Provincial aristocracies are divided into clans, each of which holds control in their own home places. The ruling family resides on the provincial capital, in fact exercises power over the entire province, and the family itself comes from lineage of the monarchy, from the time of provincial sovereignty. The choice of a successor after the predecessors is in advance dedicated to the firstborn son. Depending on their sex, firstborn daughters are married only to firstborn husbands of other noble families. The firstborn daughters of the main clan are destined mainly for the members of the royal family, which  vice versa taking place with  royal daughters to the provincial husbands.

In secondary families are permissible to freely arrange marriages of descendants to other aristocratic families, (including inter-provincial ones); -mainly  when provinces border each other, which enables cooperation and political support between them. But usually are arranged between cities. The period of this cooperation lasts until the end of the marriage, which are broken mainly by natural causes death. Clans might gives away descendants to neighboring provinces, only if they are not firstborn. Members of the main clan might arrange their children to the remaining families within the province for the sake of maintaining ties. But the firstborn are destined for the royal family. When a daughter of main clan is the firstborn, she is destined to the royal family, and the transfer of power is granted to the first born boy in the family, who has the honor of marrying a daughter of the royal family.

These rules were written into the customs already half a millennium after the establishment the state of Gigargios.

due to the growing population among the aristocrats, these were approved by themselves. Each of the provincial representatives.

EXERCISE OF MANAGEMENT

Aristocrats* do exercise power, but it is symbolicly, subject to the royal. According to the regulations in each clan, the firstborn takes authority after his father, while the other sons are at his disposal to support him. The first-born successors mainly receive from their fathers the opportunity to exercise government in cities, responsible for maintaining public order and for its proper development. Therefore, he has the right to appoint his relatives to fill various Sections. For example, captains of the city guard or architects – (suitably educated).

*Governor might come from ruling family in the province. Might it be eldest son but than he have lost inherit rights from his father as a succesor and continuator of his clan. That’s why governors become close relatives like younger brothers, unckles or highly intualected either talented noblemen.

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