Originally posted by Stei'awtliyrl:
The question then becomes, "Has the Imperium always been dominated by Homeworldism?"
Stei'awtliyrl,
I'd answer that with a qualified 'Yes'.
The Imperium in an assembly of governments and not an assembly of peoples. The early Imperium didn't undertake 'hearts and minds' campaigns that convinced the masses to join. Instead it convinced
governments to join.
When we remember that ~90% of the population of Chartered Space lives in ~10% of the systems (the so-called "hi-pop worlds"), we must concede that some systems are more important than others. When the early Imperium won over the hi-pop worlds in a given region, the dribs and drabs surrounding had no choice but to fall in line too. We see this dynamic again during the Rebellion. Each faction's war aims revolve around controlling hi-pop worlds. Lesser planets are in the mix only with regards to how they can be used to control the hi-pop worlds around them.
Remember the Long Night and try this little experiment. Pull out a sector map(1) and place a penny on every hi-pop world. Each of those pennies is the center of a potential Long Night pocket empire. Can you imagine the millennia of struggles between all them? Hot wars, cold wars, espionage, economic shenanigans, state sponsored piracy, revolts, rebellions, insurrections, the list is endless.
Then the Imperium shows up. It tells the ruling class of each pocket empire
Join us and your worries are over. The little empire will be part of a huge empire, it will be defended from other powers, it will no longer have to worry culturally, economically, or militarily about the hi-pop world pocket empires around it, it will be able to have as much or as little off-world contact as it desires. What's more, the ruling classes of the hi-pop world pocket empire get automatically inducted into the ruling classes of the Imperium. So treaties are signed, patents of nobility granted, another clutch of worlds is absorbed by the Imperium, and the frontier moves on.
SThis means the Imperium is/was a power sharing agreement among hi-pop worlds. The idea of an 'imperium' was sold to those worlds alone, the other 90% didn't really matter and weren't often asked. This also means that the interests those hi-pop worlds have/had will drive the interests the Imperium has/had and the interests the Rebellion's factions have/had.
We see regionalism, factionalism, and 'homeworldism' all throughout the Third Imperium's history. There are acknowledged cultural regions. There are dynasties with associated bloodlines from specific internal regions. There are regional power bases used for both straightforward warfare in the case of the Civil War and Ilelish Revolt and for political struggles all the other time. There are even semi-autonomous regions; Antares, Solomani, Vegan, etc., inside a polity that supposedly doesn't allow multi-world groupings within it! Sectionalism occurs throughout the Imperium's long history.
The Imperium is/was a collection of factions that generally remembered it was better in the end to hang together than to hang apart - especially when hanging together and the benefits derived from it came at such a slight cost. Strephon and Dulinor both saw that this idea had either been forgotten or misplaced in the Classic Era Imperium(2). They both tried to reinforce the old idea, but in different manners.
Strephon chose to work the way the Imperium had always worked. He focussed on the governments making up the Imperium reminding them of their duties and responsibilities and holding them more accountable. He even reinvigorated a moribund level of the Imperial nobility to help with that oversight.
Dulinor chose to work through a different path; the masses. The Imperium had never really dealt with the masses, that was a job for the governments making up the Imperium. When governments were obstinate or flat out unwilling, Dulinor chose to sidestep those governments and make Imperial policies that directly effected the masses. The Imperial practice before had been to indirectly effect the masses through their local governments.
When the shots were fired, the governments making up the Imperium had been told two conflicting accounts of themselves for some time. Neither was good. Strephon was telling them that they were failing, that he expected them to do a better job, and he would see that they did it. Dulinor's opinion was worse, he was telling them that they weren't even need anymore and the Imperium would do their job!
Is it any wonder why the idea the Third Imperium wasn't in fashion by 1117? Two of it's strongest proponents were antagonising the very members that made it up!
Have fun,
Bill
1 - The Rim is not a good choice for this for various reasons.
2 - I believe the Rim War had a hand in this, but that's for another time.