Reverse Index
Referencing “The Betrayal of Aachen”
Every codex entry that links to The Betrayal of Aachen. 19 entries.
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Aachen
The city that survived its own fall
Aachen opened its gate in A.S. 25, survived the betrayal, and has spent every taxed, polished, barefoot century proving survival is not innocence.
Codex Ref. II.2.02-001

Aachen Gate-Penny
A saint's housing made small enough to buy boot grease
The Aachen gate-penny is reliquary gold made into emergency currency: a closed gate, a cross-groove, and a city’s old betrayal priced by the handful.
Codex Ref. V.2.04-160

Avignon
A city corrected so thoroughly the river kept the receipt
Penitential ruins on the Rhône, where the Pontifex Submersis was crowned beneath water in A.S. 111, Avignon was razed into correction, and A.S. 145 burned the calendars into agreement.
Codex Ref. II.1.08-111

Cardinal-Marshal Severin of Avignon
The tourniquet of Montreval, ugly enough to save a front
Severin of Avignon held Montreval through the Atheist Wars: severe, loud, bloodstained, and too useful for the Bureau to canonise cleanly.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-007

Catechism Schools
The child enters unformed; the school returns property
The Synod's parish and ward school system, where Creed, arithmetic, maps, loyalty trials, and entrance Glass Skull Stacks turn children into obedient instruments with names attached.
Codex Ref. VIII.8.01-001

Classification Amber
The honeyed prison where Purity keeps suspicion alive
Classification Amber is Purity's suspended warrant: suspicion preserved in colour, fear extended by procedure, and mercy sharpened into watchfulness.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.06-001

Colonel Verdane
He did not break Aachen; he purchased the hinge
Colonel Verdane bought Aachen with terms, silk, wine, and exact road arithmetic. Guillaume sold the gate; Verdane priced the hinge.
Codex Ref. I.1.04-001

Erasure of Veyss
The man who asked for arrears and received absence
A.S. 148 trench-court erasure in which Lieutenant Veyss lost standing over a missing ancestral tithe-stamp, and every dependent ledger corrected him into absence.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-048

Father Clemente de los Rios
The abbot who spent a saint's jawbone at the correct hour
Abbot of the Order of Saint Iago garrison at Toledo, Second-Tier Martyr, and keeper of the Relic whose second Psalm denied Reason its prize.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-083

Guillaume of Aachen
The man who opened a gate and was closed by the Ledger
Lord-Protector Guillaume surrendered Aachen in A.S. 25, severed the Rhine approaches, and became the Synod's cleanest lesson in treason, nullity, and administrative damnation.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-123

Maastricht
The sleeve beside Aachen's knife
Maastricht survived by adjacency: feeding roads to Aachen, relabelling prayer-cellars, selling shame politely, and teaching Hungry Ink how seals can scream.
Codex Ref. II.1.07-025

Montreval
The pass-town that taught Reason the road was closed
Montreval held three winters against Lucien Artois's clockwork guns, hunger, pamphlets, fever, and arithmetic; a southern pass-town where Severin bought time with walls, bells, broth, and burned bridges.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-015

Office of Nullity
The knife kept inside the book
Sub-office of the Bureau of Records governing Erasure Notaries, strike writs, dependent ledgers, black seals, and the civic art of making a person unprovable.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.70-001

The Broken Cross
The sigil that snapped heaven and called the wound reason
The Broken Cross was Reason's battlefield sermon: a snapped crucifix carried by men who denied symbols while marching under one.
Codex Ref. I.1.05-003

The Forbidden Stacks
Where heresy is shelved close enough to hate efficiently
The Forbidden Stacks beneath Strasbourg preserve Rationalist paper, contraband symbols, and other knives the Bureau prefers labelled rather than lost.
Codex Ref. II.2.06-001

The Reichssaal
The hall that lent empire to heresy and received an altar for its trouble
The Reichssaal gave imperial furniture to Rationalist blasphemy, received the Treaty in blood and ink, and now instructs pilgrims under glass, pall, and Bureau custody.
Codex Ref. II.2.03-031

The Sisters of the Martyrdom
The bridge burned, the column halted, and the Ledger asked whether she volunteered
The Sisters of the Martyrdom burned bridges with their own bodies during the Atheist Wars; the Bureau sings them, taxes them, and refuses to ratify them.
Codex Ref. VIII.6.01-001

Zone 2
The throat where empire learns to speak in smoke
Zone 2 is the Synod's central throat: Strasbourg's field of authority, Rhine wealth, furnace obedience, catechism-barracks, and useful smoke.
Codex Ref. II.0.04-201

Zones 1 through 5
Five lawful pressures between invoice and mud
Zones 1 through 5 are graded permissions for bread, sons, movement, fear, artillery, and the state’s appetite.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.00-201
