Government
for a fictional world – will have these elements:
0. A class
based society in which service, both military and civic gives one
elevated status similar to Aristocrats –these servants – both
veterans and civil servants – make up the voting body. Any person
who has two citizen parents; does their service; gets a vote at their
tribal level. Everyone else will be legal citizens but lack the
franchise.
1. Community voting blocks called 'tribes' 50 such
tribes will exist. Each Tribe has its own mini-government and
constabulary militia.
2. A people's assembly with 10
representatives from each community who serve for a single 5 year
term. For 500 Councilors, who will select 5 'tribunes' to act as the
Joint President of the Assembly with one being 'High Tribune', the
Second being 'Junior Tribune', the other three shall be collectively
the 'third tribune'. These gain the title of Nobilius. They have
have 10 lictors to protect their President.
3. A 150 member
senate chosen for LIFE and from those who have previously served in
the Assembly. The Senate will be headed by Two Consuls, who shall be
aided by a Parliamentarian, and Clerk, as well as a Legate, to act as
an agent at large for fact finding missions ect. These gain the
additional title of Illustrious.
They
shall have 25 lictors to protect them and their proceedings.
4
A 50 member COURT, who will select 3 members to be a sitting
tribunal, who will check all laws for constitutionality, and
determine all suits between any members of government or the
government and any other party. Judges shall sit for natural life and
be replaced by their tribe as needed. Judicare shall be these peoples
titles.
5. A Dictator who will be Nominated by the Assembly,
confirmed by the Senate, and who barring illegality shall sit for
life. He shall have full power over the Army during war, police in
peace, and shall be the executive of the State. He shall be aided by
three Praetors – who shall act as Junior officers taking such roles
as he shall delegate them. August for the Dictator. Patrician for
the others will be their titles. The Dictator shall have 50 lictors
to protect his person.
The world will be a generally
'industry agriculture' fantasy world much like the Late Roman Empire
but lacking most slavery – except as a punishment or in cases of
war captures – but with a bite of Christian Germanic flourish. We
will call the the 'state' we are outlining 'Aquila'.
⚜ THE
CONSTITUTIONAL CHARTER OF AQUILA ⚜
Ratified by the Assembly and Senate in the First Year of the Eagle, for the Perpetuation of Order and the Preservation of Service.
PREAMBLE
Let it be known to all generations, that the People of Aquila, descended from the Founders, united by Duty and Faith, do ordain this Charter to establish a Commonwealth of Order and Virtue; that Service be rewarded, that Justice prevail, that the strong protect the weak, and that all may live under the unbroken wings of the Eagle.
For by Service we are ennobled, by Law we are bound, and by Faith we are sustained.
TITLE I – OF THE STATE AND ITS PEOPLE
Article I – The Nature of the Commonwealth
Aquila shall be a Commonwealth of Tribes, bound in unity under a single Dictator, governed by the Law, and administered through the organs of Assembly, Senate, and Court.
The Sovereignty of the State resides in the Service of its Citizens, and from that Service flows the Franchise, the Law, and the Sword.
Article II – Citizenship and the Franchise
All born of two lawful citizens are Citizens of Aquila.
All born or sworn into Service—military or civil—shall upon honorable completion be entitled to the Franchise of the Tribe.
Citizens who have not rendered Service shall have all rights of protection and property but not the Vote.
The Vote shall be exercised only within one’s Tribe.
Article III – The Service Oath
All who serve the State shall swear:
“To Aquila, I give my labor and my life; to my Tribe, my faith; to my fellows, my loyalty; and to Justice, my conscience. May the Eagle judge me if I betray this oath.”
TITLE II – OF THE TRIBES
Article IV – The Tribal Constitutions
Each of the Fifty Tribes shall govern its own affairs in accordance with the general laws of the Commonwealth, maintaining:
A Tribal Council of not fewer than twenty Servitors.
A Constabulary Militia to preserve order and defend the lands.
A Tribunal to hear cases within its borders.
The right to select Ten Representatives to the People’s Assembly.
No Tribe shall coin money, raise armies, or conduct diplomacy without the Dictator’s leave.
TITLE III – OF THE PEOPLE’S ASSEMBLY
Article V – Composition
The People’s Assembly shall consist of Five Hundred Members, Ten from each Tribe, known as Nobilii Populi.
Article VI – Term and Conduct
Members shall serve a single term of five years, not to be renewed. They shall receive no stipend beyond their needs, that their service remain pure and temporary.
Article VII – Tribunes of the People
The Assembly shall elect from its number Five Tribunes to preside over its sessions:
The High Tribune (Primus Nobilius), who shall speak for the Assembly.
The Junior Tribune (Secundus Nobilius), who shall manage its correspondence.
Three Third Tribunes (Tertii Nobilii), who shall chair its committees.
Each Tribune shall be attended by Ten Lictors, the symbol of lawful authority.
Article VIII – Powers of the Assembly
To propose and pass civil law.
To nominate candidates for Dictator.
To levy taxes and approve expenditures.
To maintain a record of Service Rolls and Census.
To recall representatives for misconduct by a two-thirds vote.
TITLE IV – OF THE SENATE
Article IX – Composition
The Senate shall consist of One Hundred and Fifty Illustrious Senators, drawn from those who have completed honorable service in the Assembly.
Senators hold their office for life, or until resignation.
Article X – Officers of the Senate
The Senate shall elect:
Two Consuls, as joint presiding officers for seven years.
A Parliamentarian, to ensure conformity with Law.
A Clerk, to record proceedings.
A Legate, to serve as envoy and investigator of the State.
Article XI – Powers of the Senate
To confirm or deny the nomination of the Dictator.
To ratify treaties, declarations of war, and foreign missions.
To advise upon matters of Law, Faith, and Constitution.
To sit as the Court of Honor for disputes among the Nobility.
Article XII – Guard of the Senate
Twenty-five Lictors shall guard the Senate Chamber and enforce its decrees.
TITLE V – OF THE COURT OF JUDICARE
Article XIII – Composition
The Court shall consist of Fifty Judges, one from each Tribe, serving for natural life.
Article XIV – The Tribunal of Three
From among their number, three shall be chosen each decade to form the Sitting Tribunal of Judicare.
This body shall:
Determine the constitutionality of all laws and decrees.
Judge disputes between organs of the State.
Protect the rights of citizens against unlawful seizure or arrest.
Article XV – Independence of the Court
The Judicare shall answer only to the Law and to God.
No Dictator, Senator, or Tribune shall interfere in its deliberations.
TITLE VI – OF THE DICTATOR
Article XVI – Election and Confirmation
The Dictator, titled August of Aquila, shall be nominated by the People’s Assembly and confirmed by the Senate by a two-thirds vote.
Once confirmed, he shall hold the office for life, unless removed for treason or incapacity.
Article XVII – Powers of the Dictator
To command all military and constabulary forces.
To enforce the laws of the Commonwealth.
To appoint officers of administration and command.
To proclaim war with the consent of the Senate.
To issue decrees in times of emergency, subject to later judicial review.
Article XVIII – The Praetors
The Dictator shall appoint three Praetors (Patricians) to assist in governance:
Praetor Militum: for the Armies.
Praetor Civium: for the Civil Orders.
Praetor Legum: for Law and Procedure.
Each may act with delegated authority in his absence.
Article XIX – Succession
Upon the death of the Dictator, the Assembly shall within one year nominate a successor, the Senate confirming the choice.
Until that confirmation, the three Praetors shall jointly serve as Triumvirate Regent.
Article XX – Limit of Power
The Dictator shall be supreme only so long as he remains lawful.
If he violates the Charter, the Judicare may pronounce Breach of August Authority, whereupon the Senate and Assembly may remove him by unanimous decree.
TITLE VII – OF LAW AND JUSTICE
Article XXI – The Law of Aquila
All laws shall conform to the Constitution and be written in the High Aquilan tongue.
No law shall be retroactive, nor punish a man for an act lawful at its commission.
Article XXII – Rights of the Citizen
Every citizen has:
Right to fair trial before his peers.
Right to appeal to the Judicare.
Right to property and inheritance.
Right to serve the State in honor.
Freedom of worship in manners not contrary to the Law or public virtue.
Article XXIII – Justice and Punishment
Justice shall be corrective, not cruel;
Punishment shall befit the crime and preserve the soul’s redemption.
Slavery is forbidden save as lawful penalty or in war captivity.
TITLE VIII – OF SYMBOLS AND RITES
Article XXIV – The Eagle of Aquila
The Golden Eagle shall be the emblem of the Commonwealth.
It shall bear in one talon the fasces of authority, in the other the olive branch of peace.
Its gaze shall be ever eastward, toward the rising sun of renewal.
Article XXV – The Oath of Renewal
Each year, on the Festival of Founding, all magistrates and officers shall renew the Service Oath before the Senate and People, pledging again their lives to the Commonwealth.
TITLE IX – OF AMENDMENT AND PERPETUITY
Article XXVI – Amendment
Amendments to this Charter may be proposed by either Assembly or Senate, and shall require:
Two-thirds vote of the proposing chamber.
Ratification by three-quarters of the Tribes.
Approval by the Judicare for constitutional conformity.
Article XXVII – Perpetuity
This Charter shall endure until lawfully amended or replaced by the united will of the Servient Order, and may never be suspended save by the Judicare in case of civil dissolution.
EPILOGUE
Thus is founded the Commonwealth of Aquila —
A realm where Duty is Nobility,
where the Sword serves the Law,
and where the Law guards the People.
So let it be written under the wings of the Eagle,
and so may it endure unto the ages.
⚜ THE CEREMONIAL OATH AND INVESTITURE CODE OF AQUILA ⚜
Sanctified by the Senate, the Assembly, and the Court of Judicare, in the Name of Duty and Service.
PRELUDE
Let the horns be sounded, and the banners raised;
Let the people gather beneath the vault of the Eagle;
For Service is Nobility, and Nobility is the soul of Aquila.
I. THE INVESTITURE OF THE DICTATOR (AUGUSTUS AQUILAE)
The Setting:
Within the Hall of the Twin Thrones, beneath the Great Eagle of gold and alabaster. The Senate stands robed in crimson, the Assembly in white, and the Judicare in grey.
A marble basin of consecrated water stands before the dais; the Eagle Diadem and Seal of Command rest upon crimson silk.
Ritual of the Assembly:
High Tribune:
“Who comes before the People of Aquila to bear the burden of command?”
Chamberlain of the Senate:
“He who was chosen by the Tribes, confirmed by the Senate, and judged worthy by the Law — let him approach.”
(The Dictator-elect kneels before the dais.)
The Oath of Office (spoken by the Dictator-elect):
“I, [Name], Servitor of Aquila, do swear by the Light of Duty and the Honor of Service,
To guard the Commonwealth as father guards child,
To wield the Sword only for justice,
To preserve the Law and obey it first myself,
To defend the weak, to honor the strong,
And to place the good of Aquila above all desire and fear.
So may the Eagle see me,
And so may my name be judged among the worthy.”
The Anointing and Crowning:
The High Tribune anoints the brow with consecrated oil.
The Two Consuls place upon him the Eagle Diadem, symbol of vigilance and virtue.
The Parliamentarian presents the Seal of Command, bearing the image of the bound fasces.
The Judicare Primus touches his shoulder with the Rod of Justice, signifying lawful rule.
All in Unison:
“Rise, Augustus of Aquila! By Service, Sovereignty; by Duty, Dominion!”
(The horns sound thrice; fifty lictors step forward in salute.)
II. THE INDUCTION OF SENATORS (ILLUSTRII SENATUS)
Setting:
The Forum of Marble, before the Eagle Standard and the Flame of Virtue.
Each new Senator approaches the Flame bearing a scroll of his Service Record.
The Consular Call:
“Who seeks to enter the Hall of Counsel?”
“Those who have served the People and been found steadfast.”
Ritual of the Scrolls:
Each Senator-elect places his scroll upon the altar flame, saying:
“Let my deeds be as fire, consumed but not forgotten;
Let my name be recorded in the Senate of Aquila.”
The Oath of the Illustrious:
“I swear upon the Flame and the Eagle,
To advise with honesty, to deliberate with restraint,
To guard the Charter, and to speak for the memory of the State.
I shall bow to no passion but Reason,
And serve no master but Law.
So may the Flame judge my counsel.”
The Consuls then place upon each shoulder the Mantle of Scarlet — emblem of wisdom and sacrifice.
Consuls Together:
“Be now Illustrious, and bear the burden of counsel.”
(The Flame is covered with a bronze lid until the next investiture.)
III. THE RENEWAL OF THE SERVICE OATH
Setting:
Every Year, upon the Day of Founding, in the open Forum of the Eagle.
All classes—Servitors, Citizens, Nobilii, Senators, Judges, and the Dictator himself—stand beneath the banners of their Tribes.
The Flame of Virtue is relit, and the Dictator stands before it.
The Dictator’s Invocation:
“By the wings of the Eagle and the bond of the Law,
We stand again as one people, one duty, one destiny.”
The People respond:
“By Service we rise, by Duty we endure!”
The Service Oath (recited by all Servitors):
“I serve Aquila in strength and in sorrow.
I give my hand to my Tribe, my arm to my fellows,
My heart to the Commonwealth, and my soul to Justice.
May my service be my crown,
And my faith the light of my children.”
The Benediction of the High Tribune:
“As the Eagle soars above tempest and thunder,
So shall Aquila stand above all strife.
Serve well, and be remembered.
Fail not, and be forgiven.
Forget not, for the State endures.”
(All raise their right hands in salute to the Eagle Standard. The Flame burns until dawn.)
IV. THE PRAETORIAL OATH
Before assuming office, each Patrician Praetor stands before the Dictator and swears:
“I shall be the hand of the Dictator,
The voice of his will, and the conscience of his command.
Where I walk, Justice shall follow;
Where I rule, Mercy shall temper Law.
As I have served, so shall I govern.
May Aquila guide me in all.”
V. THE CONCLUSION OF CEREMONY
The Parliamentarian intones:
“By these oaths, the State is renewed.
The Law lives, the Service endures,
And the Flame of Virtue burns anew.”
All respond:
“So let it be under the wings of the Eagle.
Virtus per Officium! — Power through Service!”
(The bells of the Tribes sound across the city, and the lictors march in procession through the avenues of banners.)
⚜ THE CALENDAR OF STATE AND SACRED DAYS OF AQUILA ⚜
Codified under the August [Name], in the 1st Century of the Eagle.
I. THE AQUILAN YEAR
The year of Aquila is reckoned from the Day of Founding, divided into Ten Months of Thirty-Six Days, followed by Five Holy Days Outside of Time, known as the Interregnum of Renewal.
Each month bears the name of a Virtue and is presided over by a civic feast, a military remembrance, and a religious observance.
The months correspond roughly to seasons as follows:
Month Virtue Season Patron Symbol
I. Servitor Duty Early Spring The Rising Eagle
II. Fidelis Loyalty Late Spring The Bound Fasces
III. Concordia Concord Early Summer The Joined Hands
IV. Fortitudo Strength Midsummer The Sword Upright
V. Justitia Justice Late Summer The Scales and Torch
VI. Pietas Piety Early Autumn The Laurel Crown
VII. Industria Labor Mid Autumn The Hammer and Plow
VIII. Patientia Endurance Late Autumn The Shield and Oak
IX. Honoris Honor Winter The Laurel Wreath
X. Sapientia Wisdom Deep Winter The Book and Lamp
II. THE CIVIC FEASTS OF THE MONTHS
I. Month of SERVITOR – Feast of the Founding
Feast: Dies Aquilae — The Day of Founding
Observance: The Dictator renews his Oath before the Senate and the Tribes.
All Servitors parade before the Forum, banners unfurled.
New citizens take their first Oath of Service.
“By Service, the world was raised from chaos.”
Rite: The Flame of Virtue is lit anew. The people fast the day before, feast the day after.
II. Month of FIDELIS – Day of Vows
Feast: Fides Vincula — The Binding of Faith
Observance: Citizens renew marriage, friendship, and oaths of loyalty.
Children of age sixteen are presented for civic initiation.
“Loyal hearts are the mortar of the State.”
Rite: Pairs clasp hands before the altar of Concordia; ribbons of red and white are tied about the wrists.
III. Month of CONCORDIA – Day of the Tribes
Feast: Conventus Tribus — The Gathering of the Tribes
Observance: Delegations from all Tribes meet in the capital.
Minor disputes are settled by common feast rather than judgment.
Rite: Each Tribe bears offerings of bread, oil, and wine to the Great Forum; one loaf is broken for all.
“Many banners, one Eagle.”
IV. Month of FORTITUDO – Day of the Sword
Feast: Dies Gladii — The Day of the Sword
Observance: Honors are given to the fallen soldiers of Aquila.
The Dictator leads a procession to the Field of Valor.
Rite: The names of the dead are read aloud by the Praetor Militum.
Citizens lay iron laurels at the cenotaph.
No weapon may be drawn in anger this day.
“He who dies in Service, lives in Honor.”
V. Month of JUSTITIA – Festival of Scales
Feast: Luminis Legum — The Illumination of Law
Observance: Judges and Advocates rededicate their service to the Law.
The Judicare convenes in open court, allowing petitions of any citizen.
Rite: The Flame of Justice is carried through the streets, borne by twelve lictors.
All decrees are read aloud for public hearing.
“The Law does not sleep, for the Eagle never closes its eyes.”
VI. Month of PIETAS – Day of the Ancestors
Feast: Memoria Majorum — The Remembrance of the Elders
Observance: Families gather at tombs and hearths, offering oil lamps and wreaths of rosemary.
The Senate sits in silent vigil.
Rite: The Dictator offers libations at the Tomb of the Founders; the Consuls burn incense to the Unknown Servitor.
“The living are the guardians of the dead.”
VII. Month of INDUSTRIA – Feast of Hands
Feast: Opera Publica — The Great Labor
Observance: A civic festival of work — bridges repaired, walls whitewashed, fountains restored.
All Servitors labor one day without pay for the good of their city.
Rite: Guilds and craftsmen march with their tools raised high.
The Dictator walks among them without regalia, bearing hammer or plow.
“Work ennobles more than birth.”
VIII. Month of PATIENTIA – Day of Trials
Feast: Probatio Virtutis — The Testing of Virtue
Observance: Games of endurance, contests of oratory, and rites of penance.
Those who have failed in duty atone through public service or fast.
Rite: Ash is placed upon the brow, and one day of silence is kept.
“Endure, and you shall overcome.”
IX. Month of HONORIS – Day of Crowns
Feast: Laurea Victorum — The Crowning of the Worthy
Observance: Awards of merit and valor are conferred.
The Assembly presents civic laurels to heroes, scholars, and benefactors.
Rite: Laurel crowns are placed upon the heads of the honored; the Dictator proclaims their deeds before the Eagle.
“To serve with honor is to live beyond death.”
X. Month of SAPIENTIA – Day of Reflection
Feast: Noctem Lampadarum — The Night of Lamps
Observance: A quiet festival of learning and remembrance.
Schools, libraries, and temples remain open through the night; citizens write letters to future generations.
Rite: Lamps are placed in every window; the streets glow with golden light.
The people read aloud the Charter and Oath of Service.
“Wisdom is the light by which Service finds its way.”
III. THE INTERREGNUM OF RENEWAL
After the tenth month, five holy days exist outside the calendar.
They are not numbered, for they belong to no time but themselves.
Dies Tacitus – The Silent Day: a day of rest and fasting; all bells are stilled.
Dies Penitentia – The Day of Reckoning: debts of honor are paid or forgiven.
Dies Novus – The Day of Forging: new laws are proclaimed; old records sealed.
Dies Flammae – The Day of Flame: the Eternal Fire is rekindled.
Dies Renovationis – The Day of Renewal: the Oath of Service is spoken; the year begins anew.
“From the ashes of the year, Aquila rises again.”
IV. RITES OF MOURNING
For a Citizen
A white shroud, a sprig of laurel, and the recitation of the Citizen’s Prayer:
“He served the Law, and the Law remembers.”
For a Servitor
A black banner trimmed in gold; six comrades bear the bier.
“He bore the weight; we carry the memory.”
For a Senator or Tribune
Procession through the Forum, silent bells, and the burning of the deceased’s mantle:
“His counsel has returned to the Flame.”
For a Dictator (Augustus)
The city fasts three days; the Eagle banners are veiled in grey.
The Praetors light the Torch of Vigil upon the Capitol, and the body lies in state before the Flame of Virtue.
Upon the third night, the lictors bear his bier through the Forum to the Tomb of the Augusti.
“The Eagle sleeps, but does not die.”
V. CONCLUSION
Thus flows the rhythm of the Aquilan year —
From Duty’s dawn to Wisdom’s dusk, from Oath to Renewal —
Each day sanctified by Service, each act bound by Law,
That the People may remember they are the living body of Aquila.
“As the year renews the earth,
So Service renews the soul.
For under the wings of the Eagle,
Time itself is made sacred.”
✠ The Litany of the Eagle ✠
The Common Prayer of the Citizens of Aquila
To be recited at Dawn and Dusk throughout the Commonwealth
I. The Dawn Invocation — “Ad Solem Surgentem”
(Said as the Sun rises, facing East)
Leader (Pontifex or Senior Officer):
Citizens of Aquila, lift thine eyes to the East, where the light first touches our land.
All:
From darkness we arise, beneath the wings of the Eagle!
Leader:
Who shelters the weak, who remembers the fallen, who guards the law and the hearth?
All:
Aquila shelters, remembers, and guards.
Leader:
By Service we are ennobled. By Duty we are bound. By Honor we endure.
All:
We serve that others may dwell in peace.
Leader:
Who grants us the peace of labor, the pride of order, the mercy of law?
All:
The Commonwealth grants it, by our toil, by our oath, by our blood.
Leader:
Then let the banners be lifted, and the forge and plow begin anew!
All:
As the Eagle soars, so may our works rise to Heaven!
II. The Midday Reflection — “In Medio Diei”
(Recited silently or communally when the bell of the civic hour sounds)
“Let no citizen forget that his strength is the strength of the whole.
Let no soldier forget that his courage is the shield of the weak.
Let no magistrate forget that his justice is the light of the State.
And let all remember: we are not masters, but servants of the Law.”
(Moment of Silence — three heartbeats, heads bowed)
III. The Dusk Benediction — “Ad Solem Occidentem”
(Said as the Sun sets, facing West)
Leader:
Citizens of Aquila, the light fades, yet the Eagle watches still.
All:
Even in shadow, we stand beneath its wings.
Leader:
This day we have labored, we have judged, we have fought — in service and in duty.
Let our works be weighed, and our hearts be found steadfast.
All:
By Service, Honor, and Law — we are made whole.
Leader:
Who guards the sleepers, the widowed, and the unborn?
All:
Aquila guards, through her sons and daughters.
Leader:
Let us commend our deeds to the memory of the Fathers, and to the promise of our children.
All:
From the ashes of the past, may the Eagle rise forever!
Leader:
In peace we rest, in vigilance we remain, in unity we endure.
All:
Glory to Aquila — One Commonwealth, under Heaven.
IV. The Creed of Citizenship — “Symbolum Aquilinum”
(Recited on days of oath renewal, state ceremony, or battle)
I am a Citizen of Aquila.
I serve, that Order may reign.
I labor, that others may live.
I obey, that the Law may endure.
My hand for the plow, my shield for the weak,
My sword for the law, my life for the Commonwealth.
In the balance of Service and Freedom,
In the fellowship of Tribe and Senate,
In the mercy of the Eagle’s shadow —
I stand.
So may my name be written in the rolls of the faithful,
And my deeds remembered in the halls of the Just.
Gloria Aquilae Aeternae — Glory to the Eternal Eagle!
V. Musical and Processional Notes
At dawn: horns of silver are sounded three times before the opening verse.
At dusk: a single bronze bell tolls as the final “Glory to the Eternal Eagle” is said.
During war or crisis: the Litany is to be spoken in full at all camps and watchtowers, with the Praetors and Centurions leading.
During peace: every citizen recites the Dawn Invocation privately or communally in their household or workplace, reaffirming civic unity.
✠ The Antiphons and Processional Order of the Litany of the Eagle ✠
Ritual Music and Marching Sequence of the Commonwealth of Aquila
Composed for the Dawn and Dusk Offices of the Civil Religion
I. The Processional Order
The Litany of the Eagle is performed twice daily — once at dawn, once at dusk — in every city, fortress, and village square of Aquila.
Each performance follows the same sacred order, expressing unity between civil and military life.
1. The Order of Procession
(All stand in two facing ranks: civic on the right, military on the left)
Standard Bearers of the Tribes — fifty banners, each embroidered with its tribal totem and colors.
The Lictors of the Dictator — fifty in number, helmed and cloaked in crimson, bearing the fasces wreathed with silver olive leaves.
The High Tribune and the Consuls — robed in white with gold trim, bearing the Eagle-Standard of the Commonwealth.
The Choir of Youths (the Novae) — boys and girls of service age, carrying lamps or laurel branches.
The Veterans and Magistrates — cloaked in deep blue, signifying the continuity of service.
The Citizenry — craftsmen, scholars, farmers, gathered in ordered ranks by trade or guild.
The Clerks of the Law — carrying tablets inscribed with the Constitution of Aquila.
The Pontifex of the Eagle — last to enter, bearing the bronze effigy of the Eagle with outstretched wings, set upon a gilded pole.
The procession enters the Forum (or parade ground) to the sound of the First Antiphon.
II. The Musical Antiphons
Each antiphon alternates between Choir and People, with the Horn Corps and Drums of the Watch providing rhythm and solemn cadence.
The melodies follow Aquilan mode — pentatonic minor with solemn rising thirds, imitating the cry of an eagle in flight.
1. The First Antiphon — Adventus Aquilae (The Coming of the Eagle)
Choir:
Ex oriente surget lumen Aquilae,
(From the East rises the light of the Eagle,)
Ex umbris oritur ordo novus,
(From shadow arises the new order.)
People (respond):
Surgimus in lumine eius,
(We rise in its light,)
Sub alis eius invenimus pacem.
(Under its wings we find peace.)
(Drums beat thrice; horns sound one long note to mark the Eagle’s arrival at the dais.)
2. The Second Antiphon — Carmen Civium (The Song of the Citizens)
Choir:
Who labors in peace builds the pillar of the realm;
Who serves in war defends its crown.
People:
One Law, One Service, One Aquila.
Choir:
Blood and oath, toil and grace,
bind us in the circle of the faithful.
People:
By Service we are raised; by Duty we are known.
(Bells sound softly. The banners of all 50 tribes are dipped toward the Eagle Standard.)
3. The Third Antiphon — Militia et Pax (War and Peace)
Leader (High Tribune):
What keeps the peace when men forget the Law?
Choir:
The watchman’s blade, the soldier’s vow.
Leader:
And who shall guard the hearts of men?
Choir and People together:
Justice, borne by the wings of the Eagle!
(At this point, soldiers present arms; magistrates raise their right hands in salute. Drums shift to half tempo.)
4. The Fourth Antiphon — Memoria Fidelium (The Memory of the Faithful)
(Sung at dusk or at funerary observances.)
Choir:
Remember, O Commonwealth, the fallen sons,
whose dust guards thy fields, whose names gird thy walls.
People:
They are not lost, but gathered into the shadow of the Eagle.
Choir:
Their deeds are stars in the firmament of duty,
and their silence speaks in our oaths.
People (kneeling):
Requiescant sub alis Aquilae.
(May they rest beneath the wings of the Eagle.)
(Horns fall silent; a single bell tolls thrice. The Eagle Standard is lowered.)
III. The Marching Cadence
Between antiphons, the drums maintain a measured cadence of 6 beats per line, representing the six pillars of the Aquilan State:
Service, Law, Duty, Order, Faith, and Unity.
At dawn: the cadence ascends, 1-2-3 / 1-2-3, symbolizing the rising of the Eagle.
At dusk: it descends, 3-2-1 / 3-2-1, signifying the Eagle’s return to its aerie.
The Horn Corps plays in triple call, echoing through the city:
"Rise – Serve – Endure" at dawn,
"Rest – Remember – Guard" at dusk.
IV. The Concluding Procession
After the final antiphon, the Pontifex blesses the crowd:
“As the Eagle watches, so may you watch.
As the Law endures, so may your faith endure.
As the light returns, so may your service be renewed.”
All respond:
Gloria Aquilae Aeternae!
(Glory to the Eternal Eagle!)
Then the banners are lifted, horns sound the Triumphal Tone, and all march outward in the same order as they entered — but in reverse direction, symbolizing the unity of return: from the many back to the one Commonwealth.
✠ Hymnus Triumphalis Aquilae ✠
The Triumphal Hymn of the Eternal Eagle
To be sung only at Coronations, Victories, and the Founding Feast of the Commonwealth
Set for full choir, horns, drums, and the Great Bell of Aquila
I. The Procession of Triumph
(The people gather before the Forum or Basilica of the Eagle. Bells toll seven times — one for each virtue of the Commonwealth: Faith, Duty, Honor, Law, Service, Mercy, Unity.)
Pontifex Maximus raises the Standard of Aquila. The Dictator, Consuls, and Senate stand beneath the Eagle Banner.
Herald of the State:
People of Aquila, behold! The Eagle descends once more upon her children!
Crown and Standard are united — Victory and Virtue made one!
(Horns of silver sound the Triumphal Call, echoing thrice through the Forum.)
II. The Hymn Begins — “Cantus Gloriae”
1. The Invocation of Light
Choir:
Ex tenebris surrexit Aquila,
(From darkness has the Eagle arisen,)
in flamma aurorae alas expandens.
(Spreading her wings in the flame of dawn.)
People:
Exultemus in lumine eius,
(Let us rejoice in her light,)
quia per eam salus civitatis manet.
(For through her endures the salvation of the State.)
Choir:
Behold her feathers of gold and iron,
cleansed by battle, tempered in justice.
People:
Our hearts are her hearth; our hands her flight.
2. The Antiphon of Service
Choir (in triple harmony):
Servire est regnare!
(To serve is to reign!)
People (thundering reply):
Servire est regnare!
Choir:
He who bears the plow serves the State.
He who bears the sword guards the Law.
He who bears the oath sustains the world.
People:
All serve, and in service are made noble.
(Drums strike the “Pace of Triumph” — six deep notes repeated three times. Horns answer in high triple call.)
3. The Chorus of Victory
Pontifex Maximus:
Who has broken the spear of the tyrant?
Choir:
The sons and daughters of Aquila!
Pontifex:
Who has guarded the law from decay?
Choir:
The servants of the Commonwealth!
Pontifex:
Who has kept faith beneath the storm and flame?
Choir and People (together, crescendo):
The Faithful of the Eagle!
All:
Victoria! Victoria! Gloria Aquilae Aeternae!
(Victory! Victory! Glory to the Eternal Eagle!)
(Fire beacons are lit across the city, and the Eagle Standard is raised to full height.)
4. The Hymn of Coronation
(Sung only when a new Dictator or Consul is crowned.)
Choir:
Blessed is he who bears the burden of command,
who wears the laurel of service, not dominion.
Pontifex:
May he rule by Law, not by whim.
May he guard by duty, not desire.
May he remember that the crown is not owned, but borne.
People:
Aquila coronat, non possidet.
(The Eagle crowns, she does not possess.)
Choir:
Ascend, O August, beneath the shadow of the wings,
Thou servant of the Law, thou keeper of the peace.
People (bowing):
Sub alis Aquilae regna, non regnaris.
(Beneath the wings of the Eagle, rule — and be ruled.)
(The Pontifex anoints the Dictator’s brow with oil, saying, “Rise, August of Aquila. Serve as you would be served.”)
5. The Hymn of Foundation
(Sung each year on the Founding Day, and at the dedication of great works.)
Choir:
From the stones of duty we raised these walls,
from the ashes of discord we forged one peace.
People:
We built not for glory, but for endurance.
We sowed not for harvest, but for posterity.
Choir:
Behold, the Eagle rests upon her mountain,
and her gaze endures from age to age.
People (softly):
Sicut erat in principio, et nunc, et semper,
et in saecula saeculorum Aquila.
(As it was in the beginning, now and forever, the Eagle.)
(The Great Bell tolls once — the sound of Eternity — and the Choir resumes in full voice.)
6. The Final Chorus — “Exaltatio Aquilae” (The Exaltation of the Eagle)
All choirs, horns, and drums together:
Rise, O Eagle of the Eternal Law!
Spread thy wings over the sons of service!
Shine upon our fields and towers!
Remember our dead, bless our living!
Let Justice be thy left wing, and Mercy thy right;
Let Truth be thy flight, and Honor thy cry!
For as long as hearts beat and hands serve,
The Eagle shall never fall!
All (in unison, as torches are raised):
Gloria Aquilae Aeternae! Gloria Aquilae Aeternae!
(Glory to the Eternal Eagle! Glory to the Eternal Eagle!)
(The music ends with a triple horn-call: one for Heaven, one for Earth, one for the Commonwealth.)
✠ Rituals of the Twin Consuls and the Dictator’s Throne ✠
Sacred Investiture of the August, Consuls, and Tribunes of Aquila
I. Preparation of the Forum
Setting: The Grand Forum of Aquila, beneath the Great Eagle Banner.
Marble dais at center, with three elevated thrones: the central for the Dictator (Augustus), flanked left and right by the Consuls’ thrones. The High Tribune stands slightly forward to officiate.
Fifty lictors line the sides of the dais; banners of all fifty Tribes drape the Forum in gold and crimson.
Pontifex Maximus (PM) blesses the space with consecrated oil, sprinkling water thrice.
Pontifex Maximus (intoning):
“Let the Forum of the Eagle be cleansed of shadow and doubt.
Let the Law and Service shine as flame and beacon.
May the hearts of the faithful rise as the wings of the Eagle!”
(All present kneel; a bell tolls seven times — one for each virtue of Aquila.)
II. Procession of the Officers
Standard Bearers of the Tribes — advance to the dais, raising the Eagle Standard.
The Dictator (Augustus) — led forward by the High Tribune, flanked by fifty lictors, head bowed.
The Twin Consuls (Consules) — step forward on either side of the Dictator, each accompanied by their own ten lictors.
Senators, Judges, and Tribunes — form a semicircle around the dais.
Choir and Horn Corps — sound three long tones, signaling the start of the rite.
III. The Oath of the Dictator (Augustus)
The High Tribune steps forward, holding the Eagle Diadem and Seal of Command.
High Tribune (HT):
“Who stands before the People of Aquila to bear the weight of Command and the Law?”
Dictator (kneeling, voice solemn):
“I, [Name], Servitor of Aquila, do present myself to the Commonwealth.
I bear the oath, I bear the law, I bear the sword of the People.”
HT:
“By what virtue shall you govern?”
Dictator:
“By Service, by Justice, by Duty, and by Honor.”
(The High Tribune lifts the Eagle Diadem above the Dictator’s head.)
HT:
“Rise, Augustus of Aquila, chosen by the Tribes, confirmed by the Senate, consecrated by the Flame of Virtue!”
(Pontifex anoints the Dictator’s brow with sacred oil, then places the Seal of Command in his right hand. Fifty lictors kneel in salute. Horns sound thrice.)
IV. The Investiture of the Twin Consuls
The High Tribune now turns to the Consuls.
HT:
“Step forward, Consules of Aquila. By Law and by Oath, do you pledge to uphold the Commonwealth, to advise the August, and to protect the People with wisdom and strength?”
Consuls (in unison):
“We pledge, by the Flame and by the Eagle, to serve with honor and to guard the Law.”
(Pontifex drapes the Mantle of Scarlet over each Consul’s shoulders. The Clerk of the Senate presents each with the Scroll of Counsel.)
HT:
“Rise, Illustrious Consules, for your vigilance and wisdom shall uphold the Commonwealth alongside the August!”
(Drums beat once for each virtue; the crowd chants in unison: “Gloria Aquilae Aeternae!”)
V. The Consecration of the Tribunes
The three Tribunes approach, standing before the High Tribune.
HT:
“By the voice of the Council and the Oath of the People, do you swear to guide the Assembly, to protect the rights of the Tribes, and to uphold the dignity of the Law?”
Tribunes (in unison):
“We swear, by Service and by Virtue, to act in justice and counsel.”
(Pontifex lays a hand upon each Tribunus’ shoulder, chanting:)
“Patricii of Aquila, bear now the mantle of Nobility in Service. Let your wisdom and counsel rise as wings of the Eagle!”
(Ten lictors step forward to form a protective circle around the Tribunes.)
VI. The Elevation of the Thrones
Dictator’s Throne: The High Tribune leads the Dictator to the central throne. Pontifex raises the scepter and places it in his lap.
Consuls’ Thrones: The Consuls ascend to their flanking thrones.
Tribunes’ Position: They step to the front of the Assembly dais, forming the symbolic triangle of command: August at apex, Consuls at sides, Tribunes in counsel.
HT (intoning):
“Behold the triad of command: the August, the Consules, the Nobilii Tribunes.
By Law, by Service, by the Flame, the Commonwealth is consecrated!”
(Horn Corps signals the assembly; the Choir intones the opening bars of the Hymnus Triumphalis Aquilae in subdued tones.)
VII. The Benediction of the Commonwealth
Pontifex Maximus (raising the Bronze Rod of Justice):
“By the Flame of Virtue, by the Wing of the Eagle, by the Law of our Fathers, I bless this Throne and all who occupy it.
May the August govern with wisdom.
May the Consuls counsel with foresight.
May the Tribunes speak with justice.
And may the People ever prosper under their vigilance.”
All Present (chanting):
“Gloria Aquilae Aeternae! Gloria Aquilae Aeternae! Gloria Aquilae Aeternae!”
(The Great Bell tolls thrice; the Eagle Standard is lifted to full height; horns sound the Triumphal Call. Lictors and officials march in ceremonial departure.)
VIII. Closing of the Ritual
The Assembly disperses in silent respect.
Citizens remain in contemplation for three heartbeats in honor of the eternal service of the State.
The Dictator, Consuls, and Tribunes stand briefly in communion with the Flame of Virtue before resuming public duties.
The Litany of the Eagle may now be recited in full, followed by a civic feast or parade depending on the occasion.
This
liturgical rite cements the sacred hierarchy of Aquila — August,
Consuls, and Tribunes — in both the hearts of the people and the
eyes of the Eagle. The ceremonial language, gestures, and objects
(oil, mantles, scepter, Seal of Command) emphasize that authority
derives from Service and Law, not mere birth or ambition.
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