Category:Heroes' Guild of Imperia

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Revision as of 06:12, 5 February 2021 by Gigermann (talk | contribs) (Perception)
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The Heroes' Guild is a professional confraternity dedicated to helping ordinary folks with their problems "best solved with violence" when it is impossible or inconvenient for the realm's regular militia to get involved. The Guild's charter, as granted by individual realms' rulership, allows its members to bear arms, and to intervene martially on behalf of innocent citizens, and are generally exempted from otherwise-compulsory military duties (though they may still volunteer for military service).

Details

Ruler: The Grand Master
Seat: Guildhall of Heroes, The Capital, Generica

Tropes

Adventure Guild, The Order, Heroes “R” Us

Perception

The organization is seen as an old-and-tired "hammer wanting for a nail" that isn't as necessary as it was in the days of the Old Empire. Members are generally treated with a cautious respect, as they still have the right (and in some cases, the tendency) to dispense violence, and are expected to keep their word, so long as the rules (or contract) are followed.

Origin and History

Around 2000YA, as the Old Empire was at war abroad, and all the able-bodied fighting men were away, nearby barbarian tribes of all sorts were able to raid Imperial lands virtually unopposed. There would sometimes arise "peasant-heroes" from amongst those few that remained, who would fight the raiders. At one such time, a number of these peasant-heroes banded together to protect a town targeted by raiders, and through great personal sacrifice, saved the town from destruction. Emperor Genericus IV was so impressed with the bravery of this gathering that he granted them official charter to "defend the helpless" when the Emperor's own men could not. As other confraternities such as the Wizards' Guild and Merchants' Guild were coming into their own at the time, this new organization was dubbed the "Imperial Heroes' Guild." The Guild prospered and grew, in numbers and influence, over the following centuries. After the disintegration of the Old Empire in 1000YA, the Heroes' Guild continued to be recognized by the new nations that arose from its ashes. Although its official charter, to "defend the helpless," has never changed, the Guild's methods and practices have evolved to include bounty-hunting, crisis negotiation, monster-slaying, and getting the occasional stranded cat out of a tree.

Locations

Guildhall of Heroes, at the Capital, Generica

Guildhall of Heroes

The Guildhall of Heroes, the Guild's headquarters, is in the Capital, in Generica, run by the Grandmaster of the Guild, currently Válaris of Heroham. It is essentially a guildhall attached to a massive, well-appointed inn/tavern/pub where jobs are handed out and other business is conducted.

Chapter-Houses

  • Major chapter-houses exist in each kingdom, and some of the larger/more-important duchies
  • Other halls and chapter-houses exist in other cities, but are usually smaller; chapter-houses tend to be more of a low-key safe-house run by a Guild representative, who can also issue out jobs and otherwise carry out local Guild business.

Ranks and forms of address

  • Guild Rank 5: (Master X) The Most Honourable X, Grand Master of the Heroes’ Guild
  • Guild Rank 4: (Master X) The Honourable X, Seneschal/Marshal of the Heroes’ Guild
  • Guild Rank 4: (Master X) The Honourable X, Chapter Master of the Heroes’ Guild (or the [Town] Heroes’ Guild)
  • Guild Rank 3: Master X, [Officer] of the Heroes’ Guild (or the [Town] Heroes’ Guild)
    • Master-Sergeant
  • Guild Rank 1-2: X, Sergeant/Man-At-Arms/Cleric/
  • Guild Rank 0: Initiate of the Heroes’ Guild

Practices

Goals

"We take up arms, so the people don't have to." Their overall goal is to promote peace throughout the realms of Imperia.

General

  • When a citizen has a problem that he does not wish to take to the local magistrate or constabulary, or that said authorities have refused to deal with on his behalf, he can take his matter to the Heroes' Guild, who will take no payment for resolving the matter except for a future "favor," which they must not refuse
  • The Guild's charter(s) doesn't grant members actual legal authority to dispense justice, nor immunity from prosecution, but does grant them the benefit of doubt if charged with a crime in the course of executing their Guild duties. Members are expected to bring the accused before the local magistrate when applicable (generally only applies to the local citizenry)
  • The Guild accepts new members by member-invitation only, regardless of experience or obvious ability; everyone has some use to the Guild. Apprentices in the Guild are usually paired up with an experienced member, for training and monitoring purposes
  • Guild members help each other in times of need (sometimes for a Coin); this often includes legal intervention in cases where a member has been accused of a crime in the course of doing his job
  • Guild members have a wide range of services available to them (sometimes for a Coin, or provided by former-clients), including healing and, if needed, funerary services and widows' care; low-level apprentices are usually well taken care of, so they survive their early encounters to become productive Guild members
  • Once a member, always a member—unless you break the house rules
  • "Wall of Heroes" at Guild HQ records the most famous and heroic members, past and present.

Guild Rules

  • Guild business is Guild business, and no one else's.
  • The sovereign's business is not the Guild's business.
  • Most jobs offered are voluntary, though members are expected to accept some jobs [within a certain period] or risk membership being revoked. A job may also be declared mandatory, in which case refusal to accept is grounds for immediate revocation of membership.
  • A job accepted must be completed to the client's satisfaction.
  • No business to be conducted on Guild premises.
  • Refusal to pay up always results in a blacklisting, and may result in direct action by Guild members.
  • Misrepresenting the Guild, or asking payment of an already-arranged Guild client, will result in immediate revocation of membership. Asking a client to cover specific expenses might be overlooked in special circumstances.
  • [Stay neutral; stay out of politics]

The Guild Coin

The founding members of the Heroes' Guild refused monetary payment from the townsfolk it had saved from the raiders, but they rather received payment in the form of "favors" granted by the individual townsfolk. This practice continued through the centuries, resulting in a complex relationship of trade in-kind between the Guild and its former-clients, evolving to include such trade in favors amongst the Guild's own members. Around 500YA, after having come to the aid of a Dwarven trade-colony, the Heroes' Guild was given a chest of mithral "coins," specially minted for the Guild, which the Dwarves had said were to represent their debt to the Guild: any Guildmember could redeem one of these special coins for whatever goods or services were required of the colony. The idea caught on with the Guild, such that it would later negotiate an exclusive contract with the Dwarves for the minting of future Guild coins, to be used to represent a "favor owed" to the bearer of the coin. Once a former-client has accepted a Coin as payment, the Coin is returned to the Guild, and the former-client's debt is cleared from the Guild's records.

These coins have no recognized value as "real" currency except amongst Guild members or clients. The Guild maintains tight control over the distribution and minting of Guild Coins, and what rules exist to govern their value within the Guild is a closely-guarded Guild secret; the Guild's privilege in such matters is granted by their charters. To this day, the Coins tend to find their way back to the Dwarves (who probably melt them down to make armor…or more coins).

Brothers-at-Arms

Blog Reference

The Guild encourages its members to form mutual-support-groups; it's good for the members' survival (usually), and members that survive become more valuable to the Guild. To that end, the Guild offers as a service the management of "Brothers-at-Arms" charter contracts. Such agreements are genuine legal bonds, sometimes for life, sometimes for a specific period, which are usually arrived at by a solemn oath or by sealed letters. Their terms normally provide that the brothers-at-arms should share equally in all gains of war, and should contribute equally to ransoms if one of them becomes a captive, though there are as many forms of contract as there are groups to swear to them. Once the details have been agreed to (the Guild can provide a number of "standard" contracts for members' use), the Guild administers (or has administered) any oaths and files away signed-and-sealed contract papers at the Guild headquarters for safe keeping.

Courtesy Members

Guild members who own lands or have sworn fealty to another lord are considered "courtesy" members. Such members can still be offered or seek out jobs from the Guild, but are exempted from any mandatory duties or expectations that apply to regular members (though "Guild Rules" still apply).

Rumor Has It…

  • Some bad PR of late has the Guild out of favor

Behind the Scenes

  • "Coin" concept shamelessly ripped from the movie John Wick, A "gold" coin wouldn't work in a society that already uses GP as currency, so some other solution had to be found. Mithral is uncommon and very difficult to work, but "precious" enough, so it was a logical choice.


Subcategories

This category has only the following subcategory.