Reverse Index
Referencing “Tithe Assessor”
Every codex entry that links to Tithe Assessor. 16 entries.
Return to Tithe Assessor

Arno Kett
The man who made disbelief small enough to fit in a pocket
Founder of the first verifiable Silent Godless cells, author of the question-based recruitment method, and the corpse from which Doctrinal Nullification was made lawful.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-144

Assessor Maren Gault
Fear, properly disciplined, can take measurements
Assessor Maren Gault stands at Brine Fork measuring sealed grief, ownerless warmth, leaning racks, and the exact weight of a transfer request denied.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-153

Assessor-General Kaethus Brenn
The crossed-out prayer beneath the Widow’s Penny
Assessor-General Kaethus Brenn wrote the arithmetic that turned pity exemptions into Widow’s Pennies, regretted it in the margin, and sent it forward.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-147

Confession Reform of A.S. 104
The paragraph that made sin stand in columns
A.S. 104 Bureau of Rites reform that standardised sin categories, introduced rubric cards, authorised lay intake clerks, and made confession countable at scale.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-014

Fames (Bell)
The hunger bell of Strasbourg, whose receipts frighten wiser governments than drums
Fames is the Tower of the Quill's middle bell, tolled for rationing adjustments when hunger becomes too official to remain quiet.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.72-005

Feast of Balanced Scales
Mercy, weighed once yearly and sealed before it multiplies
The Feast of Balanced Scales permits each Tithe Assessor one yearly remission, proving mercy can survive only when counted, sealed, and made afraid.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.89-201

Ledger Laws
Mercy measured by the ladle, sanctioned by the noose
The Ledger Laws made mercy countable after the Broth Riots: every bowl, bandage, draught, confession, death, and useful pity entered the record before it dared call itself compassion.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.89-112

Purists of the Bureau of Records
One truth, one roll, no supper invitations
Strict-text faction within the Bureau of Records, devoted to clean rolls, witnessed corrections, discrepancy reporting, and the holy unpleasantness of unpurchased truth.
Codex Ref. XII.9.03-001

Red Trial of Bastion-Constantinople
The ledgers bled because the tithe was wrong
A.S. 157 southern-anchor trench trial in which Judge Marrowe condemned a company for misfiled tithes and the ledgers bled red ink with the mud.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-047

Saint Ysolt of the Scales
Patroness of pity weighed until it becomes collection
Ratified patron of Tithe Assessors and arrears clerks, Saint Ysolt gives extraction a kindly face, a brass scale, and a grain that never falls.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-146

The Burden Index
The number rises; the bread shrinks
The Burden Index is the Bureau of Tithes household score that turns hunger, obedience, arrears, and suspicion into one billable number.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.84-157

The Cradle Decree A.S. 157
The receipt issued before the first cry
The A.S. 157 Cradle Decree made pregnancy taxable, entering the unborn into the Ledger before birth and calling the cruelty provision.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.83-157

The Palatine Counting House
Where debt receives its sacrament and arithmetic learns to bite
The Palatine Counting House is Strasbourg's sleepless Fiscal Heart, seat of the Bureau of Tithes, where coins, corpses, widows, unborn debtors, and corrected accountants are counted.
Codex Ref. II.2.07-001

The Salt Dues of Marseille
Temporary measures have the finest survival instincts
The Salt Dues of Marseille began as an A.S. 92 emergency surcharge on coastal salt and learned immortality, feeding war, pilgrimage, and every clerk hungry enough to call permanence temporary.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.39-001

The Widow Riot
Three days of pots, smoke, and fiscally inconvenient grief
A.S. 139 lower-district uprising at Bastion-Königsberg after Directive 91-B made Widow’s Pennies mandatory and taught grief to strike metal.
Codex Ref. VII.8.10-139

Widow's Pennies
A penny enters the palm and waits for the scale
The Widow's Pennies are the Bureau of Tithes' smallest perfected cruelty: bereavement turned into household continuity, route discipline, and receipt.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.85-065
