Relationships between crest-bearing houses and tribes

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Relationships between Crest-Bearing Houses and Tribes

Under Ts’msyen law, crests do not belong to tribes as abstract groups. They are carried by specific houses (*wilp / waap*), and through those houses they create lawful relationships **within and across Ts’msyen tribes**.

Crests are one of the primary ways Ts’msyen law maintains unity without erasing local authority.


Foundational Understanding

Crests are house-held, not tribal possessions.

They:

  • belong to specific wilp
  • carry defined responsibilities
  • derive authority from adaawx and witness
  • connect houses through shared legal relationships

Tribes are composed of houses; law flows through houses first.


Houses as Primary Legal Units

Under ayaawx:

  • the wilp is the primary bearer of authority
  • crests are held and exercised by houses
  • rights and responsibilities attach to houses, not populations

Tribal identity does not override house law.


Crests as Cross-Tribal Connectors

The same crest may appear in houses belonging to different Ts’msyen tribes.

This reflects:

  • shared origins recorded in adaawx
  • historical movement and settlement
  • alliances formed through law and marriage
  • lawful transfer or recognition of responsibility

Shared crests do not imply shared territory or merged authority.


Lawful Relationship, Not Hierarchy

When houses across tribes carry related crests:

  • neither house gains supremacy over the other
  • authority remains tied to each house’s territory and responsibility
  • relationships are governed by protocol, not dominance

Crests connect lawfully; they do not centralize power.


Clans (Pdeex) and Crest Relationships

Clan systems provide structure for crest relationships.

Clans:

  • group houses through lineage
  • maintain balance and neutrality
  • enable recognition across distance
  • prevent isolation of authority

Crests operate within clan law, not outside it.


Territorial Limits

A shared crest does not grant:

  • automatic access to another house’s land
  • authority beyond one’s own territory
  • decision-making power over another wilp

Territory remains defined by adaawx and stewardship, not by crest alone.


Protocols Between Houses

Where crest-bearing houses interact across tribes:

  • protocol governs conduct
  • permission must be sought where required
  • responsibilities must be respected
  • disputes are resolved through law and witness

Crests guide relationship; protocol governs action.


Use in Diplomacy and Cooperation

Crest relationships may support:

  • diplomacy between tribes
  • cooperation on shared waters or routes
  • mutual aid in times of need
  • lawful negotiation and settlement

These uses depend on consent and proper process.


Witness and Recognition

Relationships between crest-bearing houses are affirmed through:

  • feast and public witness
  • acknowledgment by clans
  • repetition through practice
  • correction where misuse occurs

Unwitnessed claims of relationship have no legal standing.


Protection Against Misuse

Misuse occurs when crests are treated as:

  • tribal ownership symbols
  • identity badges without responsibility
  • justification for territorial claims
  • substitutes for consent

Such misuse is corrected under ayaawx.


Teaching These Relationships

Youth are taught that:

  • crests connect law, not entitlement
  • relationships require respect and restraint
  • shared symbols do not erase boundaries
  • authority follows responsibility

Understanding prevents conflict and confusion.


Living Relationships

Relationships between crest-bearing houses are living.

They:

  • adapt through lawful renewal
  • respond to new circumstances
  • remain accountable through witness
  • preserve unity without erasing difference

Through these relationships, Ts’msyen law remains interconnected and whole.