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Overview

A sinecure is any Imperial title that provides the office holder with a fixed income. The return can take the form of money, herbs, materials for crafting items, mana crystals or even liao.

Sinecures are traditionally appointed for life.

Senate Commissions

The Imperial Senate may pass a motion for the construction of an establishment capable of producing wealth - money, herbs, resources or similar. This motion automatically results in the creation of a sinecure once the construction is complete.

It is also possible for the Senate to pass a motion to upgrade a sinecure, increasing the benefits that it provides.

Costs

  • Materials: Variable (minimum 10 wains)
  • Time: 3 months to construct per 50 wains of materials used
  • Labour: 2 crowns per wain
  • Upkeep: None

The more resources are devoted to constructing a sinecure, the greater the return. Under normal circumstances, the material required will be the one associated with upgrading an equivalent personal resource. For example, at least 10 wains of mithril is required to create a sinecure that produces mana crystals.

In addition to the wains required, it costs 2 crowns per wain to pay for labour and skills to complete the construction.

Wains Money Ingots Herbs Mana Crystals Congregation XXX
10 216 rings 12 18 9 6 12
12 252 rings 14 21 10 7 14
16 288 rings 16 24 12 8 16
20 324 rings 18 27 13 9 18
30 396 rings 20 30 15 10 20
60 540 rings 30 45 22 15 30
80 612 rings 34 51 25 17 34
116 720 rings 40 60 30 20 40

The table shows some standard costs and benefits for a range of sinecures. For example a sinecure created by the Senate using 20 wains of mithril could produce 13 mana crystals each season. There is no upper limit on how many wains can be used to construct a sinecure; provided at least 10 wains are used, then any amount can be spent to build it.

Limitations

It is not possible to create a sinecure which mimics the effects of a fleet or military unit, nor is it possible to create a sinecure which creates mithril, ilium, weirwood, or white granite.

A sinecure is very similar to a personal resource such as a farm or mine in that it provides a set amount of resources to the character who holds the position at the start of each event. Unlike a personal resource, however, the sinecure cannot be upgraded or diversified by its holder (only by senate motion) and there are no decisions to be made about what the position provides or how it does so. A sinecure that produces liao will not come with an option to sell that liao in downtime, a sinecure that produces green iron cannot be paid to produce more in the way a green iron mine could.

Sinecures are not affected by rituals that target a personal resource. A ritual that increases the production of a green iron mine will not affect a sinecure that produces green iron.

Votes

It is possible to create a sinecure that provides votes in the Imperial Synod. It is also possible to create a sinecure that provides votes in a Bourse or Senate election where voting is determined by the size of a citizen's personal resource. A sinecure can only provide votes if it also produces the appropriate output. The sinecure does not have to provide votes - votes are usually appropriate if the description of the sinecure includes the idea that the title-holder represents a number of citizens who would not normally attend the gatherings at Anvil but would normally be entitled to vote.

Sinecures that provide votes may have significant constitutional implications if the appointment of the sinecure does not follow standard procedures. For example, the Guardian of Britta's Shrine is unconstitutional since it is appointed by the Senate but the title carries votes in the Synod. The magistrates would not have allowed this motion to pass in this form if they had noticed the situation at the time. If the sinecure were appointed by the Synod, or if it only provided liao, then it would be constitutional.

If a sinecure is created that provides votes in the Synod then it produces one third of the normal output. If a sinecure is created that provides votes in Bourse or Senate elections then it provides two thirds of the normal output, unless it also provides votes in the Synod. A sinecure that provides votes in the Synod or in senatorial or bourse elections must provide those votes for all situations where they are relevant.

For example, the Senate could spend 12 wains of weirwood to create an Imperial Sinecure for the Abbot of Longmarsh in Bregasland, a monastery that provides leadership and protection to many small farms in the surrounding valley. The character appointed to the sinecure would receive 84 rings each season and 14 votes in the Bregasland senatorial election.

Votes in Marcher and League Senatorial Elections

A sinecure which provides votes in the election for a senator for a Marcher or League territory is normally appointed by the senator for that territory. From a constitutional point of view, it is considered better for a sinecure that provides votes in Mournwold to be appointed by the representative of the inhabitants of Mournworld than for the position to be determined by the inhabitants of other Marcher territories. Such positions can only ever be held by a citizen of that territory.

This situation only applies where a sinecure provides votes in a Marcher or League senatorial election. The normal constitutional route for any sinecure that does not provide votes in an election is for it to be a normal Imperial or national position.

The constitutional implications that underpin this decision to not apply in Highguard because members of the Highborn assembly vote in all senatorial elections there.

Synod Votes

A sinecure that provides votes in the Imperial Synod grants the holder of that title the legal powers and responsibilities of membership of the Synod. If the holder of the title is not already a member of the Synod, it automatically includes membership of all appropriate assemblies (the General Assembly, the appropriate National Assembly, and either the relevant Virtue Assembly or the Assembly of the Way).

Responsibility

Any citizen who is granted a sinecure is expected to be responsible for any problems that might beset the resources represented by the sinecure. For example, if Thule reavers are raiding the mines overseen by the Lady of the Upper Halls, then the Empire will expect that citizen to deal with the problem.

Recent Sinecures

Please refer to the permanent titles page for a list of all sinecures, including those under construction.