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Imperial Aquila
WARHAMMER
40,000 COMPENDIUM
HOLOLITH ACTIVE · ADEPTUS ADMINISTRATUMFILE 4471-Δ

Civilised Worlds

Upon the Golden Throne abides the eternal will of the Emperor.

++ REF.M42.HORUS-RESURGENT — UNCONFIRMED ++++ TITHE ASSESSMENT: SEGMENTUM SOLAR ++++ ASTRONOMICAN STABILITY: NOMINAL ++

Overview

Civilised worlds are characterized by balanced development and sustainable populations numbering in the billions

Civilised worlds are characterized by their balanced development and sustainable populations, typically ranging from hundreds of millions to a few billion citizens. These worlds possess functional infrastructure, diverse economies, and established systems of governance that have proven stable across centuries or even millennia. The populations of civilised worlds generally enjoy higher living standards than those on Hive Worlds or industrial planets, though they remain subject to the harsh realities of Imperial life including mandatory military service, rigorous tithes, and the omnipresent scrutiny of the Ecclesiarchy and Inquisition.

The vast majority of human-inhabited worlds are classified as civilised worlds — the backbone of the Imperium

The planetary governments of civilised worlds vary enormously in structure, from hereditary aristocracies to democratic councils, from theocratic rule to merchant oligarchies. What unifies them is their loyalty to the Empire and their ability to meet their tithe obligations without external support. Each civilised world operates under a planetary governor appointed by the Adeptus Administratum, though the actual governance structure beneath this office may take countless forms adapted to local traditions and conditions.
Civilised worlds serve as recruitment grounds for the Astra Militarum, providing countless regiments of soldiers who become the backbone of Imperial Guard forces across the galaxy. Unlike the savage warriors from Death Worlds or the undisciplined masses from Hive Worlds, soldiers from civilised worlds typically arrive with basic education, discipline, and training that makes them valuable assets to Imperial commanders. Many civilised worlds maintain professional standing armies that defend their systems and can be tithed as entire regiments when the Empire requires reinforcements.
The strategic value of civilised worlds lies not in any single resource but in their reliability and diversity. While no single civilised world can match the industrial output of a forge world or the agricultural production of an Agri Worlds, collectively they produce the vast majority of goods, services, and manpower that keeps the Empire functioning. They are the worlds where Imperial culture flourishes, where the Imperial Cult finds its most devoted followers, and where the traditions of humanity are preserved across the long millennia.
Despite their relative stability, civilised worlds face constant threats from Chaos, Xenos incursions, and internal rebellion. Their populations, educated enough to question but not powerful enough to resist, occasionally fall prey to heretical ideologies that spread like wildfire through planetary societies. The Inquisition maintains constant vigilance on civilised worlds, knowing that these stable, productive planets represent both the greatest strength and most vulnerable weakness of the Empire.

Social Structure and Governance

Social hierarchies on civilised worlds mirror feudal structures with mobility through military service or commerce

The social hierarchies of civilised worlds typically mirror the feudal structures prevalent throughout the Empire, with clearly defined classes ranging from planetary nobility to industrial workers to agricultural laborers. The upper classes control the means of production, administer planetary law, and interface with Imperial authorities, while the vast majority of citizens occupy various stations of productive labor. Social mobility exists on many civilised worlds, unlike the static castes of Hive Worlds, allowing talented individuals to rise through military service, commercial success, or religious devotion.

Education systems on civilised worlds produce literate, skilled populations essential to Imperial governance

Planetary governors, appointed by the Adeptus Administratum, wield absolute authority over their worlds in the name of the Emperor of Mankind. These governors come from diverse backgrounds—some are hereditary nobility, others are former military commanders, and still others are administrators promoted from the ranks of the Administratum itself. A competent governor maintains the delicate balance between extracting sufficient tithes to satisfy Terra while ensuring the population remains productive and loyal. Incompetent or corrupt governors may find themselves replaced by Inquisition investigation or popular uprising, though such transitions often come at terrible cost.
Local governmental structures beneath the planetary governor vary wildly across civilised worlds. Some maintain democratic assemblies where citizens elect representatives to advise the governor, while others operate through strict hierarchies of appointed officials. Many civilised worlds preserve ancient traditions predating Imperial compliance, blending local customs with Imperial law in ways that the Adeptus Administratum tolerates as long as tithes flow and loyalty remains unquestioned. This flexibility allows civilised worlds to maintain distinct cultural identities while remaining integral parts of the Empire.
The Ecclesiarchy maintains significant presence on civilised worlds, with temples and cathedrals serving as centers of community life where citizens receive spiritual guidance and Imperial propaganda in equal measure. The Imperial Cult on civilised worlds tends toward organized orthodoxy rather than the desperate faith found on Hive Worlds or the primal beliefs of Death Worlds. Ecclesiarchal influence extends deep into planetary governance, with many governors relying on the Church to maintain social order and identify potential heresy before it spreads.
Education systems on civilised worlds produce literate, skilled populations capable of operating advanced technology and comprehending complex Imperial doctrines. Scholae Progenium facilities on major civilised worlds train orphans of Imperial servants to become future administrators, commissars, and officers. This investment in education represents both a strength and vulnerability—educated populations can more efficiently serve the Empire, but they also possess the knowledge to recognize injustice and question authority, making them prime targets for Chaos corruption.

Tithe Contributions and Strategic Value

Civilised worlds provide trained military recruits who become the backbone of Imperial Guard forces

Every civilised world bears the burden of the Imperial tithe, the sacred obligation to contribute resources, manpower, and manufactured goods to sustain the Empire across the galaxy. The Adeptus Administratum assigns each civilised world a tithe grade based on its productive capacity, population size, and strategic location, with assessments conducted every decade by teams of adepts who spend years calculating exact obligations. Meeting the tithe represents the primary duty of planetary governors, and failure to provide adequate contributions can result in sanctions ranging from increased oversight to full military intervention.
The diversity of tithe contributions from civilised worlds reflects their varied economies and capabilities. Agricultural civilised worlds may provide foodstuffs to supplement the massive outputs of dedicated Agri Worlds, while industrialized civilised worlds contribute manufactured goods, components, and basic weapons systems. Many civilised worlds provide trained military recruits as their primary tithe, raising entire regiments for the Astra Militarum according to specifications provided by the Departmento Munitorum. The flexibility of civilised world tithes allows the Empire to draw upon whatever resources each planet produces most efficiently.

The strategic value of civilised worlds lies in their reliability and diverse tithe contributions

Recruitment for the Astra Militarum from civilised worlds follows established protocols that have remained largely unchanged since the Great Crusade. Planetary defense forces serve as training grounds and recruitment pools, with the best units tithed entirely to become Imperial Guard regiments. These regiments often maintain strong connections to their homeworlds, preserving cultural traditions and fighting styles that distinguish them from other Imperial forces. Civilised world regiments are valued for their reliability, discipline, and ability to operate sophisticated equipment without extensive retraining.
Beyond material contributions, civilised worlds provide the Empire with administrative personnel, technical specialists, and religious authorities. The Adeptus Administratum draws heavily from civilised worlds to staff the countless bureaucratic positions required to govern a million planets, while the Adeptus Mechanicus recruits tech-adepts from civilised worlds with strong technical education systems. The Ecclesiarchy finds many of its most devoted preachers and missionaries among the faithful populations of civilised worlds, where organized religion flourishes alongside Imperial culture.
The strategic importance of civilised worlds extends beyond their individual contributions to their collective role as the stable foundation of Imperial power. While Forge Worlds and Hive Worlds attract more attention from military planners, civilised worlds form the secure interior regions where Imperial authority remains unchallenged and populations support the regime without question. This stability allows the Empire to project power outward, knowing that the core regions will continue functioning even as frontier worlds burn in endless warfare.
Yet this very reliability makes civilised worlds prime targets for Xenos raiders and Chaos cultists seeking to disrupt Imperial supply lines. The loss of a major civilised world can have cascading effects across an entire sector, as tithes fail to arrive and regiments go unsupplied. The Empire commits enormous resources to defending civilised worlds, understanding that while individual planets may seem unremarkable, collectively they represent the beating heart of human civilization in the galaxy.