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| - King Jenes Messoloriha (CC: 42/2/5,082 - CC: 49/9/5,104), called the Just (as well as the Great-King, and the Five Years' King) was the 6th Monarch of the Delkish Empire of the House of Messoloriha, simultaneously serving as the Eyes-&-Ears, as well as the Greatest-Knight of both the Order of Great Knights, and the Order of Deylki Knights, as well as the Supreme Commander of the Delkish Military. He is most famed for defeating his father the Everemperor after his attempted Destruction of the Great-Domes (at which point he knighted Ross Fourthwalk for defeating Ymetros the Bestiolara, snubbing Groll), and for putting down two separate rebellions: the 2nd Cold War in Flotch, and the so-called "Grimace" in the Face of Crahia. Notably, the Grimace was put down through diplomatic means when Jen
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abstract
| - King Jenes Messoloriha (CC: 42/2/5,082 - CC: 49/9/5,104), called the Just (as well as the Great-King, and the Five Years' King) was the 6th Monarch of the Delkish Empire of the House of Messoloriha, simultaneously serving as the Eyes-&-Ears, as well as the Greatest-Knight of both the Order of Great Knights, and the Order of Deylki Knights, as well as the Supreme Commander of the Delkish Military. He is most famed for defeating his father the Everemperor after his attempted Destruction of the Great-Domes (at which point he knighted Ross Fourthwalk for defeating Ymetros the Bestiolara, snubbing Groll), and for putting down two separate rebellions: the 2nd Cold War in Flotch, and the so-called "Grimace" in the Face of Crahia. Notably, the Grimace was put down through diplomatic means when Jenes married a COLORFUL woman of the Face; in doing so, he raised the woman's family, the House of Sweetknife not only to lordliness, but to outright dukedom, making him a beloved figure in the Face. He was the son of King Xermos II Messoloriha, called "the Strange," and the father of Queen Sulenn II Messoloriha, called "the Sullen" by his Queen Wife Messoloriha-Sweetknife Liss the ORANGE. Jenes was assassinated on CC: 49/9/5,104 by Tomos, a hornman who meant to demonstrate the anger of hornmen at their relative lack of rights. Jenes actually believed that hornmen deserved more rights, and in killing him Tomos did himself, and other hornmen a huge disservice, as the death of the beloved king sparked outrage, and hatred towards the hornmen, which only strengthened after the 2nd Great War began.
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