{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"CreativeWork","@id":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/e49e7a3b-3be9-5ba2-a71b-834a0a71a195","identifier":"e49e7a3b-3be9-5ba2-a71b-834a0a71a195","url":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/e49e7a3b-3be9-5ba2-a71b-834a0a71a195","name":"States, Empires, Law, and Administration","text":"Human societies have organized authority through many combinations of law, custom, bureaucracy, force, legitimacy, and representation. Empires connected large territories but often did so through unequal rule, extraction, negotiation, and local intermediaries. Primary sources reveal both official claims and the varied experiences of people governed by these systems.","keywords":["connected-knowledge","general-knowledge-demo","history","public-knowledge","source-backed"],"about":[],"citation":["https://www.loc.gov/discover/","https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/"],"isPartOf":{"@type":"Dataset","name":"Froggit.ai Knowledge Graph","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Froggit.ai","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"dateCreated":"2026-07-11T05:56:24.127000Z","dateModified":"2026-07-11T05:59:57.242000Z","isBasedOn":"https://www.loc.gov/discover/","additionalProperty":[{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"trust_level","value":90},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"verification_status","value":"sources_verified"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"provenance_status","value":"valid"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"evidence_level","value":"institutional"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"content_hash","value":"cd779638cfc8658be00202f3213c699b476643b3d997ca9e6cde21f389db4d98"}]}