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Found 80 results for "schools for children"
John V. Usurper of the throne
…promoted agriculture, opened elementary schools for children, built a postal system, and replenished the army with foreign volunteers as wel…
Philip I. The Thinker › Children and the opening of the world
At the same time, Philip's sons show how broadly the dynasty was already thinking. Alfred studied in the elven lands and…
Magnus IV Merciless › First line of fortresses
…truction of the first defensive line of fortresses to protect the most important areas of the kingdom, including Magnur itself. It was not j…
Ferdinand I. The Fearless › Land and everyday life reform
…ut also the renewal of daily life. Therefore, he carried out an agricultural reform that had a surprisingly profound impact. He supported th…
Leo I. The Hunter › King of the forest and open space
Leo I was famous from his youth for his passion for hunting. While other rulers sought confirmation of strength in battle, he sought…
Magnus V the Short King › Heir to a restless transformation
…us did not accept the crown as a reward for his own actions, but as an obligation to carry the changing state on his shoulders. That alone m…
Henry I. King of the Blood › Ruler only for a temporary period
… son was not yet of age. This made room for Henry, who was originally to fulfill the role of temporary ruler. Such a temporary arrangement w…
Jakob I. The Reformer › The Assembly of Unicorns and the birth of a new order
…lematic or politically impassable. Therefore, the famous Assembly of Unicorns was convened, which lasted more than fifty days, during which …
Jakob I. The Reformer › Tax reform and realignment of power
…uild the very mechanisms of power. Therefore, he carried out a tax reform that redistributed the income between the local ruler, the provinc…
Jakob I. The Reformer › Banners and the new face of war
…ven more fundamental was his military reform. Jakob divided the royal army into separate battalions, each with its own general and clearly d…
Jakob I. The Reformer › Magic as part of the state
…nd expensive center, intended primarily for people from the empire. This step is extremely important in history. Magic thus ceased to appear…
Jakob I. The Reformer › A king between the old world and the new
…es in the fact that he was able to transform the country from the chaos of dynastic near-rulelessness to a time when it was once again possi…
Ignatius II. Unbreakable › Schools of Ruinous Magic and the Legacy of Government
… systematically support the creation of schools focused on teaching destructive magic. It is from these centers that the first generation of…
Ignatius III Weaver of intrigue › Fortresses, Towers, and the Web of Shadows
…as a land densely covered with castles, fortifications and watchtowers. This defense infrastructure was not just a technical project. She wa…
Ignatius III Weaver of intrigue › Claims on foreign lands
…econd part of the reign, Ignac began to formulate diplomatic and historical claims towards neighboring states. He demanded from the elves th…
Richard III Sword of Magnursia › South ford and the death of the king
…hard's life was the Battle of the South Ford in -103. Here he faced the superiority of the elves and Waldoria, but with the help of elite ma…
Alfred I the Victorious › Power Limits and Forest War
…e. Alfred's army, brilliantly organized for large campaigns and fortress warfare, faced here an environment that absorbed supplies, scattere…
Leo II The conqueror › Administration of the empire and the first imperial reforms
… be governed like the old kingdom. Therefore, he began to replace the old land structures with a new system of provinces and governors. King…
Henry II Passionate › The emperor before his coronation
…rs. The official coronation in 344 therefore rather confirmed a fact that the empire had known for a long time. The young successor was visi…
Henry II Passionate › Richard's plays for the whole empire
One of Henry's most successful moves was to spread Richard's plays throughout the empire. It was no longer just a celebr…
Henry II Passionate › The uprising of the nobility and the battle for John's Bridge
… in the east. The culmination of this effort came in the Battle of John's Bridge. There stood a large army of nomads and mercenary orcs agai…
John III Prolific › Continuator of fortresses
…he empire no longer had enough strength for grand conquests, and that its security depended on the ability to hold its borders, not on furth…
John III Prolific › Emperor's Wives and Children Act
…lso registered with a new law that transformed imperial family law. He stipulated that the emperor could have multiple wives, but only one o…
Frederick III He was reveling › The backyard transformed into a theater of power
…rederick III he became famous above all for his frequent excesses and the spectacular celebrations he organized for the nobility from all ov…
Frederick I the Destroyer › Peace without victory and death in the forest
… by the Peace of the Four Swords, which forced Frederick to hand over some of his titles to other houses in exchange for renewed loyalty. It…
Valendor I Steward › Tax reform and a downsized military
…he actual scope of their activity. Therefore, he began to monitor the economic activity of individual population groups more closely and pro…
John V. Usurper of the throne › Schools, post office and the new face of everyday life
…t steps was the introduction of regular schools for children. First in the cities, later also in the villages, children learned basic skills…
Theodore III Tough › Emperor after the end of comfort
…ers began to feel that they could not afford everything that they had previously taken for granted. The market was oversaturated, incomes we…
Untred III. Chronicler › Uncomfortable calm after stagnation
Untred III. he took over an empire that was not threatened by a major war, but its atmosphere was tense. Residents felt …
Untred IV. Correct › Reform of cities, provinces and states
… of the most important administrative reforms of the late empire. He regulated the relationship between cities, provinces, states and the em…
Jirex III. › Battle for the New Order
He personally led his army in the decisive battle. He built an army on the high ground and relied on the strength of the…
Zareth-Ka › Teaching reform
Zareth-Ka instituted a new system of teaching. Magic was to become a natural part of kobold life, not just the skill of …
Nuriak › A forgotten giant
…heir magical power, he has been all but forgotten by human history. At the same time, it was his discoveries that enabled the development of…
Letteria › A foreigner in the heart of the empire
… oppressed part of the elven population for a long time. Leteria thus lived between two worlds without fully belonging to one of them.
Other children of Richard I.
…eir descendants was Bejmut, a candidate for the Assembly of Unicorns.
Other children of Jacob I.
Jakob had 8 sons and 14 daughters.
The rise of the First Elven Empire and the war with the desert goblins › The world before the empire
Before the rise of the First Elven Empire, the elves lived divided into many clan communities and smal…
The establishment of the Free City of Hirch › The transformation of the city
Hatur saw Hirch not only as a fortress, but as a center that could attract different cultures and peoples. He had several temples …
Fall of the Old Norse Empire › Battle for the New Order
The decisive clash took place in -2700 in the area of today's Nickel Hills. The Old Norse army under the leadership of…
The formation of the Stone Crown
…e that kept the north of Ulvenor stable for thousands of years.
The formation of the Stone Crown › Wars under the mountains
Long before the formation of the Stone Crown, the north of Ulvenor was not a unified territory. The dwarven…
The formation of the Stone Crown › Agreement of the Three Kings
After one of the biggest wars that ended in a stalemate between the three most powerful kingdoms, there was a historic m…
The formation of the Stone Crown › An order that has lasted through the ages
The Stone Crown was not just a political tool. It became the basis of dwarven identity. Each king knew that his rule was…
Expanding the Stone Crown › Hunger for the deep
…he land. After the unification, their efforts became even stronger. New mines were created far beyond the borders of the original kingdoms, …
Clash of the Magic Schools — Javorica vs. Magnursia › Two paths of magic
…ginated as a systematic discipline. The schools in Magnursia were based on order, theory and gradual mastering of individual elements. Magic…
Clash of the Magic Schools — Javorica vs. Magnursia › Javorica as a center of change
…d that magic might not be a replacement for their power, but an extension of it. The combination of physical prowess and magic created somet…
Clash of the Magic Schools — Javorica vs. Magnursia › The Rise of Zareth-Ka
… was not only a visionary, but also a reformer. Zareth-Ka understood that magic's greatest weakness was its limited stamina. Following up on…
Clash of the Magic Schools — Javorica vs. Magnursia › The invisible conflict
…ut in minds. For a long time, the human schools did not realize how quickly the kobolds advanced. They considered their approach dangerous a…
Clash of the Magic Schools — Javorica vs. Magnursia › A limit that cannot be crossed
When the Empire tried to expand its influence on the Great Plains, it ran into a problem it didn't expect. Kobold magic …
The great reforms of Philip I
…a professional army laid the foundation for a long period of prosperity known as the era of the Silk Kings.
The great reforms of Philip I › Single currency and state banks
… and created a common economic language for the entire kingdom. Even more fundamental was the creation of state banks. These made it possibl…
The great reforms of Philip I › Professional army
Philip's military reform marked a transition from a purely occasional force to a more organized, permanent army. This in…
The great reforms of Philip I › The beginning of the Silk Kings
It is Philip's reign that is considered to be the real beginning of the silk period. The kingdom relied on trade, financ…
Murder of the Sorcerer › Gender Paranoia and the First Line of Fortresses
… this climate, he had the first line of fortresses built to protect the core of the kingdom from external threat, even as it itself grew out…
Restoration of the kingdom under Ferdinand I. › Agrarian reform
Ferdinand did not just restore the state with the sword. He introduced changes in agriculture that increased yields and …
Richard's plays and the transformation of the power of wealth
…ays were created and a fundamental transformation of the banking system took place.
Richard's plays and the transformation of the power of wealth › Privatization of banks
The sale of old banks to the private sector made Richard a huge amount of wealth. This move changed the relationship bet…
Richard's plays and the transformation of the power of wealth › Richard's plays
Spectacular games became a regular public ritual of power. They included sports contests as well as gladiator matches an…
Richard's plays and the transformation of the power of wealth › Court scandal
Richard's personal life, especially his relationship with Bela and later his second wife, led to another scandal. This a…
The crisis of the reign of Otto III. › Prohibition of foreign coins
…attempt to boost the economy by banning foreign coins backfired. It has restricted the flow of trade and eroded confidence in the economic e…
Assembly of Unicorns › Tax and ensign reform
Jacob's government then brought tax reform and a new military system of ensigns. Both changes fundamentally reshaped the functioning of th…
Silent preparations for the Great War › State monopoly of magic
Ignatius III restricted access to magic schools to the kingdom's residents. In doing so he created the first truly conscious attempt to make…
Silent preparations for the Great War › Spy network and second line of defense
The king developed espionage to an unprecedented extent and at the same time completed the second line of defense. This …
Silent preparations for the Great War › Preparing for the Great War
…ely heightened demands to set the stage for future conflict. That is why his reign is considered a direct anteroom of the Great War.
Beginning of the Great War › Death at the South Ford
… battles of the war. His death at South Ford became a symbol of the monarch's personal commitment and the price Magnursie paid for her ambit…
The transformation of Richard's plays into Imperial plays
…riginal plays were under Henry II. transformed into a wider imperial tradition known as the Imperial Games. This celebration spread beyond t…
The transformation of Richard's plays into Imperial plays › From dynastic celebration to imperial ritual
… Henry II. however, they received a new form. It was no longer just a commemoration of an old tradition or a spectacular holiday confined to…
The transformation of Richard's plays into Imperial plays › Expensive but effective
The Imperial Games were expensive. They required the movement of people, supplies, the organization of large public spac…
The transformation of Richard's plays into Imperial plays › Power among ordinary people
The most important historical significance of the Imperial Games was that they created a more direct relationship betwee…
The opening of the Empire's mining era › Wealth that transformed the court and the province
…ived from old land, inheritance, or the fortunes of war. This change had long-term consequences. It was the mining era that gave later emper…
The great reforms of Engelbrekt I. › State controlled wealth
…tween the throne and the nobility. Therefore, he introduced laws according to which each gram of mined precious metal or stone was subject t…
The great reforms of Engelbrekt I. › The army of the new age
…ng defeats in recent centuries. He therefore decided to fundamentally change the army. He encouraged the wider use of crossbows, more consis…
The great reforms of Engelbrekt I. › An empire divided but stronger
…r crucial step was the administrative reform. Engelbrekt had the empire divided into 48 provinces, each with its own capital and its own vic…
South Elven Unrest and the Peace of Leteria › The South That Didn't Forget
Although the former elven exodus left less of the elven population in the empire than in the past, the southern r…
Peace of the Four Swords › Frederick's forced concession
… of peace meant a significant weakening for Frederick I. He had to hand over some of the titles to other houses and admit that the emperor c…
The Second Imperial Diet and the Second Imperial Election › Distribution of forces
…ated, whose votes proved to be decisive for the final result.
The Silver Age of Youlenders › The basis for further growth
The Silver Age created the conditions for the further development of the empire. It was not the final peak, but a bridge between the blood…
Construction of the first eastern dam › Water for the arid east
… eastern regions of the empire suffered for a long time from worse conditions for agriculture. The steppe landscape was only fertile in good…
The regency and usurpation of Oleda I. › Regent for child heir
… his son Magnus was still a child. Therefore, on his deathbed, Theodore entrusted his brother Oled with the regency to rule temporarily unti…
Foundation of the Order of the White Horse › Knights for the Stability of the Provinces
… developing into long-term crises. Therefore, he founded the Order of the White Horse, whose members were to serve throughout the empire and…