- Tetracameralism
Tetracameralism (Greek "tetra", four + Latin "camera", chamber) is the practice of having four legislative or parliamentary chambers. It is contrasted to
unicameralism andbicameralism , which are far more common, andtricameralism , which is rarely used in government.Medieval Scandinavian deliberative assemblies were traditionally tetracameral, with four estates; the nobility, the clergy, the burghers and the peasants. The Swedish and Finnish
Riksdag of the Estates maintained this tradition the longest, having four separate legislative bodies.Finland, as a part of Imperial Russia had tetracameral system until 1906, when it was followed by the then most modern legislature, the unicameral Parliament, with
universal suffrage .
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