Imperial Court of Packilvania

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The Imperial Court of Packilvania (Packilvanian: luKhama luShahitishme aBakhilfaniya) refers to the formal body of support institutions and courtiers of the monarchy of Packilvania. The head of the Imperial Court of Packilvania is the Sultana Consort of Packilvania, currently Her Imperial and Royal Majesty, Sultana-Queen Consort Mebri. She is responsible for overseeing the running of the court.

Harem

The Harem is the collective name for the wives, minor children, unmarried daughters, and other people who are formally dependent on the monarch for their upkeep. The Sultana-Consort is the highest ranking member of the Harem and is technically the head of the Harem. In the past, the term Harem referred to the Inner Court of the Bingol Royal Palace and other formal Royal residences where men (except eunuchs and the Sultan) were not permitted to enter. The term Harem evolved to encompass all of the women and children under the care of the Sultan and under the authority of the Sultana.

Members

The members of the Harem are ranked as follows:

  1. Sultana-Consort: First wife of the Sultan
  2. Sultana-Mother: The mother of the incumbent Sultan
  3. Sultana-Dowager: The widow of the previous Sultan none of whose sons are the Sultan.
  4. Other wives: These are other women that the Sultan is formally and legally married to. Since Namdun III, many of them are also Queen of Drakkengard.
  5. Unmarried daughters above the age of majority: These are the female children of the incumbent Sultan. They are ordered according to whether they are widows and by age.
  6. Widows of relatives
  7. Unmarried adult female descendants: This includes great etc. grandchildren.
  8. Minor female descendants
  9. Daughters of members of the nobility of Packilvania: In Packilvania, there exists the practice of nobles sending their daughters to live in the Imperial Court for some time where they are educated with the aim of building closer relations.
  10. Princesses who were divorced (regardless of prior rank)
  11. Princesses who were adultresses and fornicatrixes (this is no longer possible as both these elements would disqualify a women from even entering the bar. TV
  12. Concubines (they had an internal order of precedence and sometimes they received more honour in practice) that was accorded people higher in the list.
  13. Eunuchs.

Concubines

The Harem used to have concubines, but since concubinage was abolished, the Harem no longer has concubines. Concubines were women who were not married to the Sultan but whom he could have extra-marital relationships with. Concubines did not have the right to support from the Crown or formal positions should the Sultan's reign end. Further, they were not allowed to marry or have romantic relationships with men outside of the Harem.

In the 19th century, when Madvinism was gaining momentum and influence, the Magisterium of Paxism led by Supreme Magister Khameed III published an edict stating that the practice of concubinage was forbidden by the Writings of Paxism stating that it was prostitution by another name. As such, the Sultan issued a Decree banning concubinage and subsequently ending it in his own court. Many of his concubines were in a precarious position because other men would refuse to marry them, so Sultan Tyber II married them all, affording them the status and protection of marriage. The Magisterium was reluctant to acknowledge the marriages but did so due to the unique nature of the situation and the attempts by the Sultan to protect the women in his court.

Eunuchs

Eunuchs were men who were castrated and could not bear children. They devoted their lives to the service of the Crown including providing physical labour, teaching, domestic duties, child raising, and security within the Inner Court. Eunuchs were typically people who in modern parlance would be described as homosexual men, non-binary and gender non-conforming males, predominantly male-presenting intersex people and transgender women who instead of being executed for their sexual orientation and gender identity would be allowed to serve at the Imperial Court if they took a bow of celibacy and agreed to castration. They were not allowed to marry or adopt or be guardians of children. Biologically female or predominantly female-presenting intersex people could not be eunuchs.

The country experience substation religious fervour under the Demirite dynasty thus the Magisterium of Paxism took a more stern interpretation of scripture and abolished the office of the eunuchs. Furthermore, there were acts taking place at the Bingol Royal Palace which the Supreme Magister who witnessed them described as "debauchery" (this included evidence of eunuchs wearing feminine clothing etc.). Together these forces led to the Magisterium issuing an edict that eunuchs were against the laws of Paxism prompting the Sultan to ban them. Eunuchs were given severance payments and freed from Palace duties. Many had to go back into hiding or flee the country for fear of persecution.

Department of Imperial Affairs

The Department of Imperial Affairs is a department of the executive branch within the Office of the Prime Minister of Packilvania that is responsible for managing relations between the Council of Ministers of Packilvania and the Imperial Court. This includes managing events and meetings between the executive branch and the Imperial Court as well as managing the transfer of funds for the Imperial Court from the Department of Finance. The Junior Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister for Imperial Affairs is Princess Abdina.

Imperial Household Agency

The Imperial Household Agency is an agency that is directly within the Imperial Court that manages the day-to-day running of the monarchy and providing support to the Sultan of Packilvania in the exercise of his duties. This includes security, maintenance of royal residences, transportation and logistics, and other matters as would encompass the agency. The Director of the Imperial Household Agency is Alawad Somhadeel. He liaises with the Sultana-Consort and executes her instructions as she demands. This agency employs over 10,000 people. This includes landscaping, laundry, culinary services, maintenance, postal, communications, bodyguards, and other personnel. It oversees over 21 Royal Residence distributed throughout the country.