Left Panel
menu
HomeHome / Total War: Attila / Himyar / Technologies / Division of Lands
Division of Lands HimyarHimyar Civil Tier 7

Division of Lands

Every man according to his need. This man needs a vineyard.

Over time, the Sassanids reformed many institutions so that more of the empire could be controlled by a central authority. In the beginning, however, the monarchy operated similarly to its Parthian predecessors, with satraps being almost independent kingdoms that fed support back into the state. Ardashir I began building new 'royal' cities and renaming old ones, creating territories that were loyal to the Shahanshah and not to over-powerful nobles. He was able to place his own men and labour forces in these cities, creating a loyal populace. Although they were still semi-independent, royal cities were nevertheless unified by state administration, and not reliant on the whims of noble and minor kings. There is evidence that the newly settled people were apportioned a division of land, as evidenced by a Sassanid deputy, vested with authority over Dura, owning an estate just outside the city. Despite this increase in central state control, the Shahanshah continued to promote the policy of religious tolerance instituted by the Parthians whilst championing Zoroastrianism as the official state religion at the same time. This religious tolerance was borne out in the royal cities, where the majority of the artisan class (masons, woodworkers, stone cutters, etc.) were Christian. These artisans, unless in a royal workshop, belonged to private 'corporations', which worked much like early guilds or unions. Artisans, particularly Christian ones, were able obtain exemption from military service as a perk of their craft. This was not a boon granted to the peasantry, who were levied wholesale to fight in the Shahanshah's wars.

Division of Lands

Node Set

Civil Tier 7

research_points

0

cost_per_round

0

Effects

Growth: +3 (all provinces)
Requires
Requires Technologies Private VenturesPrivate Ventures Intensive AgricultureIntensive Agriculture
Enables
Enables Technologies Social EthicsSocial Ethics
Enables Buildings Large CityLarge City
TownTown
Qanat NetworkQanat Network
Facebook