This is a response to a post made in the
"Can ships change their real space vector in Jump?" Thread (Posts #100 & #101):
Thanks for providing this nice spreadsheet. But I do have a question. Is this just a list of ALL the members of the forum staking out their claims to being Nobles in "their systems" or is this derived from the canon?
The ones corresponding to forum members were assigned (and I don't know the process) as rewards for contributing to a T5 kickstarter and/or beta testing that game years ago, I think. Some of these may have been linked to a "land grab" on the ancient Traveller Mailing List (pick a planet or few, roll it up, write it up in detail, and it was "yours"...) but not all.
I ended up with the crew of a Free Trader (character cards at about credit card size, one name personalized) from a later one.
@whulorigan -- among others -- should have a more complete answer.
Also, you seem to have replied into the wrong thread somehow... I think.
To begin with, the link in my signature : "
Link: Traveller5 Noble Patents Registry " is to a spreadsheet that was initially created by a Moot-member on this forum with username "
Bloo", so I do not want to take credit for his initial arduous work in doing the initial compiling. I have since reformatted some of the pages and expanded the cover pages, as well as maintained and updated the list with additional data as it became available.
All of the members listed in the spreadsheet are people who were assigned Noble Patents by Marc Miller in the form of Noble Patent Cards associated with the T5 Project. Some of them went to T5 kickstarter-backers and beta-testers, some were given out as rewards to Moot-members on this forum commensurate with their paid Moot-nobility level in supporting the Board, and some were given out as bonus swag to people who bought products off the FFE website as long as the supply of T5 Cards lasted. There are a few linked to the "land grab" on the ancient Traveller Mailing List (such as Don McKinney's).
Some of the cards are actually issued in a person's (or character's) actual name, others are issued generically. Some are issued with an order or style (i.e. "
of the Third Imperium" or "
of the Solomani Rim", others are not so styled, and just show "<NOBLE TITLE> of <WORLD NAME>". Marc Miller has basically said that they are for us to use however we want, and are therefore for fun and are non-canonical (and several examples in the list would clearly overwrite canon unless they represent different eras).
Note also that under T5 there are different general classes of Imperial Nobles:
- Honor Nobles - These are nobles who have been granted a title as a reward for and/or recognition of significant service to the Imperium by the Emperor;
- Ceremonial Nobles - These are nobles who have been granted a title as a minimum required standing and perquisite to holding an Imperial office or position as a high-level functionary or bureaucrat in the Imperial government administration;
- Landed (& High Landed) Nobles - These are the nobles who are the official Imperial representatives to a world (in the case of Landed Knights), and the official Imperial representatives of a world at the interstellar level and before the Imperial Moot (in the case of Landed Baronets and higher). Only Landed Nobles may be styled "<NOBLE TITLE> of <WORLD NAME>".
In T5 World write-ups (and on the
Traveller Map Noble Extensions), note that
only the Landed Nobles for a world are listed in the Noble extension. Any number of Ceremonial or Honor Nobles (or none at all) may reside on a world (and this does not necessarily include any local/planetary nobility of the world government's political/social-structure itself).
While individuals can do whatever they want with their cards/patents (obviously), the general understanding that seems to have arisen on the public forum is that cards styled "
<NOBLE TITLE> of <WORLD NAME>" represent Landed Nobles, whereas cards styled in any other way (e.g. "
<NOBLE TITLE> of the Third Imperium", "
<NOBLE TITLE> of the Spinward Marches", "
<NOBLE TITLE>" with a character name, but no other specification", etc.) represent Honor and/or Ceremonial titles.