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AI-generated conjecture · below the evidence/publication boundary

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The clerk's calendar breaks with the realm

Status: Anticipated · untested

Status is derived only from the shepherd-authored triage/prediction data above -- community submissions and claims are a separate overlay and can never change it (see the participation panel below).

This is a proposed connection between two domains, generated by a language model. It is not an article and not evidence: it sits below the evidence/publication boundary. A quantitative prediction and a named kill-dataset are attached (when registered) so the claim stays falsifiable rather than merely evocative.

Claim (verbatim)

Medieval dating clauses encode the date redundantly — indiction, regnal year, year of the incarnation — and the redundancy lets us catch clerks in errors. This conjecture claims the internal-inconsistency rate of dating elements in royal and imperial acta is a chancery-stress gauge: mismatches should spike during succession disputes and periods of military itinerancy, because clerks miscount regnal years precisely when it is politically unclear when the reign began, and drafting discipline decays when the writing office travels under pressure. Scribal error thereby stops being noise and becomes measurement. If this holds, we gain a political-instability series computed from arithmetic mistakes — checkable against known crises, and usable for periods and regions where narrative sources fall silent.

Prediction clause (verbatim)

Primary clause: in Regesta Imperii, the share of acta with mutually inconsistent dating elements is at least 50% higher inside disputed-succession windows (for example 1198-1214) than in the adjacent stable decades of the same chanceries. Secondary clause: within crisis windows, inconsistencies concentrate in the regnal-year element specifically, not in the indiction, matching the proposed mechanism.

Kill-dataset (verbatim)

Regesta Imperii, whose regesta systematically flag discordant dating elements in the acta they calendar.

Nobody has run this test. The kill-data is named above. If you can run it — or you know the paper that already settles it — claim the kill or submit the prior. Kills and priors are credited here, by name, as they come in.

In the atlas

This conjecture is bridged, as an L1 lead, onto these Inferpedia subject pages.

Provenance

Run: Fresh agent generation · model: claude-fable-5

Composed blind by claude-fable-5 with zero tool use and no information ingress of any kind; the packet was emitted as a single JSON text message for the orchestrator to persist.

Novelty / leakage triage

anticipated in the literature — this exact test has never been run

Discordant dating elements (regnal year versus indiction) are a recognized diplomatic problem, with imperial chancery charters known to be error-prone, but turning the inconsistency rate into a political-instability time series concentrated in disputed-succession windows is un-run.

Predictions

No prediction registered yet.

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