Bishopric
From Crusaderkings
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== Inheritance in a Bishopric == | == Inheritance in a Bishopric == | ||
- | When a bishop dies, the game will automatically will appoint a new bishop. That new bishop can come from | + | When a bishop dies, the game will automatically will appoint a new bishop. That new bishop can come from: |
a) The Papal court | a) The Papal court |
Revision as of 12:10, 16 November 2008
What is a Bishopric?
Bishoprics are counties that are ruled by a bishop.
How do Bishoprics differ from Counties?
- Only males with a finished ecclestial education can be made a bishop
- Creating a bishopric doesn't reduce your badboy-points, it gives you a one-time piety-bonus of between 150 and 300 piety. If you give an existing bishop another county or make him an archbishop (= give him a duketitle) then you will get a BB-reduction.
- Bishops have no demesne-limits, so they won't create sub-vassals
- Bishops get a loyalty bonus if you have positive piety, which means that bishops are less likely to revolt
- You can't lose a bishopric through inheritance, a normal vassal can be inherited by someone from outside your realm, a bishopric can't be inherited
- If a bishop becomes Pope and he is your direct vassal then you will get all his titles back
Inheritance in a Bishopric
When a bishop dies, the game will automatically will appoint a new bishop. That new bishop can come from:
a) The Papal court
b) The court of the Papal Controller
c) The court of the bishopric
d) The game creates a randomly new character to fill the see
Regardless of where the new Bishop comes from, the Bishopric will always remain part of your realm. See Point 5 above.