The idea of Justice in Sol’Valen is predicated upon the value of Hytori life. Having immortality stripped away from them made life more precarious and so a sense of fraternity and sorority exists that often surprises strangers. The other fundamental virtue is Honor, a gift from the Dragon God Skar. There is a term in Mythrasi—philotimo—that does not translate into any other language younger than Vallenor. The closest translation to Common would be “love of honor,” which is both a civic and a personal virtue. Justice—and much of Hytori law—is derived from philotimo.
This translation is lacking, however. If one asked different elves, one would most assuredly get different answers. Doing good, or doing the right thing. Loving and honoring the Gods, and society. Striving for perfection. Helping others despite the cost to oneself.
Looking historically, it comes from the Vallenor word—philotimia—which was the common parlance before Raella’s grace dimmed in the First People. Then, it was more clearly a love of honor, but also a love of distinction, ambition, and a virtue that could easily become hubris and vice. The zenith of philotimia, and perhaps contemporary philotimo, is one who loves to receive the praise of his city and his people, but also serves the community.
Many a shipwrecked crew on the rocky islands of Sol’Valen’s coast has been saved because elven fishermen exhibited philotimo.
Law
Much of elven law comes from precedents, many set down before any surviving recorded history. As such, some can be changed, but that requires great consensus. Even a Phoenix Monarch would not make unilateral changes. Exact codification of laws varies from realm to realm, but largely, one ought to consider the harm principle: The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others.
Of course, in reality, for all the egalitarian principles of Sol’Valen, it remains a stratified society. Noble houses have been noble since before recorded history, proving that great virtue continues to run through golden veins. Len’Hytori are equal to Len’Hytori, Val’Hytori to Val’Hytori, and Sol’Hytori to Sol’Hytori. An injury done to a lord is more grievous than the same injury done to a common citizen, although crimes against lower classes are not unpunishable.
Lesser courts oversee cases over the Len’Hytori, and their cases only move upward if a higher judge steps in or a consensus cannot be reached through the machinery of the lower courts.
Order
The Pilindioitar—Also called the Arrows of the King, these are the police force in Silfanore. In practice, they answer to various of the Archontes, but do not carry great authority in and of themselves. Theirs is the task of maintaining order, which entails crisis management more than the potential violence their moniker might indicate. They are all trained in first aid as well as those skills that would require it.
Military—Most elves volunteer for the armed forces upon achieving their majority. The highborn show their commitment to the protection of the Hytori homeland equally as do the low. No elf's citizenship is called into question if they do not serve, although elves in Aerion are barred from certain positions and honors if they have not shed blood for their people. But even pacifists are given roles—logistical, medical, or the like—such that they can support a total war if ever such was required again to maintain Hytori sovereignty and freedom. In such a case, the Phoenix Monarch would declare war, then name one of the Val'Kor diarchs the polemarch to execute that war.
The military leadership skews heavily toward warriors from Aerion, though all principalities are represented. The genius of the Hytori military is its adaptability. There are phalanges of hoplites with shields and spears. There are Hytori-Avialae who rain down from airships. For every challenge, there is a tool. But to an outsider, the byzantine structure of the Hytori military would be baffling.
Elves are extremely long lived and few travel beyond the bounds of Sol'Valen. They don't need an anonymous, depersonalized ranking system as many other races because they have known all of their companions for decades or centuries. Each elf knows his or her place and how everyone contributes. The most common unit is a company, wherein the members swear loyalty to a leader, albeit a loyalty secondary to their prince.
Strategoi lead land-based companies, navarchoi lead those based on sea- or airships.