The Crown
: For usages of The Crown in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, see Crown of the Polish Kingdom. For the venue in Cincinnati, Ohio, see U.S. Bank Arena. For the Swedish metal band, see The Crown (band). For other general usages, see Crown.
Related Topics:
Crown of the Polish Kingdom - U.S. Bank Arena - The Crown (band) - Crown
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The Crown is a term which is used to separate the government authority and property of the state in a kingdom from any personal influence and private assets held by the current Monarch.
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In the United Kingdom, as an example, The Crown is an entity that represents all rulership in the U.K., but is separate from the person currently wearing it. For instance, the Queen owns some of her castles herself, and if she abdicated, she would keep them. Others belong to the Crown, and would belong to the next monarch. This situation arose on the abdication of King Edward VIII in 1936, when the new King, George VI, was obliged to purchase Balmoral Castle and Sandringham House from the former king.
Related Topics:
United Kingdom - Abdication - Edward VIII - 1936 - George VI - Balmoral Castle - Sandringham House
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The situation for The Crown in the other Commonwealth Realms is similar.
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The Crown is therefore a corporation sole (or perhaps more correctly in modern times a corporation aggregate), a legal entity which can own property and have rights. In the U.K. Elizabeth II is currently the post holder, and thus Queen of the United Kingdom. The holder of the position of the Crown will be King or Queen and officially governs the U.K. In practice, however, the U.K. is usually governed by the government derived from the democratically elected parliament, but this is only done 'on behalf of the Crown' and laws are passed by the Crown in Parliament, with Royal assent.
Related Topics:
Corporation sole - Corporation aggregate - Elizabeth II - Crown in Parliament
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Many government workers in the United Kingdom are Crown Servants. For instance, traditionally, prison warders and police officers were directly employed by the Crown, or owe a duty to the Crown where there is no direct employer-employee relationship, and not by the Prison Service or Police Authorities. The Crown is also the source of all justice in the U.K. (which is why there is the Crown Prosecution Service in the criminal courts whose lawyers are called Crown Prosecutors), which also meant that it was immune from prosecution. Those working within the intelligence services such as Mi5 and Mi6 are also Crown Servants. Thus all Government departments were essentially immune from prosecution, an immunity which was limited slightly by the Crown Proceedings Act of 1947. Crown servants may not sit as Members of Parliament and this is used as a way of allowing MPs to retire before their time—they are awarded a sinecure job which is that of a Crown Servant and thus disbarred as an MP (see resignation from the British House of Commons).
Related Topics:
Police officers - Lawyer - Mi5 - Mi6 - 1947 - Members of Parliament - Sinecure - Resignation from the British House of Commons
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The concept of the Crown took form under the feudal system, evolving from and synthesising oriental and barbarian concepts of kingship. Under the feudal System, in England and (separately) Scotland, all rights and privileges were ultimately granted by the ruler (though this was not the case in all countries that had this system). All land was granted by the Crown to lesser lords, in exchange for feudal services, and they granted the land to lesser lords. One exception to this was common socage—owners of land held as socage held it subject only to the Crown. The Crown as ultimate owner of all property also owns any property which has become Bona Vacantia.
Related Topics:
Feudal system - England - Scotland - Socage - Bona Vacantia
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Again, most of these principles are similar in the other Commonwealth Realms which share the Crown along with the U.K.
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Crown in Right of ... / Exercise of the rights of the Crown |
| ► | See also |
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