Reverse Index
Referencing “Secular Gatherings Act”
Every codex entry that links to Secular Gatherings Act. 15 entries.
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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

Brittany
The province that taught martyrdom to travel by road
Brittany is the Synod's western salt-wound: a loyal province that turned Saint-Malo's blood, Dinan's road, and local stubbornness into taxable Doctrine.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-010

Chapel of the Tide
The shrine built from a journey denied
The Chapel of the Tide is Saint Clement's wet little shrine beyond Saint-Malo, made holy by forty-three pilgrims who were denied arrival and made profitable by everyone after.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-014

Edict of Ironmouth
When Reason mistook prayer for infection and discovered eleven thousand tongues to classify
A.S. 30 Rationalist law that made spoken prayer vocal treason, answered hymns with pincers, and left the Synod a cabinet of tongues to condemn and study.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.55-001

Father Gaël of Dinan
Four words, one reliquary, and the useful poverty of a man not yet sainted
Father Gaël of Dinan, first named dead of Saint-Malo, survives as four words of custody: brief enough for children, sharp enough for states.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-016

First Black Census
The Republic learned to murder with a household table and a clean pen
The First Black Census turned belief into a column, children into transfer marks, and faithful households into blanks awaiting carts.
Codex Ref. I.1.06-030

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

Philosophical Prefectures
Reason numbered Europe; Hell ignored the numbers
The Philosophical Prefectures were Reason's thirty-seven cuts across Europe: a map designed to erase saints, graves, borders, and memory by schedule, under the Rationalist Republic.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.13-030

Porte Saint-Vincent
Where stone learned to answer after the thirty-first toll
The Porte Saint-Vincent is Saint-Malo's principal landward gate: toll aperture, atrocity site, pilgrimage wound, and stone witness to the A.S. 10 massacre.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-010

Reliquary of Saint Matthias
A box of bones that taught law to bleed
The Reliquary of Saint Matthias is the Saint-Malo martyr-object: seized as Item 7, recovered from Rationalist custody, and made into portable proof that holy custody is not inventory.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.73-010

Saint Hermas
The boy who held the banner until the banner held him
Saint Hermas of Dinan was the boy beneath the banner at Saint-Malo: two wounds, one strip of cloth, and a cult made tidy by force.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-006

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 Order of the Blessed Thorn
Linen, old women, and the machinery that discovered humility after it became profitable
A Breton mendicant sisterhood made Venerable after Margaux: twelve sisters, a house of linen, and enough humility to embarrass the Bureaus.
Codex Ref. XI.7.01-001

Town of Saint-Malo
The Breton gate where law discovered it could bleed
Saint-Malo is the Breton port where a narrow gate, a lawful writ, and forty-three pilgrims gave the Synod its most profitable wound.
Codex Ref. II.4.09-013
