Nihil Novi

Nihil Novi ( to German No New) was a Constitution of the Polish Diet of Radom in 1505, in which King Alexander of Poland, the House of Deputies the right to legislative awarded ( " ut deinceps futuristic Temporibus perpetuis, nihil novi constitui debeat by Nos et Successores nostro sine communi Consiliariorum et Nuntiorum Terrestrium consensu ").

" Nihil novi " continued the Statute of Mielnik from 1501, which conceded the Senate the right to renunciation of obedience in breach of the monarch, except power and legalized the Sejm as a bicameral assembly, consisting of three political stands - the monarch, the senators and the in the House of Deputies elected representatives of the nobility - should you be, and moved the main part of the deliberations of the Sejm by the Senate to the House of Deputies. The Constitution Nihil Novi was one of the most important pillars of the Polish- Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Source

  • Digital processing of Krakow pressure from the year 1506.
  • Polish history
  • Legal source of the early modern period
  • Legal source ( Poland)
  • Constitution
  • Constitutional History
  • Latin phrase
  • 1505
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