Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition: Difference between revisions

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84 cities across the Inquisition have the status of '''håmnamarta''' (closed city), with various levels of movement restriction for non-inhabitants. They are often situated serving strategically important facilities such as large electric plants, military bases and industries, cosmodromes, or labour camps.
84 cities across the Inquisition have the status of '''håmnamarta''' (closed city), with various levels of movement restriction for non-inhabitants. They are often situated serving strategically important facilities such as large electric plants, military bases and industries, cosmodromes, or labour camps.


While the lowest independent division is the parish (including cities and villages), a minor area in a parish may be recognized as a ''hamlet'' ('''mūrė''') (note that some dioceses use the term for village (''poga'') instead), which for cities is usually a ''borough'' ('''martauseh poga''', literally "urban village"). Note that cities may also have hamlets: boroughs are usually defined as such if many of them form a large contiguous urban area; smaller inhabited places in rural areas administered by a city are still hamlets.
While the lowest independent division is the parish (including cities and villages), a minor area in a parish may be recognized as a ''hamlet'' ('''mūreh''') (note that some dioceses use the term for village (''poga'') instead), which for cities is usually a ''borough'' ('''martauseh poga''', literally "urban village"); in the quaestorship of Līlasuṃghāṇa only, the core wards of the city are designated as ''hālgāra'' (districts).<br/> Note that cities may also have hamlets: boroughs are usually defined as such if many of them form a large contiguous urban area; smaller inhabited places in rural areas administered by a city are still hamlets.


Large uninhabited or extremely sparsely populated areas are often not assigned to any municipality, but are administered by the circuit and defined as an ''extra-parish territory'' ('''šrimāṇāyuseh ṣramāṇa''').
Large uninhabited or extremely sparsely populated areas are often not assigned to any municipality, but are administered by the circuit and defined as an ''extra-parish territory'' ('''šrimāṇāyuseh ṣramāṇa''').