法理

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Duchies from the kingdom of Aquitaine drifting into the kingdom of France in 1066.

Alert de jure.png De jure is a Latin expression which literally means "by law". It is contrasted with de facto, which means "in fact". De jure ownership of land and titles is an important concept in the game as it determines AI behavior and the ability of the player to declare war.

Each duchy, kingdom and empire has a legal right to a land area in the game. If one ruler has occupied land that rightfully belongs to another, then they will have a de jure casus belli on that land area. For counties, the count holding the county title is the de jure liege of all holdings within the province.

AI characters, including vassals to the player, will be upset if the liege hold land that de jure belongs to them. E.g., if they hold a duke-rank title and the player holds one of their de jure counties. Each instance of this produces a negative opinion modifier which stacks without limit. The player's own vassals will also be upset if they are not the liege of vassals that de jure fall under their dominion, e.g. a baron in one of their counties calls the player their liege instead of them. They will be pleased if these vassals are transfered to them. In general, all rulers in the game will believe they are fully entitled to whatever traditionally belongs to them and they will wage war to get their way if they think they can win.

The de jure ruler of a Kingdom or Empire also decides the Crown Authority of the realm. De facto owners of parts of a de jure realm are then granted voting rights for laws if the rulers are of the same religion. With the DLC icon Conclave.png Conclave DLC, this feature is replaced by council votes instead.

Titles with feudal elective succession have all their de jure vassal rulers of the same religion as nominators.

De jure drift

De jure drift or assimilation is the process by which the de jure borders of kingdoms and empires can change over time.

In general, a duchy will assimilate into a kingdom after being controlled by that kingdom for 100 years (depending on game rules set at start), and a kingdom will similarly assimilate into an empire in the same time frame. Every duchy in the game is considered to be part of a specific de jure kingdom. Vassals within a de jure border have less reasons and abilities to revolt against their liege and declare independence. Both the duration required for assimilation and any additional conditions required can be changed at the game rules.

A duchy will begin to drift into a kingdom when the following conditions are met:

  • The entire duchy (i.e. all county titles; baronies are allowed to be outside the realm) is within the realm of the king.
  • The king does not hold the crown of the current de jure kingdom to which the duchy belongs.
  • The ducal title either does not exist or is held by the king or by a vassal of the king.
  • The duchy is not part of the kingdom of Jerusalem.
  • The kingdom is its owner's primary title.

Upon reaching Jan 01 of the next year, drift is visible as dashed stripes on the kingdoms map mode. Hovering over the duchy will show a tooltip indicating the number of years until full assimilation.

Whenever the conditions for assimilation are not met — for example, if the local ruler of a duchy rebels against top-liege, or if one of the counties in the duchy is conquered by another independent realm - the counter will tick backwards instead of forwards, and at twice the speed. When the conditions are again met — for example, if the duke's rebellion is put down - the counter will resume ticking forwards.

Kingdoms assimilate into empires in a near-identical fashion: The emperor must hold or control all county titles in the de jure kingdom, and the empire title to which the kingdom belongs de jure either does not exist or is not held by that emperor. In addition, however, all duchy titles that are de jure vassals of the kingdom must be either under the emperor's control or not held at all.

Assimilation allows titular kingdoms and empires to become non-titular and vice versa. If a de jure kingdom becomes titular, it can be created by whoever controls its de jure capital.

Analysis

Assimilation can be both good and bad from a gameplay perspective:

  • An assimilated duke (or king) becomes more loyal, can vote in elections (which may not be a good thing; see below), and provides more levies.
    • In most instances, this increase in levies due to successful de jure shift is about 40%. But, if a duchy shifts from outside a king's de jure empire into the kingdom, the increase in levies is 100%, with all other factors remaining the same.
  • But, the assimilated duchy no longer counts towards the total territories needed to claim a crown. E.g. as the King of Scotland, you control the Duchy of Ulster in northern Ireland. Before the duchy assimilates, the player would control 4 out of 13 counties in Ireland and only needs 3 more to be proclaimed king of Ireland. But if Ulster assimilates into Scotland, the player will now have 0 out of 9 counties in Ireland and needs to conquer 5 more to become king of Ireland.
  • If the kingdom's (or empire's) succession law is set to feudal elective, an assimilated duchy will add an additional elector in deciding the heir to the kingdom (or in the case of an assimilated kingdom, usually several electors for the empire's heir), adding some uncertainty to the succession. This becomes more problematic with DLC icon Conclave.pngConclave, especially for feudal realms which adopted feudal elective by passing the "full council authority" law, as the realm cannot switch from feudal elective as long as the law stands.

实际

Despite the importance of the de jure concept, depending on your circumstances, you might have to pay more attention to the de facto situation.

  • Liege tax is not affected by de jure modifiers; merchant republics should expand with the intention of creating more republic vassals for income, rather than feudal vassals for levies.
  • Under Tanistry succession, electors are de facto vassals.
  • Horse Lords.pngNomadic and tribal rulers call their clans and direct tribal vassals respectively, to war as allies, rather than provide liege levies.