Lucilia of Exponent: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
| caption = Lucilia Exponentia, 1932
| caption = Lucilia Exponentia, 1932
| succession = Queen of Great Nortend  
| succession = Queen of Great Nortend  
| reign = 1929 - 2002
| reign = March 3, 1955–September 25 2002
| reign-type =  
| reign-type = Queen
| allegiance= [[House of Anthord]] of [[Great Nortend]]
| allegiance= [[House of Anthord]] of [[Great Nortend]]
| titles= Princess of Exponentia (abolished in 1997) <br> Queen of Great Nortend <br> Queen Dowager of Great Nortend
| titles= Princess of Exponentia (abolished in 1997) <br> Queen of Great Nortend <br> Queen Dowager of Great Nortend
Line 15: Line 15:
| successor =  
| successor =  
| heir =  
| heir =  
| spouse= King [[George III of Great Nortend]]
| spouse= [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|George III of Great Nortend]]
| issue = Prince Henry<br>Princess Julia<br>Prince Tiberius<br>Princess Claudia
| issue = Charles Henry<br>Catherine Lucy<br>Susanna Claudia
| noble family= House of Exponentia
| noble family= House of Exponentia<br>[[House of Anthord]] (by marriage)
| father= [[Liberius XXI|Liberius XXI, Emperor of Exponent]]
| father= [[Liberius XXI|Liberius XXI, Emperor of Exponent]]
| mother=  
| mother=  
| birth_date= {{Birth date|1907|02|19|mf=yes}}
| birth_date= {{Birth date|1907|02|19|mf=yes}}
| birth_place= Paradisa, [[Empire of Exponent]]
| birth_place= Paradisa, [[Empire of Exponent]]
| death_place= {{death date and age|2002|10|06|1906|02|19|mf=yes}}
| death_date= {{death date and age|2002|9|25|1906|02|19|mf=yes}}
| death_place= [[Great Nortend]]
| death_place= [[Great Nortend]]
| burial_place=  
| burial_place=  
Line 31: Line 31:
|-
|-
}}
}}
'''Queen Lucilia''', also known as '''Lucilia of Exponent''' was [[Queen of Great Nortend]] as the wife of King [[George III of Great Nortend]]. She was the youngest daughter of [[Liberius XXI]] of the [[Empire of Exponent]]. During her reign, she became well known within [[Great Nortend]] for her rural activism and her staunch advocacy for Great Nortend's farmers.
'''Lucilia of Exponent''' (February 19, 1907 to September 15, 2002) also known familiarly as '''Lucy''' in the Nortish royal family was Queen consort of Great Nortend as the wife of [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|George III]] of [[Great Nortend]] from 1955, and later Queen dowager after the death of George and the accession of her daughter as Catherine II in 1965. She was the youngest daughter of [[Liberius XXI]] of the [[Empire of Exponent]]. During her life, she became well known within [[Great Nortend]] for her rural activism and her staunch advocacy for Great Nortend's countryside life.


==Early life==  
==Early life==  
Lucilia was born on February 19, 1907 at the Imperial Palace in [[Paradise City]], [[Empire of Exponent]].
Lucilia was born on February 19, 1907 at the Imperial Palace in [[Paradise City]], [[Empire of Exponent]] to Liberius XXI of the Empire of Exponent.


==Marriage and children==
==Marriage and children==
Lucilia married Prince George of Nortend in 1929.
[[File:LuciliaAndHenry.jpeg|300px|thumb|right|Princess Lucilia and Prince George of [[Great Nortend]], 1929]]
Lucilia married Prince George of Nortend on July 23, 1929 in the large Lady Chapel of [[St Peter's Cathedral, Lendert|Lendert Cathedral Priory]], the traditional location of weddings of the heir to the throne in [[Great Nortend]]. She lived with Prince George thereafter at Whistler's Lodge in the grounds of the Castle of Hameford, as well as in an apartment at the Palace of St. Michael'sgate. She bore three children, all with very difficult pregnancies and labour—Charles, Catherine and Susanna.
 
===Rural activism===
===Rural activism===
Shortly after marrying Prince George, Lucilia began advocating on behalf of the farmers of Great Nortend. One of the most significant issues was the rapid mechanization of agriculture across the country, which was costing millions of farmlands their livelihoods and ruining the quality of the soil.
Shortly after marrying Prince George, Lucilia began advocating on behalf of the rural workers of Great Nortend as royal patroness of the Royal Countryside Society. Despite the passage of the ''Agricultural Practices Act'' of 1893, which forbade the refusal of livery of seisin to the heirs of life tenants in order to employ free labourers in their stead, more efficient mechanisation of farms meant that the amount of labour required on farms would reduce. Thus, yeoman farmers could avoid livery of seisin as they had no need to employ free labourers in any case. This had the real threat of mass unemployment and migration from the countryside into towns, which Great Nortend has hitherto managed to controllable levels.
 
With the approval of Lucilia, and it is believed, the King Edmund IX, the Royal Countryside Society launched a public scare campaign against the use of mechanical farm equipment on fields, claiming that the fumes were toxic and threatened the wholesomeness of Nortish produce. This was given heightened publicity when Lucilia, at an official luncheon hosted by the Lord Mayor of Lendert refused to eat a salad allegedly sourced from a farm which used motor tractors, claiming that she could „detect an unwholesome air” about the lettuce. This was later explained as being the „air of unemployment and countryside malaise”. A Royal Commission into the matter was announced and returned proposals to restrain certain types of mechanisation in agriculture for the sake of public health and the health of the land, as well as in order to limit the loss of farm labouring jobs.


====''Second Agricultural Practices Act'' of 1936====
The ''Second Agricultural Practices Bill'' was introduced by the Foide government in 1935 as one of his first acts as Lord High Treasurer. Despite strong opposition from the Droughers, it was passed by a majority of three in the Houses of Commons and of one in the House of Lords, Lord Cane finally agreeing to support the bill after days of negotiation. Royal assent was granted and the Great Seal affixed on Ladymas that year.
[[File:LuciliaAndHenry.jpeg|300px|thumb|right|Princess Lucilia and Prince George of [[Great Nortend]], 1929]]
 
Lucilia continued as patroness for the Royal Countryside Society throughout her life, also taking up causes such as the promotion of heirloom and rare varieties and breeds and the preservation of common land and diversity. Several Royal Forests, largely neglected since the Great Astyrian War, were restored under Lucilia's orders to their mediaeval state as hunting forests for deer.
 
==Queen consort and dowager==
 
==Final years and death==
Lucilia died on September 25, 2002, with the cause of death being described as „old age”. She had been largely house-bound for the last month of her life, returning to live at Whistler's Lodge with a reduced household as Queen dowager. Her death, only three days prior to Michaelmas, threw the Court into Full Mourning, resulting in the cancellation of much of the Michaelmas festivities across Great Nortend. Her funeral was held on October 15 at Lendert Cathedral Priory and officiated by the Lord Bishop of Lendert.


==Later life==
==Final years and death==
==Titles and honors==
==Titles and honors==
===Title and style===
===Title and style===

Latest revision as of 21:42, 21 July 2024

Exponentia.PNG
Lucilia of Exponent
Exponentia.PNG

Princess of Exponent
Queen of Great Nortend
Lucilia.jpg
Lucilia Exponentia, 1932
Queen of Great Nortend
QueenMarch 3, 1955–September 25 2002
Full name
Lucilia Exponentia
Titles and styles
Princess of Exponentia (abolished in 1997)
Queen of Great Nortend
Queen Dowager of Great Nortend
Born(1907-02-19)February 19, 1907
Paradisa, Empire of Exponent
DiedSeptember 25, 2002(2002-09-25) (aged 96)
Great Nortend
Noble familyHouse of Exponentia
House of Anthord (by marriage)
Spouse(s)George III of Great Nortend
Issue
Charles Henry
Catherine Lucy
Susanna Claudia
FatherLiberius XXI, Emperor of Exponent

Lucilia of Exponent (February 19, 1907 to September 15, 2002) also known familiarly as Lucy in the Nortish royal family was Queen consort of Great Nortend as the wife of George III of Great Nortend from 1955, and later Queen dowager after the death of George and the accession of her daughter as Catherine II in 1965. She was the youngest daughter of Liberius XXI of the Empire of Exponent. During her life, she became well known within Great Nortend for her rural activism and her staunch advocacy for Great Nortend's countryside life.

Early life

Lucilia was born on February 19, 1907 at the Imperial Palace in Paradise City, Empire of Exponent to Liberius XXI of the Empire of Exponent.

Marriage and children

Princess Lucilia and Prince George of Great Nortend, 1929

Lucilia married Prince George of Nortend on July 23, 1929 in the large Lady Chapel of Lendert Cathedral Priory, the traditional location of weddings of the heir to the throne in Great Nortend. She lived with Prince George thereafter at Whistler's Lodge in the grounds of the Castle of Hameford, as well as in an apartment at the Palace of St. Michael'sgate. She bore three children, all with very difficult pregnancies and labour—Charles, Catherine and Susanna.

Rural activism

Shortly after marrying Prince George, Lucilia began advocating on behalf of the rural workers of Great Nortend as royal patroness of the Royal Countryside Society. Despite the passage of the Agricultural Practices Act of 1893, which forbade the refusal of livery of seisin to the heirs of life tenants in order to employ free labourers in their stead, more efficient mechanisation of farms meant that the amount of labour required on farms would reduce. Thus, yeoman farmers could avoid livery of seisin as they had no need to employ free labourers in any case. This had the real threat of mass unemployment and migration from the countryside into towns, which Great Nortend has hitherto managed to controllable levels.

With the approval of Lucilia, and it is believed, the King Edmund IX, the Royal Countryside Society launched a public scare campaign against the use of mechanical farm equipment on fields, claiming that the fumes were toxic and threatened the wholesomeness of Nortish produce. This was given heightened publicity when Lucilia, at an official luncheon hosted by the Lord Mayor of Lendert refused to eat a salad allegedly sourced from a farm which used motor tractors, claiming that she could „detect an unwholesome air” about the lettuce. This was later explained as being the „air of unemployment and countryside malaise”. A Royal Commission into the matter was announced and returned proposals to restrain certain types of mechanisation in agriculture for the sake of public health and the health of the land, as well as in order to limit the loss of farm labouring jobs.

The Second Agricultural Practices Bill was introduced by the Foide government in 1935 as one of his first acts as Lord High Treasurer. Despite strong opposition from the Droughers, it was passed by a majority of three in the Houses of Commons and of one in the House of Lords, Lord Cane finally agreeing to support the bill after days of negotiation. Royal assent was granted and the Great Seal affixed on Ladymas that year.

Lucilia continued as patroness for the Royal Countryside Society throughout her life, also taking up causes such as the promotion of heirloom and rare varieties and breeds and the preservation of common land and diversity. Several Royal Forests, largely neglected since the Great Astyrian War, were restored under Lucilia's orders to their mediaeval state as hunting forests for deer.

Queen consort and dowager

Final years and death

Lucilia died on September 25, 2002, with the cause of death being described as „old age”. She had been largely house-bound for the last month of her life, returning to live at Whistler's Lodge with a reduced household as Queen dowager. Her death, only three days prior to Michaelmas, threw the Court into Full Mourning, resulting in the cancellation of much of the Michaelmas festivities across Great Nortend. Her funeral was held on October 15 at Lendert Cathedral Priory and officiated by the Lord Bishop of Lendert.

Titles and honors

Title and style

  • 1955 – 1965: Her Majesty The Queen
  • 1965 – 1985: Her Majesty The Queen Dowager

Lucilia's full formal title as Queen was :—

Her Majesty the Most High Most Mighty and Most Excellent Lady LUCILIA Queen of Nortend and Hambria Princess of Exponent Lady of Cardoby Countess of Hastica.

As queen dowager, her full formal title was :—

Her Majesty the Most High Most Mighty and Most Excellent Lady LUCILIA Queen Dowager of Nortend and Hambria Princess of Exponent Lady Dowager of Cardoby Countess Dowager of Hastica.

Honors