- House law
House law or House laws ("Hausgesetze") are rules that govern a
royal family ordynasty in matters of eligibility for succession to a throne, membership in adynasty , exercise of a regency, or entitlement to dynastic rank,titles and styles. Prevalent in European monarchies during the nineteenth century, few countries have house laws any longer, so that they are, as a category of law, of more historical than current significance.Some dynasties have
codified house laws, which then form a distinct section of the laws of therealm , e.g.Monaco ,Liechtenstein and, formerly, most of Germany's monarchies, as well as Austria and Russia. Other monarchies had few laws regulating royal life. In still others, whatever laws existed were not gathered in any particular section of the nation's laws. InGermany where many dynasties reigned as more or less independent sovereigns, laws governing dynastic rights constituted a distinct branch of jurisprudence called private princely law ("Privatfürstenrecht").Dynastic Traditions
In some cases, house laws are rules or
tradition s that are treated as if they have the force of law. In theUnited Kingdom an example of this might be considered the custom whereby a wife shares in her husband's hereditary titles and rank. While this is settledcommon law with respect to the wives of peers and commoners, it is less clear when it comes to consorts of the king and princes. When, in 1923, Prince Albert, Duke of York became the first member of the Britishroyal family to marry a non-princess in more than 300 years (with the sovereign's approval), so an announcement was apparently issued byBuckingham Palace and carried in the "London Gazette " and "The Times ", "It is officially announced that, in accordance with the settled general rule that a wife takes the status of her husband, Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon on her marriage has become Her Royal Highness the Duchess of York, with the status of a Princess" [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/britain/drafting_lp1937.htm#documents_] .This issue was re-visited by the British government in 1937 and 2005, when the marriages of a former and a future king to divorcées cast into doubt what titulature was appropriate for women who were to become, essentially, the "private" wives of royal princes. As can be gleaned from discussions at the time, popular certainty that "a woman is entitled to share her husband's status", has by no means been seen as absolutely clear by government experts and lawyers upon examining the matter [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/britain/drafting_lp1937.htm#Description] .
Extraordinary Law
Where they have existed, dynastic house laws have often been extraordinary compared to other national laws. The house laws of the families of the Austrian and German emperors were not made public until after the fall of the monarchy in 1918. Luxembourg's grand duke has made modifications to his country's dynastic law that remain unknown to the public at present [http://groups.google.com/group/alt.talk.royalty/msg/975149b7fc52303c] . Russia's house laws were applied -- or not -- at the Emperor's decision. Even today, the house laws of the dynasty that has exclusive right to succeed to the throne of
Liechtenstein may not be amended by either theparliament or populace of the principality, and until the late 1990s the reigning Prince could not be dethroned except according to the house law -- which stipulated that ouster was only possible by a vote of his own family members.Royal Marriages
Nearly all house laws have regulated dynasts' right to marry.
Paul I of Russia established the house law of the Romanovs, one of the strictest inEurope . The consorts of Russian dynasts had to be "equally born" (i.e., belong to royal or ruling house) and be approved by theEmperor .While some German dynasties included in their laws language requiring or urging the monarch to consent to any "equal" marriage, some heads of dynastic houses rejected royal matches on behalf of their family members. The French pretender denied his daughter,
Princess Hélène d'Orléans , the opportunity to become Queen Consort of Britain by refusing her permission to convert toAnglicanism to marryPrince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence . In the late 19th or early 20th centuries the monarchs ofBelgium , Russia, andSpain all withheld consent from members of their families to marry for love into foreign dynasties:Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich of Russia andInfante Alfonso de Borbon-Orléans of Spain sought to marry a pair of sisters who were also British princesses, Victoria Melita andPrincess Beatrice of Edinburgh , choosing toelope and endure (temporary)banishment rather than obey their sovereigns' commands.Evolution of dynastic law
Dethroned European dynasties continued to enforce their house laws until after
World War I , even though they had no legal authority to do so. Some continued doing so through the 20th century (Bourbon-Sicily, Prussia,Wurttemberg ). Governments in extant monarchies, without calling the legal mechanisms "house laws", have generally strengthened their control over the marriages of members of their royal families since the second half of the 20th century. Previously a prince could often morganatically marry a woman not deemed acceptable as a royal consort, relegating her and their children to a sub-royal status. That is rarely an option anymore. In mostWestern Europe an monarchies of today, a prince must renounce or forfeit membership in the royal family if his chosen spouse is not deemed suitable, e.g.Prince Johan-Friso of Orange-Nassau .ee also
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Salic law
*Hereditary monarchy
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