Household registration in Kiravia: Difference between revisions

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The practice of registering families and keeping written genealogical records has deep roots in Kiravian history. Like most traditional cultures, ancient Coscivians maintained {{wp|oral history|oral histories}} of ancestral lineages. The proto-totalitarian [[Verticalism|Verticalist]] system of the First Empire required detailed and current demographic data on village work units to inform the labour planning and population transfers that underpinned its command economy, although these records were quantitative and anonymous in nature. The connexion between registration and citizenship rights is similarly quite old, with Coscivian polities from the Second Empire on maintaining ledgers of their fully-enfranchised citizens and their households. The Antaric Empire and the Idośok Kingdom in the Northeast attempted (with mixed success) to impose compulsory civil registration of all residents in each prefecture under their rule, but otherwise comprehensive registration of households with the state would not be put into practice until the advent of modernity. Nonetheless, records similar to the civil ''thramdastraterion'' were maintained by churches, ancestral shrines, and cemeteries. In areas where manorialism took root, manorial records related to land tenure and other obligations were kept on a household-by-household basis and contained similar information.
The practice of registering families and keeping written genealogical records has deep roots in Kiravian history. Like most traditional cultures, ancient Coscivians maintained {{wp|oral history|oral histories}} of ancestral lineages. The proto-totalitarian [[Verticalism|Verticalist]] system of the First Empire required detailed and current demographic data on village work units to inform the labour planning and population transfers that underpinned its command economy, although these records were quantitative and anonymous in nature. The connexion between registration and citizenship rights is similarly quite old, with Coscivian polities from the Second Empire on maintaining ledgers of their fully-enfranchised citizens and their households. The Antaric Empire and the Idośok Kingdom in the Northeast attempted (with mixed success) to impose compulsory civil registration of all residents in each prefecture under their rule, but otherwise comprehensive registration of households with the state would not be put into practice until the advent of modernity. Nonetheless, records similar to the civil ''thramdastraterion'' were maintained by churches, ancestral shrines, and cemeteries. In areas where manorialism took root, manorial records related to land tenure and other obligations were kept on a household-by-household basis and contained similar information.


The current system of household registration was first introduced in the late 19th century AD in Northeast Kirav. Rapidly urbanising states like [[Fariva]], [[Harma]], [[Bissáv]], and subsequently the [[Kiygrava]] were the first to encounter the need to maintain centralised registries of family units. The system was gradually adopted by more and more jurisdictions across Great Kirav as modernisation progressed, but was implemented more rapidly in the overseas colonies to promote more efficient administration and control access to civil rights. Although widespread by the 1930s A.D., household registration did not become nigh-universal as it is now until the Sunderance, when both the Kiravian Union and Kiravian Remnant began to rely on ''thramdastraterion'' for all manner of administrative purposes, including the judiciary, military conscription, and economic planning.
The current system of household registration was first introduced in the late 19th century AD in Northeast Kirav. Rapidly urbanising states like [[Fariva]], [[Harma]], [[Bissáv]], and subsequently the [[Kaviska]] were the first to encounter the need to maintain centralised registries of family units. The system was gradually adopted by more and more jurisdictions across Great Kirav as modernisation progressed, but was implemented more rapidly in the overseas colonies to promote more efficient administration and control access to civil rights. Although widespread by the 1930s A.D., household registration did not become nigh-universal as it is now until the Sunderance, when both the Kiravian Union and Kiravian Remnant began to rely on ''thramdastraterion'' for all manner of administrative purposes, including the judiciary, military conscription, and economic planning.


Household registration was added to the list of Duties of the Federal Subjects by the Restoration Constitution.
Household registration was added to the list of Duties of the Federal Subjects by the Restoration Constitution.