Governance is established under Charter.
The Charter defines the conditions under which land, architecture, and authority operate as ordered domain.
It precedes development and occupation.
Governance is fixed from origin.
The Charter establishes:
• Constitution of the Institutional Seat
• Delineation of the Territorial Domain
• Architectural discipline
• Mandate of Principal Offices
• Succession procedure
• Amendment conditions
Foundational provisions governing the Territorial Domain and the Institutional Seat are not subject to ordinary change.
Authority is distributed across defined Offices to maintain structural balance.
Authority under Charter is exercised through defined Principal Offices:
• Institutional Authority
• Architectural Order
• Territorial Governance
No single Office may unilaterally alter the foundational provisions governing:
• Territorial integrity of the Domain
• Constitution of the Institutional Seat
• Architectural discipline
Authority resides in the Office, not in the individual.
Authority does not persist beyond office.
The Institutional Seat is constituted within the Domain as its permanent architectural and territorial anchor.
Its status is not subject to subdivision or speculative transfer.
The Charter fixes its condition prior to expansion and preserves it across succession.
Amendment occurs only under defined Charter conditions.
Stability precedes adaptation.
Change occurs within the Charter.
Succession is established under Charter from origin.
Principal Offices persist beyond individual tenure.
Transition in officeholder does not alter:
• Jurisdiction of the Domain
• Classification of land
• Architectural discipline
• Status of the Institutional Seat
The territorial order remains intact across generational transition.