Welcome to the official website of the Crown of Antarctica
Purpose & Mandate
The Ministry of the Interior and Antarctic Stewardship serves as the Crown’s principal organ for the internal governance, preservation, and sacred stewardship of the Antarctic realm.
Charged with the direct administration of Crown territory, settlements, natural sanctuaries, and protected zones, the Ministry upholds the sacred will of the Emperor and enforces all imperial edicts concerning Antarctica’s ecological and territorial sanctity.
Areas of Authority
Territorial Governance
Oversight of all land and waters claimed by the Crown of Antarctica
Mapping, naming, and managing symbolic settlements and research sanctuaries
Coordination with scientific stations and missions aligned with Crown law
Environmental Stewardship
Enforcement of Imperial Edict I (Ban on Drilling and Mining)
Enforcement of Imperial Edict II (Protection of Endangered Wildlife)
Management of imperial conservation zones and ecological monitoring programs
Settlement & Infrastructure Policy
Regulation of any civilian or research activity within imperial jurisdiction
Maintenance and recognition of permanent, seasonal, or symbolic outposts
Supervision of sustainable infrastructure design in harmony with the polar environment
Philosophy of Stewardship
The Ministry exists not to conquer, but to protect.
Its mission is to keep the continent pure, peaceful, and eternal—frozen in purpose for the good of the planet.
Where nature is sovereign, so too is our responsibility.
Active Edicts Enforced by the Ministry
Imperial Edict No. I — Ban on Drilling and Natural Resource Extraction
Imperial Edict No. II — Protection of Endangered Antarctic Wildlife
Imperial Edict No. III — Recognition of the Imperial Wildlife Triumvirate
Ministry Leadership
The Minister of the Interior is appointed directly by His Imperial Majesty. The Minister serves as chief steward of the land and enforcer of imperial will in all internal matters.
"To protect the ice is to protect the Earth itself."
— Emperor Alexander I of Antarctica