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・ City of London by-election, 1869
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・ City of London by-election, 1924
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・ City of London by-election, 1938
・ City of London by-election, 1940
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City of London Corporation
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City of London Corporation : ウィキペディア英語版
City of London Corporation

 Independent (99)
 Labour (1)
| committees1 = Privileges Committee, General Purposes Committee
| committees2 = Policy & Resources Committee, Finance Committee, Investment Committee, Planning & Transportation Committee, Port Health & Environmental Services Committee, Markets Committee, Police Committee, Culture Heritage & Libraries Committee, Community & Children's Services Committee, Gresham Committee, Epping Forest & Commons Committee, Open Spaces Committee, Establishment Committee, Barbican Residential Committee, Hampstead Heath Committee, City Bridge Trust Committee, Standards Committee, Licensing Committee, Audit & Risk Management Committee, Boards: City of London School, City of London School for Girls, City of London Freemen's School, Guildhall School of Music & Drama, Barbican Centre, Museum of London
| voting_system1 =
| voting_system2 =
| last_election1 = Varies – individual mandate, up to 6 year term of office
| last_election2 = March 2013 – 4 year term of office
| session_room =
| session_res =
| meeting_place = Guildhall, London
| website = (cityoflondon.gov.uk )
| footnotes =
}}
The City of London Corporation, officially and legally the Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London, is the municipal governing body of the City of London, the historic centre of London and the location of much of the UK's financial sector. In 2006 the name was changed from Corporation of London to avoid confusion with the wider London local government, the Greater London Authority.〔The body was popularly known as the ''Corporation of London'' but on 10 November 2005 the Corporation (announced ) that its informal title would from 3 January 2006 be the ''City of London'' (or the ''City of London Corporation'' where the corporate body needed to be distinguished from the geographical area). This may reduce confusion between the Corporation and the Greater London Authority.〕
The corporation claims to be the world's oldest continuously elected local government body. Both businesses and residents of the City, or "Square Mile", are entitled to vote in elections, and in addition to its functions as the local authority – analogous to those undertaken by the boroughs that administer the rest of London – it takes responsibility for supporting the financial services industry and representing its interests.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/about-the-city/history-and-future/history-and-heritage/Pages/default.aspx )〕 The corporation's structure includes the Lord Mayor, the Court of Aldermen, the Court of Common Council, and the Freemen and Livery of the City.
==History==

In Anglo-Saxon times, consultation between the city's rulers and its citizens took place at the Folkmoot. Administration and judicial processes were conducted at the Court of Husting and the non-legal part of the court's work evolved into the Court of Aldermen.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/DEA0EEB3-9449-4E72-AA99-7C35D995FBB4/0/Courtcommoncouncil.PDF )
There is no surviving record of a charter first establishing the corporation as a legal body, but the city is regarded as incorporated by prescription, meaning that the law presumes it to have been incorporated because it has for so long been regarded as such (''e.g.'', Magna Carta states that "the city of London shall have/enjoy its ancient liberties").
The City of London Corporation has been granted various special privileges since the Norman Conquest, and the corporation's first recorded royal charter dates from around 1067, when William the Conqueror granted the citizens of London a charter confirming the rights and privileges that they had enjoyed since the time of Edward the Confessor. Numerous subsequent royal charters over the centuries confirmed and extended the citizens' rights.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=075-col_01#0 )
Around 1189, the city gained the right to have its own mayor, eventually coming to be known as the Lord Mayor of London. Over time, the Court of Aldermen sought increasing help from the city's commoners and this was eventually recognised with commoners being represented by the Court of Common Council, known by that name since at least as far back as 1376.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/about-the-city/history-and-heritage/mansion-house/Pages/History-of-the-Government-of-the-City-of-London.aspx )〕 The earliest records of the business habits of the city's Chamberlains and Common Clerks, and the proceedings of the Courts of Common Council and Aldermen, begin in 1275, and are recorded in fifty volumes known as the Letter-Books of the City of London.
The City of London Corporation had its privileges stripped by a writ of Quo Warranto under Charles II in 1683, but they were later restored and confirmed by William and Mary in 1690, after the Glorious Revolution.〔(Statute of William and Mary ), confirming the Privileges of the Corporation, A New History of London: Including Westminster and Southwark (1773)〕
With growing demands on the corporation and a corresponding need to raise local taxes from the commoners, the Common Council grew in importance and has been the principal governing body of the corporation since the 18th century.
In January 1898, the Common Council gained the full right to collect local rates when the City of London Sewers Act 1897 transferred the powers and duties of the Commissioners of Sewers of the City of London to the Corporation. A separate Commission of Sewers was created for the City of London after the Great Fire, and as well as the construction of drains it had responsibility for the prevention of flooding; paving, cleaning and lighting the City of London's streets; and churchyards and burials. The individual commissioners were previously nominated by the Corporation, but it was a separate body. The Corporation had earlier limited rating powers in relation to raising funds for the City of London Police, as well as the militia rate and some rates in relation to the general requirements of the Corporation.
The corporation is unique among UK local authorities for its continuous legal existence over many centuries, and for having the power to alter its own constitution, which is done by an Act of Common Council.〔(London Metropolitan Archives ) Information Leaflet Number 13〕

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