History of the
International Imperial Court System
The Imperial Court System was
founded in San Francisco
in 1965 by José Sarria, also known as Absolute Empress I, The Widow Norton.
Sarria, now affectionately known as "Mama" or "Mama José"
among Imperial Court members, devised the name "Widow Norton" as a
reference Joshua Norton, a much-celebrated citizen of 19th Century San Francisco
who had declared himself Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico in
1859.
Sarria soon became the nexus of a
fundraising group with volunteer members bearing titles of nobility bestowed by
yearly elected leaders. Around 1971, this structure was replicated in
Vancouver
,
Canada
. In the
United States
, the first court outside of
San Francisco
was
Portland
,
Oregon
, followed closely by
Los Angeles
. Other Imperial Courts were founded thereafter. These empires operated and
formed policies more-or-less independently until an Imperial Court Council lead
by Sarria was formed to prevent participation by groups that were not involved
strictly and solely involved with charitable fundraising.
For many years certain chapters
remained outside the recognition of the Widow Norton and the Imperial Court
Council for various reasons, particularly groups in
Canada
loyal to Ted Northe, a founder of the
Vancouver
chapter who was known for some time as "Empress of Canada".
Eventually these chapters reconciled their differences with Sarria's group and
joined the IICS. In 1997, Northe was among the recipients of the "José
Honors Award", a prestigious recognition granted by Sarria in a special
ceremony held on that first year it was given in
Boston
,
Massachusetts
.
Each individual court chapter (or "realm") is a separate,
legally-incorporated charitable non-profit organization that raises funds and
awareness for various charities and people in need within its realm. Each
chapter has its own board of directors and is financially responsible for its
own management. In addition to local non-profit status, many courts in the
United States
have Federal 501(c) status.
The Imperial Court Council is a separately-incorporated non-profit organization
created to advise individual chapters and, when necessary, to grant or rescind
recognition by the IICS as a whole. This group also urges a degree of
consistency regarding matters of protocol via proclamations which are generally
observed by all chapters.
On 17 February 2007, Sarria (who turned 84 years old in December 2006)
officially passed IICS leadership to Nicole the Great, (real name Nicole
Murray-Ramirez), former 1st Heir Apparent, in a ceremony held in
Seattle
,
Washington
.
Most chapters are Imperial Courts and are
also known as "empires". A few chapters are called "ducal
court" (infrequently called a "duchy") or "barony"
(infrequently called a "baronial court"). The term ducal court is
typically used in the rare situation when one chapter's area overlaps with the
territory of an already established chapter, as is the case with the Ducal Court
of San Francisco. The term barony is typically used when a new chapter has yet
to fully realize the level of infrastructure and successful fundraising
characteristic of those chapters deemed full-fledged Imperial Courts. Except for
the titles used by the monarchs (i.e. baroness rather than empress, etc.)
baronial and ducal chapters function in essentially the same way as those
chapters headed by emperor and empresses.
Each court holds an annual
coronation which is usually the chapter's largest fundraiser and is attended by
both local people and members of other chapters from across
North America
. The focal point of the evening is the actual coronation ceremony in which the
new emperor and empress are crowned. The method by which monarchs are selected
varies from chapter to chapter, ranging from selection by vote among the active
membership in closed session months before the coronation to election by all in
attendance on the night of the ceremony.
The office of monarch is taken very seriously within the court system and
requires a large commitment of the holder's time and money. Accordingly, while
the presence of an "imperial couple" is the norm, it is not uncommon
for an emperor or empress to reign alone depending on the availability of
suitably dedicated and charismatic candidates with the necessary resources to
fulfil the requirements of a one year reign.
In the most frequent case, several weeks after coronation the new monarch
or monarchs give out court titles at a fundraiser called investitures. The
titles given to members vary from one chapter to another and are primarily left
to the discretion of the reigning monarch or monarchs, the fons honorum
(fountain of honor) of their chapter.
Typical titles awarded are Imperial Crown Prince, Grand Duchess, Marquess,
Viscount, etc. Other appellations bestowed resemble offices or professions
within a medieval or modern noble court rather than titles of nobility, such as
"Court Jester" or "Chancellor of the Realm" and so forth.
These titles may be as serious-sounding or as humorously campy as the monarchs
wish.
Titles are traditionally based upon those used by European nobility (especially
the British Peerage) but nothing prohibits the creation of titles such as
czarina, raja or sultan and these are sometimes used as well.
Noble titles are ranked according to an order of precedence so that, for
example, a member who has been created a duke takes precedence over a member who
has been made countess. The main effect of this hierarchy involves the order
that members are introduced during "protocol", a ceremonial procedure
endemic to the
Imperial Court
in which titles are read by the master of ceremonies as members approach the
presiding monarchs. This bit of pageantry, which is typically reserved for
coronations and similar large events, gives
Imperial Court
members an opportunity to display their titles and costumes to the assembled
crowd.
While largely made up of gays and
lesbians, each court is open to anyone wishing to help raise money for
charities. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and heterosexual people have all
served as monarchs and court members in the system's history.
Although drag queens, transvestites and cross-dressers are especially
well-represented within the Imperial Court (collectively comprising about 50% of
the total membership), the organization also attracts large numbers of men and
women who dress in a manner traditional to their gender. This typically means
suits and tuxedos for men and dresses and gowns for women.
History of the International
Imperial Court as published on Wikipedia www.wikipedia.com