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Signi

The Republic of Signi – Official World Wiki. One nation. Twenty-one states. Zero conquest

The Republic of Signi is a sovereign nation composed of 21 official states, united under a civic charter that values clarity, preservation, and people-first governance. Founded on December 21, 1811, through the historic Signi Pact, the nation was born out of rebellion, resolve, and the desire to build a republic rooted in trust, not conquest.

From its beginning with the Signi Five... Lakeview, Eastmount, Greendale, Harland, and Rivermont, the republic expanded through organized missions known as the Unity Missions, forming a peaceful network of diverse states across plains, forests, deserts, tundras, and coasts. Each state was admitted with purpose, shaped by geography and civic need rather than territorial ambition.

Signi’s national government operates through a cooperative federal system, anchored by the Unity Council, with authority distributed between state governments and national civic charters. Its current president, Thalen Lockwood, a direct descendant of Signi founder James Lockwood, oversees ongoing reform and cultural cohesion across the republic.

What sets Signi apart is not only its peaceful expansion, but its symbolic closure. The last three states... Linnet, Stonehill, and Winfell... are collectively known as The Final Three, a term used to describe the republic’s deliberate conclusion of territorial development. These states were not founded for growth, but for responsibility. They represent Signi’s decision to end its map with dignity and intent.

Today, Signi stands as a nation where each state contributes to the whole... through agriculture, research, ethics, environmental stewardship, and cultural memory. From the bustling civic districts of Lakeview City to the wind-quieted glacial outposts of Wynnville, the republic remains committed to its founding principles:

Listen. Lead. Preserve. Complete.

Signi is not just a country. It is a civic idea, one built on clarity, bound by charter, and kept whole by the quiet strength of its people.

Republic of Signi

Sarah Morgan. Lakeview, Signi

Country Name: Signi

Founded On: December 21, 1811
 

Founder: James Lockwood

Capital City: Lakeview City
 

Largest State: Lakeview (Population: 1,950,000)
 

Total Population (2025): 10,000,000

Number of States: 21
 

Official Language: Signian English

Currency: Signi Dollar (SD)
 

Government Type: Cooperative Federal Republic
 

President (as of 2025): Thalen Lockwood (27th President)

Founding & History

The Republic of Signi was founded on December 21, 1811, in the aftermath of a civil fracture that began with one man’s refusal to yield.

That man was James Lockwood, a principled architect of policy who chose conscience over compliance. When the government he once advised began using power to suppress rather than protect, Lockwood refused to be complicit. He gathered those who still believed in service over subjugation and led them westward, through treacherous terrain and constant pursuit. They reached the shores of a vast inland lake, untouched, defensible, and fertile. There, they built something new. They called it Lakeview.

 

But Lockwood’s vision extended beyond a single safe haven. In the years that followed, four neighboring settlements aligned with Lakeview under a shared civic ideal: clarity in law, restraint in power, and the right of each state to serve its people in peace. These five states, Lakeview, Eastmount, Greendale, Harland, and Rivermont, became known as the Signi Five. Their alliance was sealed by the Signi Pact, which formally established a constitutional republic with shared governance, a rotating Unity Council, and protections for every state admitted thereafter.

 

From 1812 to 1820, the Unity Missions, a series of peaceful expeditions authorized by the Council, expanded Signi’s reach. These missions were never conquests. They were structured campaigns led by civic engineers, planners, scientists, and ethics advisors. Each new state was founded based on necessity: agricultural needs, ecological preservation, or civic balance.

Over time, the republic welcomed new members, each one vetted, deliberate, and charted with precision. Notably, the state of Millwood, already self-established by the time of the Pact, voluntarily joined the republic in 1813, reinforcing Signi’s credibility as a government of inclusion, not imposition.

By the mid-1800s, the expansion neared its limit. The Unity Council drafted a final set of directives, known collectively as the Closure Initiative. These would bring Signi’s map to a close with three final missions: Linnet, Stonehill, and Winfell. Each of these states served not to begin, but to conclude, to give structure to the nation’s edges and memorial to its journey.

 

The final state, Winfell, was founded in 1846, following the death of expedition leader Henry Star, who perished during the mission. His sacrifice marked the end of territorial development, and the beginning of Signi’s modern age.

 

What followed was not an era of expansion, but one of refinement. Infrastructure, preservation, and civic ethics became the core of national policy.

The Unity Council’s powers shifted from admission to stewardship. And the republic, whole at last, turned its focus inward, on its people, its values, and the legacy it had fought so carefully to construct.

Structure of Government

Signi operates as a cooperative federal republic, guided by the Civic Charter of Signi, a shared constitutional framework adopted by all 21 states. Power is distributed across three coordinated levels: national, state, and civic, with firm ethical guardrails, equity mandates, and non-partisan oversight.

The Presidency

At the national level, the republic is led by the President of Signi, a democratically elected official who may serve up to three ten-year terms. While the president does not rule unilaterally, they are not ceremonial. The presidency is the executive center of national coordination, responsible for:

  • Enforcing civic law and maintaining national unity
     

  • Commanding the Signi National Defense Force (SNDF) in matters of national security
     

  • Approving and directing federal infrastructure programs
     

  • Representing Signi abroad and managing foreign diplomacy
     

  • Appointing civic officers, ethics board chairs, and emergency response leaders
     

The current president, Thalen Lockwood, is the 27th to hold office, and a direct descendant of the republic’s founder, James Lockwood. He is widely credited with restoring national cohesion through the Clean Nation Mandate, universal healthcare reforms, and civic emergency infrastructure. While the Unity Council legislates, the President executes. Their powers are not absolute, but they are essential.

 

The Unity Council

The Unity Council is the republic’s primary legislative and ethical authority. It is composed of rotating delegates from all 21 states and serves as a constitutional body with long-term guardianship of the Signi Pact.

Founded in 1812, immediately following national unification, the Council originally authorized the Unity Missions that expanded the republic’s boundaries. Today, its core responsibilities include:

  • Ratifying inter-state policy
     

  • Upholding and interpreting the Civic Charter
     

  • Approving nationwide reforms and civic protocols
     

  • Investigating breaches of civic ethics and corruption
     

  • Confirming new leadership appointments and emergency actions
     

While the President enacts, the Council deliberates. Neither supersedes the other, they are interdependent arms of a unified republic.

 

State Autonomy and Local Governance

Each of the 21 states retains high autonomy, led by a State Governor and supported by mayors, regional representatives, and local civic assemblies. States govern their internal affairs under the national charter, including:

  • Public education, healthcare, and transportation
     

  • Zoning laws, environmental policies, and infrastructure
     

  • Local elections, ordinances, and housing reforms
     

  • Cultural and regional preservation programs
     

Diversity is respected across all states, from Millwood’s industrial drive to Greendale’s conservationism. While the Unity Council standardizes federal law, states may introduce amendments, subject to Council review and presidential countersignature.

 

Checks and Ethical Balances

Signi’s system prioritizes not just legality, but civic morality. Every national or state initiative must pass an Ethics Review, overseen by the Unity Council’s Oversight Branch or state-level review boards. These protocols prevent power from being hoarded or abused.

Additionally, all presidential actions, including executive orders are recorded publicly and may be challenged by the Council or state petition.

In Signi, power exists to serve, not to control. From the president’s desk to a village clerk’s table, authority is measured by clarity, accountability, and civic trust.

Economy & Infrastructure

Signi’s economy is a model of balanced civic investment, public trust, and long-term sustainability. It is not built on endless expansion, but on careful structure, cooperative revenue systems, and service-oriented governance. From its clean cities to its universal healthcare access, every public benefit is rooted in a network of real, measurable systems.

National Revenue Model

The Republic of Signi sustains itself through a hybrid economic structure that blends taxation, environmental licensing, innovation partnerships, and civic exports. It is not a free-for-all economy, nor a charity model. It is a participatory system, where the nation gives generously because it is designed to responsibly receive.

Key Revenue Sources Include:

  • Tiered Income Taxation: Applied nationally but administered regionally. Higher earners contribute more, with capped rates for rural workers and low-margin producers.
     

  • Business & Commercial Licensing: Signi licenses commercial activity across all 21 states, with environmental accountability thresholds built into the cost.
     

  • Resource Levies: High-yield states like Stonehill (minerals), Tremont (metalwork), and New Mountana (energy zones) fund federal programs through structured levies.
     

  • Innovation Exports: Architectural patents, clean-energy systems, civic AI frameworks, and frost-adapted infrastructure are exported through national contracts.
     

  • Freight & Commercial Use Fees: Instead of toll booths, commercial fleets pay road impact fees during registration, based on mileage and cargo class.
     

This financial web supports healthcare, infrastructure, public education, ecological protection, and cultural preservation, all without requiring privatization or austerity measures.

Healthcare Access

As of 2016, Signi guarantees universal healthcare access to every citizen in all 21 states. This includes:

  • Medical & Emergency Care: Fully funded hospital visits, preventive care, and urgent services
     

  • Public Wellness Centers: Accessible in all cities, towns, and registered villages
     

  • Mental Health Integration: Therapy, crisis support, and social work programs included in baseline care
     

Funded through national taxation and regional levies, the healthcare system is audited every two years under the Civic Wellness Act and publicly graded by the Office of Civic Health.

 

Clean Infrastructure

Under President Thalen Lockwood’s Clean Nation Mandate, Signi invested in a complete overhaul of its civic infrastructure, focused on cleanliness, durability, and long-term service access. The results reshaped every corner of public life.

The Clean City Pact (2018–Present):

  • Daily cleanings in all public zones, led by the Civic Sanitation Corps (CSC)
     

  • Zero-litter public culture via “carry in, carry out” behavioral norms
     

  • Mandatory maintenance schedules for all urban, town, and village facilities
     

  • Bi-annual audits tied to infrastructure funding and community grants
     

There are no public trash bins in Signi. Instead, waste is returned to designated community zones or managed through pocket-sized kits distributed to all citizens.

 

Public Transit & Roads

All 21 states maintain access to modern transportation systems tailored to their terrain. These include:

  • Rail networks in the flatland states (Greendale, Heartfield, Millwood)
     

  • Snow-adapted crawler routes in tundra and alpine regions (Winfell, Stonehill)
     

  • Floating harbors and tide-synced terminals in coastal zones (Harland, Eastmount)
     

Though toll booths are not used, funding is maintained through:

  • Freight impact fees
     

  • Electric transit taxes
     

  • Municipal road bonds underwritten by the Civic Transit Office
     

Villages and smaller settlements use state-supplied solar vehicles, tram paths, or seasonal access routes coordinated by their local councils.

Energy & Utilities

Power is decentralized but coordinated. Signi draws from a national clean grid, sourced through:

  • Wind and solar farms (Heartfield, Savannah, Eastmount)
     

  • Geothermal sites (Baywood, New Mountana)
     

  • Snow conversion systems (Stonehill, Winfell)
     

Water, heat, and power are treated as civic rights. Utility costs are subsidized and capped for all citizens, with full coverage in hardship zones.

 

Summary Impact

  • Litter Reduction: Down 84% nationally since 2018
     

  • Healthcare Outcomes: Up in all 21 states since the Civic Wellness Act
     

  • Employment Rates: Highest among youth ages 16–24 in public works sectors
     

  • International Praise: Signi is considered “the cleanest and most civically engaged republic on Earth” by outside observers
     

The economy of Signi does not rely on volume. It relies on trust, clarity, and systems that work, quietly, constantly, and for everyone.

Geography & Regions

The Republic of Signi spans 21 states across a vast and diverse landscape, featuring glacial tundras, alpine ridges, wetlands, volcanic plains, central farmlands, and fog-shrouded forests. Every state was founded with respect to its terrain, climate, and civic purpose, resulting in a republic that is both geographically balanced and functionally interdependent.

Signi’s geography is generally divided into five key corridors:

 

Northern Signi

Cold, remote, and preservation-focused. The northern corridor hosts the final two states ever founded, Stonehill and Winfell, both created under the Closure Initiative. This region prioritizes structural resilience and environmental monitoring.

  • States: Winfell, Stonehill, Evergreen
     

  • Defining Traits: Tundra, coniferous forest, highland passes, snowbound civic infrastructure
     

 

Eastern Signi

A region of mist, memory, and diplomacy. The east is home to foundational coastlines, soft-law states, and both atmospheric and maritime research initiatives.

  • States: Eastmount, Harland, Linnet
     

  • Defining Traits: Coastal cliffs, estuaries, fog-forest corridors, oral preservation
     

 

Central Signi

The core of Signi’s civic framework, featuring the capital state of Lakeview and the original civic alliances that birthed the republic. Central states are dense with population, farmlands, and foundational ideology.

  • States: Lakeview, Fernhill, Greendale, Heartfield, Pinehill
     

  • Defining Traits: Rolling farmland, academic centers, vineyard regions, balanced governance
     

 

Southern Signi

Rugged, arid, and terrain-rich. This region supports Signi’s mineral production, long-distance logistics, and architectural adaptability.

  • States: Millwood, Tremont, New Mountana, Montera
     

  • Defining Traits: Deserts, steppes, savannahs, frontier-style logistics and mineral hubs
     

 

Western Signi

Lush, fluid, and deeply storied. Western Signi includes wetlands, ancient floodplains, and seasonal agricultural zones. It is also the birthplace of early oral traditions and navigation lore.

  • States: Westbrook, Rivermont, Baywood, Savannah
     

Defining Traits: Swamp-mapping, river preservation, seasonal civic design, heritage routes

Signi National Defense Force (SNDF)

The national defense organization of the Republic of Signi.

Overview

The SNDF exists to protect the territorial integrity, civic sovereignty, and environmental sanctity of Signi. Formed under the Closure Directive in the mid-1800s following the final wave of state expansion, it is a defense-first organization, not structured for conquest, but designed for vigilance, coordination, and rapid civil protection.

Civilian Oversight

The SNDF is constitutionally subordinate to the civilian government. Its structure is built to prevent militarization of policy and to ensure national defense remains a public service, not a power mechanism.

 

Chain of Command (As of 2025)

  • Commander-in-Chief:

    President Thalen Lockwood

    Holds supreme authority over the SNDF, including deployment approval, wartime directives, and defense policy alignment with the nation’s civic ethos.

     

  • National Defense Advisor:

    Appointed by the President to coordinate intelligence, assess global risks, and advise on non-domestic threats.

     

  • High Command Assembly (HCA):

    A strategic body consisting of military commanders from each region, a chairperson appointed by the President, and two civilian ethicists approved by the Unity Council.

     

  • Unity Council Role:

    Holds budgetary control and policy review power over all long-term defense initiatives. Council approval is required for:

     

    • Establishing permanent bases
       

    • Engaging foreign treaties
       

    • Altering the SNDF Charter
       

    • Expanding mission scope beyond Signi borders
       

 

Branches of the SNDF

  • Territorial Guard Corps (TGC)

    • Regional defense units assigned to each state

    • Focus on border monitoring, anti-smuggling, and environmental protection

    • Activated during natural disasters and civic unrest

     

  • Civic Defense Corps (CDC)

    • Originated as an emergency response force, now integrated into SNDF logistics

    • Trained in infrastructure protection, evacuation, and disaster recovery

    • Still retains its civilian-first, non-combatant structure

     

  • Atmospheric & Environmental Division (AED)

    • Oversees climate monitoring and weather-based threat response

    • Protects airfields, atmospheric towers, and cold-zone perimeters in Winfell, Stonehill, and Linnet

     

  • Unified Response Wing (URW)

    • Elite, mobile units trained in high-threat containment, reconnaissance, and counter-intrusion operations

    • Deployed only with presidential or Unity Council authorization

     

 

Standing Doctrine

  • No First Strike: Signi does not engage in offensive warfare.
     

  • Defense Only: All SNDF mobilizations must be tied to internal security, border protection, or response to verified external threat.
     

  • Public Transparency: All SNDF budgets, training exercises, and deployments must be published in the quarterly National Security Brief.
     

Ethical Warfare Policy, Upholds human rights, international law, and Signi’s national values of restraint and civility.

Culture & Civic Identity

In Signi, culture is not ornamental—it is structural. The republic’s civic identity is defined by restraint, remembrance, and participation. While each state contributes unique regional expression, the nation as a whole is shaped by shared beliefs, communal behaviors, and deeply embedded civic rituals.

Core Values

Signi’s national culture is grounded in the belief that governance is not a spectacle, but a responsibility. This belief echoes across public life:

  • Service over status
     

  • Clarity over conquest
     

  • Participation as pride
     

  • Care as a civic act
     

Signians tend to avoid overt displays of individualism in public spaces, favoring quiet consistency, communal trust, and functional beauty. Clean walkways, well-kept signage, and respectful silence during civic proceedings are all considered markers of a healthy republic.

Civic Rituals

Civic rituals in Signi are not imposed. They are inherited, quietly observed, and taught across generations. Most are simple in form but powerful in meaning:

  • The Oath of Place – A voluntary civic vow recited by citizens at turning points: marriage, home ownership, government service, or entry into adulthood.
     

  • The Lantern Gesture – A hand placed on the heart with eyes lowered, often used in mourning, remembrance, or quiet solidarity.
     

  • The Clean Sweep – A daily act of tidying shared public spaces, performed by citizens as a gesture of community respect.
     

These rituals blur the line between civic duty and cultural expression. To clean one’s street is not just sanitation, it is reverence. To speak softly in a transit corridor is not mere politeness—it is discipline.

Public Conduct

Public spaces in Signi reflect the cultural expectation of care through behavior:

  • Noise levels are kept low in urban centers.
     

  • Public signage avoids commands, instead using gentle prompts like “Hold Space,” or “Move With Care.”
     

  • Citizens thank sanitation workers and transit guides with a nod or lantern gesture.
     

  • Eye contact is brief but meaningful, considered a sign of shared acknowledgment.
     

 

Civic Dress & Presentation

Modesty is a shared value across all of Signi. While there is no enforced uniform, public attire reflects a culture built on dignity, not display.

  • Short skirts, revealing tops, and overtly sexualized fashion are uncommon and widely viewed as inappropriate in public settings.
     

  • Women do not show cleavage or bare midriffs in civic zones. Clothing tends to be high-collared, long-sleeved, or layered, elegant but reserved.
     

  • Men do not wear tank tops or go shirtless in public. Even in warmer states, breathable but modest garments are preferred.
     

  • Seasonal sashes, cloak pins, and document bands are commonly worn for function and decorum, not fashion.
     

Fashion in Signi is clean, practical, and subdued. Tailoring favors long lines, natural fibers, and subtle embellishments tied to a person’s civic role, region, or family. Formal wear during oaths or holidays often includes symbolic bands, shoulder fasteners, or engraved brooches denoting state allegiance or life milestones.

There is pride in modesty, not repression, but respect.

 

The Role of Silence

Silence in Signi isn’t about stillness, it’s about space. It’s not a denial of emotion, but a respect for it.

Public life across the republic leans quiet, but never cold. Conversations are thoughtful. Voices are low, but present. In transit hubs, people speak in normal tones, just without shouting. In offices, people converse at a respectful volume, not whispering, but never disruptive.

What’s absent in Signi isn’t sound. It’s noise.

  • There are no speakerphones in cafes.
     

  • No portable speakers blasting music on public trains.
     

  • No shouting across crowds or using volume for attention.
     

Instead, even in celebration, citizens express joy without turning civic space into a performance. Weddings are marked with singing, Founding Day brings quiet choruses and hand-tapped rhythm lines, and Winterfest features music, soft, orchestral, often played live in the street, but it never overwhelms the setting.

In formal events, a brief moment of quiet may open the space, five to ten seconds for breath and reflection, but it’s not rigid. It’s just Signi’s way of saying: we begin with presence, not noise.

Holidays & Observances


In the Republic of Signi, holidays are more than moments of rest. They are civic rhythms, emotional rituals, and opportunities for public reflection. While every state is free to add its own customs, a shared national calendar ensures unity without sameness. Most holidays are non-religious, non-commercial, and deeply personal, marked by ritual, silence, and seasonal symbolism.

Nationwide Traditions

January 1 — New Year’s Day
A republic-wide reset. Homes are cleared of old clutter, and families light clarity candles to mark fresh intentions. Civic bells ring once at dawn.

 

February 14 — Kindred Day
A celebration of love in all its forms: romantic, platonic, and familial. Citizens exchange handwritten notes, small gifts, and share evening meals.

 

Late March — Bloomlight
Spring planting begins in civic beds. Communities repaint signs, refresh murals, and host small redesign projects. Youth groups tend soil together.

 

April 1 — Fool’s Day
A sanctioned day for harmless tricks and role reversal. Officials switch duties, children “lead” parades, and tall tales are told, then revealed at dusk.

 

First Monday in May — Pillars’ Day
Honoring civic founders and quiet contributors. Residents display engraved value tiles at doorways. Schools host tribute readings.

 

October 17 — John’s Day
In Stonehill and beyond, lanterns are placed near water edges to honor the sacrifice of John Wesley. The day is marked in silence and cold reflection.

 

October 31 — Festival of the Lost
A night to remember the unspoken and the missing. Masks are worn. Names are whispered. Chalk etchings are washed away by morning snow or rain.

 

November 1 — Founding Night
A candlelight vigil held nationwide in honor of the Winfell 15 and the moment Signi’s map was completed. Citizens march silently at dusk.

 

 

Last Thursday of November — Harvest Fest
Families gather for a shared meal to express gratitude. Pacts and personal oaths are renewed. An extra chair is left for the “not yet known.”

 

December 21 — Founder’s Day
Commemorates the original Signi Pact. Each state lights five beacons to represent the Signi Five. Elders and youth read the civic charter aloud.

 

December 25 — Winterfest
A quiet night of warmth, memory, and gift exchange. Children receive visits from Father Winter. Households light firebowls to honor the long night.

 

December 31 — Year’s End
Homes hold vow-burning circles, where residents write and symbolically release their regrets. At midnight, a single civic bell marks the close.

 

Region-Specific Observances

Stonehaven — Stone Day
Citizens re-carve public laws by hand as a symbol of earned continuity and foundational permanence.

 

Rivermont — Accord Day
Held in early January. Water lanterns are floated at dusk while oaths of trust and shared history are spoken aloud.

 

Eastmount — Pact Day
Soil-touching, breadbreaking, and open-air storytelling honor the unbroken compacts between Eastmount’s founding families.

 

Baywood — Harbor Day
Ship-naming rituals, silent aid tributes, and memory tokens are floated into the harbor to honor those lost at sea.

 

Stonehill — Gridline Ceremony
An annual re-certification of civic boundaries and topographical clarity. Residents walk the border trails in guided silence.

 

Linnet — Whisper Season
Observed in late autumn. For one month, unresolved stories are whispered or written. Public speech is softened across all civic forums.

 

Winfell — Founding Night (also nationally observed)
A solemn night vigil with hand candles, snow-path walks, and quiet memorials for the Winfell 15. Observed most deeply in Star City and Wynnville.

Major Institutions & Initiatives

Signi’s republic is sustained not only by its states and laws, but by the national institutions and civic programs that bridge generations. These are the systems that preserve order, extend care, and refine the republic’s promise over time.

1. The Unity Council

Established: 1812

Role: Central legislative and advisory body of Signi

Authority: Final arbiter of national policy, Unity Missions, expansion efforts, and inter-state conflict resolution.

  • Formed after the Signi Pact of 1811.
     

  • Oversees federal programs, ratifies statehood applications, and appoints national committee leads.
     

  • Holds annual Civic Summit to align state and federal goals.
     

 

2. The Clean Nation Mandate

Launched by: President Thalen Lockwood (2015–present)

Core Programs:

  • Clean City Pact
     

  • Civic Sanitation Corps (CSC)
     

  • National Clean Civic Code
     

  • Digital Cleanse Zones
     

  • Transformed public space standards in every state.
     

  • Introduced uniform sanitation schedules, noise ordinances, and aesthetic codes tied to civic pride.
     

  • Abolished public trash bins in favor of personal responsibility (“carry in, carry out”).
     

 

3. The Civic Defense Corps (CDC)

Established: 2003 (expanded nationally under President Lockwood)

Function: Civilian-led emergency response and public safety coordination.

  • Trained in flood, fire, terrain collapse, and infrastructure failure response.
     

  • Runs seasonal youth internships and field readiness programs.
     

  • Deploys rapidly in high-risk areas across all 21 states.
     

 

4. The Public Memory Initiative

Mission: Preserve the soul of Signi through oral histories, language retention, and cultural archives.

  • Digitizes family histories, endangered dialects, and rural traditions.
     

  • Funds school access to interactive museums and community archive centers.
     

  • Especially active in towns and countryside zones overlooked by earlier infrastructure waves.
     

 

5. National Health Authority (NHA)

Founded: 2016 under the Universal Healthcare Act

Mandate: Provide baseline medical, mental, and emergency care to all citizens of Signi.

  • Operates regional wellness centers, mobile clinics, and long-term care hubs.
     

  • Guarantees mental health integration at every primary facility.
     

  • Tracks national health trends for civic readiness.
     

 

6. The Statehood Archives

Role: Maintain historical records of each state’s founding, leadership transitions, and civic evolution.

  • Houses expedition logs, founding proposals, Unity Council approvals, and annotated cartographic maps.
     

  • Primary source for state researchers, historians, and law students.
     

  • Satellite offices present in each capital city.
     

 

7. The Ethics & Oversight Commission

Jurisdiction: National civic law, state dispute moderation, and digital charter compliance.

  • Reviews policy decisions for constitutional soundness.
     

  • Trains Ethics Officers stationed in every state.
     

  • Oversees usage of civic AI, biometric systems, and public data networks.
     

 

8. The Signi Civic Education Board

Focus: Develop curriculum, national assessments, and historical literacy programs.

  • Integrated the “Closure Directive” and “Clean Nation Mandate” into classroom learning.
     

  • Oversees textbooks, national civics exams, and the Youth Trust Projects.
     

  • Supported by the Lockwood Historical Trust.

Notable Figures

Signi’s legacy is shaped by individuals whose decisions, sacrifices, and visions carved out the republic’s foundation, and refined its future. Below are the most widely recognized figures in Signi’s historical, political, cultural, and civic story.

James Lockwood

(1763–1839)

Founder of Lakeview. First Chair of the Unity Council. Unifier of the Five.

  • Led the original retreat westward to escape a corrupt foreign regime.
     

  • Founded Lakeview on December 21, 1809, and unified the Signi Five two years later.
     

  • Oversaw the Unity Missions from 1812 to 1820, guiding the expansion of the republic.
     

  • Buried in Kingsward, Lakeview, in a formal civic tomb known as The Lockwood Rest.
     

 

President Thalen Lockwood

(Born 1985)

Modern reformer and architect of the Clean Nation Mandate.

  • Youngest elected head of state (age 30).
     

  • Instituted universal healthcare, national cleanliness standards, and digital ethics reforms.
     

  • Founded the Civic Defense Corps and Public Memory Initiative.
     

  • Serving his second 10-year term as of 2025. Seen as a living continuation of the Lockwood legacy through action, not myth.
     

 

Kelsey Cosgrove

Civic Planner. Founder of Linnet.

  • Authored “Ten Reasons to Listen”, the handwritten proposal that led to Linnet’s founding.
     

  • Leader of the Linnet Ten, whose expedition established Cosgrove City.
     

  • Known for restraint, clarity, and refusing legacy politics in favor of quiet stewardship.
     

  • Resides in the village of Kelseyville, away from public office.
     

 

John Wesley

Veteran Civic Planner. Founder of Stonehill.

  • Lost his left arm during a bear attack while leading the Stonehill expedition.
     

  • Completed the mission despite injury. The capital, Wesley City, is named in his honor.
     

  • His story is honored annually on John’s Day (October 17).
     

 

Henry Star

Polar Systems Strategist. Founder of Winfell. (Deceased)

  • Led the final Unity expedition under the Closure Directive.
     

  • Fell through the ice during the mission’s final day. His body was never recovered.
     

  • The capital, Star City, and the lake where he perished, Star’s Hollow, are named in his honor.
     

  • Remembered each year on Founding Night (November 1).
     

 

Maggie Holloway

Journalist Turned Business Owner.

  • Inherited Holloway’s Corner, the café brand originally founded by her parents in Lakeview.
     

  • Transformed the business after their retirement, expanding its presence while preserving its quiet, community-first atmosphere.
     

  • Formerly an acclaimed investigative journalist. Stepped away from the field after one of her most important exposés was buried under legal pressure.
     

 

Sarah Morgan

Archaeologist. Painter. Civic Storyteller.

  • A citizen of Lakeview known for her thoughtful writings and reflective artwork.
     

  • Often contributes to museum projects, oral history efforts, and archival exhibits throughout the state.
     

  • Raised in the countryside town of Normandy, where her connection to family, land, and story continues to influence her work.
     

 

Arthur Trench

Executive Chairman of Trench Holdings.

  • Oversees one of the most prominent real estate portfolios in Signi, with a focus on vertical development and civic skyline projects.
     

  • Known for his refined public presence, infrastructure advocacy, and strategic leadership in Lakeview.
     

  • Maintains a discreet but well-publicized rivalry with Victoria Whitmore, stemming from unresolved legal and historical tensions between their families.
     

 

Victoria Whitmore

CEO of Whitmore Estate Group.

  • Leads one of Signi’s most established legacy real estate dynasties, with holdings in hospitality and civic space design.
     

  • Commands both legal and political influence, often steering large-scale development projects from behind the scenes.
     

  • While her past connection to the Trench family is a matter of public record, she does not speak about it, leaving space for speculation, but never answers.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is Signi?

Signi is a cooperative federal republic made up of 21 states, each with its own civic personality, history, and governance. It was founded to uphold clarity, shared responsibility, and ethical expansion after the Signi Pact of 1811.

 

2. Who leads Signi?

Signi is led nationally by the President of the Republic, currently Thalen Lockwood, and governed day-to-day by the Unity Council—a legislative body of state delegates that oversees law, expansion history, and civic ethics.

 

3. How is the President of Signi chosen?

The President is elected through a national vote every ten years, with a maximum of three terms. While the Council handles law and policy, the President is the republic’s unifying figure—tasked with guiding infrastructure, national welfare, and inter-state cooperation.

 

4. Does Signi have a military?

Yes. The Signi National Defense Force (SNDF) is a national defense agency created for homeland protection, disaster response, and emergency coordination. It operates under the oversight of both the President and the Unity Council.

 

5. What are the Final Three?

The Final Three refers to the last three states founded in Signi’s history: Linnet, Stonehill, and Winfell. Each was founded with symbolic restraint and civic clarity, marking the end of the republic’s territorial expansion.

 

6. Who was James Lockwood?

James Lockwood was the founder of Lakeview and the visionary behind the Signi Pact. He led the original Unity Missions and became the republic’s first head of state. His legacy shapes many civic principles still upheld today.

 

7. Is healthcare free in Signi?

Yes. Under President Thalen Lockwood’s Clean Nation Mandate, every citizen is guaranteed access to baseline healthcare—including mental health services—across all 21 states.

 

8. What are the Unity Missions?

The Unity Missions were a series of authorized expeditions launched after 1812 to explore, evaluate, and peacefully integrate new territories into the republic. They resulted in the founding of nearly all post-Signi Five states.

 

9. What is the Closure Directive?

The Closure Directive was a formal declaration by the Unity Council to end national expansion after the founding of Winfell in 1846. It symbolized the completion of the republic’s territorial map.

 

10. What does it mean to be a citizen of Signi?

Citizenship in Signi means more than legal status—it implies participation. From civic oaths to seasonal ceremonies, every citizen is considered a steward of public space, civic history, and national identity.

 

11. Are all the state names inspired by real-world places?

No. Signi’s state names are original and meant to reflect their geography, values, or founders. While some names may feel familiar, each was chosen with intent and canon-specific meaning.

 

12. Why is silence so important in Signi?

Silence in Signi isn’t repression—it’s reverence. It reflects care, focus, and intention. From public spaces to founding ceremonies, moments of quiet are part of the nation’s civic design and cultural rhythm.

 

13. Who is Sarah Morgan?

Sarah Morgan is a young archaeologist from Lakeview whose work centers on memory, history, and the quiet traces people leave behind. She is best known for her field journals, watercolor sketches, and thoughtful presence in Normandy, the countryside town where she was raised.

More than a scholar, Sarah embodies Signi’s civic spirit—deeply rooted in family, driven by quiet determination, and guided by an unshakable sense of purpose.

 

14. What is Holloway’s Corner?

Holloway’s Corner is a national café chain known for its handwritten menus and quiet reading spaces. It was originally founded by Maggie Holloway’s parents and later expanded under her care.

 

15. What’s the deal with Arthur Trench and Victoria Whitmore?

They are two of the most influential real estate figures in Signi. Their families co-founded the Wilton Hotel brand, but personal and business tensions fractured the alliance. What exactly happened between them remains a subject of speculation.

 

16. Are there more stories to come?

Yes. The world of Signi is built for depth—its cities, figures, and mysteries are explored through multiple forms of storytelling: lore cards, character journals, and upcoming narrative releases.

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