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Lein Durun berHikas: Difference between revisions

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'''Lein Durun berHikas, the Exalted Progenitor''' was the first and founding Emperor of the Lein Dynasty. Originally no more than an impoverished Chief Constable and Magistrate of a [[Political divisions of the Lein|District]] in the northern reaches of the Har Empire, he managed over a five year period to topple the highly corrupt and ineffectual Har Dynasty and take the throne for his own house, beginning the Lein Dynasty. After he became Emperor, his reforms and the style of his reign - to be, in general, non-interfering, relatively lenient in his punishments, and to highly encourage any scheme that would lead to economic prosperity - paved the way for the glorious age of the [[Four Great Emperors]].
'''Lein Durun berHikas, the Exalted Progenitor''' was the first and founding Emperor of the Lein Dynasty. Originally no more than an impoverished Chief Constable and Magistrate of a [[Political divisions of the Lein|District]] in the northern reaches of the Har Empire, he managed over a five year period to topple the highly corrupt and ineffectual Har Dynasty and take the throne for his own house, beginning the Lein Dynasty. After he became Emperor, his reforms and the style of his reign - to be, in general, non-interfering, relatively lenient in his punishments, and to highly encourage any scheme that would lead to economic prosperity - paved the way for the glorious age of the [[Four Great Emperors]].
[[Category:Lein Saga]]

Revision as of 16:27, 6 May 2006

Lein Durun berHikas, the Exalted Progenitor was the first and founding Emperor of the Lein Dynasty. Originally no more than an impoverished Chief Constable and Magistrate of a District in the northern reaches of the Har Empire, he managed over a five year period to topple the highly corrupt and ineffectual Har Dynasty and take the throne for his own house, beginning the Lein Dynasty. After he became Emperor, his reforms and the style of his reign - to be, in general, non-interfering, relatively lenient in his punishments, and to highly encourage any scheme that would lead to economic prosperity - paved the way for the glorious age of the Four Great Emperors.