Reverse Index
Referencing “De Vera Luce”
Every codex entry that links to De Vera Luce. 17 entries.
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Academies
New cathedrals of Reason, with better brass and worse gods
The Academies taught Europe to replace altar with demonstration table, relic with specimen case, prayer with applause, and cruelty with excellent paperwork.
Codex Ref. I.1.03-000

Academy of Sciences
The Republic's licensed brain, perfumed in Paris
Paris's Academy of Sciences gave the Rationalist Republic clean nouns for dirty hands: prayer as infection, tongues as evidence, and schools as knives.
Codex Ref. I.1.03-030

Age of Faith
The golden age improved by burial
A devotional-historical category for the centuries before A.S. 0, when Heaven is said to have answered and Europe had not yet taught unbelief to print.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.00-000

Age of Reason
The mind may hold the lamp, but Doctrine owns the flame
The Age of Reason licensed unbelief, polished desecration into civic virtue, and ended when Hell answered the lecture hall without raising its hand.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.00-001

Amsterdam
The city where Europe learned to sin in pamphlet form
Amsterdam is the independent Dutch city where the Synod's calendar wound was printed: first the Year of Letters, then *De Vera Luce*, then Europe taught to doubt by invoice.
Codex Ref. II.4.09-012

Amsterdam Academy
The lectern that made unbelief printable
The Amsterdam Academy licensed unbelief, printed the calendar wound, and taught Europe that a schoolhouse may do the work of a siege engine.
Codex Ref. VIII.8.01-000

Deputy Archon Werrenrath
A warm hymn, a clean absence, and the road east
Deputy Archon Werrenrath, a Strasbourg administrator with dangerous warmth for unlicensed hymns, was transferred cleanly to Bastion-Shipka, where his fault became operationally useful.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-104

Europe
The wounded continent, held together by rails, bells, hunger, and denial
Europe is the wounded continent: Synod west, Charnel east, Line between, and every road, harbour, cradle, ration card, bell, and grave bent toward survival.
Codex Ref. II.0.01-201

First Relic Auctions of Amsterdam
When the hammer learned to price a saint without blushing
Amsterdam's first relic auction season made sacrilege respectable by catalogue, turning stolen bones into lots and provenance wounds into profit.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-007

Paris
The city kneels beautifully, which is precisely why one watches the angle
Paris is the Western Heartlands' corrected jewel: Rationalist salon, Synod workshop, black-market confessional, obedient theatre, and treason with excellent diction.
Codex Ref. II.1.08-201

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 Lie
Falsehood with appetite, corrected by bell and flame
The Lie is hostile ontology: uncounting, unnamedness, mimicry, record-contagion, and the enemy grammar by which Creation is taught to refuse the Ledger.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.30-201

The Netherlands
The merchant republic that invoices our contempt
The Netherlands remain independent, solvent, suspect, and indispensable: a Dutch merchant republic whose ships, presses, credit, and invoices keep irritating the Synod into survival.
Codex Ref. X.1.02-001

The Republican Guards
The philosophers wrote the sentence; the Guards added punctuation
The Republic's armed hand wore blue-grey, carried law over the heart, and proved that unbelief does not remain in books. It drills.
Codex Ref. I.1.05-001

Ulm
The city that taught paper to confess and scholars to become pulp
Ulm is the corrected Heartlands city whose Rationalist compact predated the calendar wound, and whose Paper Mines now make heretical learning into obedient sheets.
Codex Ref. II.2.01-005

Van Hoorn, Lemstra & de Waal
Three clerks of doubt, one table of bones, and forty cities taught to sneer
Pieter van Hoorn, Gerrit Lemstra, and Jan de Waal made doubt portable in -32 A.S.; their Bone Census counted relics accurately and wounded truth efficiently.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-026
