Saints in Atyaism
Within the Imperial Faith, the Seven Apostles are the descendants of the Great Wolf and were his disciples. Each of the seven made up different Imperial Tribes, particularly the most dominant tribes within The Empire. According to the tradition of the Imperial Faith, the Seven Apostles were blessed by the Great Wolf once he ascended into godhood as apostles of specific aspects that made up their tribe. Most of the Apostles traveled together for a period of a decade over the span of the Empire.
The Seven Apostles are primarily covered within three major texts that are considered to be canonical to the Imperial Faith. The first of which is Levél, a book made up of letters kept by the Apostle Asma that described her journey as the only female Apostle as well as the journey. The Levél describes their young adulthood in what is now Kossuth. The following text is the Evangélium, written by the Apostle Tamas, which described their journey from the Imperial West through the Imperial North and the Imperial East. The final text is the Feloszlatás, written posthumously by the scribe and later Dózse Astrik III. The text describes their final journey to the Imperial Central and subsequent dispersal throughout the land in an effort to settle.
The Seven Apostles were venerated through the establishment of the Seven Basilicas and the establishment of Cathedrals and tribes. The Seven Apostles were subsequently theorized to have offspring, termed the Nineteen Disciples.
List
№ | Apostle Name | Term of office | Selected | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Took Office | Left Office | Time in Office | Prime Minister | Congressional Premier | |
1 | Ye Desheng 葉德生 Yè Déshēng (1846-1902; 56 years old) |
April 3, 1881 | 21 December, 1902 | 21 years and 172 days | Xinjia Kuang 新家曠 |
Yao Kai'ao 姚開翱 | |
Ye Desheng was the first President of Huajiang after the end of the Huajiangite Civil War following the Proclamation of the Republic of Huajiang coterminous with the signing of the 1881 Constitution of the Republic of Huajiang. He was seen as the political figurehead of the revolution and was appointed the president. As the president, he set out to create a non-democratic republic under his ideas of Deshengism, which is still the philosophy of the Republican Party. Ye Desheng later appointed Xi Jing to serve as the next President. He was seen as a popular figure and the father of the modern Huajiangite State. Ye Desheng also created the 1882 Huajiang Foreign Crisis which caused Huajiang to cut itself off from other monarchist states and isolated itself. | |||||||
2 | Xu Jing 徐晶 Xú Jīng (1826-1910; 84 years old) |
September 28, 1902 | December 15, 1910 | 8 years and 79 days | Rou Wen 柔温 |
Li An 里諳 | |
Xu Jing was the second President and was appointed by Yu Desheng before his death in 1901. Xu King oversaw the continuation of the foreign crisis. With the foreign crisis at hand, Xi altered Huajiang's foreign policy to be more jingoistic and more funding poured to the military. With the aim of continued provocation of foreign non-republican governments, he was the president of Huajiang during the Great Continental War in 1905, and aligned Huajiang with those of Republican aims. Xu's work left behind a strong but conflicted Huajiang, and failed to resolve the 1882 Huajiang Foreign Crisis. He appointed Feng Shixang the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces and later as a replacement to his then Congressional Premier, Li An. Xu Jing did not appoint a successor, leading to a vote in the Huajiang Legislative Tang during his Sihou. | |||||||
3 | Feng Shixang 冯世祥 Féng Shìxiáng (1846-1902; 56 years old) |
December 23, 1910 | February 9, 1925 | 14 years and 54 days | Bo Sheng 波聖 |
Kong Rui 孔兑 | |
Feng Shixang took over office after Xu Jing's death. He is the first non-appointed president as Xu Jing did not appoint an successor. Feng Shixang was known as a hardliner president, and oversaw the end of the Great Continental War in 1912 and the aftermath of the war. Immediately after his ascenion, he started the 1910 Feng Military Reform, which involved the purging of generals and officials as well as investing money into improving the military. After the war, the 1882 Huajiang Foreign Crisis only worsened as Huajiang had alienated itself from monarchial powers. Feng reworked Xu Jing's foreign policy and worked to make Huajiang less jingoistic. In his later reign, he would attempt to seat Huajiang as a powerful country, trying to play Huajiang and its improved military in international affairs. He successfully ended the 1882 Huajiang Foreign Crisis in 1921. He was also known for being economically and socially conservative during his later years, and kept a hardliner approach in domestic affairs. | |||||||
4 | He Dazhao 何大釗 Hé Dàzhāo (1846-1902; 56 years old) |
February 12, 1925 | July 27, 1934 | 9 years and 166 days | E Tai 鄂太 |
Wei Fu 魏发 | |
He Dazhao was appointed President before the Sihou of Feng Shixang. He Dazhao continued the 1910 Feng Military Reform and consolidated the power of his reign. Dazhao considered the Feng Military Reform to be over in 1926, and consolidated his power by removing certain members from their positions in government. Dazhao's reign focused on the re-balancing of the national budget and the stabilization of the country. Dazhao released the current form of the Huajiangite Yuan after abolishing the Huajiangite Fabi in 1927 which had become inflated after the war in order to jump-start the stagnant economy. Dazhao's social ideas were seen as left-wing, and his policies brung Huajiang to be one of the most liberal countries at the time. His administration outlawed discrimination against women in 1927 and decriminalized same-sex relations in 1929. His economic policies, while not completed before he died, were set up for the next administration to continue and were near complete. | |||||||
5 | Gui Fuhai 圭佛海 Guī Fúhǎi (1846-1902; 56 years old) |
April 3, 1881 | 21 December, 1902 | 6 years and 142 days | Xinjia Kuang 新家曠 |
Yao Kai'ao 姚開翱 | |
6 | Yan Chen 閻陳 Yán Chén (1846-1902; 56 years old) |
April 3, 1881 | 21 December, 1902 | 20 years and 38 days | Xinjia Kuang 新家曠 |
Yao Kai'ao 姚開翱 | |
7 | Liu Jian 劉建 Liú Jiàn (1846-1902; 56 years old) |
April 3, 1881 | 21 December, 1902 | 11 years and 199 days | Xinjia Kuang 新家曠 |
Mai Han 麥瀚 |