Apert of 2700

The Apert of 2700 is the named cycle of Apert in the Twenty-seventh Century. It is recalled as the moment when Fraa Clathrand of the Concent of Saunt Edhar had his remarks—later known as Clathrand’s Contention—copied out and distributed to the mathic world at large.

Significance and associations: - Timeline marker: In discussion it is placed roughly eight decades before the Third Sack. - Diffusion of ideas: After this opening, theors across different traditions pursued various developments of Clathrand’s Contention, each colored by their views of time and metatheorics. - Circulation context: The event is referenced within a Convox as a benchmark for how long‑cycle ideas pass from a math’s holdings into wide circulation during an Apert.

This instance is cited not for ceremonial spectacle but for its role in dissemination: it marks when Clathrand’s work left Edhar’s shelves to be read and argued across the maths. Subsequent references treat it as a convenient waypoint when situating later debates and historical turns in that century.

Summary:

An instance of Apert in the Twenty-seventh Century, cited for distributing Fraa Clathrand’s writings across the mathic world; later speakers note it as occurring some decades before the Third Sack.

Known as:
the Apert of 2700