Regional tribunal
The Order of Hermes is governed by thirteen regional or local Tribunals, each of which presides over a different geographic area. There is also a supreme Grand Tribunal, which meets less frequently and has the authority to overrule a decision by a lower Tribunal.
The regional Tribunals are:
- Greater Alps Tribunal
- The Alps and surrounding region, including part of Bavaria
- Hibernian Tribunal
- Ireland
- Iberian Tribunal
- The Iberian peninsula, including modern-day Spain and Portugal, as well as the Belearic Islands
- Levant Tribunal
- The Crusader states and any Hermetic covenants in Egypt or the Middle East
- Loch Leglean Tribunal
- Scotland and its outlying islands
- Normandy Tribunal
- The northern part of modern-day France, including Aquitaine and Burgundy, plus the Low Countries
- Novgorod Tribunal
- Poland, Russia, and Scandinavia
- Provençal Tribunal
- The Provençe region of what is now southern France
- Rhine Tribunal
- Modern-day Germany and Hungary north of the Alps
- Roman Tribunal
- Italy south of the Alps, plus the islands of Corsica, Sardinia, and Sicily
- Stonehenge Tribunal
- England and Wales
- Thebes Tribunal
- Greece, the southern Balkans, Anatolia, and the Aegean islands
- Transylvanian Tribunal
- Bulgaria and Hungary
In addition, there are a few areas of Mythic Europe that are not assigned to a Tribunal, or are disputed between Tribunals. These include:
- The Isle of Man