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| - After leaving university, Tudor embarked on a grand tour of the former realms of the Holy Luthori Empire, including Alduria, Greater Hulstria, Namviet, Yishelem, Beiteynu, Talmorschland, Philipi, Mordusia, and New Mordusia. In addition to a generous allowance from his family, Tudor financed his travels as by penning articles a foreign correspondent for the Fort William Herald. During this period Tudor penned a number of historical works such asThe Naval War of 2578, Christopher Dove: His Life and Times, Lionheart: The Three Hundred Year Reign of St. Richard, and his magnum opus, A History of the Luthori-Speaking People.
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abstract
| - After leaving university, Tudor embarked on a grand tour of the former realms of the Holy Luthori Empire, including Alduria, Greater Hulstria, Namviet, Yishelem, Beiteynu, Talmorschland, Philipi, Mordusia, and New Mordusia. In addition to a generous allowance from his family, Tudor financed his travels as by penning articles a foreign correspondent for the Fort William Herald. During this period Tudor penned a number of historical works such asThe Naval War of 2578, Christopher Dove: His Life and Times, Lionheart: The Three Hundred Year Reign of St. Richard, and his magnum opus, A History of the Luthori-Speaking People. Tudor returned to his homeland in 3824 and founded the Cavalier Party in response to what he perceived as a lack of deference for traditional Luthori values in the Liberal Alliance-dominated government of the time. He stood for, and was elected to, a seat in the Holy Imperial Diet, representing the Williamsbrough area in 3827. He has continnuously served as the Member of the Diet for that seat and the leader of the Cavalier party since that time. Tudor served as the Minister of Justice from 3837 to 3840, in a right-of-center coalition led by the Liberal Alliance. In the 3840 General Election, the Cavaliers became the most popular party in the Diet, though they did not win a majority, and Ambrose struck a bargain with a number of disparate political parties to form a Cavalier-dominated cabinet in exchange for instituting an elective monarchy. Though this maneuver landed him in the post of the Imperial Seal Bearer for just under a decade, and helped contribute to making the Cavaliers the largest party in the Diet for almost 15 years, he was percieved by many segments of the Party to have betrayed a key Cavalier principle. A massive upset occured during the 3854 General Election, in which the Cavalier Party lost 15 seats in the Diet and recieved no posts in the cabinet, as well as suffering the humiliation of their incumbent Holy Luthori Emperor Charles X being unseated by a commoner. After these shocking losses, a clique of highly traditionalist, young aristocrats rode a surge of reactionary zeal to seize control of the Party and oust Tudor from his Diet seat and leadership position. Tudor effectively resigned from public life, though maintaining party membership, and chose to focus instead on his writing.
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