Reverse Index
Referencing “The Miracle of Saint Aldebrand”
Every codex entry that links to The Miracle of Saint Aldebrand. 16 entries.
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Academy System
The lecture hall as ministry, purse, press, knife, and alibi
The Rationalist Academy System made scholarship into command: lectures became policy, footnotes became bayonets, and children learned unbelief as paperwork.
Codex Ref. I.1.03-000

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

Althazar of Pest
The unauthorized man history mistook for a throne
Althazar of Pest was the sorcerer-lord of Vienna's last siege, a Rationalist remnant commander destroyed by Clemens Stahlhand and Saint Aldebrand's reliquary mace.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-153

Cathedral of the Holy Column
The church that made obedience stand upright
Cologne's vertical archive: conciliar nave, Holy Column, relic galleries, Odo's sentence, and seventeen femurs arguing successfully with anatomy.
Codex Ref. II.2.01-005

Cologne
The city where obedience borrowed a room and never repaid it
Cologne is the Rhine's holy account-book: cathedral, archive-bank, minting throat, relic cupboard, and the city where Synodic obedience learned to sign.
Codex Ref. II.2.01-004

Dr. Matthias Voll
The lecturer who counted bones and was answered by one
Dr. Matthias Voll made relic arithmetic into theatre at Amsterdam in A.S. 11. Vienna later supplied the Bureau's preferred calculation: one bone, one blow, one crushed argument.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-011

Links
Custody is only a small fastening with authority
Links are the Synod's smallest instruments of custody: iron, ink, oath, route, relic claim, debt, guilt, and every useful fastening in between.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.84-201

Mint-Chapter
Where the Synod makes faces spendable and obedience portable
The Mint-Chapter binds face, name, and coin into one leash: a polished doctrine by which bread, debt, memory, and burial all learn to ask for a clean strike.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.91-094

Saint Rupert
Salt in the wound, bronze in the tower, order in the market
Saint Rupert, Vienna’s salt-saint, preserves meat, measure, bells, markets, and civic memory: the patron whose bronze throat answered when men forgot to kneel.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-095

Strasbourg Cathedral
The stone lease by which Heaven rents authority to the Bureaus
Strasbourg Cathedral is stone, bell, vault, bench, seal, and threat: the capital's holy machine for turning awe into obedience.
Codex Ref. II.1.04-004

The Bells of Saint Rupert
Bronze sang; committees have been recovering ever since
At Vienna in A.S. 95, the unroped bells of Saint Rupert rang without permission, broke a siege, and left three Bureaus arguing with bronze.
Codex Ref. III.2.04-018

The Desecrations
Being the Bureau of Doctrine's Definitive Survey of the Rationalist Programme of Coordinated Spiritual Aggression, A.S. 0–45, Classified Retroactively in A.S. 92, and Updated at Considerable Instituti
The Rationalists destroyed two thousand sanctuaries, melted eight hundred and ninety-one bells into cannon, and killed three thousand four hundred clergy in a programme they insisted was spontaneous. Spontaneity does not print programmes.
Codex Ref. VII.1.01-001

The Rationalists
Architects of the wound the Synod counts from
The Synod's most instructive enemy — philosophers who stripped Europe of its spiritual armor on the eve of Hell's invasion and then had the grace to be destroyed by the consequences.
Codex Ref. I.1.01-001

The Third Hierarch
A nameless mitre, a moth-eaten reign, and the file that knew too much
The Third Hierarch is an ordinal with no name, no portrait, and one surviving achievement: Saint Aldebrand's file vanished under his reign.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.05-002

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
