### Introduction
Sigmar was born in 2085, he fought for Vers in the First Sol War (2108-2111). He fought at the Siege of Earth, when he was 26, where he witnessed the death of his Lord. He left Vers in 2121 at the age of 36. He left the milky way He died two hundred and one years later, in 2322 at the age of 237. Sigmar was a real person, his friends whos works he collected together into a codex long before he died was known to many.
The first Codex, Sigmars' Codex, was at first just a collection of his own and his friends writings, broadly laying out the history of the Church and its people. However, Lawgar, whom Sigmar had come to depend on for managing political affairs, begged Sigmar to include the second and third sections to his codex. So that the book (which Lawgar knew future generations would look back on for definitive, authoritative, messaging) would contain information demonstration how the Germushian people brought together Church and State. Equally, Lawgar hoped that by including these things, the political institutions which he had developing along Sigmar, most notably the Estates General, might survive.
It is also worth noting that Lawgar withheld releasing the Codex until his own death five years after Sigmar. This was because, as is explained early in Gadreillar, Lawgar fought to prevent the creation of the office of the Sigmarian, which be believed would pervert the teachings of Sigmar and his word. Once he knew he'd lost that fight, Lawgar then quickly moved to create a position of the Lawgarian. Finally, according to the Lawgarian reading of Gadriellar, Lawgar moved to fill the position the later political theoristist Civlawar's describes, and which became reality of the Lawder and the Sigder, or political and religious leaders, who then became united in the position of Emder or shared leader.
Each Epitome will be broken down into summaries of their three sections. That means: A summary of hte history the codex describes, a summary of the institutions and changes described, and a summary of hte legal changes described. These sections do not preserve specific authors of each book, though I try and discuss key work and members as htey are referenced and laid out.