[Dragaera] How are Teckla Republics formed?
Scott Schultz
scott at cjhunter.com
Thu Mar 27 10:26:58 PDT 2008
It's a speculative question, given the lack of actual data, but I've
recently been wondering just what it is that inspires the change-over to a
Teckla Republic, aside from the obvious metaphysical events associated with
the turning of the Cycle?
The Teckla have no particular House culture. City Teckla live different
sorts of lives than country Teckla, and it seems plausible (I'd say likely)
that Teckla in one part of the Empire could have methods of governing their
affairs that differ entirely from those in another part. For instance, a
village living under the rule of an Iorich noble could be presumed to have
very different lives than those living under a Dragon or an Athyra. This
could be wrong, of course. One thing we HAVE seen is that the nobility
appear to be rather "hands off" in the management of their peasants as long
as the grain is being grown, taxes paid, and obligations being kept. It may
be that there IS a sort of homogenous peasant culture in the Empire except
in the rare cases where a noble takes it into her head to become a
micro-manager, the local laws are being flouted, or a noble is simply so
narcissistic that he forgets that the peasants are people and mistreats them
to the point of revolution.
Paarfi sort of implies (maybe just for the sake of drama) that at any given
time there's some part of the Empire teetering on revolt. If true, we can
deduce that there are a number of nobles who mistreat their peasants or at
least burden them with taxes to the point that they live in fear for their
existence and continued well-being. For every Aerich who is just and fair
(by his lights), there's a Tazendra who hasn't a clue or a care about
managing her lands and a Loraan who views his tenants as less than the dust
beneath his feet.
In the past, if I'd thought about it all, I'd simply imagined that a Teckla
Republic was probably a kind of semi-peaceful usurpation of a corrupt
throne - Having been through it so many times, they probably had it down pat
by now.
Today I started reading _The Scarlet Pimpernel_ and, probably not too
surprisingly to the readers of this list, in the back of my mind I started
trying to fit it it in to the history of the Empire, just to see how it
would work. (Prompted by a fun question I'd had for sometime back - what
would a Dragaeran superhero be like - Robin Hood or the Pimpernel being the
obvious answers.)
It got me thinking - Why would a Teckla Revolution be peaceful? In fact,
why would it even be the same from Cycle to Cycle? The fact that there have
been 17 Teckla Republics doesn't actually imply that they tried the same
form of government every time!
While I'd pictured the Teckla Republic forming every time as a kind of
replay of the formation of the United States, there's no good reason why it
should have happened that way. It's plausible that it could have formed at
least once (maybe more) with a Robespierre figure who led their own version
of the French Revolution and ended up sending hundreds of nobility (from
Houses at the bottom of the Cycle, most likely) to the Star in an effort to
purge the Empire and hold onto power. While Verra acknowledges that a true
Socialist revolution can't stand because of the Cycle, that doesn't mean
that it hasn't been tried or will never be tried by some Teckla Lenin or
Trotsky leading their own Bolshevik Uprising.
It may very well be that EVERY Teckla Republic has been different in some
fashion from its predecessors, depending on the degree of unrest (I can
certainly picture a transition that develops because of an "enlightened"
Orca ruler who oversees the creation of the next government), the cruelty of
the regime (It's Orca, after all), and the character, moral fortitude, and
social ideas driving the leaders of the revolution.
I don't know if Steve intentionally setup Teckla's neighbors on the Cycle,
but they are singularly appropriate. The Orca have the hard, predatory
nature that is the natural oppressor of the peasant combined with the
mercantile drive to exploit and use them to the point of revolt. The
Jhegalla have the adaptive nature to survive and eventually overcome the
Republic no matter what outlandish form it takes from Cycle to Cycle.
I guess I wouldn't be all that surprised that out of seventeen Teckla
Republics there have, in fact, been seventeen DIFFERENT sorts of governments
managing that Republic.
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