Crusader kings iii succession laws1/5/2024 ![]() With Tanistry, the House head gets +1-vote strength, the Dynasty Head gets +2-vote strength and the current ruler gets a flat +1-vote strength instead of increase for their title rank. So, an influential duke will have a total vote strength of 3, the same as a king. All electors get a base of 1, with influential vassals getting +1-vote strength, dukes getting +1-vote strength and kings getting +2-vote strength. Vote strength is determined by rank in most of the elective types. The decision is only available until 1100. It costs 300 prestige and adds the appropriate cultural elective law to all of your top-level titles. The second is a minor decision that kings and emperors can take if they have access to a culture specific elective law. First, available to everyone, is to add them on the title screen at a cost of 1500 prestige per title. Elective succession laws can be added to your titles by two methods. All other elective types include vassals as potential heirs and potentially family members that are not members of your dynasty (aunts, cousins, nephews, etc.). Tanistry is arguable the strongest as you get a relative high and consistent vote strength and potential heirs are limited to members of your dynasty. Saxon is the weakest as it can only applied to kingdom level titles. Feudal elective is not available to rulers with culture specific elective laws. Feudal elective is available to all feudal rulers while Saxon elective is only available to Anglo-Saxon rulers, Scandinavian elective is only available to North Germanic rulers (Norse, Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian), and Tanistry elective is only available to Goidelic rulers (Gaelic and Irish) and Brythonic rulers (Breton, Cornish, Cumbrian, Pictish, and Welsh). There are four types of elective succession in the game – Feudal, Tanistry, Saxon and Scandinavian. Furthermore, any titles you have that are not a de jure part of your realm will also get partitioned out instead of going to your elected heir. Note that each of your top-level titles need to have elective succession and titles without elective succession will be partitioned out like usual. If you end up with different heirs for your elected titles each heir will get their elected title and any de jure subordinate titles (counties, duchies, etc.) that belong to the title they are inheriting. Vassals will also tend to vote against someone with the opposite personality traits, such as Brave vassals voting against Craven heirs. However, your vassals have a higher tendency to vote against you, especially you elect someone of the wrong gender (female in a male dominated religion), a child or someone with sinful personality traits. Unlike the above method you can select anyone to be heir, not just your primary heir. Having elective succession laws on all your top-level titles and then selecting the same person as your heir for each title will grant all of your titles to that heir. Note that is you have elective laws on your primary title and your subordinate titles (for example, a kingdom and your duchies) then partition will apply to all of your other titles without elective meaning that your counties will get partitioned out like normal while your elected heir will get your kingdom and duchy titles.įor the second method (available to dukes, kings, and emperors) you will need at least two top-level titles of the same rank. ![]() This applies to both kings and emperors and doesn’t matter if the second heir getting a kingdom becomes your primary heir’s vassal or becomes independent upon succession. This will also work for duchies outside of your primary title and they will go with your primary heir even if another heir is inheriting a kingdom-tier title that the duchy is a de jure part of. If you don’t want to worry about vassals voting against you then you can either revoke their title so you are the only who controls any counties in the duchy or simply grant the troublesome vassal to another duke in your realm. County-level vassals in a duchy will tend to vote for your primary heir since they are the primary heir. Adding elective succession to your duchies and selecting your primary heir as elected heir works the same for kings and emperors, the duchies with elective and their de jure counties all go to your primary heir. This is the simplest method to use and is pretty straight forward. ![]() The first method (available to kings and emperors) is adding elective succession to your subordinate titles, so duchies and kingdoms, and choosing your primary heir as your elected heir then all of your lower tier titles will go to your primary heir. ![]() There are two methods to achieve this depending on your situation. ![]() As the title says this is a guide to use Elective Succession to get de facto Primogeniture at the start of the game for both start dates. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |