Treaty of Corcra
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Type | Multilateral agreement |
---|---|
Signed | 4 September 1937 |
Location | Corcra, Dericania |
Effective | Immediately |
Original signatories | Template:Country data Latinic States |
Parties | Urcea Members of the Holy Levantine Empire |
Language | Julian Ænglish Latin |
The Treaty of Corcra was an agreement between Urcea and the other members of the Holy Levantine Empire generally, and particularly between the Emperor of the Levantines and the princes of the Empire. Although the Emperor had renounced his authority over all parts of the Empire beyond Urcea earlier in May 1935, a final settlement was necessary in order to settle the many outstanding issues of dissolving the millennia-old Empire. Among many other provisions, it established the Empire-in-fact which acknowledged the right of the Apostolic King of Urcea to retain, in perpetuity, the title and rights of Emperor of the Levantines, and it also allowed the Apostolic King to retain the Imperial Regalia while continuing a small number of Imperial institutions in Urcea
The Treaty of Corcra definitively ended the southern Levantine theater of the Second Great War, and set in motion a series of events that would create the Deric States, and, later, the Levantine Union.
Background
Provisions
The Treaty guaranteed stipends for life for certain former Deric nobility, particularly ruling families of counties or above. These payments were specified to be made by a future Levantine body created for this purpose and was initially intended to be a non-profit with a limited amount of funds. However, the Levantine Union assumed this treaty obligation upon its creation and accordingly the stipends have continued to be paid through the present time.