継承

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2021年1月24日 (日) 20:31時点におけるGnagaoka (トーク | 投稿記録)による版
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継承(Succession)とは、称号の相続のことです。称号の現在の所有者死亡または退位(abdication)すると発動します。継承の順序は、継承法に依存します。また、逝去した支配者が複数の称号を持っていた場合に、後継者たち(heirs)の間でどのようにその称号が分配されるのかも規定します。

後継者

  An heir is any character who stands to inherit a title. If this includes the ruler’s primary title, they are considered to be their primary heir. Additionally, the player heir indicates with whom the player will continue upon death; unless they are of a different dynasty, this is the primary heir as well.

Eligible children

The gender law determines which children can inherit titles.   Bastards cannot inherit unless   legitimized, their children can only inherit if born after legitimization took place. The following traits disinherit as well:   bastard founder,   devoted,   disinherited,   eunuch,   order member, and any trait considered to be criminal.[1] Note that the progeny of disinherited characters still qualifies.

  • Male only (agnatic): Only sons inherit titles.
  • Female only (enatic): Only daughters inherit titles.
  • Male preference (agnatic-cognatic): Daughters do not inherit titles if any eligible sons exist. Daughters with at least one son take precedence over daughters without.
  • Female preference (enatic-cognatic): Sons do not inherit titles if any eligible daughters exist. Sons with at least one daughter take precedence over sons without.
  • Equal (cognatic): Both sons and daughters inherit titles.

Realm succession

The realm succession law determines who will inherit each title without its own succession law.

Single heir

Every title is passed on to a single relative, keeping the realm fully intact.

Primogeniture

All titles are inherited by the oldest eligible child. Note that a dead or dishinerited child’s progeny takes precedence over younger siblings. If the gender law is set to male preference, male children of daughters are given precedence over their parent; vice versa for female preference.

If no living descendants remain, the title is passed on to the father in a patrilineal marriage, or mother in a matrilineal marriage. If this parent is dead, an heir will be sought in their progeny according to the same principles.

Ultimogeniture

All titles are inherited by the youngest eligible child. Note that a dead or dishinerited child’s progeny takes precedence over older siblings. If the gender law is set to male preference, male children of daughters are given precedence over their parent; vice versa for female preference.

If no living descendants remain, the title is passed on to the father in a patrilineal marriage, or mother in a matrilineal marriage. If this parent is dead, an heir will be sought in their progeny according to the same principles.

House seniority

All titles are inherited by the oldest eligible house member.

Multiple heirs

Titles are distributed among all eligible children, splitting the realm. If no eligible children exist, every title gets passed on to the oldest eligible relative within the smallest degree of consanguinity.

Confederate partition

  1. New titles, that are the same tier as the primary, will be created if enough of their de jure land is held.
  2. The oldest child is given the primary title along with the capital and any higher de jure title it belongs to.
  3. All titles, that are the same tier as the primary, are distributed in the order they're displayed, with priority given to the oldest child with the fewest titles.* Children, except the primary heir, are also given any lower de jure title. When a child inherits a title equal in tier as the primary, they gain independence.
  4. If applicable, all remaining titles one tier below are distributed likewise. Note that, except the primary heir, all children who received a title before are excluded from further distribution. When a child inherits a title that is lower in tier than the primary, they become a vassal of the primary heir.
  5. The previous step repeats itself till all titles are handed out.
* duchy+ titles do not affect the number of counties you get.

(Regular) partition

  1. The oldest child is given the primary title along with the capital and any higher de jure title it belongs to.
  2. All titles, that are the same tier as the primary, are distributed in the order they're displayed, with priority given to the oldest child with the fewest titles.* Children, except the primary heir, are also given any lower de jure title. When a child inherits a title equal in tier as the primary, they gain independence.
  3. If applicable, all remaining titles one tier below are distributed likewise. Note that, except the primary heir, all children who received a title before are excluded from further distribution. When a child inherits a title lower in tier than the primary, they become a vassal of the primary heir.
  4. The previous step repeats itself till all titles are handed out.
* duchy+ titles do not affect the number of counties you get.

High partition

  1. All children are divided into two groups: the Primary Heir and Other Heirs.
  2. Perform a regular partition, treating Other Heirs as if they were a single person.
  3. Titles that Other Heirs obtained as a group are then distributed among members of the group through regular partition.
* duchy+ titles do not affect the number of counties you get.

Examples

Primary heir rules

The following diagrams denote the line of succession for the primary title. Squares are male, circles female. Only valid candidates are shown, ignoring the gender succession law. Black figures are deceased.

Partition rules

The following diagrams denote who of four heirs inherits each title. Higher tier titles are displayed above lower tier titles, and their de jure relationship is drawn out. The crown indicates which county is the capital. The black figure is the primary title.

Title specific succession

A title succession law can be assigned to individual titles—besides the gender laws, these are all a form of elective succession. Options are restricted to certain ranks, cultures and faiths.

Claim inheritance

The gender law determines which children can inherit claims.   Bastards,   disinherited and   eunuchs never receive claims. Valid children are given a pressed claim on titles they did not inherit nor vassalize. If the ruler in question held pressed claims, each valid heir is given an unpressed version. Unpressed claims cannot be passed down themselves, but will become pressed if used in an inconclusive war.

  • Male only (agnatic): Only sons inherit claims.
  • Female only (enatic): Only daughters inherit claims.
  • Male preference (agnatic-cognatic): Both daughters and sons inherit claims.
  • Female preference (enatic-cognatic): Both daughters and sons inherit claims.
  • Equal (cognatic): Both daughters and sons inherit claims.

Notes

  • If an unlanded character inherits a title but no holdings, they will automatically usurp a county in their realm; preference is usually given to its de jure capital.
  • If a character inherits a duchy+ they will also inherit all de-jure counties in that title.
  • With partition succession, anyone but the primary heir can be granted titles their siblings stand to inherit.
  • If an heir already owns land within a certain title, they will inherit it before siblings who do not.
  • Baronies are always inherited by their de jure count.
  • The primary heir receives all wealth/gold and men-at-arms upon death.
  • Characters with the trait devoted or order member can still inherit claims
  • Disinherited characters can still inherit titles from rulers outside their dynasty
  • The display order of titles in the character screen is decided as follows:
    1. The primary title always comes first.
    2. Higher tier titles come before lower tier titles.
    3. Titles of the same tier are ordered according to how long each title has been in possession, the oldest one coming first.

Tips

  • With partition, one could grant children titles in advance for a major opinion boost—remember that a quarter of vassals’ positive opinion, or half of vassals’ negative opinion, is passed on to the primary heir (opinion of predecessor). As the house head, one can also modify their feudal contract with a weak hook.
  • With partition, try and keep your domain within the capital duchy: every county within will be given to the primary heir as long as all siblings are given a duchy+ title. The same applies to kingdoms and empires.
  • Relatives within the 3rd degree (extended family) can be asked for an alliance—this means a partitioned realm can be reunified as a federation.
  • Characters above the age of 9 can be asked to take the vows, disqualifying them from inheritance; even married characters can be asked, assuming they're the patriarch/matriarch.
  • With the following steps, your entire realm and domain will be inherited by your primary heir:
    1. Your domain is (de-jure) inside your primary title.
    2. You hold no duchy+ title except your primary title.
    3. Your primary heir is unlanded.
    4. Every additional child is already a duke.

References