ツイートする Facebook にシェア

Greek Constitution of 1864

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Greece

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Greece



Other countries · Atlas
Politics portal

The Second National Assembly of the Hellenes took place in Athens (1863 - 1864) and dealt both with the election of a new sovereign as well as with the drafting of a new Constitution, thereby implementing the transition from constitutional monarchy to a Crowned Democracy.

Following the refusal of Prince Alfred of Great Britain (who was elected by an overwhelming majority in the first referendum of the country in November 1862) to accept the crown of the Greek kingdom, the government offered the crown to the Danish prince George Christian Willem of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Gluecksburg, who was crowned constitutional King of Greece under the name "George I, King of the Hellenes".

The Constitution of 1864 was drafted following the models of the Constitutions of Belgium of 1831 and of Denmark of 1849, and established in clear terms the principle of popular sovereignty, since the only legislative body with reversionary powers was now the Parliament. Furthermore, article 31 reiterated that all the powers stemmed from the Nation and were to be exercised as provided by the Constitution, while article 44 established the principle of accountability, taking into consideration that the King only possessed the powers that were bestowed on him by the Constitution and by the laws applying the same.

The Assembly chose the system of a single chamber Parliament (Vouli) with a four-year term, and hence abolished the Senate, which many accused for being a tool in the hands of the monarchy. Direct, secret and universal elections was adopted as the manner to elect the MPs, while elections were to be held simultaneously throughout the entire nation.

In addition, article 71 introduced a conflict between being an MP and a salaried public employee or mayor at the same time, but not with serving as an army officer.

The Constitution reiterated various clauses found in the Constitution of 1844, such as that the King appoints and dismisses the ministers and that the latter are responsible for the person of the monarch, but it also allowed for the Parliament to establish "examination committees". Moreover, the King preserved the right to convoke the Parliament in ordinary as well as in extraordinary sessions, and to dissolve it at his discretion, provided, however, that the dissolution decree was also countersigned by the Cabinet.

The Constitution repeated verbatim the clause of article 24 of the Constitution of 1844, according to which "The King appoints and removes his Ministers". This phrase insinuated that the ministers were practically subordinate to the monarch, and thereby answered not only to the Parliament but to him as well. Moreover, nowhere was it stated in the Constitution that the King was obliged to appoint the Cabinet in conformity with the will of the majority in Parliament. This was, however, the interpretation that the modernizing political forces of the land upheld, invoking the principle of popular sovereignty and the spirit of the Parliamentary regime. They finally succeeded in imposing it through the principle of "manifest confidence" of the Parliament, which was expressed in 1875 by Charilaos Trikoupis and which, that same year, in his Crown Speech, King George I expressly pledged to uphold: "I demand as a prerequisite, of all that I call beside me to assist me in governing the country, to possess the manifest confidence and trust of the majority of the Nation's representatives. Furthermore, I accept this approval to stem from the Parliament, as without it the harmonious functioning of the polity would be impossible".

The establishment of the principle of "manifest confidence" towards the end of the first decade of the crowned democracy, contributed towards the disappearance of a constitutional practice which, in many ways, reiterated the negative experiences of the period of the reign of King Otto. Indeed, from 1864 through 1875 numerous elections of dubious validity had taken place, while, additionally and most importantly, there was an active involvement of the Throne in political affairs through the appointment of governments enjoying a minority in Parliament, or through the forced resignation of majority governments, when their political views clashed with those of the crown.

External links

  • ソーシャルブックマークに追加:

gooウェブ検索 急上昇ランキング (総合)
注目のニュース - gooニュース
橋下氏「慰安婦必要」は撤回せず
参院選投開票「7月21日」石破氏
大阪の2遺体、幼児が先に死亡か
北、韓国大統領を呼び捨てで非難
犠牲の黒人4少女に米最高位勲章
課税逃れ防止へ、G8が国際ルール
急性腎盂炎の杉本有美、完治報告
バイエルン5度目の優勝 欧州CL
gooのお知らせ
おもいやり食堂gooヘルスケア「おもいやり食堂」ヘルシー美味しい社員食堂に「おもいやり」。健康に配慮した人への“食”を通じた「おもいやり」。
スマホ版gooトップページの使い方gooトップページさらに使いやすくなった「スマホ版gooトップページ」の使い方をご紹介。実は60種類以上のデザインが選べるんです
gooブログのスマホアプリgooブログのスマホアプリを使えばいつでもどこでもブログが書ける♪今日を明日の思い出にしよう!
災害用伝言サービスから節電サポートまでNTTグループ内の災害対策リンク集で、万が一のための情報を知っておこう。
goo電子書籍特集「キミと話がしたいのだ。」何気ないしあわせ、疲れたココロに染みわたる、珠玉のショートストーリー。
Wikipedia記事検索について
gooサービス
不動産   賃貸   歌詞   恋愛相談   婚活   ダイエット   地図   乗り換え案内   天気   エコ   節電   中古車   バイク   講座   資格   求人転職   アルバイト   マネー   電話番号   国内旅行   海外旅行   行列ラーメン店   ビジネスコラム   プレスリリース   健康食品   妊娠・出産   子育て