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===Spouses===
===Spouses===
In the Yuzhou dynasty, the emperor is allowed up to four spouses if male and only one if female. All spouses of the male emperor bear the title of "Empress" and are of equal rank, while the spouse of a female emperor would simply be addressed as the emperor's husband and wield the same amount of power an Empress would.
In the Yuzhou dynasty, the emperor is allowed up to four spouses if male and only one if female. All spouses of the male emperor bear the title of "Empress" and are of equal rank, while the spouse of a female emperor would simply be addressed as the emperor's husband and wield the same amount of power an Empress would.


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Concubines are given the right to represent the Ramadhan Family in the parliament for any number of terms, but not consecutively (e.g if Dianne currently occupies a seat in the parliament, she can only do so again after another concubine has used her right).
Concubines are given the right to represent the Ramadhan Family in the parliament for any number of terms, but not consecutively (e.g if Dianne currently occupies a seat in the parliament, she can only do so again after another concubine has used her right).
===Children===
All children of the Emperor are equal in terms of both hierarchy and claim to the throne. Upon the Emperor's death, the leaders of the current Family's subsidiaries would convene and discuss which child would be the best candidate. These discussions can last several meetings across days, and if one candidate could not gain the votes of more than 50% of the leaders, then they would


[[Category: Realms]] [[category: R1]]
[[Category: Realms]] [[category: R1]]

Revision as of 04:08, 4 March 2022

Emperor of China
皇帝
Imperial
Inscription on Imperial Seal of China "受命於天 既壽永昌".svg
Incumbent
Tianshi
since 31 August 2042
Details
StyleHis Imperial Majesty (陛下)
Heir presumptiveStarchild Sorority
First monarchQin Shi Huang

The Emperor of China, or Huángdì (Chinese: 皇帝) is the monarch of China during its imperial period, from the Qin dynasty to the Qing dynasty, then from the revival of the imperial system at the founding of the Empire of Amenria until the unification of Earth in the 22nd century. With Tianshi's reforms on succession laws, the title is now a gender neutral term and it is thus possible for any member of the Starchild Sorority to claim it once her father dies, instead of defaulting to "Empress" becoming the second woman to hold it after Wu Zetian.

Power

Heredity and succession

Spouses, concubines, and children

Spouses

In the Yuzhou dynasty, the emperor is allowed up to four spouses if male and only one if female. All spouses of the male emperor bear the title of "Empress" and are of equal rank, while the spouse of a female emperor would simply be addressed as the emperor's husband and wield the same amount of power an Empress would.

Concubines

Theoretically, the emperor can have as many concubines as he likes, although there are currently less than 10 concubines in Amenria, a tiny number compared to the harems of previous emperors, due to the standards of the current emperor. All concubines are legally equal and formally wield the same amount of power, but due to the dynamic nature of relations between the concubines and the emperor, the concubines and the rest of the government, the concubines and the general public, or even the concubines among themselves, one or more concubine(s) can be more influential than others, as was the case with Michelle Miao, who earned her own subsidiary within the Ramadhan Family.

Concubines are given the right to represent the Ramadhan Family in the parliament for any number of terms, but not consecutively (e.g if Dianne currently occupies a seat in the parliament, she can only do so again after another concubine has used her right).

Children

All children of the Emperor are equal in terms of both hierarchy and claim to the throne. Upon the Emperor's death, the leaders of the current Family's subsidiaries would convene and discuss which child would be the best candidate. These discussions can last several meetings across days, and if one candidate could not gain the votes of more than 50% of the leaders, then they would