Only when every child has at least 1 title of that tier, they become eligible again. A child is only eligbile to inherit, if they don't already hold a title of the same or higher tier. Yes, it matters, what your children already hold. your capital county, the duchy it is in, the knigdom that is in and the empire that is in) guaranteed. The only difference between high partition and normal partition is, that your heir gets at least 50% of your titles, while under partition, the heir only gets your primary title down to the realm capital (i.e. If you hold 1 empire, 2 kingdoms, 2 duchies and 10 counties, that's 14 titles, so your heir under high partition would inherit half of that, if he gets the empire, kingdoms, one duchy and 3 counties. Every duchy, kingdom and empire is also a title. Will that count in the partition calculations when my son (after inheriting from me) eventually dies too? (For what it's worth, my current player heir is King of Georgia, a title given to him by my father)įirst of all, your titles are more than just counties. So, for example, as an emperor I have granted a kingdom to my grandson. And of those 7, one is de jure part of my primary empire title, my kingdom title and the one duchy title that my player heir is supposed to get, but yet is still slated to be handed to somebody else which supposedly shouldn't happen.Īlso, does it matter what your children already hold? I know you can't grant a title to your heir that they weren't already entitled to, but you can grant to their heir. What gives? I'm not even inheriting half of my counties since 7/10 are going to heirs other than my player heir. However, after switching to high partition it still says I'll be losing 10 titles. But I was on partition and looking at the succession tab I looked to be losing 10 titles on succession. It says here that the player heir will always inherit at least half the late Ruler's titles (it doesn't say that in game which is annoying). With partition that won't happen and so long as you don't create that second kingdom, your realm won't split.īut what high partition is supposed to do is still a mystery to me. Even if they don't create that new kingdom it will be created on succession and handing to their second son. This can split you realm if, for example, your ruler is a king and also has enough of counties from some other kingdom that they could create a new kingdom out of it. Is there a clear example of the difference between these two succession laws? I understand that the major difference between confederate partition and regular partition is that with confederate partition it will automatically create new titles.
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