Reichskammergericht

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Wetzlar, Germany: Reichskammergericht
Wetzlar, Germany: Reichskammergericht

The Reichskammergericht (Imperial Chamber Court) was one of two highest judicial institutions in the Holy Roman Empire, the other one being the Reichshofrat (Aulic Council) in Vienna. It was founded in 1495 by the Reichstag in Worms. All legal proceedings in the Holy Roman Empire could be brought to the Reichskammergericht, except if the ruler of the territory had a so-called privilegium de non appellando, in which case the highest judicial institution was founded by the ruler of that territory. Another exception was criminal law. The Reichskammergericht could only intervene in criminal cases if basic procedural rules had been violated.

The Reichskammergericht was infamous for the long time it took to reach a judgement. Some proceedings, especially in lawsuits between territories belonging to the Holy Roman Empire, took several hundred years. Some of the lawsuits were not brought to an end by the time it was dissolved in 1806, after the downfall of the Holy Roman Empire. Yet, lately it has been discovered that this could often be attributed to a loss of interest on the part of the parties involved, and that the court could sometimes be much more efficient than previously thought. Sometimes the court even ordered injunctions within a few days.

Recent research also brought to light that, especially in the 18th century, the rulings of the Reichskammergericht anticipated in many ways the constitutional establishment of civil liberties in Germany. For instance, the inviolability of one's housing or freedom of trade were legally introduced in the Empire by rulings of the court. At the end of the 18th century some contemporaries even compared the Reichskammergericht to the National Assembly in France.

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Audience of the Reichskammergericht in the 18th century
Audience of the Reichskammergericht in the 18th century

From the early middle ages there had been a supreme court of justice for the Empire--the Hofgcricht, in which the emperor himself presided. The Hofgericht was connected directly with the emperor, so it ceased to act when he was abroad and disbanded when he died. In the 15th century, the emperor ceased to command as much respect, so his court lost the confidence of his subjects. Its place was taken by the Kammergericht.

The king (or his deputy) still presided in the Kammergericht and it was still his personal court; but the members of the court were now officials of the court. It was generally the legal members of the council who sat in the Kammergericht. The Kamrnergericht, fell into disuse in the later years of the reign of Frederick III; and the creation of a new and efficient court became a matter of pressing necessity, and was one of the most urgent of the reforms which were mooted in the reign of Maximilian I.

The province of the Imperial Chamber, as it came to be gradually defined by statute and use, extended to breaches of the public peace, cases of arbitrary distrait or imprisonment, pleas which concerned the treasury, violations of the emperors decrees or the laws passed by the diet, disputes about property between immediate tenants of the Empire or the subjects of different rulers, and finally suits against immediate tenants of the Empire (with the exception of criminal charges and matters relating to imperial fiefs, which went to the Aulic Council).

In all its business it suffered from the competition. of the Aulic Council; and after the 16th century devoted itself exclusively to judicial work.

Composed of the personal advisers of the emperor, the Aulic Council did justice on his behalf. The competition between the Aulic Council and the Imperial Chamber was finally regulated by the treaty of Westphalia, which laid it down that the court which first dealt with a case should alone have competence to pursue it.

Membership of the court was determined by both the emperor and the component states of the Empire. The emperor named the chief justice (always a high aristrocrat), several presidents of the court senates, and some of the members of the court. The majority of the judges were selected by the estates of the Empire. Originally, half of the judges were knights of the empire, and the other half doctors of Roman law, but after 1548 all judges had to be doctors of law.

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Coordinates: 50°33′12″N, 8°30′07″E

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