Real quick (tenth floor!)
That chronicle is why I figured they weren't so racist anymore. Idonis obviously wasn't, himself, racist; he was fucking a Starkminar. I got vibes of Tiberius in I, Claudius there, in particular. Which is why I'm really pointing at the lore and saying, "Really? Are they racist? They seem to be doing what's politically expedient most of the time." They're just more tied into the church than to the military.
I mean, that in and of itself was almost a century and a half ago. That was before he issued the Khaedra Law that called for them to be left alone. That was even before Heideran and the Pax Amarr. Way before Jamyl Sarum and the emancipation.
This is what I'm talking about with the lore. This piece of story happened in an Amarr Empire that the lore itself tells us, in the first pages of Amarr lore, came before a massive event that reshaped Amarrian political thinking. All the modern signs point to the fact that things are changing at an impressive rate. Is this lore still useful or relevant? Or is it really a good idea to apply a glimpse into what Yonis's predecessor was thinking before the Minmatar Rebellion had even begun?
That's a lot of assumptions we're making that we don't necessarily have much evidence for. It looks like he has more political reason, at the very least, to not stick to that racist stance than his father had to do the opposite.
Just a general comment here, this is where you'll get people start balking at playing fast and loose with the PF. Many have an "it is written" attitude about it (myself included) - which doesn't mean your character can't be different, but it does mean he will be interpreted a certain way by others.
I'm just bringing up that it's not really a fast-and-loose thing. 150 years ago, the conservative party that lost the U.S. Presidential election made sure their voting states seceded in order to continue the practice of slavery. Even if we're going in a generational sense, my father was grounded at home and heckled at school for dating a black girl. Things change a LOT, and the most basic lore we have says things have changed a lot in the Amarr Empire just in the few years the game has occupied the timeline in.
I'm not saying that stuff didn't happen, I'm saying, what does it actually tell us about what is happening now that might be pertinent to our characters? It's really hard to say that everything that has ever been written about anything, in this case the Empire, is still true today even if we have a ton of lore that says the Empire has changed a lot over the years, decades, centuries, and millenia. I saw pretty much the opposite of racism in that story when I read it, Idonis himself wasn't racist per the story as much as he essentially had to play a political role to put down the rebellion. Which brings me to Lyn...
You find that he was progressive with the Mandate ? I wouldn't say that he was harsh or extremely conservative, but what he did never looked really progressive to me. He just put the Mandate - more or less - back together, especially militarily. On the rest, he stripped the Mandate a lot of its autonomy by replacing locals by his own men. Nominating an Ammatar is here just as a puppet. It's certainly not that guy that runs the Mandate. It was already barely the Ammatar that ran the Mandate beforehand, since they were always seconded by an imperial governor.
No, the only thing I saw is Idonis strenghtening his grip on the Mandate, but he didn't do that especially harshly, just well and firmly.
I don't want to get started on whole essays on the deplorable state of the Mandate, but that is probably the faction that has been the most abandoned over the years. Like most minor factions, they tend to be forgotten for long periods of time, but at least they keep their integrity. Which is not the case with the Mandate at all. The Mandate was already half of a joke before TEA, with sheepish citizens and puppet authorities. Which can be interesting... to a point. Now that Ardishapur took over (it could have been anyone really, nothing would have changed), everyone seems to assume that it's all well and good and the Mandate is stronger than ever. As an Ammatar RPer (kindof..) I would argue that it's exactly the contrary, and that the Mandate would have been in a way better shape left alone to figure out on its own how to get back on track. The only thing that Ardishapur brought story wise was to definitely kill any Ammatar spirit left in the faction.
The Ammatar Mandate is extremely interesting to me precisely because it's a HUGE anomaly in the Amarr society. They are not totally part of the Amarr Empire (or at least, were not, like the Khanid Kingdom), but more akin to a protectorate, back in time. They were given a mandate from God by the Amarr Empire to act as a buffer nation between the Empire and the newly formed Minmatar Republic, with all the benediction of the Amarr. In return, they became kindof a vassal/protectorate of the Empire with their own solar systems, as faithful as they demonstrated to be. It is an anomaly precisely because of the status of their slave owners, which is illegal everywhere else, because those are precisely not Holders (who for most of them are True Amarr or Udorian in the case of Tash Murkon, or maybe Khanid now that the Kingdom is kinda back into the Empire). The simple fact that the ex Nefantars started to happily hold slaves during the Amarr conquest and the Minmatar Rebellion, and were allowed to keep them because the Empire could not afford to enforce their rules on Holders in such times, was made purely out of necessity. And it is interesting because it creates a huge precedent. It turned the Mandate into a very privileged semi independent nation of Faithful, even larger than the Khanid Kingdom themselves (though probably with a lot less military power), which were allowed to continue to keep slaves for their Holders-that-are-not-legally-Holders, and which were also given their emancipation very quickly compared to other enslaved races. All in all, they enjoyed a unique status that balanced a bit their rather... stern pictural as meek, spineless individuals, but oh so faithful and all. It also actually provided a lot of political manoeuvers and RP material by putting the emphasis on that specific anomaly.
The arrival of Ardishapur to fix things in the Mandate after the Elder invasion basically killed all of this. Granted, we probably still have Ammatar holders that are not holders, but otherwise while bolstering their military and administration, putting all back in order, it firstly kill the semi independence they had (much like the Khanid), thus removing a lot of the sub factional differences we had so much more before TEA, and also definitely made them actually weaker since all was not done by themselves, but Ardishapur. And all they do is smiling stupidly and meekly while their own government is brutally replaced by Ardishapur puppets and men. All in all, it's a part of the identity of the Ammatar that has already more or less faded away. Well, that can bring interesting material, like the Intaki identity issue has on the federal side, but here it's not just a threat, but a systematic removal from the lore itself, delegating it to the past. So it offers good incentives to start political arguments with Amarr loyalists, but it also at the same time scarifies a lot that actually makes the Ammatar Ammatar. I would love to believe that all of this is just transitional and that cunning Idonis Ardishapur will actually leave after, doing its own version of Khadrea's law in the Mandate by looking nice and compassionate while it's actually a tool for him to protect shameful stuff, but I really don't believe it will.
@ Vic : considering their portrayal in the news, I would still say that they are the most religiously traditional of all Houses. They may probably have changed like all after Vak Atioth, Heideran, and all that, to evolve into a modern Empire, but they probably are the ones that did it the less considering their very religious roots.
Also, I firmly believe that Khadrea's law concerning Vo'shun has nothing at all to do with humanitarian purposes, which is only as a PR tool. Khadrea's law is actually a pure middle finger given to the Minmatar Voluval traditions, showing how horrible it can be. Also considering how he protects them but also does not at all to actually help them or enlight them, or enslave them on Arzad, I would rather be even tempted to say that this guy can be really cruel. Vo'Shun under Khadrea's law reminds me a lot of his personal zoo.
The fact that Ardishapur was not as keen as the Emperor to declare Hamri as heretical is also maybe not out of compassion either to me, but rather because he was an Ardishapur subject that brought a lot of shame on their House. And we all know how many famous heretics the Ardishapur sprouted.
A few things I've read (and I really hate lorenazying, so take this as conversational rather than dictatorial) just make it sound like the ground rules have changed. Let's take what you said as given, as a worst case scenario, that this is just a political stunt. Just from the bare bones, the most solid stuff I can wring out of the lore:
-The Ammatar are ethnic Matari living in the Empire
-The Ammatar were given to the most stridently conservative of the Heirs
-The Heir saw fit to cater as best he could to the Ammatar and give them political power
-We are assuming he is doing this for his political benefit because this helps his house
Then what we can gather is that, worst case scenario, the Ardishapur Family has recognized that the race of Matari, at least those who follow the faith, are a better political asset than they are enemies and would be a wise investment of political capital. That doesn't strike me as someone who sees them as barbarous heathens who aren't really part of the Amarr Empire, even at worst. If he'd really believed that, they'd be absolutely worthless and he would have done exactly as expected because he wouldn't have cared what they thought.
Things have changed, particularly since the Elder Invasion in this case. They're the most religiously traditional, but there were American laws on the books forbidding interracial marriage (and they found passages that they said supported this in the Bible) on the books until the Supreme Court declared them unconstitutional in 1967. Not 50 years later, you can get thrown off your very popular cooking show for even having been reported to have used a derogatory racial slur. Now, in the worst case scenario, those people who are racists are hiding it because blacks in America are now seen to have political power and worth, so they should be catered to.
I like to think we're better off than the worst case scenario, personally. But even at its very worst, that says something about the fact that societies, no matter how traditional, move.
So how does this relate to the stuff on the Mandate?
If you don't think of everything in that scenario, that the reason the Matari have more power now is because they've essentially "proven" themselves by staying with the Empire through the combat and after the Elder Invasion, in spite of the fact that a lot of them were hiding pureblooded Starkminar (essentially hearkening back to their own tribal roots), I'd say that ethnic racism is starting to become a dying fad. I mean, there's a Udorian heir, the Ammatar have at least earned some political power and respect in the Mandate, the Khanid have their Privy Council seat back despite their temporary secession. Even the Ni-kunni, who we're supposed to think of with racist aspirations, are called out as probably rising to prominence in the future by Amarr historians.
It's hard, given what I've read, to think that things can just be taken as written about things a hundred years ago, or even from the beginning of the game. The most relevant lore relates to the most recent developments.
It could be that racism just isn't a political viable option anymore.
[Author's Note] Again, just my interpretation of what I've read. I don't grimdark up everything I read, I try to reduce everything down and take it as neutrally as possible.