Lord Karh-ding: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{wip}} '''The Hon. Lord Kjalh-djeng PC OA''' (Shinasthana: 建成君, ''kjalh-djeng-kljul''; Jul. 5, 1757 – Oct. 3, 1824) was a Themiclesian bureaucrat,...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{wip}}
{{wip}}
'''The Hon. Lord Kjalh-djeng PC OA''' ([[Shinasthana]]: 建成君, ''kjalh-djeng-kljul''; Jul. 5, 1757 – Oct. 3, 1824) was a [[Themiclesia|Themiclesian]] bureaucrat, military officer, and politician.
'''The Hon. Lord Kjalh-djeng PC OA''' ([[Shinasthana]]: 建成君, ''kjalh-djeng-kljul''; Jul. 5, 1757 – Oct. 3, 1824) was a [[Themiclesia|Themiclesian]] bureaucrat, military officer, and politician.  He was [[Prime Minister of Themiclesia]] between 1814 and 1817, succeeding the [[Lord of Gar-lang]] as [[Council of Correspondence|President of Correspondence]].
 
==Irridentalist suppression==
In November 1815, pamphlets were printed in [[Kien-k'ang]] criticizing the government for not doing anything to redeem Sngrak, which was ceded to Hallia under the [[Treaty of Kien-k'ang]].  Lord Kjalh-djeng summoned high-ranking ministers to the [[Court Hall (Themiclesia)|Court Hall]] to discuss the proper response.  It was agreed that the government may not renege on its commitments to the treaty.  The pamphlet was not officially censored, but several other pamphlets arguing that the costs of war were prohibitive were published by government ministers.  While Emperor ′ei believed, when he heard the deliberations, that the government could capitalize on public emotions, it told him that "the rabble-rousers" represent a very minor opinion that had little economic backing.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 16:52, 10 March 2020

The Hon. Lord Kjalh-djeng PC OA (Shinasthana: 建成君, kjalh-djeng-kljul; Jul. 5, 1757 – Oct. 3, 1824) was a Themiclesian bureaucrat, military officer, and politician. He was Prime Minister of Themiclesia between 1814 and 1817, succeeding the Lord of Gar-lang as President of Correspondence.

Irridentalist suppression

In November 1815, pamphlets were printed in Kien-k'ang criticizing the government for not doing anything to redeem Sngrak, which was ceded to Hallia under the Treaty of Kien-k'ang. Lord Kjalh-djeng summoned high-ranking ministers to the Court Hall to discuss the proper response. It was agreed that the government may not renege on its commitments to the treaty. The pamphlet was not officially censored, but several other pamphlets arguing that the costs of war were prohibitive were published by government ministers. While Emperor ′ei believed, when he heard the deliberations, that the government could capitalize on public emotions, it told him that "the rabble-rousers" represent a very minor opinion that had little economic backing.

See also