Reverse Index
Referencing “The Laugh Riots of Seville”
Every codex entry that links to The Laugh Riots of Seville. 9 entries.
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Fast of Silence
The tongue kneels before the knife is invited
The Fast of Silence is the Bureau of Festivals' cleanest cruelty: a district gagged from dawn to dusk until obedience sounds like piety.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.89-153

Feast of the Cracked Bell
The damaged bell still tolls, therefore the damaged citizen still owes
The Feast of the Cracked Bell teaches the Synod's favourite mercy: broken things may still serve, so damaged citizens may still be counted, tolled, and taxed.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.89-201

Festival Form 19-M
The paper that taught Seville to laugh in sequence
Festival Form 19-M began as a tavern supplement and became the paper Seville weaponised into music, mockery, and Purity jurisdiction.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.66-153

Heresy of Siena
The circle that kept turning after Doctrine entered
The Heresy of Siena began as a harvest dance and became a Bureau problem: a circle of bodies together before any office had authorised joy.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-141

Mercy Maestros
The forbidden couplet that keeps the district breathing
Morale-first Festival Chorus-Master tendency that bends festival law just enough to keep districts breathing, then survives the auditors if mercy was timed correctly.
Codex Ref. XII.17.03-001

Prescribed Ovation Index
Count the clapping before the clapping counts you
The Synod's table of lawful applause, because a crowd that discovers its hands may soon discover teeth, rhythm, and politics.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.66-201

Seville
The city that lowered its voice and learned to speak in cups
Seville, the corrected City of Closed Lips: beautiful, prosperous, muted after the Laugh Riots of A.S. 153 and the Subjugation of A.S. 155.
Codex Ref. II.1.04-001

The List of Laughters
The ledger that hears teeth and teaches merriment to fear arithmetic
The List of Laughters is the Censorium's nightly mirth register, converting chuckles, guffaws, chortles, and riot-laughs into beads, fees, suspensions, fog, and fire.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.66-001

The Subjugation of Seville
A siege so well dressed in liturgy that the Ledger called it a procession
In A.S. 155, Seville was corrected by procession: gates opened under writ, calendars shortened, mouths disciplined, granaries emptied, and conquest taught to smell like incense.
Codex Ref. VII.8.02-002
