Prince of the Calbain
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Prince of the Calbain (Calraeg: Tywysog y Calbain) is the title for the ruler of the Calbain people. The Prince of the Calbain is the ceremonial head of state of Calbion.
List of Princes of the Calbain
No. | Portrait | Regnal name | Epithet | Reign (in AN) | Era | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Owain | The Great | 1492-1520 | First Era | First Prince of the Calbain in recorded history, assumed the title immediately following the Fall of Jasonia. | |
2. | Llywelyn I | Y Cyntaf | 1520-1524 | First Era | Attempted to resist the Matbaaic colonisation, worked with the Britannic forces on Kilkelly. | |
3. | Arthur I | The Martyr | 1524-1530 | First Era | Crucified by the Matbaaic government after a failed rebellion | |
4. | Llywelyn II | Tad y Genedl | 1530-1544 | Second Era | Led a succesful uprising against the Matbaans in 1539, installed Calbain rule for three years until the War of Jeremy's Nose resulted in Batavian colonisation of the islands. | |
5. | Arthur II | The Judge | 1544-1561 | Second Era | Founder of Llysthur, originally a fortified neighborhood of Enhasa. Worked together with the Nelagan government. Established a court system that is still the basis of Calbain law. | |
6. | Laclan | The Silent | 1561-1565 | Second Era | Had very little power and attempted to keep the Calbain spirit alive by writing several historical works. | |
7. | Dawydd | The Last | 1565-1569 | Second Era | Last Prince of the Calbain until the restoration. | |
8. | Jack I | The Good | 1597-1600, 1608-1628 | Third Era | Of South Batavian descend, oversaw the re-establishment of Calbion. In exile from 1600 to 1608 following the unsuccesful revolt. Established the modern Calbain state. | |
9. | Jack II | O'r Gwaed | 1630 - current | Third Era | Following the death of Jack I during a voyage to the Calbain colonies in Corum, a search ensued to find a living relative. Having never married, Jack I did not leave an issue, and his close family had been purged following the independence war. After a search that lasted almost two years, a distant cousin was found in a noble family in Kilkelly that was of shared Britannic and Batavian heritage. |