Reverse Index
Referencing “Route-Timing Concordat”
Every codex entry that links to Route-Timing Concordat. 8 entries.
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Bellway
The road that hears you, blesses you, taxes you, and may repeat you
Bellways are the Synod's sanctioned acoustic corridors: road, alarm, sermon, surveillance net, and mercy with teeth, carrying lawful sound through the Line and beyond.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.88-201

Bellways
The plural doctrine of roads, sky, trench, and taxable obedience
Bellways are the Synod's plural acoustic jurisdiction: low roads, middle war-lattices, high Ark corridors, and every quarrel they make audible.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.89-201

Cadence Architects
The street confesses before the bodies arrive
Cadence Architects are the Cadence Corps' route geometers: they design bellways, choke-points, and obedient grief before crowds become casualty diagrams.
Codex Ref. XII.7.05-129

Cadence Corps
One beat, one body, one road, and one stick for correction
The Cadence Corps teaches crowds to move as one obedient spine: ration queues, funerals, levies, relic routes, and riots corrected by beat, rope, whistle, and boot.
Codex Ref. XII.7.01-112

Cathedral of the Perpetual Writ
Where lawful bells learned to drown mourners politely
Strasbourg's lesser cathedral authenticates copies, stores route tables, and remembers the night two lawful bells divided eight hundred mourners into nineteen deaths.
Codex Ref. II.1.04-005

Doctrine Marchers
The faction that mistakes a perfect chant for a clear gate
Cadence Corps faction that treats processions as sacrament first and traffic second, beloved by Doctrine and dangerous wherever beauty outruns arithmetic.
Codex Ref. XII.7.02-001

Flow Marshals
Keep them breathing; pray after
Cadence Corps tendency that reduces processions to survivable movement, cutting rope, pulsing bridges, and bruising citizens so they remain alive to complain.
Codex Ref. XII.7.03-001

Saint Erasmus
The funeral throat whose obedience drowned nineteen citizens and educated a city
Patron of appointed mourning and funeral cadence, Saint Erasmus became useful after his lawful bell helped split a Strasbourg funeral into nineteen canal deaths.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-129
