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  1. No, you keep your elective monarchy succession. IIRC if you convert to another religion that allows for elective monarchy, change your succession to elective monarchy, then convert back to Islam you should still keep elective monarchy. Easier than giving your council full power and then needing to take it all away.

  2. Elective Monarchy. "It is the Assembly who makes a king, and the king who nominates a successor. None of it is carried in the blood." The inverse of Hereditary Republic, this is when a monarch does not automatically inherit the throne, but is instead chosen by a group of people. Lest you think this is a democracy, the electorate in these cases ...

  3. Apr 12, 2021 · Factions are organized groups of vassals, united against their liege for a common purpose. When a leader thinks the faction is powerful enough, they can issue an ultimatum to their liege. Unless the liege folds to the demands, this results in a civil war, where all faction members revolt together under a temporary title.

  4. Mar 21, 2024 · Tanistry is a rare succession method available only to non-Muslim characters who are also either Celtic-cultured or have either the Blood of Brian or Blood of Niall 'of the Nine Hostages' bloodlines . In Tanistry, the heir is chosen from the ruler's dynasty by a realm-wide election. It is safer but harder to control than feudal elective .

  5. Every time that I play CK2, I seem to learn something new. I came across something in my recent Kingdom of Ireland playthrough and I was wondering if someone could help explain it. I created the Kingdom of Ireland in the 1066 start and had my succession laws set to Elective Monarchy.

  6. 2. Giulls. • 5 yr. ago. I played elective monarchy on this patch and there were two reasons I couldn’t nominate my kids. Bugs - very rarely one of my kids would be chosen as an heir to some bishopric, even if they weren’t actually eligible (for example a 6 year old girl was the heir to three bishoprics). Eventually it fixed itself.

  7. May 26, 2019 · The elective monarchy is a recipe not only for weak governance while the monarch is on the throne, but for rounds of civil war, foreign intervention, and possible secession in the period ...

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