Table of Contents
The Sultanate of Reika
The Sultanate of Reika is the third great global power, after Emberstone and Felderia. Its strength lies not in raw wealth or overwhelming armies, but in:
- A resilient, layered culture
- A stable hierarchy that favors continuity
- Tribal cohesion without religious conflict
- Strong personal freedoms within strong traditions
Reika is a nation where tradition and liberty coexist. Cultural expectations are powerful, but the state does not enforce belief, dress, or “honor.”
Overview
Type of state: Hereditary monarchy (Sultanate) with tribal and urban layers Global rank: Third major power, after Emberstone and Felderia Core strengths: Cultural cohesion, tribal–urban integration, stable succession norms, adaptable military, religious pluralism Core weaknesses: Less industrial and less globally dominant than Emberstone or Felderia; often the “underdog” in great-power politics
Government Structure
Sultan / Sultana
- Absolute ruler.
- Chooses their heir directly (blood or adopted).
- The Diwan may advise but cannot veto.
- The ruler’s patron deity becomes the Patron of the Throne.
Diwan
- Advisory council of religious, military, scholarly and cultural figures.
- Influential but lacks hard authority over the Sultan.
Sheikhs
- Provincial rulers overseeing major cities and surrounding regions.
- Act as governors, judges, and senior military commanders.
- Maintain continuity of lineages under their authority.
Emirs
- Tribal leaders beneath Sheikhs.
- Confirm heirs of Pashas.
- Expected to make an heir viable rather than reject one.
- Only reject when absolutely necessary.
- Rejections may be appealed; Sheikh’s ruling is final unless the Sultan intervenes.
Pashas
- Leaders of tribes, clans, villages, or nomadic groups.
- Choose heirs (blood, adopted, or marital connections).
- Their selections normally pass unless severe issues arise.
Succession & Lineage
Reika follows the principle of Blood First, Worth Always.
- Bloodline priority: Blood heirs considered first, but not guaranteed.
- Adoption: Fully honorable. Adopted heirs inherit as true family.
- Heir selection: A titleholder may choose any heir—child, sibling, adopted kin, or a trusted youth from another family.
- Continuity mandate: Families should preserve their lineage, not purge it. Weak heirs are trained, supported, or reinforced through marriage before rejection is considered.
- Rejection: Used only as a last resort. Dishonor falls on the rejected heir, not the family.
- Appeals process: Rejections may be appealed upward to the Emir, then Sheikh. Sultanial intervention is rare.
Law vs Culture
Law
- Minimalist.
- No dress codes, no religious enforcement, no moral policing.
- Absolute ban on honor violence. Punished severely.
- State involvement occurs only for contracts, property, violence, and fraud.
Culture
- Strong honor and reputation systems.
- Arranged marriages common, especially among elites.
- Children may be promised young, but marriages occur only in adulthood.
- Modesty expected culturally, but not enforced by law.
- Social consequences replace legal punishment.
- Principle: You make your bed, you lie in it.
Religion & Pantheon
Reika shares a global pantheon, but each region emphasizes different aspects. The Sultan’s chosen deity becomes the symbolic national patron.
Overgods
- Saffron :: Love, fertility, beauty, passion. Neutral-good leaning.
- Rhizanthella :: Wealth, luck, music, humor, hedonism. Neutral-evil leaning.
Children of the Overgods
- Nosi :: Knowledge and truth. Churches double as libraries and schools. Knowledge is believed to be a universal right.
- Roisin :: Magic, mystery, arcane study. Patron of mages and scholars.
- Enosis :: Unity, diplomacy, peace, family cohesion.
Current Patron of the Throne: Nosi, due to the Sultana and her lineage. This has ushered in a period of learning, openness, and advancement.
Sultans may change the national patron by following a different deity. This affects symbolism and court culture, not personal freedom. People remain free to worship however they choose.
Military & Defense
Structure
- Tribal militias form the backbone.
- Pashas command local forces.
- Emirs coordinate tribal armies.
- Sheikhs oversee provincial forces.
- The Sultan commands all.
Equipment
- Helmets worn with turbans, shemaghs, or kufi caps according to personal preference.
- Hood-style gas masks developed for bearded soldiers.
- Armor and clothing blend desert practicality with cultural identity.
Tactics
- Speed, mobility, and desert warfare.
- Light cavalry, camel units, and rapid skirmish maneuvers.
- Strong logistics for harsh environments.
Aesthetic Influences
- Ottoman, Indian, Central Asian, and Arabian desert traditions blended into a unique Reikan identity.
Culture & Daily Life
Dress
- Robes common for heat management.
- Men may wear turbans, kufi caps, or keffiyeh/shemagh depending on taste.
- Women choose freely: hijab, niqab, uncovered hair, or mixed styles.
- State has zero authority over dress.
Marriage & Family
- Monogamous culture.
- Arranged marriages common among elites but refusal is allowed.
- Adoption is prestigious—chosen heirs are respected.
- Children protected both legally and culturally. No exploitation.
Modesty Norms
- Practical modesty expected in public: protection from sun and sand.
- Swimwear:
- Men: shorts minimum.
- Women: bikini minimum; one-piece more common for practicality.
- Private spaces have no restrictions.
- Breaking norms leads to gossip or looks, not violence or state action.
Reika in the World
Standing
Reika is the third great power—larger and stronger than all lesser nations, but not at the level of Emberstone or Felderia.
Foreign Relations
- Emberstone :: Mutual respect built on shared principles: personal liberty, lineage continuity, and non-interference in faith or dress.
- Felderia :: Cautious mistrust; philosophical and moral differences prevent close alliance.
Reputation
Reika is viewed as a nation that balances tradition without tyranny and freedom without chaos. Its cultural flexibility, stable successions, and tribal unity make it a respected—though underestimated—global power.
