God-King Era of Britain

The God-King Era of Great Britain
During the years A.D. 1846 to A.D. 1998, a cruel and totalitarian rule of Great Britain ensued, driving England into a fascist machine of a Nation.

The Title
The 'God-King" Era is so dubbed, because the Kings (and Queens) in this Era took upon the names of ancient Greek, Roman and Egyptian Gods and mythological figures. Although the Kings made laws based on the Levitical Laws, they considered themselves natural Deities (i.e. Deities without supernatural origin).

Queen Alexandrina Victoria
Queen Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria) rose to the sovereign of Great Britain in 1837, and was the first Queen to affirm herself as the sovereign, even over the King. Victoria married a suitor shortly after in 1839 (unnamed due to his historical references being outlawed in 1921). In 1843, she is declared unable to bare children due to an unknown illness (it is widely believed to have been Leukaemia, which went into remission for a number of years). However, having vowed to be the primary sovereign of Great Britain, she immediately takes affirmative action, and makes one of the first royal public adoptions of the 14 year old, well-educated Thomas (the previous family name was stricken from historical record in 1921), whom then became the sole heir to the thrown.

The Rise of King Adonai I
On the 18th of December, 1845, Victoria dies of a mysterious illness, similar in symptom to the illness that left her barren. Upon hearing of her death, her husband kills himself in a Church whilst praying for his wife's entrance into heaven. Thomas, in accordance with new laws passed by the British parliament and Victoria's will, was made King of Great Britain in 1846, at age 20. Calling himself King Adonai, the 20 year old King convinced not only the House of Lords, but the general public, that great changes for the better will come under his rule: "We shall be renowned throughout Europe, and the world will be etched with the Crown!" he proclaimed after his Crowning.

At the turn of 1847, he had called back much of Britain's Army, dubbing it "The Crown's Sword", and integrated the police into the Army as a single force. He gave them new laws to enforce based on the Old Testament Book of Leviticus. Particularly unique was the law against any unnecessary speaking outside the household on Sunday (related to the injunction to rest on the Sabbath). The Army, working as the police, had limited power, and so crime rates dropped with the larger amount of patrollers. King Adonai I stated that he didn't mean for the new laws to be enforced, but that they would affect social mores concerning the law and police.

(More to be added)