The Persian Constitution: Amendment I

6th Century ZC

When the distant continents entered the Accord, the old constitution could no longer contain the breadth of its fellowship. The language of empire had to be rewritten into the language of planet. Over two generations, councils from every hemisphere convened to re-cast the charter so that sovereignty would rest not in any homeland, but in the shared Assembly itself.   The amendment dissolved the last geographic hierarchy, transforming the Persian charter into the Koina Constitution. Authority was redistributed through concentric councils — local, federative, planetary — each answerable to the next by dialogue, not dominance. In doing so, it completed what the founders had only begun: the replacement of empire with cooperation as the central engine of history.   The Recasting marked the moment Koina became truly global — a fellowship of self-governing worlds bound by choice and mutual stewardship. Every later covenant, from the Bills of Rights to the modern accords, traces its lineage to that re-written parchment: the constitution that refused to belong to one land alone.

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