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Короли Франции постоянно окружены большим количеством придворных, большинство из которых были частью благородства. Чтобы заработать пользу короля, нужно было провести время в королевских резиденциях и придерживаться этикета. Постоянно парящее присутствие было вознаграждено финансовыми пособиями, подарками, проживанием во дворце Версальских и регулярных приглашений на торжества и церемонии. «Вся Франция собралась вокруг короля». Дворец Версальского дворца позволил большому двору жить рядом с королем. В зависимости от дня, здесь насчитывалось от 3000 до 10000 человек, формируя высокопрозрачное общество, тем не менее, регулируется строгой иерархией, которая применялась ко всем. Некоторые были там по праву рождения, другие по социальным обязательству, другие посредством интереса или любопытства, а другие просто зарабатывают на жизнь. Высокопользовательские дворяне постоянно присутствовали, предупреждают о каждой возможности, чтобы запрашивать благосклонность хозяина Версаля. придворные должны следовать строгим этикетм. Доточные правила установили порядок приоритета и выложил, кто может приблизиться к наиболее важные деятели суда, а также где и когда. Язык тела и манеры речи также были правит строгими кодами, которые варьировались тонко в зависимости от обстоятельств. Правила также регулируют названия, которые будут использоваться для решения других лиц, и даже вправе сесть или использовать кресло, стул или стул ... Titre de l'encart Члены королевской семьи и те, которые с важными ролями имели квартиры с видом на Gardens , Хотя придворные меньшие важности были размещены на городской стороне или во дворцовых постройках, такие как Grand Communal или The конюшни . придворные с ролью были сказаны «созданы» в суде. Такие роли были унаследованы или могут быть куплены, часто для чрезвычайно высокой цены и пришли с функцией или обязанностью. Одобрение короля было важно для самых важных, таких как для государственных секретарей, но для простого Валета де Шамбре-Барбер, одобрение Большого Чемберлена было достаточно. Размещение во дворце также было успешно востребованным, поскольку он избегал потребности в путешествиях и предоставил пространство, чтобы уйти в отставку, когда он не проводит посторонние обязанности. Члены королевской семьи и тех, кто имеет важные роли, имел апартаменты с видом на Сады u> , в то время как придворные меньшие важности были размещены на городской стороне или во дворцовых постройках, таких как Grand Communal или The Table. ,« Обслуживание короля в армии или в администрации высокого уровня »было основным способом победы в королевской пользе, хотя искусство выступления суда осталось важно. Отдельные таланты или добродетели, такие как красота или интеллект, конкурируют с потрясающим штрафом как средство привлечения внимания монарха. Получав более крупную роль в суд, чем <класс = "подсказку" data-tooltip = "Генри Бурбона (1553-1610), Генри И.В. был первым королем Франции династии Бурбон, царствовал с 1589 года до его убийства в 1610. Он покинул корону своему молодому сыну Луи XIII и власти своей второй жене Мари Де «Медичи, который был регент с 1610 по 1614 год». «Href =« # »> Генри IV и <класс = «Подсказка» Data-Tooltip = "Louis XIII (1601-1643) был сыном Генри И.В. и Мари Сей-де-Медичи. Он был коронован королем Франции и Наварре в 1610 году в возрасте восьми до полутора лет, но не взял Власть до 1617. "href =" http://en.chateauversailles.fr/louis-xiii "Title =" Луи XIII "> Луи XIII сделал, Луи XIV восстановил чувство обслуживания среди благородства. Таким образом, когда Сервис стал рассматриваться как способ быть полезным для царства и приятного суверенного суверена, это очень восприятие помогло суверенному контролю над благородством, поэтому укрепляя авторитет короны. Life at Court придворные дворянство вокруг короля? биография .Как развод Home > World > Social Statistics > Kingdoms and Monarchs of the World Kingdoms and Monarchs of the World Короли и Queens в мире с момента Французская революция, будущее монархии в мире было немного шаким. Как недавно 2008 года коммунистические революционеры в Непале свергли их монархию, чтобы создать республику. Тем не менее, несмотря на пару веков покровения королей, сегодня в мире существует 44 монархий. 13 находятся в Азии, 12 находятся в Европе, 10 находятся в Северной Америке, 6 находятся в Океании, а 3 в Африке. В Южной Америке нет монархий. Возможно, важно отметить, что существует 44 монархии, но есть только 29 монархов. Queen Elizabeth II Соединенных Королевство - это королева из 15 других царств Содружества, которые ранее составили британскую империю. Какие страны монархии? Вот список всех монархий в Мир, перечисленный по стране с типом монархии. см. Также: «Комплексная сеть интриги, в которой смерть приходит как яд, или кинжал ночью. Такое убийство похоже на точное вино». — Corkus, Berserk Abridged Advertisement:Суд здесь заключается в том, что группа не так благородных дворян, которые вешают вокруг коридоров власти короля. Они есть Растворы, рассеиваются, вырожденные, развращенные и мдаш; давайте просто суммируем его как «декадентскую» и MDash; до такой степени, что все, что они прикосновеются, становится поврежден. Страна, которую они Постановление направляется на гибель, пока они играют свои злобные вкусные игры. p> Как суд получил такой способ отличается от истории к истории. Чаще всего, чем нет, источник находится вверху. Они поймали его из монарха. p> Вы видите этот суд во многих историях, может быть, даже большинство историй о судах. Это источник интригов для интригов, рук и незаконных дел. И лицом к себе, Вам понадобится эти вещи, если вообще будет любое веселье. p> Это Sub-Trope to Standard Royal Court and Aristocrats Are Evil. When less than half of the court acts like this, something (or someone) else may be in play. See Evil Chancellor or Evil Prince for the possible cause. For a depraved court of law, try Kangaroo Court. Advertisement:Examples: open/close all folders Anime & Manga In Berserk, Похоже, все основные дворян в Мидленде вытесняют Гриффит, который заканчивается как цель двух условных участков по ревнивым благородством. Гриффит, однако, не сам сутуки, и все дворян, которые принимают участие в убийстве в конечном итоге мертвы или шантажируются. li> в Невеста вода Бог EM>, как суд императора, и суд водного королевства заполнены интригами и персонажами при перекрестных целях. Конечно, многие из персонажей в обоих Суды ... li> в Vinland Saga < / a> em>, суд короля Sweyn Предполагается, что Forkbeard настолько ровно, оно заполнено прекрасными рабынями, взятые из каждого угла мира, наполненной разъемами политиков и ареной многих кровавых Дуэль до смерти. li> в Легенда о Галактике Герои EM>, бомбы, яды, похищения, стрельба иsuicides are not unheard of in Imperial politics. Ooku is set in the Shogun's harem, which develops into a place of backstabbing maneuvers. In Code Geass, the Britannian Royal Court comes off as this, given the scheming nobles and The Social Darwinist Emperor. The Chinese court has this as well, with the scheming Eunuchs being the Chinese counterpart to the Britannian nobles. Меч принцесса Altina EM> изобилует этим. Каждый королевский суд показал, независимо от страны происхождения, наполнен дворянми или роялти, постоянно борьбы, схемы, отравления или просто простые отправляющие армии после того, как друг друга во время борьбы с преемственностью. Даже собственный отец Альты, Император Белгарии, отправил свою 14-летнюю дочь на передние линии, чтобы избавиться от нее, а когда она Спросил оружия, чтобы защитить себя, дал ей массивный декоративный меч, думая, что она не сможет владеть им. The Rose of Versailles: Being set at the eve of Французский Revolution , в которой есть суд Версаля, с ее огромным декаданцентом и смертоносным, что во время правления Луи XV, мадам Дю Барри, любовник короля, отравленные один Из ее собственных горничных, чтобы попробовать и рама Мари Антонетта для нее em>, только для Оскара, чтобы держать ее на мечах и напомнить ей, что она <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dathnthinkthisthrough" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dadnthinkthisthrough"> антагонизация будущей королевы, в то время как ее сила зависит от здоровья Очень старик . Li> Версаль особенно противоречит австрийскому двору, где протокол нигде был нигде как жесткий, а трезвый <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / thehighqueev" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / thehighqueen"> Maria Theresa позволит позволить лишь наименьшему количеству роскоши и без смертоносного палибия. Некоторые из проблем Marie Antoinette приходят от роста там, что привело к тому, что она была изначально слишком открыта и наивно для стандартов Версальских островов (и никогда не расти из нее наивности) и ослеплен великолепной опаленностью французского суда. Audio Plays In the Большая отделка Доктор, который EM> Audio "Святой террор" доктор находит себя в Средневековое судное общество ритуализировано и традиция, чтобы вести себя как один из них - квитанцы должны em> всегда иметь своего рода, хороший наследник и деформированный, схемы ублюдка сына, которые узурпы Его брат, работа первого священника - нанести удар королю в спину - все как символические традиции, окружающие коронацию. Comic Books Luther Arkwright: Queen Anne presides over a court of deadly intrigue and decadent orgies in Heart of Empire. Her closest servants view her absorbing the vitality of her enemies as their "favourite bit". Удивительно женщина EM> Vol 1 : умнее и более предпочтительные члены Суд Сатурнанской империи осознает, что они могут продвинуться через ряды и предотвратить потерять звание, посвященным утешению и преданности и обрамление другим за их сбои. Это суд, где элита ждала под рукой и ногами рабами, и в опасности в глазах их императора оказываются в глазах их императора и выполнены или порабощены в любой момент. Advertisement: Fan Works Королева теней EM> имеет Круг генералов Shadowkhan Empire . Генералы постоянно соревнуются друг с другом для влияния с Королева. И теперь, когда Hiruzen's Hold на желанный звание <а. Class = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dragoninchief" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dragoninhief"> yojimbo ослабевает, многие делают свой ход для него и Mdash ; <а. Class = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / nobleblemen" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / nobleblemen"> ikazuki намекнул, чтобы быть намеренным построить <класс = " Twikilink » href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / klingonpromotion" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / klingonpromotion"> Klyingon Продвижение , Jirobo работает над долгосрочным планом, чтобы манипулировать королевой, будучи его Кукольный , Куро рассматривает возможность сбрасывать его долгосрочные лояльности в Цзиробо и зацепил свой вагон в восходящую звезду Иказуки и <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / bunnyearslawyer" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / bunnyearslawyer"> Kamisori предлагает поддержать своего друга <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / bodassburocrat" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / badassbureaure"> Ozeki в создании энергетической игры. Как это все будет воспроизведено, еще предстоит увидеть. li> в потерянный король EM> Подшипство между Наложники Гарона превратили в шумный суд в агрессивной среде, даже приведя к наложнику, убивающим друг друга, и их дети em>. Гарон не может остановиться убийства, потому что он не может доказать, что наложники на самом деле делают их, и он не может просто отправить их из-за страха на обидение своих семей или спровоцировать самостоятельный наложить в более переулкие действия саботажа. li> > em> и его продолжение перемешивают em> иметь редкий Пример, где это шагает em> от альтернативы, как эта версия Фобос больше заботится о том, чтобы сохранить мир, чем утюг на его власть. У него бы скорее есть некоторые схематические союзники, которые выиграли Без насилия, чем очистить всех ненадежных. li> Суд Ухана в <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / fanfic / theweaveroption" Название = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / fanfic / theweaveroption" > Ткацкий Опция EM> настолько плохо, что есть несколько попыток открытых убийств во время мяча победы губернатора, до em> запущена попытка переворота. Однажды за раз em>: Готэм Высокое общество изображено как поддавшаяся версия этого, с различными семьями (несовершеннолетними и основными) всеми, что за исключением нескольких поколений, чтобы в конечном итоге усурп Семьи, в частности, Уэйнс, и контролируют свои судьбы. Не помогает этому вопросу заключается в том, что справедливое число тех социальных веществ являются / были также членами Суд Совы , которые заменяют Готэм из тени На протяжении веков и большая часть того, почему город коррумпирован. На первом временной шкале Джейсон Тодд, став официальным главой семьи Уэйн, абсолютно отказался вовлечь Сам в Готэмской политике уже несколько лет на улице проведение случайного благотворительного мяча для Фонда Уэйн почти явно из-за этой тропы. Это было только после Прибытие Хелена Уэйн, его отец Брюс Уэйн только известный биологический наследник, что он наконец начал играть вдоль и мдаш; специально для защиты ее и ее наследства. li> Часы драконов A> EM>: пока не так плохо, как Это канон, королевский суд Вестероса. Первичный разрыв находится между фракцией Станниса (который принимает прагматичный маршрут к увеличению и централизации железного трона Сила), Фракция Серсей (которая тесно связана с верой и становится все более <классом = «Twikilink» href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / tfundamentalist" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / tfundamentalist"> Радикализированы , когда дело доходит до роли религии в политике царства), и фракция Рене (которая номинально лояльна Stannis и пытаясь встретить CEREI, но также заправляет амбиции Релярных амбиций). И на вершине всего, что это различные великие дома, пытающиеся набрать влияние через придворные ради их собственного повестки дня. Films — Live-Action Louis XVI's court as portrayed in the French movie Ridicule exemplifies this trope, showcasing how nobles' political power and status is highly dependent on their wit. One victim of a mocking jest sees his request to the King rejected, gets ostracized and ends up killing himself as a result. Par for the course in Hamlet adaptation Legend of the Black Scorpion. Pretty much everyone is trying to kill everyone else. The Skeksis from The Dark Crystal are genocidal hedonists who only think about living an eternal life, maintaining their power over Thra, enslaving the Podlings, dressing in riches and feasting, not even bothering with physical exercise. Without an Emperor to keep everyone in check, they would certainly jump at each other's throat. There's justification— since they're the darker halves of the souls of the Precursors it's in their very nature to engage in hedonism and power grabs. It's quickly shown that this is a bad thing for the species because they killed each other until there were only about 10, and that was because the surviving Skeksis are in an eternal power struggle where they can't kill themselves off without the resulting infighting killing them all. The leader of the Mystics knows this so he performs a Heroic Sacrifice suicide to take out their leader and destabilize the court so his stepson Jen can get an opening to complete the prophecy. Their decadence is expanded upon in The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, in which it took a dramatic turn when they started getting addicted to Gelfling essence. The Skeksis would sacrifice many Gelflings in the process, and drive them to extinction after a prophecy revealed that a Gelfling would put an end to their reign. The cabinet and inner circle in The Death of Stalin are a republican version of this trope. Due to the totalitarian and extremely repressive nature of Stalin's regime (including eliminating people just for stuttering), many of the Politburo betrayed their friends and enforced all of Stalin's order to appease him from purging them too. Out of all the members, Beria was considered as the most depraved and psychotic member as he also performed numerous sexual assaults on children. The Brethren Court in the Pirates of the Caribbean series, being the "ruling body" over hordes of uncontrollable rogues and pirates, seems to only have any order at all because Captain Teague is the one enforcing The Code. It is best described by Elizabeth and Jack: Elizabeth: This is madness! Jack: This is politics. Literature A Song of Ice and Fire has one of the deadliest courts in modern fantasy, for all that it's unlikely to be the most decadent on the planet (Yi Ti probably has that in the bag; sorry Volantis). In the westernmost, backwater continent in a Crapsack World where at least seven major power blocs duke it out to gain control of the realm, Magnificent Bastards, Smug Snakes, ambiguous question marks and Byronic Heroes trade gambits which cost lives like they're in a pillow fight, yet Anyone Can Die. And God Save Us from the Queen! No, really. Cersei is many things, but safe to be around is not one of them (especially if you think you have leverage on her). And they're so busy fighting each other that they don't notice the army of zombies and god knows what else from beyond the Wall. Eddard Stark had the opportunity to become King of Westeros in the backstory, but he let Robert take the Iron Throne. Partly out of a sense of honour, and mostly because he didn't want to deal with the court. Years later, Robert made him Hand of the King and dragged him back to the court, and it all went downhill from there. The Lannisters full stop. They are so rich that they have a long history of decadence and corruption. The nobles from the Bitterbynde books. The heroine makes a few faux pas and has to run away when her pretence gets discovered — but of course till then she's been the most graceful and beautiful of women at court as well as a thousand times purer than these cruel, superficial twits. In Interesting Times, the Agatean Empire has definitely fallen into this, with murder via poisoning or assassination being an acceptable way of promotion (as long as it is discreetly done), powerful noble families, a rather insane Emperor, and rigid class stratification. Of course, Cohen the Barbarian and his Silver Horde make things, well, interesting. The Nazi high command in Downfall, waiting on a deluded Hitler while fighting rages above. In Dragon Bones, high king Jakoven thinks his court is this. It is not clear whether he is right, or just paranoid ... the only on-screen backstabber at the court is he himself, with his habit of killing the queen's lovers. (No, not out of jealousy, he appoints them to that position himself. He just thinks they're gaining too much influence). Some nobles occasionally spin some intrigues, but mostly against Jakoven, who has only himself to blame for that political climate. Some off-screen backstabbery is implied, but not dwelled on. The royal court from The Chronicles of Amber, basically a Big, Screwed-Up Family and their lackeys. So much backstabbery your brain will give up. At first the Courts of Chaos, Amber's opposite number, appear a subversion: things there are pretty peaceful for the most part. However, each pentalogy happens to take place in a turbulent time for the relevant court, and it becomes clear Chaos can be just as bad. The difference turns out to be maturity, as Order is a more recent invention and its royal bloodline, while fewer in number and invested with more individual power, simply have less in the way of learning experiences to temper their ambitions. Although not a court in the usual way, the nobility from Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurst's The Empire Trilogy, with their oh so deadly Game of the Council, might well qualify. The nobles from the first novel of The Final Empire when their society is still intact. They indulge their extravagances while the rest of the population is nearly starving and there's the extra fun of some of them secretly being Mistborn which means powerful sorcerers and born assassins. In the second The Wheel of Time book: Rand al'Thor comes into Cairhien, a big city with such a court. At least the intrigue bit is definitely fitting - everyone tries to pull him to their side by sending him invitations. Rand tries to avoid this by burning all the invitations... which they, of course, take as a cunning political move. Ultimately, his actions indirectly lead to the assassination of the king and the entire country falling into a civil war. The Seanchan also seem to operate under these rules. Tuon, the Empress's daughter and heir, notes that her position was attained partly by eliminating the competition, permanently. She also forgives Beslan's acts of treachery during a crisis because he was unaware of the crisis. Her tone suggests that if it were not during a crisis, there would be little to forgive. Seanchan nobles routinely make assassination plans for anyone they deal with, even if they don't really intend to go through with them. Tuon finds it incredible that she and her new husband Mat won't have to scheme against each other. The court of Governor and Sole Autocrat Barholm Clerett in The General Series, where intrigue is an artform, treachery a given AND on top of everything else the Governor is borderline insane. As the saying goes, 'A simpleton from the Governor's Court could give lessons in intrigue to [any other royal court on the planet, save possibly the Colony's]." The goblin court in John Barnes's One for the Morning Glory. Explicitly described as a parody of King Boniface's. The high council of Menzoberranzan, in the Forgotten Realms books. Usually, the backstabbing comes from a lower-ranking House that wants to be on the high council, but frankly the entire city is afflicted with a pernicious case of Chronic Backstabbing Disorder. Menzoberranzan is an in-universe study of this trope, as its patron goddess hates stability or any feeling among her followers of security or comfort and only allows them to be unified when she has an immediate use for them. Otherwise she encourages bringing down the strongest of her followers while also keeping her realm from weakening enough to collapse... and should there be the potential of getting a power base better than a city of drow worshippers, she's willing to let it go. David Eddings is very fond of this trope: it shows up in the Imperial Courts of both The Malloreon and The Tamuli, and the protagonists take great advantage of it: in The Malloreon, they foment discord to the point that a civil war breaks out inside the walls of the palace; they use it as cover for their escape, while in The Tamuli they help the figurehead emperor overthrow his own government and seize control by throwing a party, getting the assorted aristocrats drunk, and imprisoning the lot of them. In the furry fantasy novel The Fangs of K'aath, the royal court of Osra is a den of decadence and coldblooded political calculation that could consider genocide as well as accommodation as solutions with equal ease. While the heroes, Prince Raschid and his love Sandhri are the first to note it's a fun place for a party with food and sexy serving girls (who are openly eager to hop into bed when asked) galore when it is in a peaceful mood, they are otherwise repelled by its venal side and it suffers a Karmic Death at being nearly totally destroyed in the climactic battle in the end with nearly the entire villainous Royal family dead except for the straight arrow heroes who find themselves unquestionably on top and in charge of things to run their way. Captive Prince has a helluva one in Vere. It features political intrigue, forbidden romance, and rampant pedophilia and sexual assault. This was Vere, voluptuous and decadent, country of honeyed poison. A Court of Thorns and Roses: A running theme. Under the Mountain resembles the Capitol in its elegant brutality, and while the Autumn Court isn't evil per se, it is highly political and quite a swamp to navigate, even for a particularly scrappy human. The Nightmare Court is also this, duplicitously, so Rhys can keep up the illusion that he's a languid, hedonistic bastard. The titular character of Volle is a foreign spy sent to infiltrate the court of Tephos by posing as the long-lost son of a dead noble. He quickly finds that while outright assassination is uncommon, blackmail and deals made in the bedroom are all but standard procedure. And thoroughly enjoys himself. Simon R. Green: This trope appears in multiple series of his. Deathstalker: The Imperial Court of Golgotha, homeworld of The Empire, is this writ large IN SPACE. Forest Kingdom: Featured in multiple kingdoms in both the parent series and the Hawk & Fisher spinoff. In book 1 (Blue Moon Rising), the King's Barons and their allies are openly plotting against him, and even host a gathering of rebels in his own castle, plotting to kill him and install the eldest prince as their puppet ruler. It backfires, because Prince Harald is loyal to his father. Then in book 2 (Blood and Honor), the court recklessly dallies with eldritch abominations. In William King's Warhammer 40,000 Space Wolf novel Wolfblade, Ragnor is warned in advance that Terra is this. In James Swallow's Warhammer 40,000 novel Faith & Fire, the Battle Sisters find the aristocrats like this: hopelessly languid, using fans that could double as weapons if they were capable of fighting, and so heavily perfumed that one Sister says they obviously used a crop duster. The Japanese Imperial Court in the Tale of Genji— and Real Life— was an epitome of this trope. If its members weren't plotting against each other they were having illicit sex with somebody else's wife or mistress. The Heian Court started out much more benign—see literature like the Man'youshuu for examples of what Japan was (supposedly) like about two hundred years prior to Genji. Genji is set in Heian Japan about a century before it fell apart and was replaced by the Kamakura bakufu, which in turn led to the Muramachi period. Dune: The entire book Dune EM> практически в течение Безумированный случай судебных интригов. Император, который был тайно в Лиге с бароном, пытался от герцога, дав ему смертельную «продвижение», чтобы взять под контроль Flaiaging Production Action, что у него наверняка не было никакой надежды, в то время как иллюминатный женский монастырь приблизился к своей конечной цели и начал тянуть политическую Строки в новых и опасных направлениях, все заканчиваясь в распадах Коррино Империума и другого джихада. li> Особые упоминание о доме Harkonnen, которые вращаются декадентные и невероятно опасные - барон - это жир, отвратительный, глупости, подразумеваемый пеераст, а также садист; Его племянники - «просто» маниакальные садиты; пытки - это то, что после ужина в развлечениях (отрывок показывает, что работники Harkonnen убирают остатки одного из них в Один из книг Брайана Герберта, любимое времяпрепровождение Калигулы) и весь роман, как правило, напоминают древнего Рима в худшие (гладиаторские арены, педофилию и все.) Эстетика довольно странная, с подметающими халатами и золотом в сочетании с вонюченным маслом и огромным загрязнением, дымом и грязью - Harkonnen в прямом эфире, но совершенно грязны как морально, так и физически. li> в главе заголовка цитата из ее обширных исторических работ принцессы Ирулан случайно упоминает о своем подозрении, что у ее отца была рука в некоторых попытках убивать ее мать, сестры и себя. Она фактически посвящена своему отцу Хаддаму IV, и он ей, но она также знает, что отказ ее матери, чтобы нести его наследника Положите его в ужасную позицию, делая ее смерть и ее матери и братья и сестры политически удобными. «Королевские семьи не похожи на другие семьи». In Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files novels: The White Court. It helps that those involved are all White Court vampires that make plans as way of life; at one point Lara says something to the effect that no one will respect her if she attempts to seize power by straightforward means. The Raiths are a bit dysfunctional, to say the least. The Winter Court as well. When attending a party in Arctis Tor, Harry tries to keep an eye on anyone suspicious. He soon realizes that's impossible, and instead resolves to keep an eye out for anyone charging at him with a knife and screaming. In Holly Blacks work, all faerie courts have some aspects of this, but most notable is in The Folk of the Air. Most characters are looking to increase their status, with the exception of Cardan who is not ambitious and just doesnt want to be beaten for his failures. Even among the teenagers, you can see aspects of this. Most children sent to lectures are supposed to endear themselves to children of royalty. The bullying in the book is really the teenagers of royalty trying to establish the hierarchy within their lectures. The royal family is a mess of neglect and abuse, and spare no love for each other. Of the members of the royal family who are characterized, the oldest is a psychopath willing to turn murder his entire family for power, the middle son also schemed and murdered his way into power, and the father at least could be charged with child endangerment. In Edgar Rice Burroughs's The Gods of Mars, the court of Issus. The First Born do no work. The men fight—that is a sacred privilege and duty; to fight and die for Issus. The women do nothing, absolutely nothing. Slaves wash them, slaves dress them, slaves feed them. There are some, even, who have slaves that talk for them, and I saw one who sat during the rites with closed eyes while a slave narrated to her the events that were transpiring within the arena. The Court of the Taysan Empire in the Spaceforce books is the centre of government for the oldest and most advanced of the three great galactic superpowers. It's ruled by the Empress, who is an absolute monarch, with the Imperial and Noble Castes in attendance. It's heavily implied that a lot of backbiting and faction wars go on. All four fey courts in Wicked Lovely have elements of this, but the worst would have to be the dark court, and the winter court. The court of Herod Antipas, under the pen of romantic writers (e.g. in Oscar Wilde's play Salome). King Herod is depicted as an incestuous womaniser; Queen Herodias a murderous schemer. The princess Salome, of course, has a famously pathological infatuation with John the Baptist. The royal court of Terre d'Ange, in Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel's Legacy series. Everyone sleeps around, there is much scheming and backstabbing, and there are Masquerade Balls. In Robert E. Howard's The Devil in Iron what Octavia is willing to flee from even when she's frightened of Conan the Barbarian. In "Rogues in the House" — just about everyone is in this. In "A Witch Shall Be Born" Salome turns her country into this. In Sano Ichiro, the entire court, save Sano himself is caught up in a web of political scheming and sexual depravity right under the hilariously stupid shogun's nose. In Robert E. Howard's Kull story "The Shadow Kingdom", Strange to him were the intrigues of court and palace, army and people. All was like a masquerade, where men and women hid their real thoughts with a smooth mask. Aluwna in Star Trek: The Genesis Wave has aspects of this, as noted by Regimol (a Romulan agent): Regimol: A quite delightful planet it was. They weren't without their political intrigue, of course, and their class structure wasn't fair by Federation standards. Still it reminded me a lot of Romulus, if you could turn the Romulans into a peaceful, insular people. Captain Picard: Their overseer was recently murdered. Regimol: See, reminds me of Romulus. The Egyptian: The palace has a higher child mortality rate than the poor quarter of the capital city. Maledicte stars a god-touched murderer dropped into a shark tank of limp-wristed sociopaths. Lord Iron from "The Cambist and Lord Iron" is a member of such a court. The emperor's court in The Chronicles of Magravandias is famous for its rare imported pleasures and exotic slaves. And the death and disappearance of inconvenient people. The French court in La Reine Margot certainly falls into this as you're almost guaranteed to die the second you're not useful to the Valois, or specifically to Catherine. In Jack Vance's Planet of Adventure: the Yao people of the Kingdom of Cath. Adam Reith rescues Ylin Ylan, the Flower of Cath, from barbarians, which ends up complicating his life more than it should. Anything and everything by the Marquis de Sade basically involves this trope turned Up to Eleven. This is maybe not totally without any base in reality, as Sade himself was certainly part of this court, although large numbers of readers have missed the fact that Sade was also a moralist who was condemning society in his writings. Most of the action of The Curse of Chalion happens in one of these, with the main character as tutor to the inexperienced but quickly-learning royesse. As her eyes begin to open to the court's true nature, she says to him "We're under siege here, aren't we?" Gulliver's Travels parodied this with the miniature land of Lilliput. British statesman Lord Chesterfield mentioned this trope in his Letters to His Son. (letter 78/79) "In my next I will send you a general map of courts; a region yet unexplored by you, but which you are one day to inhabit. The ways are generally crooked and full of turnings, sometimes strewed with flowers, sometimes choked up with briars; rotten ground and deep pits frequently lie concealed under a smooth and pleasing surface; all the paths are slippery, and every slip is dangerous." "Those who now smile upon and embrace, would affront and stab each other, if manners did not interpose; but ambition and avarice, the two prevailing passions at courts, found dissimulation more effectual than violence; and dissimulation introduced that habit of politeness, which distinguishes the courtier from the country gentleman." In It Can't Happen Here, Buzz Windrip's fascist administration is characterized by ruthless internal politics and jostling for power. Doubly so near the end of the book, when Saranson forced Windrip into exile in France, and Haik later assassinates Saranson. When they're not jostling for power, Windrip's advisors engage in depraved parties where alcohol and sex are plentiful. Macgoblin once hosted talks with business leaders during a lavish party in a Roman-era boat, served by naked hostesses. After exiling Windrip and assuming power, Saranson has debauched parties with plenty of handsome young men. The Reynard Cycle: Reynard views the court of King Lionel this way in Defender of the Crown, and not without reason. Court intrigue is one of the major features of the plot. Basically the entire Roman aristocracy in Francine Rivers The Mark of the Lion. The Psi Lords of Takis in the Wild Cards series. One character from Earth observes that skullduggery is "like a fifth classical element" on Takis. In the Videssos Cycle, the royal court has this bad. How bad? In only two of the four novels do the main characters even try to face the Big Bad. In the other two books (and the first half of the books in which they do fight him) they spend all their time suppressing insurrections so that they can send the army out of the capital without worrying that there will be another coup attempt while they're gone. The city of Theatrica and its citizens. The society considers itself classless and entirely noble, relegating peasant status to all non-Theatricans (thereby keeping the elite/pleb contrast intact). The Kitan court in Guy Gavriel Kay's Under Heaven. About as Truth in Television as a fantasy novel can get, as it is closely based on Tang Dynasty China, where the court was plenty deadly and decadent. (The events of the novel pattern the intrigues that led up to the An Shi Rebellion, which some historians consider to be, in terms of percentage of casualties, the deadliest conflict in human history.) Vorkosigan Saga is a Zig Zag. By Miles's time it is simply a Standard Royal Court and most of the politics looks like fairly normal parliamenteering with mundane tricks like exchanging support for each other's favorite project. However once in awhile a Vor will stoop to thuggery. There are a number of Vor that are useless and vice-obsessed—or pretend to be, like Ivan and By. These seem to be a minority. When Miles was a child, however, the Barrayaran system was much more violent, and assassinations and attempted coups were an expected feature of politics. The King's Court is this in Sir Derek And The Faeries, although it isn't helped by the fact that the King is something of an idiot, as he sleeps with the Queen's Ladies-In-Waiting despite knowing what a terrible idea that is, then banishes the only person who could get him out of his bind. The Age of Fire series has the court politics of the Lavadome — hundreds of dragons, all vying for the favor of, or entry into, the Imperial Line. And as for those already in the Line, they're constantly struggling for influence, power, and ultimately the chance to take the Tyr's throne for themselves. Whitehouse presides over a modern, corporate executive version in The Damnation Game. For one thing, Whitehouse and his cronies get his bodyguard drunk and try to force him into an orgy involving two prostitutes as a joke. The Court of Lothar in Restoree is much too decadent and deadly for a nice American girl like Sara — though in fact she copes quite nicely. In the Erebus Sequence, Demesne is full of politics and scheming, with few nobles concerning themselves with anything but their own status and advancement. It doesn't help that the king doesn't pay any attention to it and leaves everything in the hands of a manipulative Majordomo. In the second book, attempts by Anea and Russo to reform the court and establish a rudimentary democracy are fiercely and violently resisted. The Hunger Games: The Capitol, if the story of Snow's ascension to power is anything to go by. The Dinosaur Lords: The Palace of the Fireflies, the seat of imperial power in Nuevaropa, is full of intrigue, treacherous plots, illicit romances and backstabbery. The Emperor being rather terrible at his job and civil war raging a few princedoms away is just a cherry on the top. The Goblin Emperor: It is made clear that the court of Ethuveraz is this pretty much at the beginning of the story, when his cousin tells the protagonist: "The wolves are waiting to devour thee." In the Realm of the Elderlings series, the Jamaillian court is less well described than the Farseer court at Buckkeep, but obviously much bigger and both more deadly and more decadent, with the Satrap at the top, an unstated number of advisors and nobles, the Satrap's Heart Companions (not to be confused with a harem, although to Companion Serilla's dismay most Heart Companions have chosen to do just that) and all other members of the court going unmentioned. And everyone is seemingly doing their level best to get as much power as possible, at whatever price. The Witchlands: Implied when Vaness tells Safi that she needs the latter's Living Lie Detector powers to cleanse her court. The Nubrevnan High Council feels this way to Vivia, as many conspire against her either to aid another group or nation, get more power for themselves or marry her and render her their puppet on the throne. The Archduchy of Crius in Space Opera series Lucifer's Star has the same scheming and backstabbing of Dune with the various Houses all plotting against one another for position and prestige. It, notably, leads to a We ARE Struggling Together situation as they continue this in-fighting even in the face of conquest by the Commonwealth. One example? Protagonist Cassius Mass is the clone of his Evil Chancellor father who wanted to disinherit his own children as a way to spite their mother's house that he was forced to marry into. Cassius was then trained to plot against both his siblings as well as their mother while the same was done to them—ironically ending with the three siblings plotting against their parents. In both the book and film adaptation of Stardust, the kingdom determines its succession by which of the king's sons is still alive. They are directly encouraged to murder each other with no legal repercussion. In A Face Like Glass the court in Caverna is incredibly subtle and deadly - so much so that even the person in charge is basically plotting against himself. Isaac Asimov's "The General (Foundation)": The inner court of Emperor Cleon II is full of sycophants and back-stabbers, each looking to secure their position for when the Emperor dies and possibly taking the throne for themselves. Despite his painful and incurable disease, Cleon keeps an eye out for possible revolts and betrayal, including young generals popular with the military. Subverted in Warbreaker. The Court of Gods is this on paper; it is certainly decadent, consisting of people worshiped as living gods whittling their days in idle luxury, save for when they give their lives to heal someone. As Lightsong points out, the decent people are the ones who give their lives earlier, so what's left are the selfish ones. However, despite the fears of neighboring Idris, they're not a deadly court, and most have to be talking into preparing for self-defense. Double Subverted when it turns out that the real danger wasn't the gods or the priests, but the administrators, who were manipulating the Idris fear. Live-Action TV The Rise of Phoenixes: The royal court of Tiansheng. The princes are plotting against each other, the emperor is manipulating his sons, and the only way for Ning Yi to stay alive long enough to get anything done is to pretend to be an idiot. Game of Thrones: King's Landing in the Crownlands. Deadly for many characters, including King Robert and Ned Stark. The Title Drop moment refers to the nobility's high rate of turnover. As with Littlefinger, who is advising Ned Stark on the ways of the court. Littlefinger, seeking a messenger who can go between them : "Do you have someone in your household you can trust?" Ned Stark, eagerly: "Yes." Littlefinger: "Wrong answer." The court in The Tudors might be even more corrupt than its real-life counterpart, and that's not easy to do... Queen Elizabeth's court in Black Adder II tends towards this trope. She beheads someone if she's bored. Or if they don't tell her that her nose looks pretty. Kings: The court of Gilboa is a polished, modern-day bureaucracy where the king wears suits and rules from a conference table. That doesn't make any difference to the murderous, treacherous and utterly corrupt proceedings that go on behind closed doors, though... Mark Antony's and Cleopatra's Court in Rome is so decadent it turns former Magnificent Bastard Mark Antony into a fat whiny crybaby. Star Trek: A few of the various alien races occasionally dip into this to varying degrees. While the Klingons are the Trope Namer for Klingon Promotion, their version of this trope is a bit more complicated. A standard Klingon state assembly can very easily result in more than a few deaths; at one point during a civil war, the Chancellor was challenged to a duel, and proceeded to kill his opponent before returning to the matters at hand. That all said, more underhanded actions such as poisoning or politicking are considered deeply dishonorable, and if exposed, are not all tolerated; in Deep Space Nine, one Klingon attempted to ruin a rival house by financially assaulting it, and when this came to light he was stripped of his honor and exiled. Though the exact nature of their government is not entirely clear, the Romulans are a bit straighter an example, with the Romulan government indicated to be an intricate web of alliances between factions that only work together to the point their interests align. The moment those interests stop aligning, they can and will turn against each other. Doctor Who: The non-renegade Time Lords have been depicted like this ever since Robert Holmes first took a more cynical view of them in "The Deadly Assassin", and even more so in the Darker and Edgier spin-offs. During the first part of the revived series when they were officially dead the Doctor liked to imply that they were dedicated and unselfish defenders of the universe. At least, until it became a question of "us or the rest of the universe", and they settled on "us" - and as the Doctor explained, when Wilf pointed out how he'd always talked about his people like they were wonderful and amazing, that that was how he chose to remember them, but he has most certainly not forgotten the reality. After the Doctors saved them, it's zig-zagged: while it only took two more seasons for it to be revealed just how much the upper echelons hadn't improved, the military and the civilians are depicted as being as decent (or no worse than) anybody else in the universe. Expanded Universe tells us just how much the Doctor was lying-even before the Time War there was a specialized branch of Time Lord bureaucracy specifically to act as a Decadent Court, the Celestial Intervention Agency. At first, they were nothing more than a darkly intrusive Internal Affairs sort of organization. When the Time War came, they started taking measures to enforce Time Lord dominance across the timelines. They succeeded. I, Claudius, starring Derek Jacobi and numerous other high-profile British actors. This series, based on a series of novels, recounts the life of Claudius, the awkward fool who would be emperor... and the drama, treachery, and intrigue that happened in the royal household. It's even more intense when you consider that it is based on historical events. But then, truth is stranger than fiction. (Historians, however, reject the idea of Livia as poisoner.) The Caesars was a Granada series covering the same time period as I, Claudius, and likewise featured the tangled web of incest and murder that was the Julio-Claudian royal family and their social circle. Just to name a few examples, Livia happily admits to having arranged "a good many" deaths over the course of sixty years, Livilla and her lover Sejanus conspire to poison her husband Drusus so that they can rule Rome as regents for her son Gemellus when he succeeds Tiberius, and Caligula has sexual relations with all three of his sisters - until he accidentally strangles one and has the other two banished for allegedly conspiring against him. Another BBC Production, The Cleopatras, takes place in a court where, if you weren't marrying your sibling (or your parent, or uncle, or niece), you were having them killed to keep them from becoming a threat to you. (Sometimes you married them, and THEN killed them when you fell in love with someone else.) The Hamptons in Revenge serves as a good contemporary example. Though not monarchical, Washington DC resembles this in NCIS. Not technically a court but the upper decks of the starship Ascension are this. Except for a dedicated few the main occupations seem to be jockeying for position, partying and sleeping with each others wives/husbands. King Arthur's court in Carry On Laughing! is the polar opposite of its usual portrayal - the knights do little else besides arguing, drinking and showing no loyalty whatsoever to their king (not that he deserves it - he doesn't exactly set a good example). Babylon 5 has the Circle of Houses of the Centauri Republic (actually an empire), extremely decadent as a side effect of the Centauri considering sobriety a vice (as all Centauri have many duties, and taking breaks and having pleasure is a duty that serves to keep them capable of fulfilling the others) and the House lords going overboard, and deadly due the competition among the nobles of a civilization heavy on Realpolitik. It's rather telling that when Londo had lord Refa killed Refa is surprised at the circumstances (as they were rather convoluted and for once he was innocent of what Londo wanted him dead for) and means, not that Londo is having him killed, and the latter is because Londo could have just have slipped him the second part of the poison he had administered him early for a blackmail. Subverted with the Royal Court: they're the ministers appointed by the emperor and the ones that actually run the Republic, and the Nobles know better than interfere with their jobs without really good reasons. The Man in the High Castle: After they won the war, the Nazis have established a dog-eats-dog hierarchy, with the uppermost echelons of the Party and (Para)military constantly scheming against each other for supremacy. Hitler himself even falls victim to an ambitious underling who desires to become Fuehrer so he can start a nuclear war against their former Japanese allies. Super Sentai The Gorma Tribe in Gosei Sentai Dairanger seems to be led by one. This faction seems to be running on Klingon Promotion, so many of its members try to manipulate or backstab each other. The Gorma Emperor is also revealed to wield an Artifact of Doom, which renders him violently insane. This makes dealing with him a very dangerous task. The Evil Army Shadow Line from Ressha Sentai Toqger is modeled after historical European monarchies, with each of the members possessing a title of nobility. Members of this faction scheme against each other almost as much as they do against he heroes of the show. On several occasions, some of the members even ally with the ToQgers to further their agenda against their colleagues. The entire series Kingdom (2019), both in the introductory episodes and trailers, established the courtly intrigue with the bottom of the palace's pond littered with those who were unfortunate enough to fall victim to it. This compounded the series' Zombie Apocalypse as the court and ruling clan were vying for power rather than alleviate the crisis. Furthermore, one of the main character—Yi Chang—began to be targeted by the consort who would have him killed for her own son to ascend the throne. True Blood: Vampire society is largely modeled after feudalism in Medieval Europe. It consists of vampire monarchs who spend most of their time either indulging in their luxuries, accumulating treasure, feeding on humans, or are attempting to take control of territories owned by other monarchs (either through force or political marriages). Overseeing all of this is a shadow government known as The Authority. As shown in season 5, it consists of Vampire Chancellors who are perfectly okay backstabbing each other as long as they get to keep their power. Music In King Crimson's debut album, In the Court of the Crimson King, most of the lyrics (for songs like "21st century Schizoid Man", "Epitaph", and the title track) described a corrupt, falling-apart world of medieval/futuristic kingdoms. The lyrics were written by Peter Sinfield. Myths & Religion The major Olympians of Classical Mythology (and some of the minor ones) are often portrayed as a decadent court in myth and popular culture. With no opposing force, they spend their days pursuing mortal women, engaging in hedonism, figuring out how to back stab each other, or terrorizing mortals for slights real and imaginary. They only survive since they are all immortal. The only saving grace is they all have moments of benevolence toward mortals and not all of them are as decadent. The Odyssey: In the absence of Odysseus, a flock of nobleman suitors have gathered in the palace of the kingdom to present themselves to the queen. The suitors waste the kingdom's money on their entertainment, and plan to kill prince Telemachus for getting in their way. The Bible: The northern kingdom of Israel after the Jehu dynasty ended, which became a constant series of Klingon Promotions up until its final king Hoshea, when the Assyrians invaded and conquered the territory, taking the people into exile. Podcasts In Midst, the aristocracy of the Trust aren't cruel, but they're oblivious to the lives of the less Valorous. They have so many Valor beads that they've had to get creative about wearing them: while most people are lucky to have a necklace, or even to escape their debt, Loxley's entire gown is made of Valor beads. In The Hidden People, the court in question is The Unseelie Court so there was never any doubt. Poetry William Shakespeare's Sonnet 25: Great princes' favourites their fair leaves spread But as the marigold at the sun's eye, And in themselves their pride lies buried, For at a frown they in their glory die. Tabletop Games Ars Magica covenants are prone to becoming like this when they fall into their Winter phase, with larger, more powerful covenants and Domus Magni being major antagonists because of it. Coeris, the House Tremere home covenant (yes, that Tremere) is especially ripe for it because of their extremely competitive and cutthroat political policies and general impenetrability by anyone who can't beat them at Certamen. Dungeons & Dragons: The Seelie and Unseelie Courts of are the epitome of what happens when the Deadly Decadent Court is run by The Fair Folk. The Unseelie Court is noted as downright lethal unless you are very, very carefully prepared. That being said, the 5e Dungeon Master's Guide notes that Seelie and Unseelie do not directly correlate with good and evil, and that there are denizens of the Feywild that belong to neither court or even reject being part of one. The various dukes and duchesses of the Nine Hells of Baator are constantly scheming against each other, fending off ambitious underlings, and aspiring to supplant Asmodeus as the ruler of Hell. For his part, Asmodeus is a Magnificent Bastard able to play his would-be rivals against each other, most spectacularly in the Reckoning, where Hell split into two warring factions that upended the political order, only for Asmodeus to emerge unscathed. As for the rest of the archdevils: Archduchess Zariel of Avernus was toppled for a time by her ambitious general Bel, but she's since retaken the position, yet retains Bel's services as an advisor. While she defends the gates of Hell, she also plots revenge against Asmodeus for his part in her corruption. Dispater, the Iron Duke of Dis, has grown increasingly paranoid about retribution from Asmodeus for his part in the Reckoning, and rarely leaves his inner sanctum. His advisor Titivilus does much to encourage these rumors, and now all but rules Dis in his master's name. Viscount Mammon of Minauros was the first to prostrate himself before Asmodeus after the Reckoning failed, to the disgust of his fellow conspirators, and is desperately trying to build up a war chest now that his ex-lover Glasya has become a fellow Archduke, out of fear that she may punish him for not resisting when her father ordered them to break off their relationship. For a long time, Archduchess Fierna of Phlegethos was content to let her father Belial do all the work running the layer while she enjoyed herself (often with him), but after becoming fast friends with Glasya, she's being more active and independent, setting up her own cultist networks "just in case" anything happens to her dear father. Belial has had to put his own schemes against Levistus on hold until he's sure of his daughter's goals and loyalties. Levistus was imprisoned within one of Stygia's glaciers after killing Asmodeus' consort, and for a time the archduke Geryon ruled the frozen layer. Geryon served as The Mole for Asmodeus during the Reckoning, but despite his loyalty (or perhaps because of it) he was exiled, and rule of Stygia passed back to Levistus... without the prince being released from his frozen prison. Now Geryon fights an insurgency to retake his position while raging at Asmodeus, and Levistus rules telepathically from an iceberg while raging at Asmodeus. The entire scenario is speculated to be an attempt by Asmodeus to purge the two rivals of their worst tendencies, or create an opening for a more worthy would-be ruler to exploit. Malbolge was once ruled by Moloch, who rebelled against Asmodeus upon the urging of his most trusted advisor, Malagard the Hag Countess. Moloch fled the plane after his defeat and the Hag Countess was installed in his place despite not being a baatezu, but then she was in turn replaced by Glasya, Asmodeus' own daughter, who had ended a rebellious phase and been rewarded by elevation to an Archduchess. She's since poached talented devils from other archdukes' courts and forced them to scramble to readjust their plans without antagonizing her, and by extension, her father. Meanwhile, Moloch is trying to raise a mercenary army to retake his former layer, but is stymied by the fact that every time he returns to Baator, he is demoted from an archdevil to a lowly imp. Baalzebul was once ruler of both Malbolge and his own layer of Maladomini, but as punishment for his betrayal in the Reckoning, Asmodeus transformed Baalzebul into a disgusting sluglike creature, until he had spent a year like that for every lie he told a fellow devil. He's since finished his sentence and regained a humanoid form, but Baalzebul dearly wishes to repay Asmodeus for this humiliation. Mephistopheles of Cania once toppled himself in the guise of "Baron Molikroth," in order to purge his court of conspirators. When he isn't scheming against Baalzebul, Mephistopheles is telling Asmodeus, to his face, how one day he will rule Hell. It's possible that Asmodeus keeps the openly disloyal archduke around because Mephistopheles is so determined that he shall be the one to overthrow Asmodeus that he interferes in the other archdukes' conspiracies to do the same. Invoked by Azalin, ruler of Darkon, in the Ravenloft setting. Although personally above such self-indulgence, he actively encourages Darkonian nobles to debase themselves at wild court parties, the better to expose their vices and collect dirt his secret police can use to control them. The various Courts of Raksha in Exalted are like this, and everyone's a Reality Warper to boot. The Realm's various social organizations come close to this as The Empress valued competition among her underlings and descendants. Heaven is a cross of this and the Corrupt Corporate Executive as it's a deadly decadent bureaucracy. Pretty much all Exalted types have charms that can encourage or discourage this type of behavior. Abyssals take the cake, however, as they possess a Socialize charm that causes any social group they use it on to devolve into infighting and backstabbing— in other words, they can create a Deadly Decadent Court at will. Many a Martian Court in Rocket Age. Demarcation Point One also counts, since Ambassadors to the Europans live lives of luxury, but are constantly trying to back stab one another. Pick an Elysium (or court) with Fae or Vampires in any The World of Darkness game, and this is what they're like. Granted, you'll have biker lords and harlot duchesses along with your typical "proper" lords though, oddly on an equal footing. Mage caucuses and consilii can veer into this as well. Warhammer: The various political scenes in the Empire's provinces tend to feature this sort of thing, with both the nastiness and decadence of political squabbling getting worse the further south you go. People in the northern Empire generally tend to look down on flowery speech and deceit and would much rather settle disputes with simple legal proceedings often concluding in non-fatal trial by combat. This is a necessity, because the northern Empire is regularly harassed by Chaos-worshiping Norse raiders and Dark Elf corsairs, so it usually pays to settle disputes quickly so the Burgomeisters and Elector Count can ready their forces to keep the berserking Vikings and sadistic S&M Elves at bay. Prior to their revamp in 6th edition, the Bretonnians were heavily based on the decadent, narcissism-ruled French aristocracy under Louis XVI, to the point that the cult of Slaanesh, the Mad God of Sex Is Evil, was rampant throughout the nation. They've since become Knights In Shining Armor more likely to settle their offended senses of honor with a Trial by Combat than skullduggery. Tilea is run by merchant princes and not nobles, but the region is renowned for the volatility and decadence of its upper crust. Poisoning and assassination are a regular fact of life, and just about anyone worth anything will hire a Cadre of Foreign Bodyguards (ogres are particularly favoured) as most Tileans won't trust other Tileans to guard themselves out of fear they've got an agenda (or is on someone else's payroll). The one exception where Tilea is less corrupt than The Empire is that Skaven infiltration is much less common: Tileans hate Skaven and would rather die than cut deals with them, as opposed to some of the Empire's nobility. The Dark Elves' courts are essentially based on control, cruelty and the dominion of the powerful to exercise utter obedience in those underneath them. The Hanil Khar is an annual pledge of allegiance to the ruler of a city that regularly features the cold-blooded torture of any who dare to bring insufficient tribute, with outright execution common to those who really fail to produce. Keep in mind, this is their awards ceremony here. Another indicator of the murderous nature of Druchii court life is the rigid etiquette of social space that evolved because the Dark Elves are so damn paranoid about being straight-up assassinated. Very tellingly, it is measured in sword-lengths. Lowborn Dark Elves may not approach a lord closer than three sword-lengths without being summoned, retainers may remain within two lengths, and lieutenants, trusted retainers and lower-ranking highborn may approach to a single sword-length. Within a sword-length is the most intimate space, and is reserved for lovers, playthings and, very characteristic of the Druchii, mortal enemies. You have to really think about the parties that these guys attended that forced this sort of system to be adopted. The Dark Elves likely inherited this tendency from the High Elves, who practice a downplayed example. The High Elves regularly engage in blackmail, espionage, rumour-mongering and Gambit Pileups a-plenty in their courts as the various nobles of various ranks and from various regions jockey for position and favour in the Phoenix King's court, to the extent that in certain rulebooks, which character in your High Elf army counted as its General was determined by a dice roll, not who had the highest Leadership value. Even the Phoenix King isn't entirely safe and is expected to play the game in a way good enough that no-one can accuse him of playing it (though an elected position, Phoenix Kings rule for life, but said rule can get rather impotent if the princes lack respect for the king, which they will if he lacks political clout). Unlike the Dark Elves, however, violence is limited to honour-duels (and also frowned upon when it happens), and murder is forbidden. The original High Elf/Dark Elf split comes from the one time the 'no murder in politics' rule was broken and the Dark Elves were the ones who agreed with said murder. The Skaven are a species wide example. Any Skaven is by nature selfish, backstabbing, and cowardly, who believes that the only thing of importance is the survival and gain of the individual. They will engage in no shortage of assassinations, betrayals, and sabotage, with some warlords getting murdered on the spot by their ostensible allies in front of the others (it's implied that this is considered a perfectly legitimate way of rising in ranks). Even during times of war, different Skaven clans will spend as much time plotting against their "allies" instead of their actual opponents, and even then, the different Skaven in the clans will be plotting against their kin. The lore notes that this is probably the only reason they haven't already taken over the world. Warhammer 40,000: The Highborn, the leading nobility of each Imperial world, live sequestered from the impoverished masses they rule over in their comfy little spires and palaces, and the knowledge of etiquette is as important to them as the knowledge of poisons and assassination plots. Being the most important or most powerful Highborn in your court basically means having to live your entire life in paranoid terror, seeing assassins behind every corner, and being right. They essentially treat Imperial citizens as slaves or chattel, and may form entire noble syndicates ruling over solar systems. The Administratum doesn't particularly care what they do with their planets as long as they pay their tithes (because the Imperium is a Darker and Edgier version of The Federation), so they're unlikely to ever face consequences for their decadence. The Dark Eldar fit this trope to a T. The Dark City basically started out as a composition of trade hubs and private realms of noble houses that were outside the jurisdiction of the rulers of the old Eldar empire. It was there the spread of decadence that would eventually lead to the Fall of Eldar started, and many of those same noble houses continue to exist 10,000 years later (although many have reinvented themselves as Kabals), still continuing the behaviours that lead to the Fall. Theatre Cyrano de Bergerac: Count De Guiche pays a court of False Friends who talk about him behind his back, uses Viscount De Valvert to abuse lesser nobles, bullying Roxane and Cyrano, sends one hundred men to punish a poet, and this trope is constantly discussed by all the Gascons as a proof that De Guiche is No True Scotsman Gascon. Oh, and remember, you will not go anywhere in this court unless you have wit! Subverted In Real Life: De Guiche was one of Cardinal Richelieus collaborators and they transformed France from a poor backward country into a continental power. Parodied with Ragueneaus situation: At Act II, Raguenau is called "King of the Bakers" but is clear that his court of poet friends are only flattering him to eat at his expense, that his neglected queen, Lisa, is cheating on him with the Musketeer, that his own employees are abusing his Conspicuous Consumption, Crack Is Cheaper attitudes, that all those things will lead him to ruin, and when his only real friend, Cyrano, lampshades this, the "King" cannot accept the truth. At the beginning of Act III, the Kingdom (the bakery) is lost. Arguably, Judge Turpin's Masquerade Ball in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (though since it only features in one scene it might be more of a Fête Worse than Death). All of them stand there and laugh while the judge rapes Lucy. As You Like It: The court is a treacherous place where everyone is miserable until they head to Arcadia. Pretty much ALL of Shakespeare's histories, with Richard III being the most extreme example. Even in Henry V, Act II opens with three nobles being exposed as plotting the King's assassination; he tricks them into arguing against mercy for a minor offender, reveals that he knows what they've been up to, and has them all executed without trial, then carries on with his war plans as if nothing's happened. In John Milton's Comus, the Lady observes that Sacred Hospitality is found more often among the poor, even though its courtesy was named for courts. A very small, but sufficiently treacherous, instance in The Lion in Winter, where King Henry II of England, his queen Eleanor, their three surviving sons — Richard, Geoffrey, and John — and King Philip II of France are all plotting something. Lots of backstabbing and temporary alliances result. Westeros: An American Musical: It's a little hard to parody A Song of Ice and Fire without having this trope show up. It's to the point that "Small Council", the play's counterpart to "Aaron Burr, Sir" from Hamilton, changes the "talk less, smile more" line to "trust less, conspire more". The following song, "Plot Development" is about several members of the royal court having their own little conspiracy underway. Video Games In Final Fantasy Tactics, the royal court of Ivalice, inspired in part by the War of the Roses, who manipulate, backstab, frame each other, and ally themselves with the Legions of Hell (wittingly or not) to achieve succession and absolute rule. Final Fantasy XII's House Solidor and the Archadian Council are no better. Including the "join forces with Eldritch Abominations" part. The Iron Council of Magnagora in Lusternia. They're monstrous even by the standards of a city twisted by The Corruption and populated by racist mutants: backstabbing, murder and cannibalism are all actively encouraged means of advancement, and their Physical God chief advisor is the resident manipulative chessmaster. The Interactive Fiction game Varicella plops you in the middle of such a court; the first time you play through you'll spend a while exploring then run out of time and get killed. The next time you'll solve a few more puzzles, until in the end you know exactly how to make every move count. The Italian Nobles in Assassin's Creed II are all about killing one another in order to advance their own goals (especially in the case of the Templars). Truth in Television actually. Followed up by, and maybe topped by, the French royal court under Louis XVI in Assassin's Creed: Unity. Again, a fair bit of Truth in Television. The Aristocrat Club in Rule of Rose consists of a bunch of orphaned children playing rich and powerful nobility, complete with constant intrigue and rivalries, accompanied by complex rituals which often involve torture and/or hazing of one another, as well as cruelty against animals. In Crusader Kings 2 Your court is filled with people conspiring against you, and vice versa. There's an entire game mechanic for hatching Evil Plans and conspiracies, a second one for attempting to spark civil wars and rebellions and a third option to just pay large stacks of gold to send assassins after people you don't like. The Crusader Kings series could even be seen as Deadly Decadent Court: THE GAME. The decadent part is especially evident with the DLC that allows people to play as Islamic dynasties: non-landed family members get more and more decadent, which is a very bad thing. Merchant Republics are no picnic either: a feudal realm has one ruler and his associated court. Republics have five great families, each with their own ambitious younger members and ungrateful vassals, all nominally subject to the Doge but scheming madly to steal each other's trade posts and ensure that their patrician succeeds the Doge should he meet an untimely end. The Elder Scrolls: High Rock, the homeland of the Bretons, is made up of endless multitude of city-states, principalities, baronies, duchies, and kingdoms that had, until the events of Daggerfall, resisted all attempts at centralization into a single culture or government. As such, their political intrigue is more cutthroat than is typical elsewhere in Tamriel, with the use of assassinations, spies, and double agents rampant. This has been mitigated somewhat after the Warp in The West, which converted High Rock's dozens of petty city-states into three "kingdoms," but still prevalent. Although High Rock is the place highlighted in lore, Daggerfall shows that at the least the Redguard kingdom of Sentinel, in Hammerfell, is not much better. In the Dawnguard DLC for Skyrim, joining the Volkihar Vampire Clan makes you the target of two different backstabbing plots during your very first quest with them. According to Garan Marethi afterwards, this is considered standard Volkihar politics. However, when you become the Lord of Volkihar, no one tries anything funny on you, because everyone knows what you did to the previous Lord who did try. In all five galaxies of Imperium Nova the roleplaying forum features at least one. Though the mechanical side of the game only covers the more overt actions of the players (wars, duels, dynastic marriages, etc, the worst they can do is assassination). The Last Story takes places on an island run by a court which has fallen into this. Nearly anyone who isn't outright evil is an Upper-Class Twit. If not both. Dragon Age: The most obvious example is Orlais, which is based on medieval France. The unending machinations of the upper class are known as "The Great Game", and participation is considered something of a pastime. Orlesian nobles make extensive use of bards who are trained in—besides music—espionage, assassination, and sabotage. Even the servants engage in the Game, often working as spies and/or jockeying to improve their own position. Then there's Orzammar, where the Noble Dwarf gets caught up in his younger brother Bhelen's machinations, forcing him to work with Bhelen or his rival Harrowmount. Neither choice is optimal, either. Harrowmount is kind but staunchly conservative, while Bhelan is a Game of Thrones character but progressive economically and socially. You get to have a go at playing court politics in Dragon Age: Inquisition, when a quest sends you to a grand ball to prevent the Empress's assassination. It starts with you getting judged for your background (unlucky for you if you're anything but a non-mage human) and only gets more murky. If you do well you can get the person of your choice in charge of the Empire. If not...you get tossed out and the whole kingdom dissolves into chaos as you fail to prevent the killing. The whole sequence features an absurd amount of murder, trickery and nice masks. And shoes, don't forget the shoes. Vivienne, one of your companions in Inquisition, as well as advisers Leliana and Josephine are all accomplished players of the Game - Vivienne because she's the First Enchanter of the local circle and arcane adviser to the Empress, Josephine because she's the ambassador to Orlais from Antiva, and Leliana is a former Bard. Josephine's a former Bard as well, but she quit that job. Shockingly, Solas fits right in himself, even dropping his veneer a bit and becoming a slightly snooty aristocrat, and admitting enjoying court intrigue. Primarily because he was an Evanuris thousands of years ago, the ancient elven equivalent of Orlais. While Orlais is the nation most notorious for their court intrigues, that's only because they're poetic enough to have a name for it. Other nations that engage in this trope are Tevinter (a nation ruled by mages where it's an open secret that any mage of political standing practices blood magic), Antiva (a nation with a Puppet King that's truly controlled by assassins and merchant leaders), and Orzammar (in a notable aversion to Our Dwarves Are All the Same). The Chantry, the setting's dominant religious sect, engages as well; they're well aware that their decrees shape the culture of the entire continent of Thedas, and clerics (including the Grand Cleric—the setting's Pope) are not above employing spies and assassins to do their dirty work. The popular Civilization IV mod Fall from Heaven has the Balseraphs who are all about this trope with the "deadly" part of the trope's former title being key. Those still sane and able to escape have done so long ago. Perpentach, the king of the Balseraphs, likes to dress up as a clown and kill people for amusement (basically, imagine The Joker being in charge of a country). His daughter Keelyn was born of a brief dalliance with a spy from a nation that seeks to bring out the Apocalypse. Born in a dungeon and kept from human contact, she learned to summon hellish creatures and temporarily rules while her father is away. Fire Emblem, as a primarily Medieval European Fantasy series pursuing a degree of versimilitude, has those crop up fairly often. The Nohrian Court in Fire Emblem Fates. King Garon's inability to sever ties with a woman once he fell in love with her led him to take many concubines in addition to his wives (Queen Katerina, and once she dies, Queen Arete), so he sired a lot of illegitimate children. While at first he loved all of his children equally and doted on them like a good father would, his concubines fought and chafed with one another for his favor and used their children as a part of this. Bullying, scarring, assassinations and deaths of both concubines and children occured until only four half-siblings were left: Xander (Katerina's son and the legitimate heir), Camilla, Leo, and Elise (all born from concubines), who were all tired of the in-fighting and resolved the inheritance of Nohr's throne among themselves, and in the process formed strong ties to one another. Unfortunately, the whole affair not only left deep psychological scars on them (especially Xander and Camilla) but it horribly hardened the once-kind Garon and he became neglectful, abusive, and ruthless, which became even worse after Queen Arete died in a Heroic Sacrifice. Because Xander, Camilla and Leo remember Garon's doting affection for them, they will not directly oppose him even if they agree that his rule at the present is overly harsh and ruthless, and they hope that once their father conquers Hoshido, he will go back to the kind ruler and father he was. What they don't know is that Garon is Dead All Along and his corpse is being used as a familiar by Anankos in his plot to destroy both Hoshido and Nohr. In Fire Emblem: Three Houses, the three countries of Fódlan all have this problem to varying but noticeable extents: The Adrestian Empire is all but openly run by a group of corrupt high nobles who organized an insurrection in response to attempted consolidation of power by the emperor, Ionius IX, and reduced his status to Authority in Name Only. Their leader, Duke Ludwig von Aegir, in addition to usual trappings of an unscrupulous, avaricious noble, also sanctioned the inhumane experiments on the children of the royal family in an effort to make 'a peerless emperor' controlled by them. The experiments were performed by a group of dark mages who held little to no respect to the lives of their subjects, and the leader of those mages also posed as the emperor's brother-in-law and the Imperial regent who had been presumably killed by them before. Out of the eleven subjects, only one — Edelgard von Hresvelg — survived, at the cost of her hair color, a significant part of lifespan, and, implicitly, shattered previous belief in the world... and especially the Goddess. The horrors she endured also led to the determination to bring down the Crest nobility system that directly led to the suffering of her family, as well as the Church of Seiros that condoned and proliferated said system — with any means and at any cost. As her very first act upon ascending to the Adrestian throne, Edelgard began to cleanse the system by dismissing and imprisoning several of the most corrupt and uncooperative high nobles, particularly Duke Aegir — an act the player may witness firsthand on her route. At the end of her own route, after reuniting Fódlan, she dismantles the nobility altogether, with positions in the government instead given to those who earn them by personal merits and skills. Behind its image of The Good Kingdom ruled by shiny knights faithful to their liege, the Holy Kingdom of Faerghus hides a court that rivals their Adrestian counterpart in both decadence and deadliness. Most notably, the previous king of Faerghus, Lambert Egitte Blaiddyd, fell victim to a scheme by several court members discontent with reforms pushed by him. They — along with Lambert's queen Patricia who was desperate to meet her daughter from the previous marriage — contacted the Court Mage, Cornelia Arnim, to orchestrate an ambush on the delegation led by Lambert to the neighboring land of Duscur. The attack, which left King Lambert and most of the delegation dead, was subsequently blamed on the population of Duscur, resulting in a massacre of the country by the Faerghus army. Also, Lambert's son Dimitri, who personally witnessed the tragedy, was thoroughly impacted by the event and lived to seek retribution for it ever since. Later it gets even worse: on three of four routes, Cornelia orders the assassination of Lambert's brother Rufus who ruled the kingdom as a regent, then pins it on Dimitri before joining with a group of nobles to surrender most of the kingdom to the invading Imperial army. The crown prince narrowly escapes execution and spends the next few years in exile which damages his already fragile psyche even further. On the remaining route, the kingdom is somewhat more stable, but Cornelia still tries to backstab it during the battle for Arianrhod — since Cornelia's, or precisely her placeholder's, true allegiance is with the aforementioned Mad Scientist mages. The Roundtable of the Leicester Alliance is marked by intrigue and disunity, as a large chunk of its members seek for personal benefit at the expense of the nation as a whole. The new heir of the ruling family, Claude von Riegan, finds the infighting between families ruling parts of the Alliance so heavy, when the war breaks out he is effectively forced to pit the pro-Adrestian and pro-Faerghus/anti-Adrestian factions against each other while maintaining an appearance of neutrality. Eventually, it becomes so overwhelming for Claude — who, by the way, has another throne to claim — that he books out of it altogether on every route, including his own (though there are two exceptionsSpecifically... 1. if he is killed on Edelgard's route, or 2. if he ends up married to F!Byleth (read: the player chooses him for the S-Support) and returns later). Human society in Guild Wars 2 is dominated by these, which may have something to do with their decline. Divinity's Reach is controlled by ministers scheming against the Queen. One of them, Minister Caudecus, is a major antagonist in the personal story and Living World Season 3. The nobles of Vabbi emphasize the decadent aspect of this trope. These people are all Upperclass Twits who devote all their time to partying and relaxing, completely oblivious to the abuses of their Mummy ruler or the suffering of the common folk due to the war. In Darkest Dungeon, the Court was once a home to this, a vast collection of nobles and visiting dignitaries from surrounding lands who gradually debased themselves with drink and games until they slid into horrific debauchery involving illicit drugs and cruel, murderous sport. They were so excessively debased that when the Ancestor proposed they drink a wine made of vampire blood, they accepted it eagerly, and barely halted their horrific indulgences even while being transformed into monstrous insects. By the time of the game's events, the Court is now a collection of crazed, inhuman mosquito-vampires who clothe themselves in the trappings of nobility. In Shuyan Saga, the prosperous kingdom of Zhong Rong, a long way from any fighting, is not big on taking action. They seem to lean more towards the overly-sensitive, artistically-minded kind of decadence than debauchery (breaking mid-session to look at plum blossoms), but it has the same result — they don't want to send troops. World of Warcraft The Highborne night elves all respected and loved Queen Azshara and would have never dreamt of betraying her. The backstabbing happened in her royal court where nobles and high-ranking mages would spitefully betray and slander each other to vie for their queen's attention. One of the Warcraft universe's afterlives, Revendreth, has the Ember Court, originally run by the Sire Denathrius. Despite originally being made to punish the wicked, the denizens of the realm gradually created a culture of greed and gluttony around exploiting the realm's sinful souls for their own ends. After overthrowing Denathrius, the Venthyr player is actually given the option of creating their own Ember Court to help reunite the guardian covenants of the various afterlives into working together in a uniquely social setting. Visual Novels Similarly to Lusternia, the first playthroughs in Long Live the Queen are going to get the Player Character killed, in a variety of manners. Wearing a crown, as fourteen- year-old Crown Princess Elodie is set for, means having a big shiny target on the head in Nova's turbulent political climate. In particular, it's very heavily implied that Lucille, Countess of Nix is behind many of the assassination attempts that Elodie encounters, as her husband (Elodie's maternal uncle) is next in line for the throne, followed by their daughter Charlotte. It's possible to prevent these events from occurring at all by ingratiating yourself with them in such a way that grants them the level of power that they're looking for, but good luck with that if you don't have a plan from the get-go. In Seven Kingdoms: The Princess Problem, the royal court of Corval is famously decadent and intrigue-riddled. One of the possible backgrounds for a player character is that of a lady of Corval's Inner Court, requiring and providing bonuses toward social and political savvy. In Sunrider, the royal court of the Holy Ryuvian Empire was like this according to Sola di Ryuvia. She describes it as a place where saying the wrong thing or snubbing the wrong person could easily get you marked for death, and believes that her father, the second son of the Emperor, had his older brother and father assassinated in a bid for the throne (which he then blamed on his bastard half-brother, Crow Harbor). Sola: The Ryuvian court of my era was a snake pit. Betrayals. Assassinations. Machinations. They were a part of the palace culture. Web Comics The Elven court in 8-Bit Theater is all assholes. The Elven Nominal Hero Thief isn't much better, though. The Vampire Lords in Midnight's War still carry many ancient rivalries they had before they revealed themselves to the mortals. However, disputes among them are highly formalized and cordial, to avoid disrupting their blood collection. In My Dear Cold-Blooded King, the Blood King's court is filled with political maneuvering and death plots. He fosters a false reputation for being ruthlessly murderous simply to stave off assasination attempts. Azure City in The Order of the Stick has a very prominent nobility, with cloak and dagger methods being the norm for them. Lord Shojo began a practice of feigning insanity to avoid being assassinated, and his successor Hinjo accurately guesses he'll get a ninja death squad shortly after he takes the throne. Web Original The Nobles in Twig consider all their prestige in terms of who is where in the chain of succession; having never killed to rise in the succession means that one is viewed as weak. Individuals are enhanced as children using cutting-edge science, the more radical the more prestige. Weddings are always targets for biological warfare and assassination. A Practical Guide to Evil: The Court of Ater is expected to be this, as all of the in-fighting between nobles keeps them from causing trouble outside of the Tower. The Black Knight describes it as the most lethal environment short of an actual battlefield. Food and drink at their parties is routinely poisoned, but usually only in a way that will cause humiliation to anyone inept enough to attend without learning the antidote in advance and stupid enough to then eat or drink. Black: Praesi nobility has a regrettable propensity for stabbing. Captain: And poisoning. And blood magic. Calling the Tower a snake pit is doing a disservice to snakes; they don't usually bite unless provoked. Some of the fuckers up there will have you killed for wearing robes that look too much like theirs. The Winter Court also apply, being the fairy court more aligned with evil. Western Animation In Adventure Time, the Fire Kingdom is an officially Evil hotbed of backstabbing, plotting and fratricide. Flame Princess tries to reduce this, but the fact that she seized the throne by force and imprisoned her father rather reduces her claim to the moral high ground. Real Life A bit of a Truth in Television trope, since nations with absolute rulers and a wealthy aristocracy have tended to breed Deadly Decadent Courts like flies. Imperial Rome, its medieval continuation the Byzantine/Eastern Roman Empire, Imperial China (and later communist-controlled China), and pre-Revolutionary France are the archetypal examples that most writers seem to crib from. Non-royal "courts" often work too, such as the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union had several examples of this: In the immediate aftermath of the Red October, Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks had to share power with other revolutionary groups like the Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries. There was a lot of political maneuvering as Lenin and his Co-Dragons Josef Stalin and Leon Trotsky deprived their rivals of power, along with brutal repressions of dissent like the Kronstadt Rebellion. When the Bolsheviks had seized full power and Lenin's health was failing after several strokes, much of his inner circle began maneuvering to see which of them would be the Dragon Ascendant. Stalin and Trotsky were the most heated rivals and likeliest successors. Their feud ended with Stalin succeeding Lenin and Trotsky being exiled from the USSR. When Stalin took full control, he created a sense of fear and paranoia in his own inner circle. He liberally used The Purge as a means of reminding his cronies that no one was truly safe, and any of them could be next if he decided they were no longer useful to him. This promoted a toxic political culture which left only the most sleazy, corrupt and amoral people in power by Stalin's end as they are the only ones ruthless enough to do so, willing to do anything to survive and advance in Stalin's 'court' even if it means scheming, selling out and screwing over even their colleagues. When Stalin himself died, several of his cronies engaged in a deadly power struggle to succeed him. Nikita Khrushchev won the fight, and had his main rival, the serial rapist Lavrenty Beria, arrested and executed in cold blood. More generally, the somewhat "puritanical" version of this trope was in effect in Stalin's USSR. There was officially not supposed to be any decadence, luxuries or other stuff of the sort, but there were plenty of luxuries for Josef Stalin and his close comrades, though how much they enjoyed them is a different matter. Stalin gave his mother a palace, for example, but she refused to make use of it, sleeping in the servants' quarters and cooking her own meals. In post-Stalinist times, the decadence finally came to town, though it was still discreet and subtle, never fully shown to outsiders. Though one of the causes of the fall of the USSR was exposure of this corruption and decadence, it survived the fall unscathed and continued in The New Russia, now stripped clean of any and all Communist puritanism and its practitioners reveling in their new status as the officially unequal upper class. Simon Sebag Montefiore called his excellent book on Stalin The Court of the Red Czar. The Byzantine Empire was so infamous for this that another term for this trope is "Byzantine politics." Case in point, Byzantine Empress Irene and her gender swapped version of King Henry VIII's spouse killing spree, cutting out the eyes of former Emperors and current Emperors (the Emperor was supposed to be an image of divine perfection, so mutilating somebody made him ineligible). Plus the court was subject to other influences, such as the Church and the Vikings hired for the Varangian Guard (famously resulting in Harald Hadrada, Viking, Varangian Guardsman, soon to be King of Norway, and would-be conquerer of England, castrating and ripping out the eyes of Byzantine emperor Michael V Kalaphates in 1042.) Irene specifically had her own son and successor blinded, in a way calculated to cause his death, in the chamber where she had given birth to him. Even if it sounds strange, the Hittites. The royal court of Hattusa was truly a deadly place—full of relatives ready to betray the king at the first opportunity. The Ottoman Empire was likely the defining post-renaissance example; that it was intentionally set up so that every Sultan's death resulted in a frantic power-grab by every potential heir, with the winner having the legal right to have ALL surviving losers strangled to death was just the tip of the iceberg. No matter if your mother was your father's favorite, one of wives, concubines or slaves, all of his sons had equal claim to the throne and represented a threat to you so long as they lived. It didn't help the Janissaries, the Sultan's bodyguards who eventually became corrupt, also chose a new heir to fulfill their political agenda. The Ottoman royal harem was no less of an viper's nest, with concubines competing among themselves for the Sultan's affections and to secure their children as the heir so they can become the newest Valide Sultan or Queen-Mother. To this end, they were not above conspiring with eunuchs to get rid of overly ambitious rivals, like stuffing their bodies into bags and throwing them into sea, or gelding them to prevent them from producing competitors of the throne. It's believed that the average life expectancy of every new concubine was 5 years. The court of Saudi Arabia approaches this, although exile, shaming, and reassignment to Antarctica are preferred to outright killing; after all, almost all members of the court are (half)-brothers or cousins (being descendants of King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud), and the public image of family unity must be maintained. However, by all accounts, the internal politics of the Al Saud are quite dangerous—particularly now that there's a Succession Crisis due in a decade or so that everyone can see coming from a mile away—and the decadence of the Saudi court is so legendary, it has a trope. Probably apocryphal, but worth repeating. The astrologer at the court of Louis XI of France (known as "the Universal Spider" for his intricate and devious plots) had (quite by accident) accurately foretold the death of someone close to the king. Louis decided to have the unfortunate astrologer executed, but had a last question: "When do you foresee your own death?" The astrologer replied: "That I cannot divine, but it will be three days before Your Majesty's death." After that, the (in real life) superstitious Louis gave the astrologer all possible protection. Niccolò Machiavelli himself strongly recommended against this; besides the obvious risks to one's personal security, the high taxes required to support a decadent court tend to encourage rebellions. Louis XIV told Machiavelli "Screw That" and proceeded to create an Absolute French Monarchy revolving around an extensive Bread and Circuses political spectacle with him at the centre, building* well, converting from a mere royal hunting lodge to a sprawling luxurious palace the chateau de Versailles and controlling the rebelling French barons Fronde by forcing them to develop an expensive lifestyle that defines French fashion to this very day. It worked for a time, and it certainly put an end to the period of French civil wars and the decentralized power of the nobility; but behind the scenes, Louis XIV was working extremely hard to keep the system afloat, and his successors Louis XV and Louis XVI never fully understood that they, too, needed to work hard (failing to master the "accomplishing much" part of what Benjamin Franklin would call "the art of accomplishing much while appearing to accomplish little"). Cue The French Revolution, and a posthumous I-told-you-so for Machiavelli. The system of Louis XIV's royal court itself also caused problems for his successors, for instance by increasingly isolating the king and his court as well as a large part of the aristocracy from the reality of life in Paris and the provinces, which contributed to the slowly building crisis that culminated in the Revolution. Also the decadence of the court, which to a large extent was exactly what Louis planned, gradually became a reason for intellectuals of The Enlightenment to criticise the court and the aristocracy and caused notable scandals. During Louis' own reign the "Affair of the Poisons" (1677-1682), during which many members of the court and even some of the king's inner circle were implicated and accused of poisoning and witchcraft put the "Deadly" in Deadly Decadent Court as, despite being partially hushed up, it resulted in 36 executions, two persons dying under torture, and several prominent courtiers falling from grace or being exiled.note Among the exiled was the Countess of Soissons; her son, Prince Eugene of Savoy stayed in France, but because his mother was disgraced Louis did not allow him to gain a military command. This led to him to leave the country and enter the service of Louis' Austrian Habsburg enemies. Where Eugene's leadership was instrumental in defeating France in the War of Spanish Succession. A system where courtiers had to vie for the king's favour and conduct intrigues against each other was hit and miss in ensuring that the most competent men being assigned the important state positions. Sometimes it worked, such as when the grossly corrupt finance minister Nicolas Fouquet abruptly was stripped of his office and possessions and imprisoned for life through the machinations of his rival Colbert, who took his place and greatly improved taxation. On the other hand, many a French commanding general in the War of the Spanish Succession was better at currying Louis XIV's favour than leading an army. And the problems caused by royal favour and support by court cabals deciding who was put into command of France's armies would grow even worse during the Seven Years' War... His rule also laid the seeds of the French Monarchy's total financial ruin and the revolution. A large part of his efforts to win over the nobility was built on essentially making the nobility and the church tax exempt. A loss in revenue that was ultimately never made up for, but which was compensated for by drastically increasing the number and rates which the peasantry had to pay to the crown. Which was simply added on top of the taxes the peasants already paid to their local church and nobility to begin with. His successors' incompetence is often blamed because things started falling apart under them, but the financial system of the French Monarchy was a ticking time bomb because of him which ultimately resulted in both the Revolution and in the bankruptcy of the state. On the other hand, the French court that preceded Louis' reforms was just as bad. The Frondeurs repeatedly struggled with Louis' mother Anne of Austria and Cardinal Mazarin for power even during a long war with Spain, intriguing against the royal household and each other, with one of the best French generals even defecting to the Spanish. Louis didn't create a decadent French court so much as he reformed it to one that better benefited the state, particularly in cleaning up a lot of the aristocratic corruption. Adolf Hitler's inner circle was full of people vying to outdo the other; they called it the Obersalzberg Kamarilla. Albert Speer, Hitler's chief architect, and later on super-minister of the Third Reich, describes this in great detail in his memoirs, showing that this deadly decadence was a crucial factor in the defeat of Germany. Even as the war grew larger and riskier, and as Germany's armies faced stronger resistance and suffered great defeats, Hitler's inner circle focused mostly on political rivalry and on backstabbing each other, not caring all that much about the war. And going further down the pyramid, the gauleiters (sort of a regional governor with almost-absolute authority) only cared about their wealth and luxury, protecting their share of Germany's income with absolute zeal, even on the brink ot total defeat. Even though his main priority was overseeing the country's military economy, Speer had to distract himself with these political rivalries to keep himself in power. In other words, just like Louis XIV and (probably) Stalin, Hitler planted the seeds of his empire's downfall even before it began to rise. Part of this was because Hitler himself deliberately encouraged infighting and Klingon Promotion in the NSDAP and the government, as he thought it would lead to the most capable people rising to power. The constant infighting also served a practical purpose; competition kept any one subordinate from amassing enough power to threaten Hitler. It's telling that the only time Hitler had to take direct action against his underlings (the Night of the Long Knives, when he crushed [among others] the SA "Brownshirts") was early on, before he had his Decadent Court fully set up. Depending on who you ask, the US President's staff, Joint Chiefs, and various executive underlings qualify. Although the person you ask may say it was worse under one president and not so bad under another. Office politics can be this sometimes, if you replace killing with firing. The Roman Empire had a lot of this, as numerous Legion generals attempted to usurp the throne, Senators attempted to humiliate or murder their rivals, the Praetorian Guard murdering Emperors who didn't pay them enough or upset them in some way, and more. This is a major reason as to why the Western Roman Empire failed: due to Senators and merchants not wanting to pay to support the army, plus would-be usurpers and civil wars impacting the quality of the Legions, the Empire eventually collapsed under its own weight, with only the Byzantine Empire managing to endure despite this. In her letters, Elizabeth Charlotte, Madame Palatine wrote to her relatives and friends complaining about the increasingly decadent French court at Versailles during the 18th century: I believe that the histories that will be written about this court after we are gone will be better and more entertaining than any novel, and I am afraid that those who come after us will not be able to believe them and think they are just fairy tales. Current World LeadersCountryMonarchType of monarchyAndorraAndorra is ruled by two princes, one of whom is always the current President of France.ConstitutionalBahrainKing Hamad bin Isa al-KhalifaConstitutionalBelgiumKing Philippe (2013)ConstitutionalBhutanJigme Khesar Namgyal WangchukinConstitutionalBruneiSultan Haji Hassanal BolkiahConstitutionalCambodiaKing Norodom SihamoniConstitutionalDenmarkQueen Margrethe IIConstitutionalJapanEmperor AkihitoConstitutionalJordanKing Abdullah IIConstitutionalKuwaitSabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah (2006)ConstitutionalLesothoKing Letsie IIIConstitutionalLiechtensteinPrince Hans Adam IIConstitutionalLuxembourgGrand Duke HenriConstitutionalMalaysiaAlmu'tasimu Billahi Muhibbuddin Tuanku Alhaj Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah Ibni Almarhum Sultan BadlishahConstitutionalMonacoPrince Albert IIConstitutionalMoroccoKing Muhammad VIConstitutionalNetherlandsKing Willem-AlexanderConstitutionalNorwayKing Harald VConstitutionalOmanSultan Qabus ibn Sa'idAbsoluteQatarEmir Sheik Tamim ibn Hamad Al ThaniConstitutionalSamoaTuiatua Tupua Tamasese EfiConstitutionalSaudi ArabiaKing SalmanAbsoluteSpainFelipe VIParliamentarySwazilandKing Mswati IIIAbsoluteSwedenKing Carl XVI GustafConstitutionalThailandPrem Tinsulanonda, regentConstitutionalTongaKing Tupou VIConstitutionalUnited KingdomQueen Elizabeth II1Constitutional2Vatican CityPope FrancisAbsolute1. Queen Elizabeth Ii также является суверенным в 15 Страны в Содружестве наций: Антигуа и Барбуда, Австралия, Багамские острова, Барбадос, Белиз, Канада, Гренада, Ямайка, Новая Зеландия, Папуа-Новая Гвинея, Сент-Китс и Невис, Сент-Люсия, Санкт-Винсент и Гренадины, Соломоновые острова и Тувалу. 2. Также парламентская демократия. Что такое Монархия? Монархия (от греческого monarkhia ; " monos ", и " Arkhe " Это ведет страну одним правителем, обычно королем или королевой. Монархи обычно не избираются никак., Хотя есть выборные монархии. Малайзия - это факультативная монархия, как и Священная Римская империя. Монарх, как лидер Известен, может быть глава государства, глава правительства или обоих. Глава государства является представителем страны и ее народа, особенно в дипломатических делах. Глава Правительство, напротив, человек, который фактически ведет правительство в создании и обеспечении применения политики. Монархия обычно называется царством. Другие термины могут включать Великое герцогство (как в случае Люксембурга), княжество (как в случае Монако) или городского государства (как в случае Ватикана). Как различаются монархии? есть Различные виды монархий, основанные на том, насколько политическая власть имеет монарх, и как их офис унаследован. Абсолютные монархии - это те упражнения монарха Общая власть как глава государства и главы правительства. У них могут быть собрание или другие государственные органы, но монарх упражнения окончательного органа. Самый известный пример Абсолютная монархия сегодня - Саудовская Аравия, где правящий дом Сауда имеет огромную силу и влияние. Конституционные монархии, в которых полномочия монарха явно ограничены законом. Обычно они только глава государства, в то время как глава правительства станет избранным премьер-министром. Как в случае Соединенного Королевства, Монарх может технически иметь отличную власть, но они не уполномочены согнуть эту власть. Вопреки распространенному восприятию в США королева Елизавета II может объявить войну, вето законы и уволить правительство. Однако она не будет делать, без консультации по ее правительству, однако из-за различных юридических и политических факторов. Смешанная монархия одна в Что существует законодательный орган власти, но монарх поддерживает больше власти, чем в конституционной монархии. Самый известный пример - Иордан, где царь управляется много власти, но страна довольно демократичная.See also World Rulers. Social Statistics Sources + Our Common Sources See also: Longest-Reigning Living Monarchs ? ! ТЕМЫ РЕКЛАМА«ТЕМЫ» МНЕНИЕ ТЕМЫ ЖИЗНИ ТЕМЫ 7 СОВРЕМЕННЫЙ КУРС ТЕЙТА БОЯЗНЬ, АБСУРДНОСТЬ, СМЕРТЬ ТЕМЫ КАЖДЫЙ ПОНЕДЕЛЬНИК, назад Поделиться ...Ваш текст придворные чины средневековья иерархия королевского двора придворные чины англии придворный почему при придворные дамы Статистика по словам Показов в месяц придворная дама 1 310 порно придворных дам 143 секс придворных дам 83 фильмы придворных дам 81 фильм придворные дамы 80 платья придворных дам 63 придворные платья дамы 62 фиалка придворная дама 36 секс +с придворной дамой 35 костюмы придворных дам 34 придворная дама корея 34 костюм придворной дамы 34 придворные дамы 18 века 28 порно фильмы придворные дамы 28 фильмы про придворных дам 24 фото придворной дамы 23 фото придворных дам 23 рс придворная дама 21 портреты придворных дам 18 портрет придворной дамы 18 придворные дамы короли королевы корея +в истории 17 порно +с придворными дамами 17 жизнь придворных дам 17 прическа придворных дам 17 прическа придворной дамы 17 придворные дамы картина 16 придворная дама 8 16 картины придворных дам 16 наряд придворной дамы 16 жизнь придворной дамы 15 художественные порно фильмы разных студий придворные дамы 15 придворная дама 8 букв 15 фиалка рс придворная дама 13 придворные дамы российской империи 12 +как придворная дама +на пенсию собиралась 10 придворные дамы екатерины арагонской 10 придворные дамы эротика 9 звание придворной дамы 8 ебля придворных дам 8 трахнул придворную даму 8 изнасиловал придворную даму 8 анальный секс +с придворными дамами 7 придворную даму трахают порно 7 порно ролики придворные дамы 7 гу кай чжи наставления придворным дамам 6 придворная дама 8 букв сканворд 6 придворная дама хе су 6 танец придворных дам 6 платье придворной дамы +для девочки +своими руками 6 ебу придворную даму 6 винтаж придворные дамы +в чулках 6 куда придворные дамы прикрепляли мушки 6 трах придворных дам 6 +вы +когда нибудь мечтали стать придворной дамой 6 жизнь придворной дамы фильм 1974 6 исторические костюмы придворных дам +на прокат 6 ебут придворных дам людовик xiv 2 283 веко ве придворный этикет придворных дам чины придворных дам придворный короля как называется что делал придворный короля ночью в фильме царевич проша что делал придворный короля ночью людовик 14 двор людовика 14 людовик 14 балет королевский балет ночи придворный этикет костюм для мальчика придворный короля придворный короля 502 придворные короля порно 24 придворные дамы короли королевы корея +в истории 17 французский король филипп 6 собрал +своих придворных 16 придворные слуги короля 15 жизнь королей +и придворных 7 д арбанвилль придворный короля людовика 15 5 песня бременских музыкантов короля +и придворных придворные чины придворный чин 753 придворный чин +на руси 138 придворный чин 8 букв 122 придворный чин сканворд 85 придворный чин +в россии 77 придворный чин 9 74 придворный чин 9 букв 69 придворный чин старшего Камергер Ответ на загадку: "придворный чин старшего ранга" loopy.ru›?word=камергер придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв придворный чин старшего ранга придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв кроссворд придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв сканворд придворный чин старшего ранга кроссворд придворный чин старшего ранга 8 придворный чин старшего ранга в монархических государствах 8 букв придворный чин старшего ранга сканворд придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв подсказка к придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв кроссворд придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв сканворд придворный чин старшего ранга кроссворд придворный чин старшего ранга 8 придворный чин старшего ранга в монархических государствах 8 букв придворный чин старшего ранга сканворд придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв подсказка к придворный чин старшего ранга в монархических государствах придворный +при важном чине 56 российские придворные чины 53 придворный чин +на руси 7 букв 52 низшие придворные чины придворные чины средневековья придворные чины англии придворные чины российской империи придворный чин на руси придворные дамы фрейлина мужского пола чин в россии придворных дам придворный +при важном чине 8 букв 44 высший придворный чин 39 придворный чин +на руси сканворд 33 придворный чин 10 32 придворный чин 9 букв сканворд 28 придворный чин пушкина 27 придворный чин 10 букв 26 старший придворный чин 9 букв 25 придворный чин +в царской россии 25 придворный чин 8 букв сканворд 24 придворные чины российской империи 23 какой +из +этих придворных чинов 21 табель +о рангах придворные чины 20 придворный чин +в россии сканворд 19 придворный чин +на руси 8 18 придворные чины +и звания 17 придворный чин русского государства 16 придворный чин +на руси 8 букв 16 боярский чин придворный 14 придворный чин +в россии 8 букв 14 придворный чин +на руси сканворд 9 букв 12 придворный чин +в россии сканворд 8 11 придворный чин +на руси 7 букв сканворд 11 старший придворный чин 8 букв 10 придворный чин старшего ранга 10 придворный чин +в россии сканворд 8 букв 10 придворный чин +и должность 10 низший придворный чин +в россии 9 придворные чины русского царства 9 почетный придворный чин 9 придворный чин церемониймейстера 6 старший придворный чин 9 букв сканворд 6 придворный чин +на руси 10 букв сканворд 6 придворный чин старшего ранга 8 букв 5 лютиковый цветок придворные чины российской империи придворные чины русского царства придворные чины и должности в русском государстве придворные чины при иване грозном придворные чины в англии придворные чины московского княжества придворные чины московского государства придворные чины в россии придворные чины на руси придворные чины англии женские должности при дворе фрейлина мужского пола фрейлина в англии фрейлина обязанности фрейлин немецкий фрейлина екатерины великой фрейлина фото фрейлина синоним фрейлина фильм придворных дам средневековые должности высший чин табель о рангах придворные чины королевский двор придворный почему при королевский двор королевский двор игра должности при королевском дворе королевский двор это королевский двор гусев шталмейстер двора при дворе это новости королевского двора дворы монархов двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда вып 2 двор монарха в средневековой европе двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда текст двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда автор хачатурян н.а двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда читать двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда скачать двор монарха в средневековой европе явление модель среда под ред н.а хачатурян вып i. м спб 2001 монтефиоре симон себаг сталин двор красного монарха королевский двор при дворе это монарх це шталмейстер двора должности при царском дворе придворная жизнь в какой стране монарх титул монарха должности при царском дворе на руси должности при царском дворе список придворные должности при царском дворе придворные чины средневековья придворные чины англии стольник при иване грозном высший придворный чин в московском государстве 15-16 веков шталмейстер двора придворные дамы чин при дворе 8 букв чиновник низшего класса в россии двор красного монарха двор красного монарха история восхождения сталина к власти двор красного монарха читать онлайн двор красного монарха купить двор красного монарха отзывы двор красного монарха читать двор красного монарха скачать двор красного монарха история восхождения сталина к власти скачать двор красного монарха купить книгу монтефиоре симон себаг сталин двор красного монарха сталин двор красного монарха 83 монтефиоре двор красного монарха 62 монтефиоре сталин двор красного монарха 39 симон монтефиоре сталин двор красного монарха 27 монтефиоре симон себаг сталин двор красного монарха 19 сталин двор красного монарха скачать 17 монтефиоре двор красного монарха авель 10 двор красного монарха читать +и скачать книги 5 читать монтефиоре двор красного монарха авель королевский двор великобритании 267 интриги королевского двора 267 читать королевский двор 239 королевский монетный двор 218 новости королевского двора великобритании 172 интриги королевского двора гончарова 170 изнанка королевского двора 156 новости королевского двора великобритании сегодня 135 королевский двор кирпич 134 гончарова изнанка королевского двора 119 королевский двор фильм 113 английский королевский двор 113 интриги королевского двора читать 106 королевский двор история 106 тайны королевских дворов 105 купить королевский двор 103 флеш королевский двор 101 средневековый королевский двор средневековый королевский замок средневековый королевский ужин средневековый королевский костюм средневековый королевский свадебный наряд мужской средневековый королевский дворец мужской королевский средневековый костюм королевский средневековый пирог галина гончарова интриги королевского двора 86 изнанка королевского двора читать 85 лагерь королевский двор 83 королевский двор таро 82 смотреть королевский двор 78 королевский двор тайна заговора 77 фильмы про королевский двор 77 королевский двор дорама 76 гончарова интриги королевского двора читать 75 королевский двор гусев 74 гончарова изнанка королевского двора читать 72 интриги королевского двора читать онлайн 71 королевский двор англия 64 шведский королевский двор 63 королевский двор зеленоградск 61 галина гончарова изнанка королевского двора 61 +с королевского двора питомник 59 интриги королевского двора читать онлайн бесплатно 58 дорама королевский двор тайна заговора 58 французский королевский двор французский королевский двор в xvi веке история института французский королевский дворец французский королевский двор в xvi веке шишкин евразия 390-1 французский королевский двор в xvi веке история института скачать французский королевский двор шишкин французский королевский двор в хv веке французский королевский двор в xvi веке скачать фильм французский двор королевский конюший во франции монархия франции титулы при французском дворе ценности франции культура франции придворные дамы франции культурные ценности франции культура средневековой франции придворные дамы придворные дамы это придворные дамы 17-18 века графини принцессы маркизы придворные дамы российской империи придворные дамы короли королевы корея в истории придворные дамы екатерины арагонской придворные дамы картинки придворные дамы 18 века придворные дамы фото придворные дамы кто это фаворитка что это значит придворные дамы англии придворная дама корея придворные дамы екатерины 2 придворная дама 8 букв придворная дама костюм придворный этикет во франции фаворитка короля сериал шведский королевский двор официальный инстаграм 57 королевский двор лагерь зеленоградск 57 интриги королевского двора аудиокнига 55 королевский двор франции 55 кирпич королевский двор флеш 53 гончарова интриги королевского двора читать онлайн 52 изнанки королевского двора читать онлайн 52 королевский монетный двор испании 51 гостиница королевский двор 50 гончарова изнанка королевского двора читать онлайн средневековые истории интриги королевского двора 48 сатияра королевский двор 48 королевский двор мэри грир 47 читать гончарова галина интриги королевского двора 46 должности +при королевском дворе 45 интриги королевского двора гончарова читать онлайн бесплатно 44 интриги королевского двора гончарова аудиокниги 44 слушать интриги королевского двора 44 ликолор королевский двор 42 этикет королевского двора этикет королевского двора великобритании этикет королевского двора великобритании книга этикет королевского двора испании этикет королевского двора востока этикет королевского двора англии этикет королевского двора pdf королевский этикет книга правила британской королевской семьи британский королевский протокол как нужно называть короля и королеву при первой встрече правила поведения в букингемском дворце дресс код королевской семьи уроки королевского этикета королевский этикет за столом +с королевского двора питомник золотистый ретривер 41 интриги королевского двора гончарова слушать 41 гостиница королевский двор гусев 40 слушать аудиокнигу интриги королевского двора 39 королевский двор таро мэри грир 39 этикет королевского двора великобритании 38 гончарова средневековая история интриги королевского двора 37 гончарова аудиокниги слушать интриги королевского двора 37 поставщики королевских дворов 37 интриги королевского двора читать онлайн галина 36 королевский двор изнутри 36 порно королевского двора 35 гончарова галина средневековая история интриги королевского двора 34 средневековая история изнанка королевского двора 33 изнанка королевского двора аудиокнига 31 королевский канадский монетный двор 30 сериала королевском дворе 28 королевский двор тайна заговора дорама озвучка 28 королевский двор дорама русская озвучка 27 управитель королевского двора 27 королевский двор фото 27 изнанка королевского двора гончарова читать онлайн бесплатно 25 испанский королевский двор 25 правила королевского двора 25 королевский монетный двор великобритании 25 британский королевский двор 25 датский королевский двор 24 королевский двор таро купить 24 королевский двор тайна заговора дорама русская озвучка 23 королевский двор лагерь зеленоградск официальный сайт 21 королевский двор игра 21 стужева сатияра королевский двор 21 жанна стужева сатияра королевский двор 21 жанна стужева королевский двор 21 собаки королевского двора 20 новости английского королевского двора 19 изнанка королевского двора гончарова аудиокнига 19 королевский двор гусев гостиница сайт 18 шишкин королевский двор 18 протокол королевского двора читать средневековая история изнанка королевского двора 18 изнанка королевского двора гончарова скачать 17 королевский двор таро мэри грир купить 17 средневековая история интриги королевского двора читать 17 королевский австралийский монетный двор 16 фильм интриги королевского двора 16 интриги королевского двора скачать 16 языком английского королевского двора оказался 15 кирпич ликолор королевский двор 15 титулы +при королевском дворе 15 жизнь королевского двора 15 ликолор флеш королевский двор 15 языком английского королевского двора оказался старофранцузский 15 фильмы про интриги королевского двора 14 королевский двор изнутри смотреть онлайн 14 королевский двор секс 14 королевский двор таро скачать 14 жанна стужева сатияра королевский двор читать 13 сатияра королевский двор скачать 13 правила этикета королевского двора великобритании 13 грир королевский двор таро скачать 12 королевский монетный двор испании ограбление 12 королевский двор лондон 12 1 нф флэш королевский двор 12 версаль франция королевский двор 12 должности +при королевском дворе список 12 мэри грир королевский двор таро скачать 12 королевские дворы европы 12 королевский двор калининград 11 флеш королевский двор купить екатеринбург 11 новости британского королевского двора 11 управляющий королевским двором 11 королевский судный двор 10 docme ru грир королевский двор таро 10 смотреть фильмы про королевский двор исторические 10 английский королевский двор последние новости 9 шведский королевский двор инстаграм официальный сайт 9 новости королевского двора испаниивданииеликобритпнииэри датская 9 скрипачи королевский двор 9 гостиница королевский двор гусев официальный сайт 8 интриги королевского двора слушать онлайн 8 кирпич флеш королевский двор ликолор 8 сатияра королевский двор читать онлайн бесплатно полностью 7 королевский монетный двор стокгольм 7 видео разврата +на королевских дворах 7 любовь +при королевском дворе 6 фильмы про английский королевский двор смотреть онлайн 6 управитель королевского двора +во франкском государстве называется 6 обязанности гофмейстера испанского королевского двора 6 испания королевский двор новости смотреть фильм про королевские интриги французского двора 6 ликолор баварская кладка королевский двор 6 фильмы про разврат +в королевском дворе 6 протокол королевского двора англии 6 французский королевский двор +при людовике 14 6 купить гончарова интриги королевского двора 6 королевский двор дании 6 королевский двор агентство 5 королевский двор великобритании +как функционирует 5 королевский двор сочи 5 королевский двор слизерина 5 фильмы +о французском королевском дворе 5 королевская осанка федюкович дефиле +в гостином дворе 5 порно ролики королевский двор 5 кино про любовь +при королевском дворе бесплатная электронная библиотека лучшие книги популярные книги :картина::: КомментарииЧитать далее... . ТЕМЫ страничка отразиться.. url: '', target: '_blank', // default is _self, which opens in the same window (_blank in new window) описание: ' варианты своего следующего фильма или драмы. .' url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_telephone_box', описание: 'The red telephone box is a familiar sight on the streets of the United Kingdom.' описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', url: 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autumn', описание: ' варианты.' описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', описание: '', Просто Демо: Выдвигающееся боковое меню на чистом CSS Меню Слева Меню Справа Во время -придворные дворянство вокруг короля? фото Вито Дженовезе?фото придворные дворянство вокруг короля Новый! Комментарии Как легко . Условия символы как жили короли в средневековье нравы средневековья люди средневековья жизнь в средневековье чем занимались люди в средние века мужчины средневековья как жили женщины в средние века ближайшее окружение николая 2 Короли и королевы среди нас. В мире насчитывается 36 ...mosaica.ru › news › 2016/10/20 › koroli-i-korolevy-sr... 19 окт. 2016 г. - Они либо управляют, либо традиционно числятся на верхушке власти европейских, азиатских и африканских стран. +. В последнее ... Жены и возлюбленные французских королейbooks.google.ru › books С конца XV века происходят глубокие перемены в окружении и стиле жизни французских государей, и вот – перед нами совершенно иное, ... Ги Шоссинан-Ногаре - 2017 - Biography & Autobiography Государь и подданные - Людовик XIV | Король Солнцаwww.louisxiv.ru › ... Франция в XVII веке. Время проавления короля Солнца Людовик XIV, это время расцвета абсолютной монархии. Похожий запрос Короли Франции имена Ещё 3+ Людовик XVI Людовик XVI Людовик XVIII Людовик XVIII Людовик XIV Людовик XIV Генрих IV Генрих IV Карл VII Карл VII Карл VIII Карл VIII Генрих III Генрих III Оставить отзыв Вместе с в окружении короли часто ищут страны, где правят короли короли и королевы мира король эдгар викинги в какой стране есть король короли и королевы 2019 королевства мира 2019 короли и королевы песня в каких странах до сих пор есть короли и королевы король жив 6 763 жили +были короли 2 456 +как живут короли 826 король +и шут жив 570 где жил король 533 где жили короли 533 где живет король 531 король пещеры +будет жить райской жизнью 364 король +и шут жить 315 жил +да +был +один король 230 фильм король жив 207 жил +был +он славный +был король 175 жил +был король +и королева 148 король пещеры +будет жить райской жизнью ранобэ 137 жил +был король анри четвертый 118 однажды жил +был король 116 жили +были 4 короля 109 жил +на свете король 104 жили +были король +с королевой 103 пещерный король +будет жить +как +в раю 100 жить вечно король 99 король родился король жив 78 песня жил +да +был +один король 74 жил +был король сказка 73 манга король пещеры +будет жить райской жизнью 71 король +наш погиб +но память живет 67 король живет +в интернате 66 король +и шут +я +буду жить вечно 65 король жив смотреть 64 фокус жил +был король 59 жили +были короли фокус 59 где живут короли англии 57 король жив 2000 53 +когда жил король артур 52 жили +были король +с королевой однажды 52 фильм жить +как короли 49 +в каком веке жили короли 48 жил +да +был +один король слушать 48 фильм жил +был король 47 +при дворе короля живут 22 придворных 45 жил +был король скачать 44 сколько живут короли 43 пугачева жил +да +был +один король 43 песня жил +да +был король пугачевой 41 где жил король артур 39 король +и шут горшок жив 39 где живет король артур 39 +как жили французские короли 38 жил +был +один король 1955 38 король +и шут +я жив покуда 38 Статистика по словам Показов в месяц король лич жив 36 где жил король лев 36 где живет король лев 36 жили два короля 35 фокус +с картами жил +был король 35 фокус +с картами жили +были короли 35 король жив фильм 2000 33 живу +как хочу +в виде короля демонов 32 жил +был +один король фильм 1955 31 жили +были 4 короля фокус 31 +в +одной стране жил король 30 где живут король +и королева 30 король ночи жив 29 жить +как короли 1997 29 жил +да +был +один король текст 28 карты жили +были 4 короля 28 много лет назад жил король 27 +быть королем жить под замком 25 жив ли горшок +из король +и шут 25 жить +как короли фильм 1997 24 живет +в +тебе король лев 24 +в какой стране живут короли 23 король жив смотреть онлайн 22 алла пугачева жил +да +был +один король 21 король жил +в фуле 21 +как жили короли +в замках 20 +в каком веке жил король артур 20 блоха жил +был король текст 19 король тайланда жив 19 +и томатов +не всегда жил +как король 19 работай +как раб живи +как король 18 жил +да +был +один король песня слушать 18 +в энском царстве жил король 16 где живет король тайланда 16 давным давно жил +был король 15 король меча живущий +на крыше 15 добряков король живет +в интернате 15 король живет +в интернате читать 14 давно давно жил +на свете король 14 +как жили короли +в средневековье 13 король жил +в фуле дальней 12 +как живут короли смотреть 12 +как жили короли +в средние века 12 жил +да +был +один король текст песни 12 король жив +да здравствует король 11 где жили французские короли 11 жили +на свете король +с королевой 11 король жил +в подвале 11 сказка жили +были король +и королева 11 +в каком году жил король артур 10 алистер король логейн жив 10 +как жили короли +и королевы +в средневековье 10 где живут короли лондона 10 король жив 2000 скачать 10 +как звали короля жившего +в тридевятом царстве 9 слова песни жил +да +был +один король 8 жил ли +на самом деле король артур 8 где живет король испании 8 место где живут король +и королева 8 жил король молодой песня слушать 8 король живет +в интернате купить 8 +как жили иерусалимские короли 8 жил король гномов +по имени даин 8 +в далеких краях жил безумный ирландский король 8 где живет король севилья 8 король живет +в интернате читать онлайн 7 где жили короли франции 7 где жил король франции 7 где живет король норвегии 7 король магов жив 6 жил +был +один король 720 6 жил +да +был +один король минус 5 +в каком замке жила болейн +с королем 5 владимир добряков король живет +в интернате 5 фильм король жив 2000 смотреть онлайн 5 сергей михалков жил +был король большой характер 15 175 настоящий характер картинки д ✳✳✳ .
Короли и Queens в мире с момента Французская революция, будущее монархии в мире было немного шаким. Как недавно 2008 года коммунистические революционеры в Непале свергли их монархию, чтобы создать республику. Тем не менее, несмотря на пару веков покровения королей, сегодня в мире существует 44 монархий. 13 находятся в Азии, 12 находятся в Европе, 10 находятся в Северной Америке, 6 находятся в Океании, а 3 в Африке. В Южной Америке нет монархий. Возможно, важно отметить, что существует 44 монархии, но есть только 29 монархов. Queen Elizabeth II Соединенных Королевство - это королева из 15 других царств Содружества, которые ранее составили британскую империю. Какие страны монархии? Вот список всех монархий в Мир, перечисленный по стране с типом монархии. см. Также: «Комплексная сеть интриги, в которой смерть приходит как яд, или кинжал ночью. Такое убийство похоже на точное вино». — Corkus, Berserk Abridged Advertisement:Суд здесь заключается в том, что группа не так благородных дворян, которые вешают вокруг коридоров власти короля. Они есть Растворы, рассеиваются, вырожденные, развращенные и мдаш; давайте просто суммируем его как «декадентскую» и MDash; до такой степени, что все, что они прикосновеются, становится поврежден. Страна, которую они Постановление направляется на гибель, пока они играют свои злобные вкусные игры. p> Как суд получил такой способ отличается от истории к истории. Чаще всего, чем нет, источник находится вверху. Они поймали его из монарха. p> Вы видите этот суд во многих историях, может быть, даже большинство историй о судах. Это источник интригов для интригов, рук и незаконных дел. И лицом к себе, Вам понадобится эти вещи, если вообще будет любое веселье. p> Это Sub-Trope to Standard Royal Court and Aristocrats Are Evil. When less than half of the court acts like this, something (or someone) else may be in play. See Evil Chancellor or Evil Prince for the possible cause. For a depraved court of law, try Kangaroo Court. Advertisement:Examples: open/close all folders Anime & Manga In Berserk, Похоже, все основные дворян в Мидленде вытесняют Гриффит, который заканчивается как цель двух условных участков по ревнивым благородством. Гриффит, однако, не сам сутуки, и все дворян, которые принимают участие в убийстве в конечном итоге мертвы или шантажируются. li> в Невеста вода Бог EM>, как суд императора, и суд водного королевства заполнены интригами и персонажами при перекрестных целях. Конечно, многие из персонажей в обоих Суды ... li> в Vinland Saga < / a> em>, суд короля Sweyn Предполагается, что Forkbeard настолько ровно, оно заполнено прекрасными рабынями, взятые из каждого угла мира, наполненной разъемами политиков и ареной многих кровавых Дуэль до смерти. li> в Легенда о Галактике Герои EM>, бомбы, яды, похищения, стрельба иsuicides are not unheard of in Imperial politics. Ooku is set in the Shogun's harem, which develops into a place of backstabbing maneuvers. In Code Geass, the Britannian Royal Court comes off as this, given the scheming nobles and The Social Darwinist Emperor. The Chinese court has this as well, with the scheming Eunuchs being the Chinese counterpart to the Britannian nobles. Меч принцесса Altina EM> изобилует этим. Каждый королевский суд показал, независимо от страны происхождения, наполнен дворянми или роялти, постоянно борьбы, схемы, отравления или просто простые отправляющие армии после того, как друг друга во время борьбы с преемственностью. Даже собственный отец Альты, Император Белгарии, отправил свою 14-летнюю дочь на передние линии, чтобы избавиться от нее, а когда она Спросил оружия, чтобы защитить себя, дал ей массивный декоративный меч, думая, что она не сможет владеть им. The Rose of Versailles: Being set at the eve of Французский Revolution , в которой есть суд Версаля, с ее огромным декаданцентом и смертоносным, что во время правления Луи XV, мадам Дю Барри, любовник короля, отравленные один Из ее собственных горничных, чтобы попробовать и рама Мари Антонетта для нее em>, только для Оскара, чтобы держать ее на мечах и напомнить ей, что она <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dathnthinkthisthrough" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dadnthinkthisthrough"> антагонизация будущей королевы, в то время как ее сила зависит от здоровья Очень старик . Li> Версаль особенно противоречит австрийскому двору, где протокол нигде был нигде как жесткий, а трезвый <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / thehighqueev" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / thehighqueen"> Maria Theresa позволит позволить лишь наименьшему количеству роскоши и без смертоносного палибия. Некоторые из проблем Marie Antoinette приходят от роста там, что привело к тому, что она была изначально слишком открыта и наивно для стандартов Версальских островов (и никогда не расти из нее наивности) и ослеплен великолепной опаленностью французского суда. Audio Plays In the Большая отделка Доктор, который EM> Audio "Святой террор" доктор находит себя в Средневековое судное общество ритуализировано и традиция, чтобы вести себя как один из них - квитанцы должны em> всегда иметь своего рода, хороший наследник и деформированный, схемы ублюдка сына, которые узурпы Его брат, работа первого священника - нанести удар королю в спину - все как символические традиции, окружающие коронацию. Comic Books Luther Arkwright: Queen Anne presides over a court of deadly intrigue and decadent orgies in Heart of Empire. Her closest servants view her absorbing the vitality of her enemies as their "favourite bit". Удивительно женщина EM> Vol 1 : умнее и более предпочтительные члены Суд Сатурнанской империи осознает, что они могут продвинуться через ряды и предотвратить потерять звание, посвященным утешению и преданности и обрамление другим за их сбои. Это суд, где элита ждала под рукой и ногами рабами, и в опасности в глазах их императора оказываются в глазах их императора и выполнены или порабощены в любой момент. Advertisement: Fan Works Королева теней EM> имеет Круг генералов Shadowkhan Empire . Генералы постоянно соревнуются друг с другом для влияния с Королева. И теперь, когда Hiruzen's Hold на желанный звание <а. Class = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dragoninchief" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / dragoninhief"> yojimbo ослабевает, многие делают свой ход для него и Mdash ; <а. Class = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / nobleblemen" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / nobleblemen"> ikazuki намекнул, чтобы быть намеренным построить <класс = " Twikilink » href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / klingonpromotion" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / klingonpromotion"> Klyingon Продвижение , Jirobo работает над долгосрочным планом, чтобы манипулировать королевой, будучи его Кукольный , Куро рассматривает возможность сбрасывать его долгосрочные лояльности в Цзиробо и зацепил свой вагон в восходящую звезду Иказуки и <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / bunnyearslawyer" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / bunnyearslawyer"> Kamisori предлагает поддержать своего друга <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / bodassburocrat" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / badassbureaure"> Ozeki в создании энергетической игры. Как это все будет воспроизведено, еще предстоит увидеть. li> в потерянный король EM> Подшипство между Наложники Гарона превратили в шумный суд в агрессивной среде, даже приведя к наложнику, убивающим друг друга, и их дети em>. Гарон не может остановиться убийства, потому что он не может доказать, что наложники на самом деле делают их, и он не может просто отправить их из-за страха на обидение своих семей или спровоцировать самостоятельный наложить в более переулкие действия саботажа. li> > em> и его продолжение перемешивают em> иметь редкий Пример, где это шагает em> от альтернативы, как эта версия Фобос больше заботится о том, чтобы сохранить мир, чем утюг на его власть. У него бы скорее есть некоторые схематические союзники, которые выиграли Без насилия, чем очистить всех ненадежных. li> Суд Ухана в <класс = "Twikilink" href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / fanfic / theweaveroption" Название = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / fanfic / theweaveroption" > Ткацкий Опция EM> настолько плохо, что есть несколько попыток открытых убийств во время мяча победы губернатора, до em> запущена попытка переворота. Однажды за раз em>: Готэм Высокое общество изображено как поддавшаяся версия этого, с различными семьями (несовершеннолетними и основными) всеми, что за исключением нескольких поколений, чтобы в конечном итоге усурп Семьи, в частности, Уэйнс, и контролируют свои судьбы. Не помогает этому вопросу заключается в том, что справедливое число тех социальных веществ являются / были также членами Суд Совы , которые заменяют Готэм из тени На протяжении веков и большая часть того, почему город коррумпирован. На первом временной шкале Джейсон Тодд, став официальным главой семьи Уэйн, абсолютно отказался вовлечь Сам в Готэмской политике уже несколько лет на улице проведение случайного благотворительного мяча для Фонда Уэйн почти явно из-за этой тропы. Это было только после Прибытие Хелена Уэйн, его отец Брюс Уэйн только известный биологический наследник, что он наконец начал играть вдоль и мдаш; специально для защиты ее и ее наследства. li> Часы драконов A> EM>: пока не так плохо, как Это канон, королевский суд Вестероса. Первичный разрыв находится между фракцией Станниса (который принимает прагматичный маршрут к увеличению и централизации железного трона Сила), Фракция Серсей (которая тесно связана с верой и становится все более <классом = «Twikilink» href = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / tfundamentalist" title = "/ pmwiki / pmwiki.php / main / tfundamentalist"> Радикализированы , когда дело доходит до роли религии в политике царства), и фракция Рене (которая номинально лояльна Stannis и пытаясь встретить CEREI, но также заправляет амбиции Релярных амбиций). И на вершине всего, что это различные великие дома, пытающиеся набрать влияние через придворные ради их собственного повестки дня. Films — Live-Action Louis XVI's court as portrayed in the French movie Ridicule exemplifies this trope, showcasing how nobles' political power and status is highly dependent on their wit. One victim of a mocking jest sees his request to the King rejected, gets ostracized and ends up killing himself as a result. Par for the course in Hamlet adaptation Legend of the Black Scorpion. Pretty much everyone is trying to kill everyone else. The Skeksis from The Dark Crystal are genocidal hedonists who only think about living an eternal life, maintaining their power over Thra, enslaving the Podlings, dressing in riches and feasting, not even bothering with physical exercise. Without an Emperor to keep everyone in check, they would certainly jump at each other's throat. There's justification— since they're the darker halves of the souls of the Precursors it's in their very nature to engage in hedonism and power grabs. It's quickly shown that this is a bad thing for the species because they killed each other until there were only about 10, and that was because the surviving Skeksis are in an eternal power struggle where they can't kill themselves off without the resulting infighting killing them all. The leader of the Mystics knows this so he performs a Heroic Sacrifice suicide to take out their leader and destabilize the court so his stepson Jen can get an opening to complete the prophecy. Their decadence is expanded upon in The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, in which it took a dramatic turn when they started getting addicted to Gelfling essence. The Skeksis would sacrifice many Gelflings in the process, and drive them to extinction after a prophecy revealed that a Gelfling would put an end to their reign. The cabinet and inner circle in The Death of Stalin are a republican version of this trope. Due to the totalitarian and extremely repressive nature of Stalin's regime (including eliminating people just for stuttering), many of the Politburo betrayed their friends and enforced all of Stalin's order to appease him from purging them too. Out of all the members, Beria was considered as the most depraved and psychotic member as he also performed numerous sexual assaults on children. The Brethren Court in the Pirates of the Caribbean series, being the "ruling body" over hordes of uncontrollable rogues and pirates, seems to only have any order at all because Captain Teague is the one enforcing The Code. It is best described by Elizabeth and Jack: Elizabeth: This is madness! Jack: This is politics. Literature A Song of Ice and Fire has one of the deadliest courts in modern fantasy, for all that it's unlikely to be the most decadent on the planet (Yi Ti probably has that in the bag; sorry Volantis). In the westernmost, backwater continent in a Crapsack World where at least seven major power blocs duke it out to gain control of the realm, Magnificent Bastards, Smug Snakes, ambiguous question marks and Byronic Heroes trade gambits which cost lives like they're in a pillow fight, yet Anyone Can Die. And God Save Us from the Queen! No, really. Cersei is many things, but safe to be around is not one of them (especially if you think you have leverage on her). And they're so busy fighting each other that they don't notice the army of zombies and god knows what else from beyond the Wall. Eddard Stark had the opportunity to become King of Westeros in the backstory, but he let Robert take the Iron Throne. Partly out of a sense of honour, and mostly because he didn't want to deal with the court. Years later, Robert made him Hand of the King and dragged him back to the court, and it all went downhill from there. The Lannisters full stop. They are so rich that they have a long history of decadence and corruption. The nobles from the Bitterbynde books. The heroine makes a few faux pas and has to run away when her pretence gets discovered — but of course till then she's been the most graceful and beautiful of women at court as well as a thousand times purer than these cruel, superficial twits. In Interesting Times, the Agatean Empire has definitely fallen into this, with murder via poisoning or assassination being an acceptable way of promotion (as long as it is discreetly done), powerful noble families, a rather insane Emperor, and rigid class stratification. Of course, Cohen the Barbarian and his Silver Horde make things, well, interesting. The Nazi high command in Downfall, waiting on a deluded Hitler while fighting rages above. In Dragon Bones, high king Jakoven thinks his court is this. It is not clear whether he is right, or just paranoid ... the only on-screen backstabber at the court is he himself, with his habit of killing the queen's lovers. (No, not out of jealousy, he appoints them to that position himself. He just thinks they're gaining too much influence). Some nobles occasionally spin some intrigues, but mostly against Jakoven, who has only himself to blame for that political climate. Some off-screen backstabbery is implied, but not dwelled on. The royal court from The Chronicles of Amber, basically a Big, Screwed-Up Family and their lackeys. So much backstabbery your brain will give up. At first the Courts of Chaos, Amber's opposite number, appear a subversion: things there are pretty peaceful for the most part. However, each pentalogy happens to take place in a turbulent time for the relevant court, and it becomes clear Chaos can be just as bad. The difference turns out to be maturity, as Order is a more recent invention and its royal bloodline, while fewer in number and invested with more individual power, simply have less in the way of learning experiences to temper their ambitions. Although not a court in the usual way, the nobility from Raymond E. Feist and Janny Wurst's The Empire Trilogy, with their oh so deadly Game of the Council, might well qualify. The nobles from the first novel of The Final Empire when their society is still intact. They indulge their extravagances while the rest of the population is nearly starving and there's the extra fun of some of them secretly being Mistborn which means powerful sorcerers and born assassins. In the second The Wheel of Time book: Rand al'Thor comes into Cairhien, a big city with such a court. At least the intrigue bit is definitely fitting - everyone tries to pull him to their side by sending him invitations. Rand tries to avoid this by burning all the invitations... which they, of course, take as a cunning political move. Ultimately, his actions indirectly lead to the assassination of the king and the entire country falling into a civil war. The Seanchan also seem to operate under these rules. Tuon, the Empress's daughter and heir, notes that her position was attained partly by eliminating the competition, permanently. She also forgives Beslan's acts of treachery during a crisis because he was unaware of the crisis. Her tone suggests that if it were not during a crisis, there would be little to forgive. Seanchan nobles routinely make assassination plans for anyone they deal with, even if they don't really intend to go through with them. Tuon finds it incredible that she and her new husband Mat won't have to scheme against each other. The court of Governor and Sole Autocrat Barholm Clerett in The General Series, where intrigue is an artform, treachery a given AND on top of everything else the Governor is borderline insane. As the saying goes, 'A simpleton from the Governor's Court could give lessons in intrigue to [any other royal court on the planet, save possibly the Colony's]." The goblin court in John Barnes's One for the Morning Glory. Explicitly described as a parody of King Boniface's. The high council of Menzoberranzan, in the Forgotten Realms books. Usually, the backstabbing comes from a lower-ranking House that wants to be on the high council, but frankly the entire city is afflicted with a pernicious case of Chronic Backstabbing Disorder. Menzoberranzan is an in-universe study of this trope, as its patron goddess hates stability or any feeling among her followers of security or comfort and only allows them to be unified when she has an immediate use for them. Otherwise she encourages bringing down the strongest of her followers while also keeping her realm from weakening enough to collapse... and should there be the potential of getting a power base better than a city of drow worshippers, she's willing to let it go. David Eddings is very fond of this trope: it shows up in the Imperial Courts of both The Malloreon and The Tamuli, and the protagonists take great advantage of it: in The Malloreon, they foment discord to the point that a civil war breaks out inside the walls of the palace; they use it as cover for their escape, while in The Tamuli they help the figurehead emperor overthrow his own government and seize control by throwing a party, getting the assorted aristocrats drunk, and imprisoning the lot of them. In the furry fantasy novel The Fangs of K'aath, the royal court of Osra is a den of decadence and coldblooded political calculation that could consider genocide as well as accommodation as solutions with equal ease. While the heroes, Prince Raschid and his love Sandhri are the first to note it's a fun place for a party with food and sexy serving girls (who are openly eager to hop into bed when asked) galore when it is in a peaceful mood, they are otherwise repelled by its venal side and it suffers a Karmic Death at being nearly totally destroyed in the climactic battle in the end with nearly the entire villainous Royal family dead except for the straight arrow heroes who find themselves unquestionably on top and in charge of things to run their way. Captive Prince has a helluva one in Vere. It features political intrigue, forbidden romance, and rampant pedophilia and sexual assault. This was Vere, voluptuous and decadent, country of honeyed poison. A Court of Thorns and Roses: A running theme. Under the Mountain resembles the Capitol in its elegant brutality, and while the Autumn Court isn't evil per se, it is highly political and quite a swamp to navigate, even for a particularly scrappy human. The Nightmare Court is also this, duplicitously, so Rhys can keep up the illusion that he's a languid, hedonistic bastard. The titular character of Volle is a foreign spy sent to infiltrate the court of Tephos by posing as the long-lost son of a dead noble. He quickly finds that while outright assassination is uncommon, blackmail and deals made in the bedroom are all but standard procedure. And thoroughly enjoys himself. Simon R. Green: This trope appears in multiple series of his. Deathstalker: The Imperial Court of Golgotha, homeworld of The Empire, is this writ large IN SPACE. Forest Kingdom: Featured in multiple kingdoms in both the parent series and the Hawk & Fisher spinoff. In book 1 (Blue Moon Rising), the King's Barons and their allies are openly plotting against him, and even host a gathering of rebels in his own castle, plotting to kill him and install the eldest prince as their puppet ruler. It backfires, because Prince Harald is loyal to his father. Then in book 2 (Blood and Honor), the court recklessly dallies with eldritch abominations. In William King's Warhammer 40,000 Space Wolf novel Wolfblade, Ragnor is warned in advance that Terra is this. In James Swallow's Warhammer 40,000 novel Faith & Fire, the Battle Sisters find the aristocrats like this: hopelessly languid, using fans that could double as weapons if they were capable of fighting, and so heavily perfumed that one Sister says they obviously used a crop duster. The Japanese Imperial Court in the Tale of Genji— and Real Life— was an epitome of this trope. If its members weren't plotting against each other they were having illicit sex with somebody else's wife or mistress. The Heian Court started out much more benign—see literature like the Man'youshuu for examples of what Japan was (supposedly) like about two hundred years prior to Genji. Genji is set in Heian Japan about a century before it fell apart and was replaced by the Kamakura bakufu, which in turn led to the Muramachi period. Dune: The entire book Dune EM> практически в течение Безумированный случай судебных интригов. Император, который был тайно в Лиге с бароном, пытался от герцога, дав ему смертельную «продвижение», чтобы взять под контроль Flaiaging Production Action, что у него наверняка не было никакой надежды, в то время как иллюминатный женский монастырь приблизился к своей конечной цели и начал тянуть политическую Строки в новых и опасных направлениях, все заканчиваясь в распадах Коррино Империума и другого джихада. li> Особые упоминание о доме Harkonnen, которые вращаются декадентные и невероятно опасные - барон - это жир, отвратительный, глупости, подразумеваемый пеераст, а также садист; Его племянники - «просто» маниакальные садиты; пытки - это то, что после ужина в развлечениях (отрывок показывает, что работники Harkonnen убирают остатки одного из них в Один из книг Брайана Герберта, любимое времяпрепровождение Калигулы) и весь роман, как правило, напоминают древнего Рима в худшие (гладиаторские арены, педофилию и все.) Эстетика довольно странная, с подметающими халатами и золотом в сочетании с вонюченным маслом и огромным загрязнением, дымом и грязью - Harkonnen в прямом эфире, но совершенно грязны как морально, так и физически. li> в главе заголовка цитата из ее обширных исторических работ принцессы Ирулан случайно упоминает о своем подозрении, что у ее отца была рука в некоторых попытках убивать ее мать, сестры и себя. Она фактически посвящена своему отцу Хаддаму IV, и он ей, но она также знает, что отказ ее матери, чтобы нести его наследника Положите его в ужасную позицию, делая ее смерть и ее матери и братья и сестры политически удобными. «Королевские семьи не похожи на другие семьи». In Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files novels: The White Court. It helps that those involved are all White Court vampires that make plans as way of life; at one point Lara says something to the effect that no one will respect her if she attempts to seize power by straightforward means. The Raiths are a bit dysfunctional, to say the least. The Winter Court as well. When attending a party in Arctis Tor, Harry tries to keep an eye on anyone suspicious. He soon realizes that's impossible, and instead resolves to keep an eye out for anyone charging at him with a knife and screaming. In Holly Blacks work, all faerie courts have some aspects of this, but most notable is in The Folk of the Air. Most characters are looking to increase their status, with the exception of Cardan who is not ambitious and just doesnt want to be beaten for his failures. Even among the teenagers, you can see aspects of this. Most children sent to lectures are supposed to endear themselves to children of royalty. The bullying in the book is really the teenagers of royalty trying to establish the hierarchy within their lectures. The royal family is a mess of neglect and abuse, and spare no love for each other. Of the members of the royal family who are characterized, the oldest is a psychopath willing to turn murder his entire family for power, the middle son also schemed and murdered his way into power, and the father at least could be charged with child endangerment. In Edgar Rice Burroughs's The Gods of Mars, the court of Issus. The First Born do no work. The men fight—that is a sacred privilege and duty; to fight and die for Issus. The women do nothing, absolutely nothing. Slaves wash them, slaves dress them, slaves feed them. There are some, even, who have slaves that talk for them, and I saw one who sat during the rites with closed eyes while a slave narrated to her the events that were transpiring within the arena. The Court of the Taysan Empire in the Spaceforce books is the centre of government for the oldest and most advanced of the three great galactic superpowers. It's ruled by the Empress, who is an absolute monarch, with the Imperial and Noble Castes in attendance. It's heavily implied that a lot of backbiting and faction wars go on. All four fey courts in Wicked Lovely have elements of this, but the worst would have to be the dark court, and the winter court. The court of Herod Antipas, under the pen of romantic writers (e.g. in Oscar Wilde's play Salome). King Herod is depicted as an incestuous womaniser; Queen Herodias a murderous schemer. The princess Salome, of course, has a famously pathological infatuation with John the Baptist. The royal court of Terre d'Ange, in Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel's Legacy series. Everyone sleeps around, there is much scheming and backstabbing, and there are Masquerade Balls. In Robert E. Howard's The Devil in Iron what Octavia is willing to flee from even when she's frightened of Conan the Barbarian. In "Rogues in the House" — just about everyone is in this. In "A Witch Shall Be Born" Salome turns her country into this. In Sano Ichiro, the entire court, save Sano himself is caught up in a web of political scheming and sexual depravity right under the hilariously stupid shogun's nose. In Robert E. Howard's Kull story "The Shadow Kingdom", Strange to him were the intrigues of court and palace, army and people. All was like a masquerade, where men and women hid their real thoughts with a smooth mask. Aluwna in Star Trek: The Genesis Wave has aspects of this, as noted by Regimol (a Romulan agent): Regimol: A quite delightful planet it was. They weren't without their political intrigue, of course, and their class structure wasn't fair by Federation standards. Still it reminded me a lot of Romulus, if you could turn the Romulans into a peaceful, insular people. Captain Picard: Their overseer was recently murdered. Regimol: See, reminds me of Romulus. The Egyptian: The palace has a higher child mortality rate than the poor quarter of the capital city. Maledicte stars a god-touched murderer dropped into a shark tank of limp-wristed sociopaths. Lord Iron from "The Cambist and Lord Iron" is a member of such a court. The emperor's court in The Chronicles of Magravandias is famous for its rare imported pleasures and exotic slaves. And the death and disappearance of inconvenient people. The French court in La Reine Margot certainly falls into this as you're almost guaranteed to die the second you're not useful to the Valois, or specifically to Catherine. In Jack Vance's Planet of Adventure: the Yao people of the Kingdom of Cath. Adam Reith rescues Ylin Ylan, the Flower of Cath, from barbarians, which ends up complicating his life more than it should. Anything and everything by the Marquis de Sade basically involves this trope turned Up to Eleven. This is maybe not totally without any base in reality, as Sade himself was certainly part of this court, although large numbers of readers have missed the fact that Sade was also a moralist who was condemning society in his writings. Most of the action of The Curse of Chalion happens in one of these, with the main character as tutor to the inexperienced but quickly-learning royesse. As her eyes begin to open to the court's true nature, she says to him "We're under siege here, aren't we?" Gulliver's Travels parodied this with the miniature land of Lilliput. British statesman Lord Chesterfield mentioned this trope in his Letters to His Son. (letter 78/79) "In my next I will send you a general map of courts; a region yet unexplored by you, but which you are one day to inhabit. The ways are generally crooked and full of turnings, sometimes strewed with flowers, sometimes choked up with briars; rotten ground and deep pits frequently lie concealed under a smooth and pleasing surface; all the paths are slippery, and every slip is dangerous." "Those who now smile upon and embrace, would affront and stab each other, if manners did not interpose; but ambition and avarice, the two prevailing passions at courts, found dissimulation more effectual than violence; and dissimulation introduced that habit of politeness, which distinguishes the courtier from the country gentleman." In It Can't Happen Here, Buzz Windrip's fascist administration is characterized by ruthless internal politics and jostling for power. Doubly so near the end of the book, when Saranson forced Windrip into exile in France, and Haik later assassinates Saranson. When they're not jostling for power, Windrip's advisors engage in depraved parties where alcohol and sex are plentiful. Macgoblin once hosted talks with business leaders during a lavish party in a Roman-era boat, served by naked hostesses. After exiling Windrip and assuming power, Saranson has debauched parties with plenty of handsome young men. The Reynard Cycle: Reynard views the court of King Lionel this way in Defender of the Crown, and not without reason. Court intrigue is one of the major features of the plot. Basically the entire Roman aristocracy in Francine Rivers The Mark of the Lion. The Psi Lords of Takis in the Wild Cards series. One character from Earth observes that skullduggery is "like a fifth classical element" on Takis. In the Videssos Cycle, the royal court has this bad. How bad? In only two of the four novels do the main characters even try to face the Big Bad. In the other two books (and the first half of the books in which they do fight him) they spend all their time suppressing insurrections so that they can send the army out of the capital without worrying that there will be another coup attempt while they're gone. The city of Theatrica and its citizens. The society considers itself classless and entirely noble, relegating peasant status to all non-Theatricans (thereby keeping the elite/pleb contrast intact). The Kitan court in Guy Gavriel Kay's Under Heaven. About as Truth in Television as a fantasy novel can get, as it is closely based on Tang Dynasty China, where the court was plenty deadly and decadent. (The events of the novel pattern the intrigues that led up to the An Shi Rebellion, which some historians consider to be, in terms of percentage of casualties, the deadliest conflict in human history.) Vorkosigan Saga is a Zig Zag. By Miles's time it is simply a Standard Royal Court and most of the politics looks like fairly normal parliamenteering with mundane tricks like exchanging support for each other's favorite project. However once in awhile a Vor will stoop to thuggery. There are a number of Vor that are useless and vice-obsessed—or pretend to be, like Ivan and By. These seem to be a minority. When Miles was a child, however, the Barrayaran system was much more violent, and assassinations and attempted coups were an expected feature of politics. The King's Court is this in Sir Derek And The Faeries, although it isn't helped by the fact that the King is something of an idiot, as he sleeps with the Queen's Ladies-In-Waiting despite knowing what a terrible idea that is, then banishes the only person who could get him out of his bind. The Age of Fire series has the court politics of the Lavadome — hundreds of dragons, all vying for the favor of, or entry into, the Imperial Line. And as for those already in the Line, they're constantly struggling for influence, power, and ultimately the chance to take the Tyr's throne for themselves. Whitehouse presides over a modern, corporate executive version in The Damnation Game. For one thing, Whitehouse and his cronies get his bodyguard drunk and try to force him into an orgy involving two prostitutes as a joke. The Court of Lothar in Restoree is much too decadent and deadly for a nice American girl like Sara — though in fact she copes quite nicely. In the Erebus Sequence, Demesne is full of politics and scheming, with few nobles concerning themselves with anything but their own status and advancement. It doesn't help that the king doesn't pay any attention to it and leaves everything in the hands of a manipulative Majordomo. In the second book, attempts by Anea and Russo to reform the court and establish a rudimentary democracy are fiercely and violently resisted. The Hunger Games: The Capitol, if the story of Snow's ascension to power is anything to go by. The Dinosaur Lords: The Palace of the Fireflies, the seat of imperial power in Nuevaropa, is full of intrigue, treacherous plots, illicit romances and backstabbery. The Emperor being rather terrible at his job and civil war raging a few princedoms away is just a cherry on the top. The Goblin Emperor: It is made clear that the court of Ethuveraz is this pretty much at the beginning of the story, when his cousin tells the protagonist: "The wolves are waiting to devour thee." In the Realm of the Elderlings series, the Jamaillian court is less well described than the Farseer court at Buckkeep, but obviously much bigger and both more deadly and more decadent, with the Satrap at the top, an unstated number of advisors and nobles, the Satrap's Heart Companions (not to be confused with a harem, although to Companion Serilla's dismay most Heart Companions have chosen to do just that) and all other members of the court going unmentioned. And everyone is seemingly doing their level best to get as much power as possible, at whatever price. The Witchlands: Implied when Vaness tells Safi that she needs the latter's Living Lie Detector powers to cleanse her court. The Nubrevnan High Council feels this way to Vivia, as many conspire against her either to aid another group or nation, get more power for themselves or marry her and render her their puppet on the throne. The Archduchy of Crius in Space Opera series Lucifer's Star has the same scheming and backstabbing of Dune with the various Houses all plotting against one another for position and prestige. It, notably, leads to a We ARE Struggling Together situation as they continue this in-fighting even in the face of conquest by the Commonwealth. One example? Protagonist Cassius Mass is the clone of his Evil Chancellor father who wanted to disinherit his own children as a way to spite their mother's house that he was forced to marry into. Cassius was then trained to plot against both his siblings as well as their mother while the same was done to them—ironically ending with the three siblings plotting against their parents. In both the book and film adaptation of Stardust, the kingdom determines its succession by which of the king's sons is still alive. They are directly encouraged to murder each other with no legal repercussion. In A Face Like Glass the court in Caverna is incredibly subtle and deadly - so much so that even the person in charge is basically plotting against himself. Isaac Asimov's "The General (Foundation)": The inner court of Emperor Cleon II is full of sycophants and back-stabbers, each looking to secure their position for when the Emperor dies and possibly taking the throne for themselves. Despite his painful and incurable disease, Cleon keeps an eye out for possible revolts and betrayal, including young generals popular with the military. Subverted in Warbreaker. The Court of Gods is this on paper; it is certainly decadent, consisting of people worshiped as living gods whittling their days in idle luxury, save for when they give their lives to heal someone. As Lightsong points out, the decent people are the ones who give their lives earlier, so what's left are the selfish ones. However, despite the fears of neighboring Idris, they're not a deadly court, and most have to be talking into preparing for self-defense. Double Subverted when it turns out that the real danger wasn't the gods or the priests, but the administrators, who were manipulating the Idris fear. Live-Action TV The Rise of Phoenixes: The royal court of Tiansheng. The princes are plotting against each other, the emperor is manipulating his sons, and the only way for Ning Yi to stay alive long enough to get anything done is to pretend to be an idiot. Game of Thrones: King's Landing in the Crownlands. Deadly for many characters, including King Robert and Ned Stark. The Title Drop moment refers to the nobility's high rate of turnover. As with Littlefinger, who is advising Ned Stark on the ways of the court. Littlefinger, seeking a messenger who can go between them : "Do you have someone in your household you can trust?" Ned Stark, eagerly: "Yes." Littlefinger: "Wrong answer." The court in The Tudors might be even more corrupt than its real-life counterpart, and that's not easy to do... Queen Elizabeth's court in Black Adder II tends towards this trope. She beheads someone if she's bored. Or if they don't tell her that her nose looks pretty. Kings: The court of Gilboa is a polished, modern-day bureaucracy where the king wears suits and rules from a conference table. That doesn't make any difference to the murderous, treacherous and utterly corrupt proceedings that go on behind closed doors, though... Mark Antony's and Cleopatra's Court in Rome is so decadent it turns former Magnificent Bastard Mark Antony into a fat whiny crybaby. Star Trek: A few of the various alien races occasionally dip into this to varying degrees. While the Klingons are the Trope Namer for Klingon Promotion, their version of this trope is a bit more complicated. A standard Klingon state assembly can very easily result in more than a few deaths; at one point during a civil war, the Chancellor was challenged to a duel, and proceeded to kill his opponent before returning to the matters at hand. That all said, more underhanded actions such as poisoning or politicking are considered deeply dishonorable, and if exposed, are not all tolerated; in Deep Space Nine, one Klingon attempted to ruin a rival house by financially assaulting it, and when this came to light he was stripped of his honor and exiled. Though the exact nature of their government is not entirely clear, the Romulans are a bit straighter an example, with the Romulan government indicated to be an intricate web of alliances between factions that only work together to the point their interests align. The moment those interests stop aligning, they can and will turn against each other. Doctor Who: The non-renegade Time Lords have been depicted like this ever since Robert Holmes first took a more cynical view of them in "The Deadly Assassin", and even more so in the Darker and Edgier spin-offs. During the first part of the revived series when they were officially dead the Doctor liked to imply that they were dedicated and unselfish defenders of the universe. At least, until it became a question of "us or the rest of the universe", and they settled on "us" - and as the Doctor explained, when Wilf pointed out how he'd always talked about his people like they were wonderful and amazing, that that was how he chose to remember them, but he has most certainly not forgotten the reality. After the Doctors saved them, it's zig-zagged: while it only took two more seasons for it to be revealed just how much the upper echelons hadn't improved, the military and the civilians are depicted as being as decent (or no worse than) anybody else in the universe. Expanded Universe tells us just how much the Doctor was lying-even before the Time War there was a specialized branch of Time Lord bureaucracy specifically to act as a Decadent Court, the Celestial Intervention Agency. At first, they were nothing more than a darkly intrusive Internal Affairs sort of organization. When the Time War came, they started taking measures to enforce Time Lord dominance across the timelines. They succeeded. I, Claudius, starring Derek Jacobi and numerous other high-profile British actors. This series, based on a series of novels, recounts the life of Claudius, the awkward fool who would be emperor... and the drama, treachery, and intrigue that happened in the royal household. It's even more intense when you consider that it is based on historical events. But then, truth is stranger than fiction. (Historians, however, reject the idea of Livia as poisoner.) The Caesars was a Granada series covering the same time period as I, Claudius, and likewise featured the tangled web of incest and murder that was the Julio-Claudian royal family and their social circle. Just to name a few examples, Livia happily admits to having arranged "a good many" deaths over the course of sixty years, Livilla and her lover Sejanus conspire to poison her husband Drusus so that they can rule Rome as regents for her son Gemellus when he succeeds Tiberius, and Caligula has sexual relations with all three of his sisters - until he accidentally strangles one and has the other two banished for allegedly conspiring against him. Another BBC Production, The Cleopatras, takes place in a court where, if you weren't marrying your sibling (or your parent, or uncle, or niece), you were having them killed to keep them from becoming a threat to you. (Sometimes you married them, and THEN killed them when you fell in love with someone else.) The Hamptons in Revenge serves as a good contemporary example. Though not monarchical, Washington DC resembles this in NCIS. Not technically a court but the upper decks of the starship Ascension are this. Except for a dedicated few the main occupations seem to be jockeying for position, partying and sleeping with each others wives/husbands. King Arthur's court in Carry On Laughing! is the polar opposite of its usual portrayal - the knights do little else besides arguing, drinking and showing no loyalty whatsoever to their king (not that he deserves it - he doesn't exactly set a good example). Babylon 5 has the Circle of Houses of the Centauri Republic (actually an empire), extremely decadent as a side effect of the Centauri considering sobriety a vice (as all Centauri have many duties, and taking breaks and having pleasure is a duty that serves to keep them capable of fulfilling the others) and the House lords going overboard, and deadly due the competition among the nobles of a civilization heavy on Realpolitik. It's rather telling that when Londo had lord Refa killed Refa is surprised at the circumstances (as they were rather convoluted and for once he was innocent of what Londo wanted him dead for) and means, not that Londo is having him killed, and the latter is because Londo could have just have slipped him the second part of the poison he had administered him early for a blackmail. Subverted with the Royal Court: they're the ministers appointed by the emperor and the ones that actually run the Republic, and the Nobles know better than interfere with their jobs without really good reasons. The Man in the High Castle: After they won the war, the Nazis have established a dog-eats-dog hierarchy, with the uppermost echelons of the Party and (Para)military constantly scheming against each other for supremacy. Hitler himself even falls victim to an ambitious underling who desires to become Fuehrer so he can start a nuclear war against their former Japanese allies. Super Sentai The Gorma Tribe in Gosei Sentai Dairanger seems to be led by one. This faction seems to be running on Klingon Promotion, so many of its members try to manipulate or backstab each other. The Gorma Emperor is also revealed to wield an Artifact of Doom, which renders him violently insane. This makes dealing with him a very dangerous task. The Evil Army Shadow Line from Ressha Sentai Toqger is modeled after historical European monarchies, with each of the members possessing a title of nobility. Members of this faction scheme against each other almost as much as they do against he heroes of the show. On several occasions, some of the members even ally with the ToQgers to further their agenda against their colleagues. The entire series Kingdom (2019), both in the introductory episodes and trailers, established the courtly intrigue with the bottom of the palace's pond littered with those who were unfortunate enough to fall victim to it. This compounded the series' Zombie Apocalypse as the court and ruling clan were vying for power rather than alleviate the crisis. Furthermore, one of the main character—Yi Chang—began to be targeted by the consort who would have him killed for her own son to ascend the throne. True Blood: Vampire society is largely modeled after feudalism in Medieval Europe. It consists of vampire monarchs who spend most of their time either indulging in their luxuries, accumulating treasure, feeding on humans, or are attempting to take control of territories owned by other monarchs (either through force or political marriages). Overseeing all of this is a shadow government known as The Authority. As shown in season 5, it consists of Vampire Chancellors who are perfectly okay backstabbing each other as long as they get to keep their power. Music In King Crimson's debut album, In the Court of the Crimson King, most of the lyrics (for songs like "21st century Schizoid Man", "Epitaph", and the title track) described a corrupt, falling-apart world of medieval/futuristic kingdoms. The lyrics were written by Peter Sinfield. Myths & Religion The major Olympians of Classical Mythology (and some of the minor ones) are often portrayed as a decadent court in myth and popular culture. With no opposing force, they spend their days pursuing mortal women, engaging in hedonism, figuring out how to back stab each other, or terrorizing mortals for slights real and imaginary. They only survive since they are all immortal. The only saving grace is they all have moments of benevolence toward mortals and not all of them are as decadent. The Odyssey: In the absence of Odysseus, a flock of nobleman suitors have gathered in the palace of the kingdom to present themselves to the queen. The suitors waste the kingdom's money on their entertainment, and plan to kill prince Telemachus for getting in their way. The Bible: The northern kingdom of Israel after the Jehu dynasty ended, which became a constant series of Klingon Promotions up until its final king Hoshea, when the Assyrians invaded and conquered the territory, taking the people into exile. Podcasts In Midst, the aristocracy of the Trust aren't cruel, but they're oblivious to the lives of the less Valorous. They have so many Valor beads that they've had to get creative about wearing them: while most people are lucky to have a necklace, or even to escape their debt, Loxley's entire gown is made of Valor beads. In The Hidden People, the court in question is The Unseelie Court so there was never any doubt. Poetry William Shakespeare's Sonnet 25: Great princes' favourites their fair leaves spread But as the marigold at the sun's eye, And in themselves their pride lies buried, For at a frown they in their glory die. Tabletop Games Ars Magica covenants are prone to becoming like this when they fall into their Winter phase, with larger, more powerful covenants and Domus Magni being major antagonists because of it. Coeris, the House Tremere home covenant (yes, that Tremere) is especially ripe for it because of their extremely competitive and cutthroat political policies and general impenetrability by anyone who can't beat them at Certamen. Dungeons & Dragons: The Seelie and Unseelie Courts of are the epitome of what happens when the Deadly Decadent Court is run by The Fair Folk. The Unseelie Court is noted as downright lethal unless you are very, very carefully prepared. That being said, the 5e Dungeon Master's Guide notes that Seelie and Unseelie do not directly correlate with good and evil, and that there are denizens of the Feywild that belong to neither court or even reject being part of one. The various dukes and duchesses of the Nine Hells of Baator are constantly scheming against each other, fending off ambitious underlings, and aspiring to supplant Asmodeus as the ruler of Hell. For his part, Asmodeus is a Magnificent Bastard able to play his would-be rivals against each other, most spectacularly in the Reckoning, where Hell split into two warring factions that upended the political order, only for Asmodeus to emerge unscathed. As for the rest of the archdevils: Archduchess Zariel of Avernus was toppled for a time by her ambitious general Bel, but she's since retaken the position, yet retains Bel's services as an advisor. While she defends the gates of Hell, she also plots revenge against Asmodeus for his part in her corruption. Dispater, the Iron Duke of Dis, has grown increasingly paranoid about retribution from Asmodeus for his part in the Reckoning, and rarely leaves his inner sanctum. His advisor Titivilus does much to encourage these rumors, and now all but rules Dis in his master's name. Viscount Mammon of Minauros was the first to prostrate himself before Asmodeus after the Reckoning failed, to the disgust of his fellow conspirators, and is desperately trying to build up a war chest now that his ex-lover Glasya has become a fellow Archduke, out of fear that she may punish him for not resisting when her father ordered them to break off their relationship. For a long time, Archduchess Fierna of Phlegethos was content to let her father Belial do all the work running the layer while she enjoyed herself (often with him), but after becoming fast friends with Glasya, she's being more active and independent, setting up her own cultist networks "just in case" anything happens to her dear father. Belial has had to put his own schemes against Levistus on hold until he's sure of his daughter's goals and loyalties. Levistus was imprisoned within one of Stygia's glaciers after killing Asmodeus' consort, and for a time the archduke Geryon ruled the frozen layer. Geryon served as The Mole for Asmodeus during the Reckoning, but despite his loyalty (or perhaps because of it) he was exiled, and rule of Stygia passed back to Levistus... without the prince being released from his frozen prison. Now Geryon fights an insurgency to retake his position while raging at Asmodeus, and Levistus rules telepathically from an iceberg while raging at Asmodeus. The entire scenario is speculated to be an attempt by Asmodeus to purge the two rivals of their worst tendencies, or create an opening for a more worthy would-be ruler to exploit. Malbolge was once ruled by Moloch, who rebelled against Asmodeus upon the urging of his most trusted advisor, Malagard the Hag Countess. Moloch fled the plane after his defeat and the Hag Countess was installed in his place despite not being a baatezu, but then she was in turn replaced by Glasya, Asmodeus' own daughter, who had ended a rebellious phase and been rewarded by elevation to an Archduchess. She's since poached talented devils from other archdukes' courts and forced them to scramble to readjust their plans without antagonizing her, and by extension, her father. Meanwhile, Moloch is trying to raise a mercenary army to retake his former layer, but is stymied by the fact that every time he returns to Baator, he is demoted from an archdevil to a lowly imp. Baalzebul was once ruler of both Malbolge and his own layer of Maladomini, but as punishment for his betrayal in the Reckoning, Asmodeus transformed Baalzebul into a disgusting sluglike creature, until he had spent a year like that for every lie he told a fellow devil. He's since finished his sentence and regained a humanoid form, but Baalzebul dearly wishes to repay Asmodeus for this humiliation. Mephistopheles of Cania once toppled himself in the guise of "Baron Molikroth," in order to purge his court of conspirators. When he isn't scheming against Baalzebul, Mephistopheles is telling Asmodeus, to his face, how one day he will rule Hell. It's possible that Asmodeus keeps the openly disloyal archduke around because Mephistopheles is so determined that he shall be the one to overthrow Asmodeus that he interferes in the other archdukes' conspiracies to do the same. Invoked by Azalin, ruler of Darkon, in the Ravenloft setting. Although personally above such self-indulgence, he actively encourages Darkonian nobles to debase themselves at wild court parties, the better to expose their vices and collect dirt his secret police can use to control them. The various Courts of Raksha in Exalted are like this, and everyone's a Reality Warper to boot. The Realm's various social organizations come close to this as The Empress valued competition among her underlings and descendants. Heaven is a cross of this and the Corrupt Corporate Executive as it's a deadly decadent bureaucracy. Pretty much all Exalted types have charms that can encourage or discourage this type of behavior. Abyssals take the cake, however, as they possess a Socialize charm that causes any social group they use it on to devolve into infighting and backstabbing— in other words, they can create a Deadly Decadent Court at will. Many a Martian Court in Rocket Age. Demarcation Point One also counts, since Ambassadors to the Europans live lives of luxury, but are constantly trying to back stab one another. Pick an Elysium (or court) with Fae or Vampires in any The World of Darkness game, and this is what they're like. Granted, you'll have biker lords and harlot duchesses along with your typical "proper" lords though, oddly on an equal footing. Mage caucuses and consilii can veer into this as well. Warhammer: The various political scenes in the Empire's provinces tend to feature this sort of thing, with both the nastiness and decadence of political squabbling getting worse the further south you go. People in the northern Empire generally tend to look down on flowery speech and deceit and would much rather settle disputes with simple legal proceedings often concluding in non-fatal trial by combat. This is a necessity, because the northern Empire is regularly harassed by Chaos-worshiping Norse raiders and Dark Elf corsairs, so it usually pays to settle disputes quickly so the Burgomeisters and Elector Count can ready their forces to keep the berserking Vikings and sadistic S&M Elves at bay. Prior to their revamp in 6th edition, the Bretonnians were heavily based on the decadent, narcissism-ruled French aristocracy under Louis XVI, to the point that the cult of Slaanesh, the Mad God of Sex Is Evil, was rampant throughout the nation. They've since become Knights In Shining Armor more likely to settle their offended senses of honor with a Trial by Combat than skullduggery. Tilea is run by merchant princes and not nobles, but the region is renowned for the volatility and decadence of its upper crust. Poisoning and assassination are a regular fact of life, and just about anyone worth anything will hire a Cadre of Foreign Bodyguards (ogres are particularly favoured) as most Tileans won't trust other Tileans to guard themselves out of fear they've got an agenda (or is on someone else's payroll). The one exception where Tilea is less corrupt than The Empire is that Skaven infiltration is much less common: Tileans hate Skaven and would rather die than cut deals with them, as opposed to some of the Empire's nobility. The Dark Elves' courts are essentially based on control, cruelty and the dominion of the powerful to exercise utter obedience in those underneath them. The Hanil Khar is an annual pledge of allegiance to the ruler of a city that regularly features the cold-blooded torture of any who dare to bring insufficient tribute, with outright execution common to those who really fail to produce. Keep in mind, this is their awards ceremony here. Another indicator of the murderous nature of Druchii court life is the rigid etiquette of social space that evolved because the Dark Elves are so damn paranoid about being straight-up assassinated. Very tellingly, it is measured in sword-lengths. Lowborn Dark Elves may not approach a lord closer than three sword-lengths without being summoned, retainers may remain within two lengths, and lieutenants, trusted retainers and lower-ranking highborn may approach to a single sword-length. Within a sword-length is the most intimate space, and is reserved for lovers, playthings and, very characteristic of the Druchii, mortal enemies. You have to really think about the parties that these guys attended that forced this sort of system to be adopted. The Dark Elves likely inherited this tendency from the High Elves, who practice a downplayed example. The High Elves regularly engage in blackmail, espionage, rumour-mongering and Gambit Pileups a-plenty in their courts as the various nobles of various ranks and from various regions jockey for position and favour in the Phoenix King's court, to the extent that in certain rulebooks, which character in your High Elf army counted as its General was determined by a dice roll, not who had the highest Leadership value. Even the Phoenix King isn't entirely safe and is expected to play the game in a way good enough that no-one can accuse him of playing it (though an elected position, Phoenix Kings rule for life, but said rule can get rather impotent if the princes lack respect for the king, which they will if he lacks political clout). Unlike the Dark Elves, however, violence is limited to honour-duels (and also frowned upon when it happens), and murder is forbidden. The original High Elf/Dark Elf split comes from the one time the 'no murder in politics' rule was broken and the Dark Elves were the ones who agreed with said murder. The Skaven are a species wide example. Any Skaven is by nature selfish, backstabbing, and cowardly, who believes that the only thing of importance is the survival and gain of the individual. They will engage in no shortage of assassinations, betrayals, and sabotage, with some warlords getting murdered on the spot by their ostensible allies in front of the others (it's implied that this is considered a perfectly legitimate way of rising in ranks). Even during times of war, different Skaven clans will spend as much time plotting against their "allies" instead of their actual opponents, and even then, the different Skaven in the clans will be plotting against their kin. The lore notes that this is probably the only reason they haven't already taken over the world. Warhammer 40,000: The Highborn, the leading nobility of each Imperial world, live sequestered from the impoverished masses they rule over in their comfy little spires and palaces, and the knowledge of etiquette is as important to them as the knowledge of poisons and assassination plots. Being the most important or most powerful Highborn in your court basically means having to live your entire life in paranoid terror, seeing assassins behind every corner, and being right. They essentially treat Imperial citizens as slaves or chattel, and may form entire noble syndicates ruling over solar systems. The Administratum doesn't particularly care what they do with their planets as long as they pay their tithes (because the Imperium is a Darker and Edgier version of The Federation), so they're unlikely to ever face consequences for their decadence. The Dark Eldar fit this trope to a T. The Dark City basically started out as a composition of trade hubs and private realms of noble houses that were outside the jurisdiction of the rulers of the old Eldar empire. It was there the spread of decadence that would eventually lead to the Fall of Eldar started, and many of those same noble houses continue to exist 10,000 years later (although many have reinvented themselves as Kabals), still continuing the behaviours that lead to the Fall. Theatre Cyrano de Bergerac: Count De Guiche pays a court of False Friends who talk about him behind his back, uses Viscount De Valvert to abuse lesser nobles, bullying Roxane and Cyrano, sends one hundred men to punish a poet, and this trope is constantly discussed by all the Gascons as a proof that De Guiche is No True Scotsman Gascon. Oh, and remember, you will not go anywhere in this court unless you have wit! Subverted In Real Life: De Guiche was one of Cardinal Richelieus collaborators and they transformed France from a poor backward country into a continental power. Parodied with Ragueneaus situation: At Act II, Raguenau is called "King of the Bakers" but is clear that his court of poet friends are only flattering him to eat at his expense, that his neglected queen, Lisa, is cheating on him with the Musketeer, that his own employees are abusing his Conspicuous Consumption, Crack Is Cheaper attitudes, that all those things will lead him to ruin, and when his only real friend, Cyrano, lampshades this, the "King" cannot accept the truth. At the beginning of Act III, the Kingdom (the bakery) is lost. Arguably, Judge Turpin's Masquerade Ball in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (though since it only features in one scene it might be more of a Fête Worse than Death). All of them stand there and laugh while the judge rapes Lucy. As You Like It: The court is a treacherous place where everyone is miserable until they head to Arcadia. Pretty much ALL of Shakespeare's histories, with Richard III being the most extreme example. Even in Henry V, Act II opens with three nobles being exposed as plotting the King's assassination; he tricks them into arguing against mercy for a minor offender, reveals that he knows what they've been up to, and has them all executed without trial, then carries on with his war plans as if nothing's happened. In John Milton's Comus, the Lady observes that Sacred Hospitality is found more often among the poor, even though its courtesy was named for courts. A very small, but sufficiently treacherous, instance in The Lion in Winter, where King Henry II of England, his queen Eleanor, their three surviving sons — Richard, Geoffrey, and John — and King Philip II of France are all plotting something. Lots of backstabbing and temporary alliances result. Westeros: An American Musical: It's a little hard to parody A Song of Ice and Fire without having this trope show up. It's to the point that "Small Council", the play's counterpart to "Aaron Burr, Sir" from Hamilton, changes the "talk less, smile more" line to "trust less, conspire more". The following song, "Plot Development" is about several members of the royal court having their own little conspiracy underway. Video Games In Final Fantasy Tactics, the royal court of Ivalice, inspired in part by the War of the Roses, who manipulate, backstab, frame each other, and ally themselves with the Legions of Hell (wittingly or not) to achieve succession and absolute rule. Final Fantasy XII's House Solidor and the Archadian Council are no better. Including the "join forces with Eldritch Abominations" part. The Iron Council of Magnagora in Lusternia. They're monstrous even by the standards of a city twisted by The Corruption and populated by racist mutants: backstabbing, murder and cannibalism are all actively encouraged means of advancement, and their Physical God chief advisor is the resident manipulative chessmaster. The Interactive Fiction game Varicella plops you in the middle of such a court; the first time you play through you'll spend a while exploring then run out of time and get killed. The next time you'll solve a few more puzzles, until in the end you know exactly how to make every move count. The Italian Nobles in Assassin's Creed II are all about killing one another in order to advance their own goals (especially in the case of the Templars). Truth in Television actually. Followed up by, and maybe topped by, the French royal court under Louis XVI in Assassin's Creed: Unity. Again, a fair bit of Truth in Television. The Aristocrat Club in Rule of Rose consists of a bunch of orphaned children playing rich and powerful nobility, complete with constant intrigue and rivalries, accompanied by complex rituals which often involve torture and/or hazing of one another, as well as cruelty against animals. In Crusader Kings 2 Your court is filled with people conspiring against you, and vice versa. There's an entire game mechanic for hatching Evil Plans and conspiracies, a second one for attempting to spark civil wars and rebellions and a third option to just pay large stacks of gold to send assassins after people you don't like. The Crusader Kings series could even be seen as Deadly Decadent Court: THE GAME. The decadent part is especially evident with the DLC that allows people to play as Islamic dynasties: non-landed family members get more and more decadent, which is a very bad thing. Merchant Republics are no picnic either: a feudal realm has one ruler and his associated court. Republics have five great families, each with their own ambitious younger members and ungrateful vassals, all nominally subject to the Doge but scheming madly to steal each other's trade posts and ensure that their patrician succeeds the Doge should he meet an untimely end. The Elder Scrolls: High Rock, the homeland of the Bretons, is made up of endless multitude of city-states, principalities, baronies, duchies, and kingdoms that had, until the events of Daggerfall, resisted all attempts at centralization into a single culture or government. As such, their political intrigue is more cutthroat than is typical elsewhere in Tamriel, with the use of assassinations, spies, and double agents rampant. This has been mitigated somewhat after the Warp in The West, which converted High Rock's dozens of petty city-states into three "kingdoms," but still prevalent. Although High Rock is the place highlighted in lore, Daggerfall shows that at the least the Redguard kingdom of Sentinel, in Hammerfell, is not much better. In the Dawnguard DLC for Skyrim, joining the Volkihar Vampire Clan makes you the target of two different backstabbing plots during your very first quest with them. According to Garan Marethi afterwards, this is considered standard Volkihar politics. However, when you become the Lord of Volkihar, no one tries anything funny on you, because everyone knows what you did to the previous Lord who did try. In all five galaxies of Imperium Nova the roleplaying forum features at least one. Though the mechanical side of the game only covers the more overt actions of the players (wars, duels, dynastic marriages, etc, the worst they can do is assassination). The Last Story takes places on an island run by a court which has fallen into this. Nearly anyone who isn't outright evil is an Upper-Class Twit. If not both. Dragon Age: The most obvious example is Orlais, which is based on medieval France. The unending machinations of the upper class are known as "The Great Game", and participation is considered something of a pastime. Orlesian nobles make extensive use of bards who are trained in—besides music—espionage, assassination, and sabotage. Even the servants engage in the Game, often working as spies and/or jockeying to improve their own position. Then there's Orzammar, where the Noble Dwarf gets caught up in his younger brother Bhelen's machinations, forcing him to work with Bhelen or his rival Harrowmount. Neither choice is optimal, either. Harrowmount is kind but staunchly conservative, while Bhelan is a Game of Thrones character but progressive economically and socially. You get to have a go at playing court politics in Dragon Age: Inquisition, when a quest sends you to a grand ball to prevent the Empress's assassination. It starts with you getting judged for your background (unlucky for you if you're anything but a non-mage human) and only gets more murky. If you do well you can get the person of your choice in charge of the Empire. If not...you get tossed out and the whole kingdom dissolves into chaos as you fail to prevent the killing. The whole sequence features an absurd amount of murder, trickery and nice masks. And shoes, don't forget the shoes. Vivienne, one of your companions in Inquisition, as well as advisers Leliana and Josephine are all accomplished players of the Game - Vivienne because she's the First Enchanter of the local circle and arcane adviser to the Empress, Josephine because she's the ambassador to Orlais from Antiva, and Leliana is a former Bard. Josephine's a former Bard as well, but she quit that job. Shockingly, Solas fits right in himself, even dropping his veneer a bit and becoming a slightly snooty aristocrat, and admitting enjoying court intrigue. Primarily because he was an Evanuris thousands of years ago, the ancient elven equivalent of Orlais. While Orlais is the nation most notorious for their court intrigues, that's only because they're poetic enough to have a name for it. Other nations that engage in this trope are Tevinter (a nation ruled by mages where it's an open secret that any mage of political standing practices blood magic), Antiva (a nation with a Puppet King that's truly controlled by assassins and merchant leaders), and Orzammar (in a notable aversion to Our Dwarves Are All the Same). The Chantry, the setting's dominant religious sect, engages as well; they're well aware that their decrees shape the culture of the entire continent of Thedas, and clerics (including the Grand Cleric—the setting's Pope) are not above employing spies and assassins to do their dirty work. The popular Civilization IV mod Fall from Heaven has the Balseraphs who are all about this trope with the "deadly" part of the trope's former title being key. Those still sane and able to escape have done so long ago. Perpentach, the king of the Balseraphs, likes to dress up as a clown and kill people for amusement (basically, imagine The Joker being in charge of a country). His daughter Keelyn was born of a brief dalliance with a spy from a nation that seeks to bring out the Apocalypse. Born in a dungeon and kept from human contact, she learned to summon hellish creatures and temporarily rules while her father is away. Fire Emblem, as a primarily Medieval European Fantasy series pursuing a degree of versimilitude, has those crop up fairly often. The Nohrian Court in Fire Emblem Fates. King Garon's inability to sever ties with a woman once he fell in love with her led him to take many concubines in addition to his wives (Queen Katerina, and once she dies, Queen Arete), so he sired a lot of illegitimate children. While at first he loved all of his children equally and doted on them like a good father would, his concubines fought and chafed with one another for his favor and used their children as a part of this. Bullying, scarring, assassinations and deaths of both concubines and children occured until only four half-siblings were left: Xander (Katerina's son and the legitimate heir), Camilla, Leo, and Elise (all born from concubines), who were all tired of the in-fighting and resolved the inheritance of Nohr's throne among themselves, and in the process formed strong ties to one another. Unfortunately, the whole affair not only left deep psychological scars on them (especially Xander and Camilla) but it horribly hardened the once-kind Garon and he became neglectful, abusive, and ruthless, which became even worse after Queen Arete died in a Heroic Sacrifice. Because Xander, Camilla and Leo remember Garon's doting affection for them, they will not directly oppose him even if they agree that his rule at the present is overly harsh and ruthless, and they hope that once their father conquers Hoshido, he will go back to the kind ruler and father he was. What they don't know is that Garon is Dead All Along and his corpse is being used as a familiar by Anankos in his plot to destroy both Hoshido and Nohr. In Fire Emblem: Three Houses, the three countries of Fódlan all have this problem to varying but noticeable extents: The Adrestian Empire is all but openly run by a group of corrupt high nobles who organized an insurrection in response to attempted consolidation of power by the emperor, Ionius IX, and reduced his status to Authority in Name Only. Their leader, Duke Ludwig von Aegir, in addition to usual trappings of an unscrupulous, avaricious noble, also sanctioned the inhumane experiments on the children of the royal family in an effort to make 'a peerless emperor' controlled by them. The experiments were performed by a group of dark mages who held little to no respect to the lives of their subjects, and the leader of those mages also posed as the emperor's brother-in-law and the Imperial regent who had been presumably killed by them before. Out of the eleven subjects, only one — Edelgard von Hresvelg — survived, at the cost of her hair color, a significant part of lifespan, and, implicitly, shattered previous belief in the world... and especially the Goddess. The horrors she endured also led to the determination to bring down the Crest nobility system that directly led to the suffering of her family, as well as the Church of Seiros that condoned and proliferated said system — with any means and at any cost. As her very first act upon ascending to the Adrestian throne, Edelgard began to cleanse the system by dismissing and imprisoning several of the most corrupt and uncooperative high nobles, particularly Duke Aegir — an act the player may witness firsthand on her route. At the end of her own route, after reuniting Fódlan, she dismantles the nobility altogether, with positions in the government instead given to those who earn them by personal merits and skills. Behind its image of The Good Kingdom ruled by shiny knights faithful to their liege, the Holy Kingdom of Faerghus hides a court that rivals their Adrestian counterpart in both decadence and deadliness. Most notably, the previous king of Faerghus, Lambert Egitte Blaiddyd, fell victim to a scheme by several court members discontent with reforms pushed by him. They — along with Lambert's queen Patricia who was desperate to meet her daughter from the previous marriage — contacted the Court Mage, Cornelia Arnim, to orchestrate an ambush on the delegation led by Lambert to the neighboring land of Duscur. The attack, which left King Lambert and most of the delegation dead, was subsequently blamed on the population of Duscur, resulting in a massacre of the country by the Faerghus army. Also, Lambert's son Dimitri, who personally witnessed the tragedy, was thoroughly impacted by the event and lived to seek retribution for it ever since. Later it gets even worse: on three of four routes, Cornelia orders the assassination of Lambert's brother Rufus who ruled the kingdom as a regent, then pins it on Dimitri before joining with a group of nobles to surrender most of the kingdom to the invading Imperial army. The crown prince narrowly escapes execution and spends the next few years in exile which damages his already fragile psyche even further. On the remaining route, the kingdom is somewhat more stable, but Cornelia still tries to backstab it during the battle for Arianrhod — since Cornelia's, or precisely her placeholder's, true allegiance is with the aforementioned Mad Scientist mages. The Roundtable of the Leicester Alliance is marked by intrigue and disunity, as a large chunk of its members seek for personal benefit at the expense of the nation as a whole. The new heir of the ruling family, Claude von Riegan, finds the infighting between families ruling parts of the Alliance so heavy, when the war breaks out he is effectively forced to pit the pro-Adrestian and pro-Faerghus/anti-Adrestian factions against each other while maintaining an appearance of neutrality. Eventually, it becomes so overwhelming for Claude — who, by the way, has another throne to claim — that he books out of it altogether on every route, including his own (though there are two exceptionsSpecifically... 1. if he is killed on Edelgard's route, or 2. if he ends up married to F!Byleth (read: the player chooses him for the S-Support) and returns later). Human society in Guild Wars 2 is dominated by these, which may have something to do with their decline. Divinity's Reach is controlled by ministers scheming against the Queen. One of them, Minister Caudecus, is a major antagonist in the personal story and Living World Season 3. The nobles of Vabbi emphasize the decadent aspect of this trope. These people are all Upperclass Twits who devote all their time to partying and relaxing, completely oblivious to the abuses of their Mummy ruler or the suffering of the common folk due to the war. In Darkest Dungeon, the Court was once a home to this, a vast collection of nobles and visiting dignitaries from surrounding lands who gradually debased themselves with drink and games until they slid into horrific debauchery involving illicit drugs and cruel, murderous sport. They were so excessively debased that when the Ancestor proposed they drink a wine made of vampire blood, they accepted it eagerly, and barely halted their horrific indulgences even while being transformed into monstrous insects. By the time of the game's events, the Court is now a collection of crazed, inhuman mosquito-vampires who clothe themselves in the trappings of nobility. In Shuyan Saga, the prosperous kingdom of Zhong Rong, a long way from any fighting, is not big on taking action. They seem to lean more towards the overly-sensitive, artistically-minded kind of decadence than debauchery (breaking mid-session to look at plum blossoms), but it has the same result — they don't want to send troops. World of Warcraft The Highborne night elves all respected and loved Queen Azshara and would have never dreamt of betraying her. The backstabbing happened in her royal court where nobles and high-ranking mages would spitefully betray and slander each other to vie for their queen's attention. One of the Warcraft universe's afterlives, Revendreth, has the Ember Court, originally run by the Sire Denathrius. Despite originally being made to punish the wicked, the denizens of the realm gradually created a culture of greed and gluttony around exploiting the realm's sinful souls for their own ends. After overthrowing Denathrius, the Venthyr player is actually given the option of creating their own Ember Court to help reunite the guardian covenants of the various afterlives into working together in a uniquely social setting. Visual Novels Similarly to Lusternia, the first playthroughs in Long Live the Queen are going to get the Player Character killed, in a variety of manners. Wearing a crown, as fourteen- year-old Crown Princess Elodie is set for, means having a big shiny target on the head in Nova's turbulent political climate. In particular, it's very heavily implied that Lucille, Countess of Nix is behind many of the assassination attempts that Elodie encounters, as her husband (Elodie's maternal uncle) is next in line for the throne, followed by their daughter Charlotte. It's possible to prevent these events from occurring at all by ingratiating yourself with them in such a way that grants them the level of power that they're looking for, but good luck with that if you don't have a plan from the get-go. In Seven Kingdoms: The Princess Problem, the royal court of Corval is famously decadent and intrigue-riddled. One of the possible backgrounds for a player character is that of a lady of Corval's Inner Court, requiring and providing bonuses toward social and political savvy. In Sunrider, the royal court of the Holy Ryuvian Empire was like this according to Sola di Ryuvia. She describes it as a place where saying the wrong thing or snubbing the wrong person could easily get you marked for death, and believes that her father, the second son of the Emperor, had his older brother and father assassinated in a bid for the throne (which he then blamed on his bastard half-brother, Crow Harbor). Sola: The Ryuvian court of my era was a snake pit. Betrayals. Assassinations. Machinations. They were a part of the palace culture. Web Comics The Elven court in 8-Bit Theater is all assholes. The Elven Nominal Hero Thief isn't much better, though. The Vampire Lords in Midnight's War still carry many ancient rivalries they had before they revealed themselves to the mortals. However, disputes among them are highly formalized and cordial, to avoid disrupting their blood collection. In My Dear Cold-Blooded King, the Blood King's court is filled with political maneuvering and death plots. He fosters a false reputation for being ruthlessly murderous simply to stave off assasination attempts. Azure City in The Order of the Stick has a very prominent nobility, with cloak and dagger methods being the norm for them. Lord Shojo began a practice of feigning insanity to avoid being assassinated, and his successor Hinjo accurately guesses he'll get a ninja death squad shortly after he takes the throne. Web Original The Nobles in Twig consider all their prestige in terms of who is where in the chain of succession; having never killed to rise in the succession means that one is viewed as weak. Individuals are enhanced as children using cutting-edge science, the more radical the more prestige. Weddings are always targets for biological warfare and assassination. A Practical Guide to Evil: The Court of Ater is expected to be this, as all of the in-fighting between nobles keeps them from causing trouble outside of the Tower. The Black Knight describes it as the most lethal environment short of an actual battlefield. Food and drink at their parties is routinely poisoned, but usually only in a way that will cause humiliation to anyone inept enough to attend without learning the antidote in advance and stupid enough to then eat or drink. Black: Praesi nobility has a regrettable propensity for stabbing. Captain: And poisoning. And blood magic. Calling the Tower a snake pit is doing a disservice to snakes; they don't usually bite unless provoked. Some of the fuckers up there will have you killed for wearing robes that look too much like theirs. The Winter Court also apply, being the fairy court more aligned with evil. Western Animation In Adventure Time, the Fire Kingdom is an officially Evil hotbed of backstabbing, plotting and fratricide. Flame Princess tries to reduce this, but the fact that she seized the throne by force and imprisoned her father rather reduces her claim to the moral high ground. Real Life A bit of a Truth in Television trope, since nations with absolute rulers and a wealthy aristocracy have tended to breed Deadly Decadent Courts like flies. Imperial Rome, its medieval continuation the Byzantine/Eastern Roman Empire, Imperial China (and later communist-controlled China), and pre-Revolutionary France are the archetypal examples that most writers seem to crib from. Non-royal "courts" often work too, such as the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union had several examples of this: In the immediate aftermath of the Red October, Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks had to share power with other revolutionary groups like the Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries. There was a lot of political maneuvering as Lenin and his Co-Dragons Josef Stalin and Leon Trotsky deprived their rivals of power, along with brutal repressions of dissent like the Kronstadt Rebellion. When the Bolsheviks had seized full power and Lenin's health was failing after several strokes, much of his inner circle began maneuvering to see which of them would be the Dragon Ascendant. Stalin and Trotsky were the most heated rivals and likeliest successors. Their feud ended with Stalin succeeding Lenin and Trotsky being exiled from the USSR. When Stalin took full control, he created a sense of fear and paranoia in his own inner circle. He liberally used The Purge as a means of reminding his cronies that no one was truly safe, and any of them could be next if he decided they were no longer useful to him. This promoted a toxic political culture which left only the most sleazy, corrupt and amoral people in power by Stalin's end as they are the only ones ruthless enough to do so, willing to do anything to survive and advance in Stalin's 'court' even if it means scheming, selling out and screwing over even their colleagues. When Stalin himself died, several of his cronies engaged in a deadly power struggle to succeed him. Nikita Khrushchev won the fight, and had his main rival, the serial rapist Lavrenty Beria, arrested and executed in cold blood. More generally, the somewhat "puritanical" version of this trope was in effect in Stalin's USSR. There was officially not supposed to be any decadence, luxuries or other stuff of the sort, but there were plenty of luxuries for Josef Stalin and his close comrades, though how much they enjoyed them is a different matter. Stalin gave his mother a palace, for example, but she refused to make use of it, sleeping in the servants' quarters and cooking her own meals. In post-Stalinist times, the decadence finally came to town, though it was still discreet and subtle, never fully shown to outsiders. Though one of the causes of the fall of the USSR was exposure of this corruption and decadence, it survived the fall unscathed and continued in The New Russia, now stripped clean of any and all Communist puritanism and its practitioners reveling in their new status as the officially unequal upper class. Simon Sebag Montefiore called his excellent book on Stalin The Court of the Red Czar. The Byzantine Empire was so infamous for this that another term for this trope is "Byzantine politics." Case in point, Byzantine Empress Irene and her gender swapped version of King Henry VIII's spouse killing spree, cutting out the eyes of former Emperors and current Emperors (the Emperor was supposed to be an image of divine perfection, so mutilating somebody made him ineligible). Plus the court was subject to other influences, such as the Church and the Vikings hired for the Varangian Guard (famously resulting in Harald Hadrada, Viking, Varangian Guardsman, soon to be King of Norway, and would-be conquerer of England, castrating and ripping out the eyes of Byzantine emperor Michael V Kalaphates in 1042.) Irene specifically had her own son and successor blinded, in a way calculated to cause his death, in the chamber where she had given birth to him. Even if it sounds strange, the Hittites. The royal court of Hattusa was truly a deadly place—full of relatives ready to betray the king at the first opportunity. The Ottoman Empire was likely the defining post-renaissance example; that it was intentionally set up so that every Sultan's death resulted in a frantic power-grab by every potential heir, with the winner having the legal right to have ALL surviving losers strangled to death was just the tip of the iceberg. No matter if your mother was your father's favorite, one of wives, concubines or slaves, all of his sons had equal claim to the throne and represented a threat to you so long as they lived. It didn't help the Janissaries, the Sultan's bodyguards who eventually became corrupt, also chose a new heir to fulfill their political agenda. The Ottoman royal harem was no less of an viper's nest, with concubines competing among themselves for the Sultan's affections and to secure their children as the heir so they can become the newest Valide Sultan or Queen-Mother. To this end, they were not above conspiring with eunuchs to get rid of overly ambitious rivals, like stuffing their bodies into bags and throwing them into sea, or gelding them to prevent them from producing competitors of the throne. It's believed that the average life expectancy of every new concubine was 5 years. The court of Saudi Arabia approaches this, although exile, shaming, and reassignment to Antarctica are preferred to outright killing; after all, almost all members of the court are (half)-brothers or cousins (being descendants of King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud), and the public image of family unity must be maintained. However, by all accounts, the internal politics of the Al Saud are quite dangerous—particularly now that there's a Succession Crisis due in a decade or so that everyone can see coming from a mile away—and the decadence of the Saudi court is so legendary, it has a trope. Probably apocryphal, but worth repeating. The astrologer at the court of Louis XI of France (known as "the Universal Spider" for his intricate and devious plots) had (quite by accident) accurately foretold the death of someone close to the king. Louis decided to have the unfortunate astrologer executed, but had a last question: "When do you foresee your own death?" The astrologer replied: "That I cannot divine, but it will be three days before Your Majesty's death." After that, the (in real life) superstitious Louis gave the astrologer all possible protection. Niccolò Machiavelli himself strongly recommended against this; besides the obvious risks to one's personal security, the high taxes required to support a decadent court tend to encourage rebellions. Louis XIV told Machiavelli "Screw That" and proceeded to create an Absolute French Monarchy revolving around an extensive Bread and Circuses political spectacle with him at the centre, building* well, converting from a mere royal hunting lodge to a sprawling luxurious palace the chateau de Versailles and controlling the rebelling French barons Fronde by forcing them to develop an expensive lifestyle that defines French fashion to this very day. It worked for a time, and it certainly put an end to the period of French civil wars and the decentralized power of the nobility; but behind the scenes, Louis XIV was working extremely hard to keep the system afloat, and his successors Louis XV and Louis XVI never fully understood that they, too, needed to work hard (failing to master the "accomplishing much" part of what Benjamin Franklin would call "the art of accomplishing much while appearing to accomplish little"). Cue The French Revolution, and a posthumous I-told-you-so for Machiavelli. The system of Louis XIV's royal court itself also caused problems for his successors, for instance by increasingly isolating the king and his court as well as a large part of the aristocracy from the reality of life in Paris and the provinces, which contributed to the slowly building crisis that culminated in the Revolution. Also the decadence of the court, which to a large extent was exactly what Louis planned, gradually became a reason for intellectuals of The Enlightenment to criticise the court and the aristocracy and caused notable scandals. During Louis' own reign the "Affair of the Poisons" (1677-1682), during which many members of the court and even some of the king's inner circle were implicated and accused of poisoning and witchcraft put the "Deadly" in Deadly Decadent Court as, despite being partially hushed up, it resulted in 36 executions, two persons dying under torture, and several prominent courtiers falling from grace or being exiled.note Among the exiled was the Countess of Soissons; her son, Prince Eugene of Savoy stayed in France, but because his mother was disgraced Louis did not allow him to gain a military command. This led to him to leave the country and enter the service of Louis' Austrian Habsburg enemies. Where Eugene's leadership was instrumental in defeating France in the War of Spanish Succession. A system where courtiers had to vie for the king's favour and conduct intrigues against each other was hit and miss in ensuring that the most competent men being assigned the important state positions. Sometimes it worked, such as when the grossly corrupt finance minister Nicolas Fouquet abruptly was stripped of his office and possessions and imprisoned for life through the machinations of his rival Colbert, who took his place and greatly improved taxation. On the other hand, many a French commanding general in the War of the Spanish Succession was better at currying Louis XIV's favour than leading an army. And the problems caused by royal favour and support by court cabals deciding who was put into command of France's armies would grow even worse during the Seven Years' War... His rule also laid the seeds of the French Monarchy's total financial ruin and the revolution. A large part of his efforts to win over the nobility was built on essentially making the nobility and the church tax exempt. A loss in revenue that was ultimately never made up for, but which was compensated for by drastically increasing the number and rates which the peasantry had to pay to the crown. Which was simply added on top of the taxes the peasants already paid to their local church and nobility to begin with. His successors' incompetence is often blamed because things started falling apart under them, but the financial system of the French Monarchy was a ticking time bomb because of him which ultimately resulted in both the Revolution and in the bankruptcy of the state. On the other hand, the French court that preceded Louis' reforms was just as bad. The Frondeurs repeatedly struggled with Louis' mother Anne of Austria and Cardinal Mazarin for power even during a long war with Spain, intriguing against the royal household and each other, with one of the best French generals even defecting to the Spanish. Louis didn't create a decadent French court so much as he reformed it to one that better benefited the state, particularly in cleaning up a lot of the aristocratic corruption. Adolf Hitler's inner circle was full of people vying to outdo the other; they called it the Obersalzberg Kamarilla. Albert Speer, Hitler's chief architect, and later on super-minister of the Third Reich, describes this in great detail in his memoirs, showing that this deadly decadence was a crucial factor in the defeat of Germany. Even as the war grew larger and riskier, and as Germany's armies faced stronger resistance and suffered great defeats, Hitler's inner circle focused mostly on political rivalry and on backstabbing each other, not caring all that much about the war. And going further down the pyramid, the gauleiters (sort of a regional governor with almost-absolute authority) only cared about their wealth and luxury, protecting their share of Germany's income with absolute zeal, even on the brink ot total defeat. Even though his main priority was overseeing the country's military economy, Speer had to distract himself with these political rivalries to keep himself in power. In other words, just like Louis XIV and (probably) Stalin, Hitler planted the seeds of his empire's downfall even before it began to rise. Part of this was because Hitler himself deliberately encouraged infighting and Klingon Promotion in the NSDAP and the government, as he thought it would lead to the most capable people rising to power. The constant infighting also served a practical purpose; competition kept any one subordinate from amassing enough power to threaten Hitler. It's telling that the only time Hitler had to take direct action against his underlings (the Night of the Long Knives, when he crushed [among others] the SA "Brownshirts") was early on, before he had his Decadent Court fully set up. Depending on who you ask, the US President's staff, Joint Chiefs, and various executive underlings qualify. Although the person you ask may say it was worse under one president and not so bad under another. Office politics can be this sometimes, if you replace killing with firing. The Roman Empire had a lot of this, as numerous Legion generals attempted to usurp the throne, Senators attempted to humiliate or murder their rivals, the Praetorian Guard murdering Emperors who didn't pay them enough or upset them in some way, and more. This is a major reason as to why the Western Roman Empire failed: due to Senators and merchants not wanting to pay to support the army, plus would-be usurpers and civil wars impacting the quality of the Legions, the Empire eventually collapsed under its own weight, with only the Byzantine Empire managing to endure despite this. In her letters, Elizabeth Charlotte, Madame Palatine wrote to her relatives and friends complaining about the increasingly decadent French court at Versailles during the 18th century: I believe that the histories that will be written about this court after we are gone will be better and more entertaining than any novel, and I am afraid that those who come after us will not be able to believe them and think they are just fairy tales. Current World LeadersCountryMonarchType of monarchyAndorraAndorra is ruled by two princes, one of whom is always the current President of France.ConstitutionalBahrainKing Hamad bin Isa al-KhalifaConstitutionalBelgiumKing Philippe (2013)ConstitutionalBhutanJigme Khesar Namgyal WangchukinConstitutionalBruneiSultan Haji Hassanal BolkiahConstitutionalCambodiaKing Norodom SihamoniConstitutionalDenmarkQueen Margrethe IIConstitutionalJapanEmperor AkihitoConstitutionalJordanKing Abdullah IIConstitutionalKuwaitSabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah (2006)ConstitutionalLesothoKing Letsie IIIConstitutionalLiechtensteinPrince Hans Adam IIConstitutionalLuxembourgGrand Duke HenriConstitutionalMalaysiaAlmu'tasimu Billahi Muhibbuddin Tuanku Alhaj Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah Ibni Almarhum Sultan BadlishahConstitutionalMonacoPrince Albert IIConstitutionalMoroccoKing Muhammad VIConstitutionalNetherlandsKing Willem-AlexanderConstitutionalNorwayKing Harald VConstitutionalOmanSultan Qabus ibn Sa'idAbsoluteQatarEmir Sheik Tamim ibn Hamad Al ThaniConstitutionalSamoaTuiatua Tupua Tamasese EfiConstitutionalSaudi ArabiaKing SalmanAbsoluteSpainFelipe VIParliamentarySwazilandKing Mswati IIIAbsoluteSwedenKing Carl XVI GustafConstitutionalThailandPrem Tinsulanonda, regentConstitutionalTongaKing Tupou VIConstitutionalUnited KingdomQueen Elizabeth II1Constitutional2Vatican CityPope FrancisAbsolute1. Queen Elizabeth Ii также является суверенным в 15 Страны в Содружестве наций: Антигуа и Барбуда, Австралия, Багамские острова, Барбадос, Белиз, Канада, Гренада, Ямайка, Новая Зеландия, Папуа-Новая Гвинея, Сент-Китс и Невис, Сент-Люсия, Санкт-Винсент и Гренадины, Соломоновые острова и Тувалу. 2. Также парламентская демократия.