Editing Lineage:Other Times, Other Places

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Florence in 1580 is a society in revolution as ideas and factions compete for power.  After all of human history, the Rebellion has forced the House to make a truce and tolerate its open existance.  The dominant position still lies firmly in the hands of the House of Medici, having extended their temporal power across all of Tuscany, their financial power across Europe and the Mediterranian, and having snatched the papacy from the House of Julii who had held it from its inception.  Agents from many other Houses are at work in Florence, Julii plotting to return to power, the Houses of Abyssid and Ummayad from the Muslim world looking to deal with the powers of the west, the House of Capet looking for advantage for France, the House of Hapsburg looking for advantage for the Holy Roman Empire, and the Houses of York and Lancaster, each searching for a way to gain permanent ascendency over the other in England.  The Flavii, never entirely driven from Italy even at the height of Julii rule, are returning in increasing numbers from the east.  Their proud city of Byzantium may have fallen to the House of Abyssid, but they are still influential advisors in the courts of princes throughout the Muslim world and scheme eternally on behalf of one faction or another.
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Florence in 1580 is a society in revolution as ideas and factions compete for power.  After all of human history, the Rebellion has forced the House to make a truce and tolerate its open existance.  The dominant position still lies firmly in the hands of the House of Medici, having extended their temporal power across all of Tuscany, their financial power across Europe and the Mediterranian, and having snatched the papacy from the House of Julii who had held it from its inception.  Agents from many other Houses are at work in Florence, Julii plotting to return to power, the Houses of Abyssid and Ummayad from the Muslim world looking to deal with the powers of the west, including the House of Capet looking for advantage for France, the House of Hapsburg looking for advantage for the Holy Roman Empire, and the Houses of York and Lancaster, each searching for a way to gain permanent ascendency over the other in England.  The Flavii, never entirely driven from Italy even at the height of Julii rule, are returning in increasing numbers from the east.  Their proud city of Byzantium may have fallen to the House of Abyssid, but they are still influential advisors in the courts of princes throughout the Muslim world and scheme eternally on behalf of one faction or another.
  
 
The two most influential orders of the Rebellion are the Order of Coppernicus and the Order of Siddhartha.  Giddy with its success in unleashing the Rebellion across Europe, the Order of Coppernicus is ready to face any challenge, and works with boundless optimisism to bring reason, science and education to the peoples of Florence, openly scorning the Medici.  Ironically, the shaking of the Christian faith has also allowed the Order of Siddhartha to flourish, as mages seek for a new humanocentric religion to replace the old.  To the horror of the Medici, converts flock to the Indian-inspired order and to the Rebellion.  Older rebel Houses endure in Italy too.  The Order of Spartacus has been holding on since Roman times, infiltrating the armies and sowing the seeds of republican discontent with the nobility.  The Order of Thales still holds court in the universities and monestaries, teaching mortals and mages alike to think critically about old assumptions.  The Medici and others have long tried to ferret them out, but they are skillful and cunning.
 
The two most influential orders of the Rebellion are the Order of Coppernicus and the Order of Siddhartha.  Giddy with its success in unleashing the Rebellion across Europe, the Order of Coppernicus is ready to face any challenge, and works with boundless optimisism to bring reason, science and education to the peoples of Florence, openly scorning the Medici.  Ironically, the shaking of the Christian faith has also allowed the Order of Siddhartha to flourish, as mages seek for a new humanocentric religion to replace the old.  To the horror of the Medici, converts flock to the Indian-inspired order and to the Rebellion.  Older rebel Houses endure in Italy too.  The Order of Spartacus has been holding on since Roman times, infiltrating the armies and sowing the seeds of republican discontent with the nobility.  The Order of Thales still holds court in the universities and monestaries, teaching mortals and mages alike to think critically about old assumptions.  The Medici and others have long tried to ferret them out, but they are skillful and cunning.

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