Emperor of the Levantines: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 15:15, 5 December 2022
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Emperor of the Levantines | |
---|---|
Incumbent | |
Riordan VIII since 14 August 2006 | |
Details | |
Style | His Most Christian Majesty |
Heir apparent | Leo, Prince of Halfway |
First monarch | Conchobar I |
Residence |
|
Appointer | Hereditary |
The Emperor of the Levantines, sometimes called Holy Levantine Emperor is a semi-defunct title of the ruler of the Holy Levantine Empire (considered by itself to be the successor of Great Levantia) during the Middle Ages through the 20th Century. Prior to the Second Great War, the title was, without interruption, held in conjunction with title of King of Dericania and King of Culfra, and these two titles were considered to be the two constituent crowns of the Holy Levantine Empire. Though the Empire and its institutions came to a functional end during the Second Great War, the Empire, and thus the Emperor, have continued as a legal fiction in full union with the Urcean Crown. The terms of the title's continuance - and its possession by the Apostolic King of Urcea - are set forth in the Treaty of Corcra, the document that ended the South Levantine phase of the Second Great War.
See Also
- List of Emperors of the Levantines