heads, recording births and deaths, and updating the Registry of Names, the official roll of imperial citizens. Being absent from the Registry is not merely an administrative inconvenience — it affects inheritance rights, access to imperial courts, and the ability to hold a licensed trade or craft. Wealthy households that have recently relocated or expanded tend to receive Censor visits with notable hospitality. Direct payment is technically prohibited, but there is no rule against a generous host, and the tradition is old enough that no one pretends otherwise.

Registration

The most direct interaction most citizens have with a Censor is the registration ritual, conducted when a person turns fourteen — the age at which the Empire considers them an adult. The individual dips their palm into a mixture of red clay, oil, powdered brass and silver, and a few drops of their own blood, then presses it to a blank page of the Red Book. The impression is permanent; the hand comes away clean.

This is the blood pact. It records identity, citizenship status, and whether the individual is known to be a mage. It allows any Imperial officer with the right training to verify all three against the registry. The ritual has been public knowledge for generations and its exact working is available to anyone who wants to review it. However, it is distrusted in newer provinces and among mages, both groups having historical reasons for such opinions with anything the Empire writes their names into.

It has become standard practice to bring a hired mage (known as a Lexarch) to observe the ritual and confirm it has not been modified. This is common enough that most Censors now expect it and make space at the table accordingly.

The Nota

Beyond the census, Censors hold a less well-known power: the formal notation. A Censor may attach a nota to any citizen's registry entry — a written record of conduct deemed contrary to the public interest. This does not carry a legal sentence, but a nota can restrict access to civic contracts, flag an estate for audit, or disqualify a family from certain appointments. They are rarely applied to common citizens. When they do appear, it is usually on the records of merchants, guild officers, or minor nobles, and the subject is almost never told directly — they find out when a contract falls through or a permit is denied.

Notas can be removed, but only by the Censor who issued them, their counterpart or their designated successor. This creates a small but consistent market for Censor goodwill.

Contracts and Public Works

Censors also oversee the awarding of major imperial contracts: road maintenance, granary construction, supply agreements for garrisons, etc. Suppliers and builders petition through the local Censor office, and while the Senate approves large expenditures in principle, the Censors control the paperwork that turns approval into payment. This gives them a second layer of practical influence over commerce.

Standing and Reputation

The Order numbers fewer than three hundred across the entire Empire. Despite this, they hold access to financial records and household data that most provincial governors do not, which makes them useful to the Senate and quietly unpopular with nearly everyone else. Provincial officials in particular tend to view visiting Censors with a mix of formal courtesy and genuine wariness — a Reckoning team asking questions about local tax yields is rarely a comfortable visit.

Among themselves, Censors have a reputation for being precise, unhurried, and difficult to read. Whether this is professional habit or deliberate performance is a question they do not appear interested in answering.

Reckoning Teams

Pairs of Censors dispatched every decade for the Decennial Reckoning. Both must countersign all entries to prevent falsification.

The Chancellery

Lawyers and scribes who prepare bills for the Senate.

The Chancery of Writs

Formal warrants, charters, and legal instruments.

The Tribune's Chamber

Represents citizens before Imperial courts.

The Roadkeepers

Roads and bridges.

The Tower Wardens

Post towers and the courier network.

The Granary Stewardship

Stores and food reserves.

The River Wardens

Waterways, aqueducts, and ports.

The High Muster

Standing legions and their commanders.

The Iron Keep

Arms, armor, and supply lines.

The Rampart

Garrisons, walls, and frontier fortifications.

The Levy Roll

Coordinating provincial military contributions.

The Far Eye

Agents and informants abroad.

The Cipher House

Coded communications and counter-intelligence.

The Diplomatic Corps

Imperial ambassadors and their retinue stationed abroad.

The Herald's Court

Hosting and protocol for foreign delegations.

The Archive of Accords

Drafting and archiving diplomatic agreements.

The Mage Roll

Licensing and tracking of practicing mages.

The Arcane Wardens

Ensuring compliance with Imperial mage regulations.

The Conclave Seat

Direct liaison to the Magistracy Conclave.

Archmages

Heads of officially chartered mage academies. Sit on the Magistracy Conclave and issue binding decisions for all mages.

Noble Titles

Entirely separate from the state apparatus. Status is registered in the Red Book and maintained by Censors. Holding a title carries no automatic right to political office.

Patricius / Patricia

Oldest noble families. Status predates or was established alongside the Empire. Family-wide standing; direct access to the Imperial Curia.

Duke / Duchess

Holds a Duchy. Hereditary territorial charter; must be re-registered each generation. Charter strippable only by the Imperial Curia.

Earl / Earless

Holds an Earldom: a cluster of towns or a significant district within a Duchy. Hereditary and separate from any ducal authority over the same land.

Dominus / Domina

Holds a Domain: a single town or district with surrounding lands. Often a cadet branch of a ducal family.

Thane

Personal noble status only; no territorial charter. Primary path upward from common birth via wealth, civic contribution, or distinguished service. Not automatically inherited.

Archmagisters

40+ years experience. Title granted by the Imperial Senate on crown recommendation. Can found academies and form chartered companies. Sit on the Conclave.

Magisters

20+ years experience. Commended by the crown. May own property, move freely between provinces, take on apprentices, and build mage towers.

Imperial Magistracy
aliasesThe Magistracy

Magisters are mages in the Pheagon Empire that have completed their studies at an officially chartered academy, have at least 20 years of working experience in their field and have been commended by the crown for their service and loyalty to the Empire.

Mages with this title are afforded more freedoms such as, but not limited to: owning property, freedom of movement between provinces without sanctioned order, taking on apprentices outside of the academies, building their own mage towers.

An archmagister is someone who has at least 40 years of experience and has been granted that rank by the Imperial Senate for service to the Empire and its people, on the recommendation of the crown. They are awarded further rights such as, but not limited to: ability to start their own mage academies with consent from the Senate (though this is rarely requested and rarer granted still), able to form their own house and estates, form organizations and chartered companies.

It is led by a conclave composed of all archmages of the academies and all archmagisters, regardless of their status within an academy. Their decisions are reached through secret votes and are considered official stances of all mages in their relations towards the Empire and are binding for all other mages within their territories.

The Magistracy is the main instrument of control that the Imperial bureaucracy uses to keep the mages in check and prevent uprisings that have plagued its early history.

Pheagon Empire Flag
aliasesThe Protector, The Emperor, The Empress, Empire, Imperator, Imperatrix

Sovereign

Imperial Curia

Judicial body. Can strip noble territorial charters by ruling. Sole right to sentence citizens to death.

Enforcers of Truth

Independent prosecutorial body. Issue indictments that open formal prosecution of Senators before the Curia, and of the Sovereign before a joint sitting of the Senate and Curia.

Enforcers of Lesser Rank

Appointed by the Head Enforcer. Conduct investigations and issue indictments across the Empire.

Head Enforcer

Leads the Enforcers of Truth. Appointed by a majority of the Imperial Curia for a single ten-year term.

Imperial Senate

Legislative body. Approves major expenditures, grants the Archmagister title, and legislates noble rights and obligations.

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