As long as the rules of ownership, of entry into the business and of resolving disputes live only in the heads of the elder generation, they hold while that generation lives and while no one disputes them. A family constitution sets them down on paper, and a family council gives a place where they are applied. The House drafts the charter, sets the council, and seals both to the legal structure — so the rules have teeth, not goodwill.
The House leads the family from spoken understandings to a written instrument of governance and to a working body that applies it. This is neither a will nor a corporate charter: the constitution answers who owns, who decides, how an heir enters and how a dispute is settled — and then the House binds it to the holding and the foundations, so what is written carries legal force.
What you get: a family charter (written constitution) · a family-council protocol · a dispute-resolution protocol · a binding of the constitution to the holding and the foundation · a revision procedure on a horizon of 2+ generations
The family gains the written law of its own house: it is clear who owns, who decides, how the next generation enters and how a dispute is settled. And when the one who held it all in his head is gone, the family receives not a vacuum and not improvisation, but an order that goes on working without him.
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