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The '''Ich Dynasty''' is the ruling family of the [[New Sammichian Empire]]. In addition to the modern-day Empire, the dynasty also produced monarchs for the [[Kingdom of Fulfwotz]] and even the ancient power of [[Xamichia]]. It is currently the most well-known, longest-surviving, and largest dynasty in the Shire. Over a dozen independent monarchies can claim distant relation to the influential family. It has ruled for well over two millennia, with relatively-brief periods of having been dethroned. The current Ich dynast is [[Emperor Sammus Mephistes Inigmax vos Ich II]]. The family's current seat is at [[Castle Mugg]] in [[Fulfwotz]], with its ancestral seat at [[Niflheim Palace]].
The Ich Dynasty is the current ruling family of the [[New Sammichian Empire]], as well as the preceding [[Kingdom of Fulfwotz]] and ancient empire of [[Xamichia]]. It is arguably the most well-known royal family in the world, and is by far the largest and longest-surviving in existence; Ich monarchs have ruled Sammichian dominions for well over two millennia and dozens of other noble and royal houses around the Shire can claim distant relation to the influential family. The current patriarch (or Dinastius) is [[Emperor Sammus Mephistes Inigmax vos Ich II]], who rules from [[Castle Mugg]] in [[Fulfwotz]]. Niflheim Palace in the northern Shire is the ancestral seat of the dynasty.  


The Ichs take their name from Ichira, a province in [[Xamichia]] of which they were appointed the governors (or ''Praetorae'') by Emperor Allexedes III of the Telsid Dynasty in the sixth century PRY. The first Ich praetorus was Callistes vos Ichira, commonly hailed as the legendary founder of the dynasty. Through a series of increasingly-convoluted political alliances and schemes, the Vos Ichira family was able to increase their standing and eventually overthrow the Telsid Dynasty, which had been impaired thanks to centuries of inbreeding. In 477 PRY, Thressindes vos Ichira became Emperor of Xamichia. The family's last name was changed soon after, following a rebellion and the razing of Ichira (which was in turn renamed the Niphuline). It was simply shortened to Ich, explaining the unusual nature of the name in Thrennexian conventions.
The Iches trace their lineage from the legendary Xamichine general Nypheres Ichira; after his successful conquest of the Niphuline region in the eighth century PRY, Empress Tenscipia of the Telsid Dynasty rewarded him by inducting him into the nobility (thus creating the House of Vos Ichira). She also decreed that the Niphuline should be renamed in his honor, becoming the Xamichine province of Ichirae. Despite this, she did not make him the governor (Praetorus) of the province as she did not completely trust him to not one day use such power against the Telsids. Over the years, the Vos Ichira family used their newfound social clout to soon become one of the most respected noble houses of Xamichia, famed for the generals and soldiers it produced, many of whom served as war advisors to the Emperors and Empresses. After Callistes vos Ichira guided Emperor Tartenses III through the Siege of Profira in the sixth century PRY, he and his ilk were finally appointed the Praetorae of Ichirae; just as Empress Tenscipia had feared of the family, Callistes almost immediately began plotting against the Telsid Dynasty.  


The Ich Dynasty, despite overseeing Xamichia at its greatest territorial extent as well as during the ''Mandatux Impiratia'' period of expansion, were instrumental in its downfall. It was under them that the Xamichine capital of Sarrimus slowly deteriorated and Fulfwotz became the de facto political center of the empire. Notorious Ich hot-headedness and hostility provoked other nations of the Shire who began picking at the massive dominion's borders. The state was threatened by rebellion in dozens of its provinces. In an effort to salvage what she could, Empress Flux dissolved Xamichia in 58 PRY, making the Ich Dynasty the rulers of an independent Fulfwotz. They would rule the Kingdom for nearly two-thousand years until they were deposed following the Revolution of 1681, only to regain power once again in the 1780s. After ruling as Kings and Queens for centuries, then-King Sammus M.I.v. Ich II crowned himself Emperor with the formation of the New Sammichian Empire in 1930.  
In 533 PRY, Thressindes, the son of Callistes, was recruited to the position of Magistrax Primus, the commander of the Emperor’s elite Magistrax Militae guard. At this point, the reigning Emperor Tartenses IV exemplified the decaying nature of Telsid monarchs after centuries of inbreeding in a dramatic manner; he was described by his contemporaries and court historians as only reaching a height of five feet, being completely hairless, and prone to both epileptic and psychotic episodes. His jaw was deformed to the point where he needed a translator who could dictate his speech into coherent Thrennexian. Tartenses IV was sterile, and being unable to bear children, rule would pass to one of his aunts or uncles upon his death. In 525 PRY, Tartenses died after a particularly violent seizure that came to him in the middle of the night. When alerted by his guards, Primus Thressindes vos Ichira immediately ordered the arrest of all five of the late emperor’s aunts and uncles, as well as his cousins and any living Telsid claimants to the throne. He then claimed the throne for himself, a move that was, in reality, welcomed by many Xamichine people who were dissatisfied with the ineffective and declining Telsid Dynasty. Thus, the House of Vos Ichira was established as the ruling dynasty under Emperor Thressindes vos Ichira. Not long after his coronation, a revolt was staged in the province of Ichirae; afterwards, the Ichira Dynasty shortened its name to today’s Ich in order to distance itself from the events of the rebellion, explaining its odd structure in Thrennexian linguistic conventions.  


The Ich family possesses cultural and political influence unrivaled by any other royal family in the world; throughout its lifespan, it has amassed thousands of priceless artifacts as well as an enormous fortune. It is unknown the extent of their wealth, but it is often hypothesized that the Ich Dynasty is the wealthiest family in the world. Their various Imperial Estates across the Shire, the majority of which are privately-owned by the family, retain a combined value of approximately $27 billion in their own right. The family is highly secretive about their affairs, so much about their personal assets remains unknown.
In general, members of the Ich Dynasty are characterized by their violence, cunning, lust for power, and explosive nature. These traits were so extremely prominent during their Xamichine rule that many historians theorize that the family may have had a genetic predisposition towards mental illnesses such as bipolarism and psychopathy. Their paranoia was another distinguishing characteristic -- for the better part of history, the Sammichian nobility was always viewed as a threat and attempts were made to restrict its power and influence. After the Chancelleric Interregnum in the 18th century in which the Dynasty was dethroned and then manipulated its way back into power, Ich kings and queens became noticeably more subdued and attentive to their public image.


== Imperial Estates ==
It is generally believed that the Ich Dynasty is the wealthiest family in the world, though not officially known. Over two thousand years of primacy have led to the creation of a immensely vast fortune, otherwise called the Dynastic Fortune. It contains everything from ancient gold-minted coins from around the world to today’s modern currency, treasure and plunder from countless wars, precious artifacts, priceless artwork, and the many Ich Imperial Estates, all of which are privately-owned. The estates alone come in at an estimated worth of $63.7 billion, which easily place it amongst the top five richest families in the world, and to say nothing of their liquid wealth and other physical assets, which are said to push the family’s net worth into the mid to upper hundreds of billions; some even claim they might be the world’s only trillionaires. None of this is public knowledge, as the Iches are extremely secretive, and all of their financiers tasked with managing and investing their fortune would not dare violate their lucrative contracts nor cross their powerful clients.


=== Bluepointe Manor ===
Under successive Ich rulers, who were some of, if not the most powerful individuals in the ancient world, history would see the brutal consolidation of Xamichine power over the Shire and its subsequent collapse; the rise of the repressive Orthodoxy in the Kingdom of Fulfwotz, the religious extremism inflicted upon its Demmatrodine neighbors, and the annihilation of the Church at the hands of the Dynasty; a renaissance that made a Sammichian dominion relevant in the world once again; a civil war that ousted the monarchy for over a century; an era of ruthless colonialism and imperialism that sparked the Great War, and the following reconstruction and leadership that ensured that the modern-day New Sammichian Empire is one of the Shire’s foremost nations.
 
=== Ich Imperial Estates ===
=== Castello Barsi ===
*Bluepointe Manor
 
*[[Castello Barsi]]
=== Castle Mugg ===
*[[Castle Mugg]]
Castle Mugg is the official residence of Emperor Sammus and all Fulfwotzian monarchs. It is located on an island in Enderfulf Bay, right off the coast of Fulfwotz.
*Castle Hyunadorea
 
*Madris Grotto
The island was originally the site of a trade depot prior to the hostile Xamichine takeover of Urite-controlled Fulwojka. After the Xamichine annexation of the region, Empress Phaxina I commissioned the construction of a fortress on the island where she would not be bothered by the sounds emanating from the colony's gold mines while visiting.
*Niflheim Palace
 
*Schloss Sammlutz
Empress Phaxina Magrania Vespuna vos Ichirae I sea Niphuline
*[[Villa se Vespania]]
 
=== Castle Hyunadorea ===
 
=== Madris Grotto ===
 
=== Niflheim Palace ===
 
=== Schloss Sammlutz ===
 
=== Villa se Vespania ===
The iconic Villa se Vespania (translating literally to Vespania's Villa) is the summer palace of the Ich family, located just outside of the village of Ville-de-Vespanne.
 
The palace was originally the site of a small manor house constructed in 1601, where Queen Cephula had confined her brother Prince Thediapus in the midst of his descent into madness. After his suicide in 1616, it was abandoned while the village of Ville-de-Fleuve was established nearby by the now-jobless former attendants of the estate. It would remain so for over a century until the exile of the Ich Dynasty during the Chancelleric Interregnum. Around 1766, the young Princess Vespania VII (who would soon become Queen of the New Chancelleric Kingdom of Fulfwotz) was diagnosed with Telsid Syndrome, a severe childhood vitamin deficiency-related disease which can be fatal if left untreated. The family's physicians advised a warm, sunny climate to alleviate her symptoms; her mother Princess Amphurna V managed to recover the deed to the land where the ruins of Thediapus' manor stood. The dynastic fortune supplied more than enough funds for the construction of a grander estate; construction commenced in 1767, and Amphurna provided every possible comfort for her daughter. On the property was a small mansion made of marble and yellow sunstone, an enormous garden filled with fountains and reflecting pools, an orangery, and a large greenhouse filled with exotic plants and animals. During Vespania's subsequent reign as Queen, the estate became her favored residence as she often split her time evenly between Fulfwotz and the villa. She initiated a large expansion of the structure in 1811, adding the massive Vasenian and Spiricine wings as well as the large Court of Triumph, transforming it into a fully-fledged palace and the largest of the Ich Dynasty's homes.
 
Unfortunately, this project eventually became one of the main grievances of the Broken Crown group, who accused the restored monarchy of using state funds to build its lavish palace; in reality, however, the entirety of it was funded by the dynastic fortune. Queen Vespania was tragically assassinated by the Broken Crown in 1817. The palace she so adored became her final resting place as her son King Spiricus built her funerary arch in the palace gardens.
 
After Vespania's death, the palace continued to be used by Spiricus, yet it underwent a period of neglect during the reign of King Phemenses III who preferred spending his time in Fulfwotz where he could be better exert his influence over the Kingdom's government. It is likely that Phemenses would have taken its caretakers and servants off of the government payroll and allow the palace to deteriorate were it not for the fact that it was the final resting place of his ancestor. Phemenses only visited the residence twice during the entirety of his reign. After his reclusive and hedonistic son King Drefnex eloped with the heiress Cassiopeia Viltvogel in 1900, he absconded to the Villa and resided there for three years until King Sammus II was crowned in 1903. Sammus evicted his father and his wife from the palace, and used the complex to entertain the Kingdom's elite with symphonies, balls, and garden parties. As the Great War mounted, Sammus spent more time away from the Villa. The palace remained relatively untouched by conflict, and King Sammus took advantage of this by sending his brother Prince Matares to the safety of the Villa in order to protect him from the strategic bombing being inflicted upon Fulfwotz. He remained there for several months until the capture of Ville-de-Vespanne by Liberator forces. Matares was placed under house arrest in the palace's Vasenian Wing, while the rest of the complex was requisitioned as a hospital in 1928.  
 
Today, the Villa se Vespania is one of the grandest homes in the Shire and is still privately-owned through the Dynastic Trust. Emperor Sammus still visits the palace regularly, spending the month of June in Ville-de-Vespanne. The palace grounds and portions of its interior are open to the public for the majority of the year while the Emperor is not in residence. The Fulfwotz Philharmonic Orchestra hosts their annual Summer Symphony in the Grand Ballroom every July. In 2015, the palace was placed on real estate website HomeHunt for an asking price of $25,000 as part of an April Fools' joke.

Latest revision as of 12:54, 22 May 2019

The Ich Dynasty is the current ruling family of the New Sammichian Empire, as well as the preceding Kingdom of Fulfwotz and ancient empire of Xamichia. It is arguably the most well-known royal family in the world, and is by far the largest and longest-surviving in existence; Ich monarchs have ruled Sammichian dominions for well over two millennia and dozens of other noble and royal houses around the Shire can claim distant relation to the influential family. The current patriarch (or Dinastius) is Emperor Sammus Mephistes Inigmax vos Ich II, who rules from Castle Mugg in Fulfwotz. Niflheim Palace in the northern Shire is the ancestral seat of the dynasty.

The Iches trace their lineage from the legendary Xamichine general Nypheres Ichira; after his successful conquest of the Niphuline region in the eighth century PRY, Empress Tenscipia of the Telsid Dynasty rewarded him by inducting him into the nobility (thus creating the House of Vos Ichira). She also decreed that the Niphuline should be renamed in his honor, becoming the Xamichine province of Ichirae. Despite this, she did not make him the governor (Praetorus) of the province as she did not completely trust him to not one day use such power against the Telsids. Over the years, the Vos Ichira family used their newfound social clout to soon become one of the most respected noble houses of Xamichia, famed for the generals and soldiers it produced, many of whom served as war advisors to the Emperors and Empresses. After Callistes vos Ichira guided Emperor Tartenses III through the Siege of Profira in the sixth century PRY, he and his ilk were finally appointed the Praetorae of Ichirae; just as Empress Tenscipia had feared of the family, Callistes almost immediately began plotting against the Telsid Dynasty.

In 533 PRY, Thressindes, the son of Callistes, was recruited to the position of Magistrax Primus, the commander of the Emperor’s elite Magistrax Militae guard. At this point, the reigning Emperor Tartenses IV exemplified the decaying nature of Telsid monarchs after centuries of inbreeding in a dramatic manner; he was described by his contemporaries and court historians as only reaching a height of five feet, being completely hairless, and prone to both epileptic and psychotic episodes. His jaw was deformed to the point where he needed a translator who could dictate his speech into coherent Thrennexian. Tartenses IV was sterile, and being unable to bear children, rule would pass to one of his aunts or uncles upon his death. In 525 PRY, Tartenses died after a particularly violent seizure that came to him in the middle of the night. When alerted by his guards, Primus Thressindes vos Ichira immediately ordered the arrest of all five of the late emperor’s aunts and uncles, as well as his cousins and any living Telsid claimants to the throne. He then claimed the throne for himself, a move that was, in reality, welcomed by many Xamichine people who were dissatisfied with the ineffective and declining Telsid Dynasty. Thus, the House of Vos Ichira was established as the ruling dynasty under Emperor Thressindes vos Ichira. Not long after his coronation, a revolt was staged in the province of Ichirae; afterwards, the Ichira Dynasty shortened its name to today’s Ich in order to distance itself from the events of the rebellion, explaining its odd structure in Thrennexian linguistic conventions.

In general, members of the Ich Dynasty are characterized by their violence, cunning, lust for power, and explosive nature. These traits were so extremely prominent during their Xamichine rule that many historians theorize that the family may have had a genetic predisposition towards mental illnesses such as bipolarism and psychopathy. Their paranoia was another distinguishing characteristic -- for the better part of history, the Sammichian nobility was always viewed as a threat and attempts were made to restrict its power and influence. After the Chancelleric Interregnum in the 18th century in which the Dynasty was dethroned and then manipulated its way back into power, Ich kings and queens became noticeably more subdued and attentive to their public image.

It is generally believed that the Ich Dynasty is the wealthiest family in the world, though not officially known. Over two thousand years of primacy have led to the creation of a immensely vast fortune, otherwise called the Dynastic Fortune. It contains everything from ancient gold-minted coins from around the world to today’s modern currency, treasure and plunder from countless wars, precious artifacts, priceless artwork, and the many Ich Imperial Estates, all of which are privately-owned. The estates alone come in at an estimated worth of $63.7 billion, which easily place it amongst the top five richest families in the world, and to say nothing of their liquid wealth and other physical assets, which are said to push the family’s net worth into the mid to upper hundreds of billions; some even claim they might be the world’s only trillionaires. None of this is public knowledge, as the Iches are extremely secretive, and all of their financiers tasked with managing and investing their fortune would not dare violate their lucrative contracts nor cross their powerful clients.

Under successive Ich rulers, who were some of, if not the most powerful individuals in the ancient world, history would see the brutal consolidation of Xamichine power over the Shire and its subsequent collapse; the rise of the repressive Orthodoxy in the Kingdom of Fulfwotz, the religious extremism inflicted upon its Demmatrodine neighbors, and the annihilation of the Church at the hands of the Dynasty; a renaissance that made a Sammichian dominion relevant in the world once again; a civil war that ousted the monarchy for over a century; an era of ruthless colonialism and imperialism that sparked the Great War, and the following reconstruction and leadership that ensured that the modern-day New Sammichian Empire is one of the Shire’s foremost nations.

Ich Imperial Estates