Mal'l rey
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Mal'l rey (Creeperian pronunciation: [ˈmal‿(a)l rej]; Jackian pronunciation: [ˈmɑːl.reɪ]), a Creeperian phrase meaning "to wrong the king" or "to wrong the monarchy," is criticism or an offense against a reigning sovereign.
Several monarchies have or have had laws that prohibited mal'l rey actions or speech and hand down varying punishments that vary from fines to imprisonment to death. Overtime, mal'l rey laws have been repealed or reduced in severity as freedom of speech and expression improve in many nations.
Contents
Current laws
In current monarchies
- Creeperopolis – Mal'l rey are currently enforced in Creeperopolis with the penalty being up to death. For more information, see mal'l rey laws in Creeperopolis.
- Salisford – Mal'l rey are currently enforced in Salisford with a penalty of, at minimum 200 liras, to up to millions of liras in fines with the largest recent fine being 7.2 million liras for slandering the Queen Consort.
- State of the Church – Mal'l rey are currently enforced in the State of the Church with the penalty being up to death.
In abolished monarchies
- El Salvador – Mal'l rey are currently enforced in El Salvador with the penalty being 10 years imprisonment.
Former laws
In current monarchies
In abolished monarchies
- Gjorka – Mal'l rey laws were poorly enforced with a punishment of death until they were abolished in 1772.
- Groffenord – Until the monarchy was abolished on 15 November 1910, mal'l rey laws were enforced with a penalty of trial by combat.
- Karimun – Until the monarchy was abolished in 1945, mal'l rey laws were enforced with a penalty of five years imprisonment.
- Kivu – Mal'l rey laws were varying enforced in Kivu, with penalities ranging from fines to death, until they were abolished in 1907 following the Kivuian Civil War.
- Monsilva – Mal'l rey laws were enforced with varying intensity since the earliest Monsilvan dynasties in the 9th century BC. Most recently, mal'l rey laws were heavily enforced during the Monsilvan Revolution from 1972 until the monarchy was abolished in 1978.
- Morova – Until the monarchy was abolished in 1920, mal'l rey laws were enforced with the punishment being death.
- New Gandor – Mal'l rey laws were enforced until 1670 with a punishment of forced labor, but they were officially abolished in 1704.
- Paleocacher – Mal'l rey laws were enforced with an unknown punishment until they were abolished in 1722.
- Terranihil – Until the monarchy was abolished in 1890, mal'l rey laws were enforced with a penalty of up to five years imprisonment.
See also
- Armorial of sovereign states
- Capital punishment by country
- Global Democracy Index
- Languages of Terraconserva
- LGBT rights by country
- List of aircraft carriers
- List of country calling codes
- List of countries and dependencies by area
- List of countries by GDP (nominal)
- List of countries by GDP (nominal) per capita
- List of countries by income equality
- List of countries by intentional homicide rate
- List of countries by population
- List of countries by population density
- List of countries by system of government
- List of countries by Human Development Index
- List of current heads of state and government
- List of current state leaders by date of assumption of office
- List of designated terrorist organizations
- List of flags of sovereign states
- List of ongoing armed conflicts
- List of sovereign states
- World Press Freedom Index