Dictionary Definition
parliament
Noun
1 a legislative assembly in certain countries
(e.g., Great Britain)
2 a card game in which you play your sevens and
other cards in sequence in the same suit as their sevens; you win
if you are the first to use all your cards [syn: fantan, sevens]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- Institution whose elected or appointed members meet to debate the major political issues of the day and to exercise legislative powers, and in some cases executive or judicial powers also.
- In the context of "by extension": The collective noun for a group of rooks italbrac the species of bird or owls.
Related terms
Translations
elected politcial institution
- Catalan: parlament
- Croatian: parlament
- Czech: parlament
- Dutch: parlement
- Finnish: eduskunta, parlamentti, valtiopäivät
- French: parlement
- German: Parlament
- Greek: Βουλή (voulí)
- Irish: parlaimint
- Italian: parlamento
- Japanese: 議会
- Kurdish: پهرلهمان
- Latin: senatus
- Maltese: parlament
- Polish: parlament
- Portuguese: parlamento
- Russian: парламент
- Scots: pairlament
- Scottish Gaelic: pàrlamaid
- Serbian: skupština
- Spanish: parlamento
- West Frisian: parlemint
Extensive Definition
A parliament is a legislature, especially in
those countries whose system of government is based on the Westminster
system modelled after that of the United
Kingdom. The name is derived from the French
parlement, the action
of parler (to speak): a parlement is a talk, a discussion, hence a
meeting (an assembly, a court) where people discuss matters.
Parliamentary government
Legislatures called parliaments typically operate
under a parliamentary
system of government in which the executive
is constitutionally answerable to the parliament. This can be
contrasted with a presidential
system, on the model of the United
States' congressional
system, which operate under a stricter separation
of powers whereby the executive does not form part of, nor is
appointed by, the parliamentary or legislative body. Typically,
congresses do not select or dismiss heads of
governments, and governments cannot request an early
dissolution as may be the case for parliaments. Some states have a
semi-presidential
system which combines a powerful president with an executive
responsible to parliament. Parliaments may consist of chambers
or houses, and are usually either bicameral or unicameral—although more
complex models exist, or have existed (see Tricameralism).
The lower house
is almost always the originator of legislation, and the upper house
is usually the body that offers the "second look" and decides
whether to veto or approve
the bills.
A parliament's lower house is usually composed of
at least 200 members in countries with populations of over 3
million. A notable exception is Australia, which
has only 150 members in the
lower house despite having a population of over 20
million.
The number of seats may exceed
400 in very large countries, especially in the case of unitary
states. The upper house customarily has 20, 50, or 100 seats,
almost always significantly fewer than the lower house (the British
House of
Lords is an exception).
A nation's prime
minister ("PM") is almost always the leader of the majority
party in the lower house of parliament, but only holds his or her
office as long as the "confidence of the house" is maintained. If
members of parliament lose faith in the leader for whatever reason,
they can often call a vote
of no confidence and force the PM to resign. This can be
particularly dangerous to a government when the distribution of
seats is relatively even, in which case a new election is often
called shortly thereafter.
Origins of parliamentary government
England
The Curia Regis in England was a council of tenants-in-chief and ecclesiastics that advised the King of England on legislative matters. It replaced its Anglo-Saxon predecessor, the Witenagemot, a popular assembly that developed into a sort of crown council, after the Norman invasion of 1066.Parliament originated in the 1200's, during the
reign of John's grandson Edward I. As
previous kings, Edward called leading nobles and church leaders to
converse government ailments. A meeting in 1295 became known as the
Model
Parliament because it set the pattern for later Parliaments. In
1207, Edward
I agreed not to collect certain taxes without consent of the
realm. He also enlarged the court system.
William
of Normandy brought to England the
feudal
system of his native Normandy, and
sought the advice of the curia regis,
before making laws. This body is the germ from which Parliament,
the higher courts of law, and the Privy
Council and Cabinet have sprung. Of these, the legislature is
formally the High
Court of Parliament; judges sit in the
Supreme Court of Judicature; and only the executive government
is no longer conducted in a royal court.
The tenants-in-chief often struggled with their
spiritual counterparts (Christian Humphreys) and with the King for
power. In 1215, they secured from John
the Magna
Carta, which established that the King may not levy or collect
any taxes (except the feudal taxes to which they were hitherto
accustomed), save with the consent of a council. It was also
established that the most important tenants-in-chief and
ecclesiastics be summoned to the council by personal writs from the
Sovereign, and that all others be summoned to the council by
general writs from the sheriffs of their counties.
Modern government has its origins in the Curia Regis; parliament
descends from the Great Council later known as the parliamentum
established by Magna
Carta.
The first English
Parliament was formed during the reign of King
Henry III in the 13th century. In 1265,
Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, who was in rebellion
against Henry
III, summoned a parliament of his supporters without any or
prior royal authorisation. The archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls and barons were summoned, as were two
knights from each shire
and two burgesses from
each borough. Knights
had been summoned to previous councils, but the representation of
the boroughs was unprecedented. De Montfort's scheme was formally
adopted by Edward
I in the so-called "Model
Parliament" of 1295. At first, each estate
debated independently; by the reign of Edward
III, however, Parliament had been separated into two Houses and
was assuming recognisably its modern form.
France
Originally, there was only the Parlement of Paris, born out of the Curia Regis in 1307, and located inside the medieval royal palace, now the Paris Hall of Justice. The jurisdiction of the Parlement of Paris covered the entire kingdom. In the thirteenth century, judicial functions were added. In 1443, following the turmoil of the Hundred Years' War, King Charles VII of France granted Languedoc its own parlement by establishing the Parlement of Toulouse, the first parlement outside of Paris, whose jurisdiction extended over the most part of southern France. From 1443 until the French Revolution several other parlements were created in some provinces of France.All the parlements could issue regulatory decrees
for the application of royal edicts or of customary practices; they
could also refuse to register laws that they judged contrary to
fundamental law or simply as being untimely. Parliamentary power in
France was suppressed more so than in England as a result of
absolutism,
and parliaments were eventually overshadowed by the larger Estates
General, up until the French
Revolution, when the
National Assembly became the lower house of France's bicameral
legislature. (The Sénat being the
upper house)
Scotland
From the 10th century the Kingdom of Alba was ruled by chiefs (toisechs) and subkings (mormaers) under the suzerainty, real or nominal, of a High King. Popular assemblies, as in Ireland, were involved in law-making, and sometimes in king-making, although the introduction of tanistry—naming a successor in the lifetime of a king—made the second less than common. These early assemblies cannot be considered "parliaments" in the later sense of the word, and were entirely separate from the later, Norman-influenced, institution.The Parlement
of Scotland evolved during the Middle Ages
from the
King's Council of Bishops and Earls. The unicameral parliament
is first found on record, referred to as a colloquium, in 1235 at
Kirkliston (a
village now in Edinburgh).
By the early fourteenth century the attendance of
knights and freeholders had become
important, and from 1326 burgh commissioners attended.
Consisting of the Three Estates; of clerics, lay tenants-in-chief and burgh
commissioners sitting in a single chamber, the Scottish parliament
acquired significant powers over particular issues. Most obviously
it was needed for consent for taxation (although taxation was
only raised irregularly in Scotland in the medieval period), but it also
had a strong influence over justice, foreign
policy, war, and all
manner of other legislation, whether political, ecclesiastical,
social or economic. Parliamentary business was also carried out by
"sister" institutions, before c. 1500 by General
Council and thereafter by the Convention
of Estates. These could carry out much business also dealt with
by Parliament — taxation, legislation and policy-making — but
lacked the ultimate authority of a full parliament.
The parliament, which is also referred to as the
Estates of Scotland, the Three Estates, the Scots Parliament or the
auld Scots Parliament (Eng:
old), met until the Acts
of Union merged the Parliament of Scotland and the Parliament
of England, creating the new
Parliament of Great Britain in 1707.
Poland
According to the Chronicles of Gallus Anonymus, the first legendary Polish ruler, Siemowit, who began the Piast Dynasty, was chosen by a wiec. The veche (Russian: вече, Polish: wiec) was a popular assembly in medieval Slavic countries, and in late medieval period, a parliament. The idea of the wiec led in 1182 to the development of the Polish parliament, the Sejm.The term "sejm" comes from an old Polish
expression denoting a meeting of the populace. The power of early
sejms grew between 1146–1295, when the power of individual rulers
waned and various councils and wiece grew stronger. The history of
the national Sejm dates back to 1182. Since the 14th century
irregular sejms (described in various Latin sources as
contentio generalis, conventio magna, conventio solemna,
parlamentum, parlamentum generale, dieta or Polish sejm walny) have
been called by Polish kings. From 1374, the king had to receive
sejm permission to raise taxes. The General Sejm (Polish Sejm
Generalny or Sejm Walny), first convoked by the king John I
Olbracht in 1493 near Piotrków,
evolved from earlier regional and provincial meetings (sejmiks. It followed most closely
the sejmik generally, which arose from the 1454 Nieszawa
Statutes, granted to the szlachta (nobles) by King
Casimir IV the Jagiellonian. From 1493 forward, indirect
elections were repeated every two years. With the development of
the unique Polish Golden
Liberty the Sejm's powers increased.
The
Commonwealth's general parliament consisted of three estates:
the King of Poland (who also acted as the Grand Duke of Lithuania,
Russia/Ruthenia, Prussia, Mazovia, etc.), the Senat (consisting of
Ministers, Palatines, Castellans and Bishops) and the Chamber of
Envoys—circa 170 nobles (szlachta) acting on behalf of
their Lands and sent by Land Parliaments. Also representatives of
selected cities but without any voting powers. Since 1573 at a
royal election all peers of the
Commonwealth could participate in the Parliament and become the
King's electors.
Nordic and Germanic development
A thing or
ting (Old
Norse and Icelandic:
þing; other modern Scandinavian:
ting) was the governing assembly in Germanic
societies, made up of the free men of the community and presided by
lawspeakers. Today
the term lives on in the official names of national legislatures,
political and judicial institutions in the North-Germanic
countries. In the Yorkshire and
former Danelaw areas of
England, which were subject to much Norse invasion and settlement,
the wapentake was
another name for the same institution.
The thing was the assembly of the free men of a
country, province or a hundred
(hundare/härad/herred). There were consequently, hierarchies of
things, so that the local things were represented at the thing for
a larger area, for a province or land. At the thing, disputes
were solved and political decisions were made. The place for the
thing was often also the place for public religious rites and for
commerce.
The thing met at regular intervals, legislated,
elected chieftains
and kings, and
judged according to the law, which was memorized and recited by the
"law
speaker" (the judge).
Later national diets with chambers for different
estates developed, e.g. in Sweden and in Finland (which was part of
Sweden until 1809), each with a House of
Knights for the nobility. In both these countries, the national
parliaments are now called riksdag (in Finland also
eduskunta), a word used since the Middle Ages and equivalent of the
German word Reichstag.
Russia
The name of the parliament of Russian Federation is the Federal Assembly of Russia. The term for its lower house, Duma (which is better known than the Federal Assembly itself, and is often mistaken for the entirety of the parliament) comes from the Russian word думать (dumat), "to think". The Boyar Duma was an advisory council to the grand princes and tsars of Muscovy. The Duma was discontinued by Peter the Great, who transferred its functions to the Governing Senate in 1711.Novgorod and Pskov
The veche was the highest legislature and judicial authority in the republic of Novgorod until 1478. In its sister state, Pskov, a separate veche operated until 1510. Since the Novgorod revolution of 1137 ousted the ruling grand prince, the veche became the supreme state authority. After the reforms of 1410, the veche was restructured on a model similar to that of Venice, becoming the Commons chamber of the parliament. Аn upper Senate-like Council of Lords was also created, with title membership for all former city magistrates. Some sources indicate that veche membership may have became full-time, and parliament deputies were now called vechniks. It is recounted that the Novgorod assembly could be summoned by anyone who rung the veche bell, although it is more likely that the common procedure was more complex. This bell was a symbol of republican sovereignty and independence. The whole population of the city—boyars, merchants, and common citizens—then gathered at Yaroslav's Court. Separate assemblies could be held in the districts of Novgorod. In Pskov the veche assembled in the court of the Trinity cathedral.India
In very ancient India, during the Vedic civilization, there are mentions of two Parliament-like gatherings of the Indo-Aryan kingdoms called the Sabha and the Samiti. During the time of the Buddha, many states were even tribal republics, called the Sanghas. The Sabha has been interpreted by the historians as a representative assembly of the elect—the important men of the clan, which ran day-to-day business with the king. The Samiti seems to be a gathering of all the male members of the kingdom, and probably convened only for the ratification/election of a new king. The two largely democratic institutions, which kept a check on the absolutism of the king, were given a sacred position, and have been called the daughters of the deity Prajapati in the Vedas, the holiest of all Hindu scriptures and the earliest Indo-European literature. However, these democratic institutions became weaker as republics became larger and elected chieftainship moved towards hereditary and absolute monarchy. The Sabha and the Samiti bear almost no mention in later literature. After this, India would not have any democratic legislature till the British times, culminating in its modern democratic Parliament (whose two Houses still bear the name of Sabha).Spain
- Main article Cortes Generales
Although there are documented councils held in
873, 1020, 1050 and 1063, there was no representation of commoners.
What is considered to be the first Spanish Parliament (with the
presence of commoners), Cortes -
was held in the Kingdom of
Leon in 1118. Prelates, nobles and commoners met separately in
the three estates of the Cortes. In this meeting new laws were
approved to protect commoners against the arbitrarities of nobles,
prelates and the king. This important set of laws is known as the
"Carta Magna Leonesa"
Following this event, new Cortes will appear in
the other different kingdoms: Catalonia in
1218, the Kingdom
of Castile in 1250, Kingdom
of Aragon in 1274, Kingdom
of Valencia in 1283 and Kingdom
of Navarre in 1300.
After the union of the Kingdoms of Leon and
Castile under the Crown of
Castile, their Cortes will be united as well in 1258. The
Castilian Cortes had representatives from Burgos, Toledo, León,
Seville, Córdoba, Murcia, Jaén, Zamora, Segovia, Ávila, Salamanca,
Cuenca, Toro, Valladolid, Soria, Madrid, Guadalajara and Granada
(after 1492). The Cortes had powers to control the king spending
and taxing. But, after the defeat of the communities (Castilian
War of the Communities) against the newly arrived Habsburg
emperor
Charles V in 1521, the Castilian Cortes lost its power and was
reduced to a mere consultative entity.
The Cortes of the Crown of
Aragon kingdoms remained with their power to control the king
spending regarding to the finances of those kingdoms. But after the
War of the Spanish Succession and the arrival of another royal
house - the Bourbons
- in 1714 with Philip
V, their Cortes were suppressed (as were those of Aragon and Valencia
in 1707, Catalonia and
Balearic
islands in 1714).
Parliaments of the United Kingdom
The British Parliament is often referred to as
the Mother of Parliaments (in fact a misquotation of John Bright,
who remarked in 1865 that "England is the Mother of Parliaments")
because the
British Parliament has been the model for most other
parliamentary systems, and its Acts
have created many other parliaments. Many nations with parliaments
have to some degree emulated the British "three-tier" model. Most
countries in Europe and the Commonwealth
have similarly organized parliaments with a largely ceremonial
head
of state who formally opens and closes parliament, a large
elected lower house and a smaller, upper house.
The Parliament of the United Kingdom was
originally formed in 1707 by the Acts
of Union that replaced the former parliaments of England and
Scotland—the
Irish
Parliament was subsumed into the
Imperial Parliament in 1801.
In the United Kingdom, Parliament consists of the
House
of Commons, the House of
Lords, and the Monarch. The House
of Commons is composed of 646 members who are directly elected by
British citizens to represent single-member constituencies. The
leader of a Party that wins more than half the seats or less than
half but can count on support of smaller parties to achieve enough
support to pass law is invited by the Queen to form a government.
Legally the Queen is the head of government and no business in
Parliament can be taken without her authority. The House of Lords
is a body of long-serving, unelected members: 92 of whom inherit
their seats and 574 of whom have been appointed to lifetime
seats.
Legislation can originate from either the Lords
or the Commons. It is voted on in several distinct stages, called
readings,
in each house. First reading is merely a formality. Second reading
is where the bill as a whole is considered. Third reading is
detailed consideration of clauses of the bill.
In addition to the three readings a bill also
goes through a committee stage where it is considered in great
detail. Once the bill has been passed by one house it goes to the
other and essentially repeats the process. If after the two sets of
readings there are disagreements between the versions that the two
houses passed it is returned to the first house for consideration
of the amendments made by the second. If it passes through the
amendment stage Royal Assent
is granted and the bill becomes law as an Act of
Parliament.
The House of Lords is the less powerful of the
two houses as a result of the Parliament
Acts of 1911 and 1949. These Acts removed the veto power of the
Lords over a great deal of legislation. If a bill is certified by
the
Speaker of the House of Commons as a money bill
(i.e. acts raising taxes and similar) then the Lords can only block
it for a month. If an ordinary bill originates in the Commons the
Lords can only block it for a maximum of one session
of Parliament. The exceptions to this rule are things like
bills to prolong the life of a Parliament beyond five years. If a
bill originates in the Lords then the Lords can block it for as
long as they like.
In addition to functioning as the second chamber
of Parliament, the House of Lords is also still the final court of
appeal for much of the
law of the United Kingdom—a combination of judicial and legislative
function that recalls its origin in the Curia Regis. This will
change in October 2009 when the
Supreme Court of the United Kingdom opens.
Since 1999, there is a Scottish
Parliament in Edinburgh, which
is a national, unicameral legislature for Scotland.
List of parliaments
Contemporary national parliaments
- List is not exhaustive
- ''See also: list of national legislatures
Parliaments of the European Union Member States
- European Parliament
- Parliament of Austria
- Belgian Federal Parliament
- National Assembly of Bulgaria
- House of Representatives of Cyprus
- Parliament of the Czech Republic
- Parliament of Denmark
- Parliament of Luxembourg
- Parliament of Malta
- National Assembly of the Republic of Poland
- Parliament of Estonia
- Parliament of Finland
- Parliament of France (Parlement)
- Parliament of Germany - The Bundestag
- Greek parliament
- Hungarian National Assembly (Országgyűlés)
- Parliament of Ireland - the Oireachtas
- Parliament of Italy (Parlamento Italiano)
- Parliament of Latvia
- Parliament of Lithuania
- Parliament of the Netherlands
- Assembly of the Republic (Portugal)
- Parliament of Romania (consisting of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate)
- Parliament of the United Kingdom
- National Council of the Slovak Republic
- Slovenian Parliament
- Cortes Generales of Spain
- Parliament of Sweden
Others
-
- The federal (Commonwealth) government of Australia has a bicameral parliament, and each of Australia's six states has a bicameral parliament except for Queensland, which has a unicameral parliament.
-
- The federal government of Canada has a bicameral parliament, and each of Canada's 10 provinces has a unicameral parliament.
- Parliament of the Faroe Islands (Løgtingið)
- Parliament of the Fiji Islands
- Parliament of Iceland (The Althing is one of the oldest still-acting parliaments in the world, established at Thingvellir in 930)
- Parliament of India consisting of Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha
- Parliament of the Isle of Man - Tynwald (Tinvaal) Tynwald is the oldest parliament in the world in continuous existence.
- Parliament of Israel - The Knesset
- Parliament of Malaysia
- Parliament of Montenegro
- Parliament of Morocco
- Parliament of Nauru
- Parliament of New Zealand
- Parliament of Norway (Storting)
- Parliament of Pakistan
- National Assembly of Serbia (Narodna Skupština)
- Parliament of Singapore
- Parliament of South Africa
- Spanish Cortes
- Parliament of Sri Lanka
- Federal Assembly of Switzerland (Bundesversammlung, Assemblée fédérale, Assemblea federale)
- Parliament of Trinidad and Tobago
- Parliament of Nepal (recently reorganized)
Contemporary supranational parliaments
Equivalent national legislatures
- Majlis, e.g. in Iran
- in Afghanistan: Wolesi Jirga (elected, legislative lower house) and Meshrano Jirga (mainly advisory, indirect representation); in special cases, e.g. as constituent assembly, a Loya Jirga
Defunct
- Parliament of Ireland (1200–1801)
- Parliament of Southern Ireland (1921–1922)
- Parliament of Northern Ireland (1921–1973)
- People's Parliament (1940s)
- Silesian Parliament (1922-1945)
Belgium
In the federal (bicameral) kingdom of Belgium, there is a curious asymmetrical constellation serving as directly elected legislatures for three "territorial" regions—Flanders (Dutch), Brussels (bilingual, certain peculiarities of competence, also the only region not comprising any of the 10 provinces) and Wallonia (French)—and three cultural communities''—Flemish (Dutch, competent in Flanders and for the Dutch-speaking inhabitants of Brussels), Francophone (French, for Wallonia and for Francophones in Brussels) and German (for speakers of that language in a few designated municipalities in the east of the Walloon Region, living alongside Francophones but under two different regimes)- Vlaams Parlement ("Flemish Parliament"; originally styled Vlaamse Raad "Flemish Council") served both the Flemish Community (whose same it uses) and, in application of a Belgian constitutional option, of the region of Flanders (in all matters of regional competence, its decisions have no effect in Brussels)
- Parliament of the French Community
- parliament of the German Community
- parliament of the Walloon region
- parliament of the Brussels 'capital' region;
- within the capital's regional assembly however, there also exist two so-called Community Commissions (fixed numbers, not an automatic repartition of the regional assembly), a Dutch-speaking one and a Francophone one, for various matters split up by linguistic community but under Brussels' regional competence, and even 'joint community commissions' consisting of both for certain institutions that could be split up but are not.
Denmark
The Netherlands
Finland
Spain
United Kingdom
See also
References
parliament in Arabic: مجلس الشعب
parliament in Asturian: Parllamentu
parliament in Azerbaijani: Məclis
parliament in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Парлямэнт
parliament in Bosnian: Parlament
parliament in Bulgarian: Парламент
parliament in Catalan: Parlament
parliament in Czech: Parlament
parliament in Welsh: Senedd
parliament in Danish: Parlament
parliament in German: Parlament
parliament in Estonian: Parlament
parliament in Spanish: Parlamento
parliament in Esperanto: Parlamento
parliament in French: Parlement
parliament in Irish: Parlaimint
parliament in Scottish Gaelic: Pàrlamaid
parliament in Galician: Parlamento
parliament in Korean: 의회
parliament in Hindi: संसद
parliament in Croatian: Parlament
parliament in Indonesian: Parlemen
parliament in Icelandic: Þing
parliament in Italian: Parlamento
parliament in Hebrew: פרלמנט
parliament in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Bunge
parliament in Kurdish: Parleman
parliament in Latin: Parlamentum
parliament in Luxembourgish: Parlament
parliament in Lithuanian: Parlamentas
parliament in Lingala: Palemá
parliament in Hungarian: Parlament
parliament in Maori: Pāremata
parliament in Malay (macrolanguage):
Parlimen
parliament in Dutch: Parlement
parliament in Japanese: 議会
parliament in Norwegian: Parlament
parliament in Norwegian Nynorsk: Parlament
parliament in Narom: Parlément
parliament in Polish: Parlament
parliament in Portuguese: Parlamento
parliament in Romanian: Parlament
parliament in Quechua: Rimana huñunakuy
parliament in Russian: Парламент
parliament in Simple English: Parliament
parliament in Slovak: Parlament
parliament in Serbian: Скупштина
parliament in Serbo-Croatian: Parlament
parliament in Finnish: Parlamentti
parliament in Swedish: Parlament
parliament in Tagalog: Parlamentaryo
parliament in Thai: รัฐสภา
parliament in Tajik: Парламент
parliament in Turkish: Parlamento
parliament in Ukrainian: Парламент
parliament in Yiddish: פארלאמענט
parliament in Chinese: 议会
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Parliament, assembly, bicameral
legislature, board of aldermen, chamber of deputies, city board,
city council, commission, common council,
congress, council, court, diet, federal assembly, general
assembly, house of assembly, legislative assembly, legislative
body, legislative chamber, legislature, lower chamber,
lower house, national assembly, provincial legislature, provincial
parliament, representative town meeting, soviet, state assembly, state
legislature, town meeting, unicameral legislature, upper chamber,
upper house