Privy Seal

The Privy Seal of England can be traced back to the reign of King John. It has been suggested that it was originally the seal that acompanied the person of the Sovereign, while the Great Seal required to remain in Chancery. Prior to its adoption as the Privy Seal of the United Kingdom after the Act of Union 1707, its most notable appearance in Scottish hustory was its capture by the Scots in the aftermath of the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314. The Great Seal Act 1884 effectively ended the use of the Privy Seal by providing that it was no longer decessary for any instrument to be passed under the Privy Seal. The Privy Seal of England was originally kept by the Controller of the Wardrobe, but by 1323 the distinct office of Keeper of the Privy Seal had emerged. The present-day title of this office, Lord Privy Seal is recorded in 1539. There was also a separate Privy Seal of Scotland, which existed from at least the reign of Alexander III. The Seal was last used in 1898 to execute the commission appointing Rev James Cooper to a Regius Chair at Glasgow University, but has never been abolished. The office of Keeper of the Privy Seal has not been filled since the death of the Marquess of Breadalbane in 1922.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
aetolian league
ambresbury banks
westminster larger catechism
black hebrews
moldovan leu
lor
triangle offense
west hallam
memphis southmen
nyogtha
jaafari
euskotran
the algebraist
cognitive semantics
styrophone
autozone
general electric f110
treniota
the works (album)
nyaminyami: legend of the river god
typo3
panchavati
fluvastatin
roblin, manitoba
walking on glass
gaylord entertainment center
kielder forest
rosuvastatin
tanaji malusare
list of trotskyists
baji prabhu deshpande
david bates (groundsman)
frank a. gerbode
national union of students scotland
shadow warrior
yacht club
william mayne
round table class landing ship logistics
overspill
western football league
william caslon
four leaf clover
hubert lagardelle
the elder scrolls legends: battlespire