翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ City of Palms Park
・ City of Paris
・ City of Paris Dry Goods Co.
・ City of Parks
・ City of Parramatta
・ City of Literature
・ City of Lithgow
・ City of Liverpool
・ City of Liverpool (New South Wales)
・ City of Liverpool College
・ City of Liverpool Gymnastics Club
・ City of Logan
・ City of Lompoc Transit
・ City of London
・ City of London (disambiguation)
City of London (elections to the Parliament of England)
・ City of London (UK Parliament constituency)
・ City of London Academy
・ City of London Academy, Islington
・ City of London Academy, Southwark
・ City of London and Westminster South by-election, 1977
・ City of London Artillery
・ City of London Building Society v Flegg
・ City of London by-election, 1868
・ City of London by-election, 1869
・ City of London by-election, 1904
・ City of London by-election, 1906
・ City of London by-election, 1922
・ City of London by-election, 1924
・ City of London by-election, 1935


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

City of London (elections to the Parliament of England) : ウィキペディア英語版
City of London (elections to the Parliament of England)

:''For details of Parliamentary elections in the City of London, to the Parliament of Great Britain (1707-1800) and the Parliament of the United Kingdom (from 1801); see City of London (UK Parliament constituency).''
The City of London was a Parliamentary constituency of the Parliament of England until 1707.
==Boundaries and history to 1707==
This borough constituency consisted of the City of London, which was the historic core of the modern Greater London. In the twenty-first century, the City forms part of the London Region of England.
The southern boundary of the City is the north bank of the River Thames. The City of Westminster is situated to the west. The districts of Holborn and Finsbury are to the north, Shoreditch to the north-east and Whitechapel to the east.
Before 1298, the area was represented as part of the county constituency of Middlesex. The City formed part of the geographic county, even though from early times it was not administered as part of Middlesex.
London is first known to have been enfranchised and represented in Parliament in 1298. It was the most important city in England and was administered as a county of itself from before boroughs were first represented in Parliament. It received four seats in Parliament instead of the normal two for an English constituency. The extra two seats (whose holders were known as Knights, like the representatives of a county) were supposed to represent the county like status of London. No such extra seats were awarded to other cities or boroughs which received the status of being counties of themselves in later times.
By the sixteenth century it was the practice for the Court of Aldermen to summon a meeting at the Guildhall. The Aldermen met and selected two candidates to sit as the City's Knights in Parliament. One was normally an Alderman (probably a former Lord Mayor of the City of London). The other was normally the Recorder of London, whose legal expertise was essential to the City which had a lot of legislation it wanted drafted and passed by Parliament. On one occasion in the sixteenth century the Recorder was already a burgess representing another borough in Parliament, so two Aldermen were chosen.
The Aldermen also prepared a list of twelve prominent Londoners, who were not themselves Aldermen. The nominees for Knight were then put to the liverymen, who had been waiting whilst the Aldermen met, for approval and an election was held to select two Citizens from the list of twelve nominees to fill the other two seats in the House of Commons. The London election thus took place in a single day.
If the Recorder resigned during a Parliament or a Citizen was elected an Alderman, he was disqualified and the new Recorder or another Citizen (as the case might require) was elected.
At some point after 1603 the City adopted a more normal system for nominations and elections. The two London Sheriffs appointed a day for candidates nominations to be submitted, at a meeting in the Guildhall. If there were more than four candidates a poll was held at a later date which usually extended for several weeks. Although it was no longer a legal requirement, there was a custom that two City seats were filled by Aldermen and two by non-Aldermen.
During the Protectorate the City was allocated six seats in the House of Commons, under the terms of the Instrument of Government adopted on 15 December 1653. However, by the time the Third Protectorate Parliament assembled in 1659 the constituency had reverted to its traditional four seats.
The ''City of London'' was a densely populated area in the period up to 1707. The composition of the City electorate was not as democratic as that of some other borough constituencies, such as neighbouring Westminster. The right of election was held by members of the Livery Companies. However the size and wealth of the community meant that it had more voters than most other borough constituencies. Only Westminster had a larger borough electorate. Duke Henning estimated the City liverymen at about 4,000 in 1661 and about 6,000 by 1680.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「City of London (elections to the Parliament of England)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.