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Privy Council
(redirected from privy councilor)

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Privy Council

Historically, the British sovereign's private council. Once powerful, the Privy Council has long ceased to be an active body, having lost most of its judicial and political functions since the middle of the 17th century. It grew out of the medieval curia (curia regis), which comprised the king's tenants in chief, household officials, and other advisers. The curia performed all the functions of government in either small groups, which became the king's council, or large groups, which grew into the great council and Parliament. It now is chiefly concerned with issuing royal charters, conducting government research, and serving as an appeals body for ecclesiastical and other lesser courts. See also prerogative court.


Privy Council
the private council of the British sovereign, consisting of all current and former ministers of the Crown and other distinguished subjects, all of whom are appointed for life


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The royal commission responds to the privy council and as a cabinet minister I am a privy councilor," Karalus told a press conference.
I'm today announcing the establishment of an independent privy councilor committee of inquiry," he told the House of Commons, saying it would have access "to the fullest range of information, including secret information.
With its evidence of the procedures and motives of censorship and revision," Clegg notes, this section of the Chronicles "suggests that in the 1580s the often divergent views held by many English citizens, the queen, and her Privy Councilors converged in a vision of England as a great Protestant nation" (15).
 
 
 
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