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House of Magnates
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The House of Magnates (Hungarian: Főrendiház; German: Magnatenhaus; Romanian: Camera Magnaților; Italian: Camera dei Magnati) was the upper chamber of the Diet of Hungary. This chamber was operational from 1867 to 1918 and subsequently from 1927 to 1945.[1]
Key Information
The house was, like the current House of Lords in the United Kingdom, composed of hereditaries, ecclesiastics, and, unlike the House of Lords, deputized representatives from autonomous regions (similar to Resident Commissioners of United States territories). The House had no fixed membership size, as anyone who met the qualifications could sit in it. The official list was composed of:
- Princes of the Royal House who have attained their majority (16 in 1904)
- Hereditary peers who paid at least 3000 florins a year land tax (237 in 1904) (2.178 kg of gold ; at its 1896 exchange rate, £1 was worth 12 florins, so this comes to £250)
- High dignitaries of the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches (42 in 1904)
- Representatives of the Protestant confessions (13 in 1904)
- Life peers appointed by the Crown, not exceeding 50 in number, and life peers elected by the house itself (73 altogether in 1904)
- Various state dignitaries and high judges (19 in 1904)
- Three delegates of Croatia-Slavonia
For a full list of the speakers, see List of speakers of the House of Magnates.
The modern parliament of Hungary, the National Assembly, is unicameral and meets in the lower house, while the old upper house is used as a conference and meeting room and for tourism.
The shaping of the House of Parliament grew out of conscious choices of symbolism and carries important historical and political messages. Viewing it from the side of the Danube, we see the halls of the lower and upper houses rise on both sides of the dome surrounded by turrets, which evoke the memory of the bicameral parliament that was in operation when the building was being constructed. The two halls are completely identical in size and shape, thus expressing the equality between the representative lower house and the historical upper house. The dome rising between them signifies the unity of the legislature as well as serving as the venue for joint sittings of the two chambers.
Gallery
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Assembly hall of the House of Magnates
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United Nations conference in the assembly hall of the House of Magnates in 2012. Today the Upper House is used as a conference and meeting room and for tourism.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Nathan Kay (18 November 2019). "The secrets and symbols of Hungary's Parliament building". CNN.
External links
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Media related to House of Magnates at Wikimedia Commons
House of Magnates
View on GrokipediaEstablishment and Legal Framework
Origins in the Austro-Hungarian Compromise
The Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 (Ausgleich or Kiegyezés) established the dual monarchy between Austria and Hungary, restoring constitutional governance in the Kingdom of Hungary after a period of absolutist rule imposed following the 1848–1849 revolution. On February 17, 1867, Emperor Franz Joseph I reinstated the Hungarian constitution, enabling the reconvening of the Diet of Hungary (Országgyűlés) as a bicameral legislature. This body included a lower house, the House of Representatives (Képviselőház), elected on a restricted suffrage basis, and an upper house designated the House of Magnates (Főrendiház), which represented aristocratic, ecclesiastical, and institutional interests to provide continuity with Hungary's feudal traditions and a conservative counterbalance to the elected chamber.[7][8] The formal organization of the House of Magnates emerged from negotiations led by Hungarian statesman Gyula Andrássy and the emperor's representatives, culminating in legislative acts passed by the provisional Hungarian Diet in March 1867 and elaborated in the December Laws (promulgated December 21, 1867), which served as the foundational constitutional framework until 1918. Law XII of 1867 codified key aspects of the dualist settlement, including shared foreign policy and military responsibilities, while ancillary laws delineated parliamentary structures, vesting the upper house with powers of legislative review and amendment. The Magnates' chamber drew directly from the historical "Table of Magnates" (Főrendek Tábla) of pre-1848 diets, adapting it into a modern institution modeled partly on the British House of Lords to safeguard noble privileges amid industrialization and liberal reforms.[9][10] This arrangement privileged empirical continuity with Hungary's estate-based political heritage, where magnates—numbering around 200 major noble families—had long dominated decision-making, ensuring that the upper house could veto or delay bills perceived as threatening social hierarchies or property rights. Initial membership encompassed all princes of the royal house over 16 years old (later adjusted to 24), hereditary peers paying at least 3,000 forints in annual taxes, high-ranking clergy such as archbishops and bishops, and life appointees selected by the king from prominent officials, scholars, or landowners. The emperor's coronation as King of Hungary on June 8, 1867, in Budapest symbolically affirmed the dual monarchy's structure, with the House of Magnates playing a pivotal role in subsequent validations of the Compromise.[11][12]Constitutional Basis and Initial Organization
The House of Magnates (Főrendiház) was constituted as the upper house of Hungary's restored bicameral Diet under the constitutional framework of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, which ended the absolutist suspension of Hungarian parliamentary institutions since 1849 and granted internal autonomy to the Kingdom of Hungary while maintaining a shared monarch, foreign affairs, and defense with the Austrian Empire.[13] [14] This settlement, negotiated primarily by Ferenc Deák and ratified by the provisional Diet convened in Budapest starting February 1867, was enshrined in Law XII of 1867, affirming Hungary's sovereign legislative authority over domestic matters through its parliament.[15] [16] The initial organization of the House drew from the customary structure of the pre-1848 feudal Diet's upper table of magnates and prelates, formalized under the April Laws of 1848 and restored without fundamental alteration in 1867 to balance the popularly elected lower House of Representatives.[17] Membership was inherently non-elective and lifelong, comprising three principal categories: ecclesiastical dignitaries (all Roman Catholic archbishops and bishops, plus select Protestant superintendents); hereditary peers (including princes of the royal house upon majority, counts, and barons meeting land tax thresholds derived from noble privileges); and royal nominees such as high state officials (e.g., county lord-lieutenants, the ban of Croatia-Slavonia, and certain judicial leaders).[18] [19] The king retained prerogative to appoint additional life peers to ensure aristocratic representation and stability, with no fixed numerical limit initially, resulting in approximately 200-250 members at inception based on qualified nobles and clergy.[18] Procedural rules for the House emphasized consensus among elites, with sessions convened by royal decree alongside the lower house, typically requiring a simple majority for decisions but allowing veto over legislation deemed contrary to constitutional traditions.[18] This setup reflected causal priorities of preserving noble influence against mass democracy, as the chamber's composition inherently favored landed wealth and ecclesiastical authority over popular sovereignty, without elected elements until the 1885 reform.[17] The first post-Compromise session of the full Diet, including the organized Magnates, convened in Ofen (Buda) on March 1, 1869, after preparatory laws on elections and procedures were enacted.[13]Composition and Membership
Hereditary Peers and Aristocratic Representation
The hereditary peers constituted the foundational aristocratic element in the House of Magnates, ensuring representation of Hungary's high nobility as established under the 1867 Austro-Hungarian Compromise. Prior to reforms, membership extended to all adult male descendants of families granted hereditary status by Hungarian kings or through legislative naturalization, without property qualifications.[17] This resulted in over 700 hereditary peers by 1885, comprising approximately 87% of the chamber's 836 members, including 31 dukes, 452 counts, and 245 barons.[17] The 1885 reform, enacted via Act VII of 1885, addressed the chamber's excessive size and diluted aristocratic influence by imposing a property threshold: hereditary peers were required to hold Hungarian citizenship and pay at least 3,000 forints in annual land census tax, equivalent to estates yielding a net income of no less than 11,765 forints.[17] [18] This criterion effectively limited access to wealthier magnate lineages, reducing the number of hereditary peers to around 200, or about 60% of the total membership, which fluctuated between 346 and 391 seats in the late 1880s and 1890s.[17] Of the pre-reform hereditary cohort, 198 opted to retain seats, while 73% initially exited due to failure to meet the tax requirement or foreign affiliations barring participation.[17] Despite the contraction, the reform preserved the chamber's aristocratic orientation, with prominent families such as the Eszterházy and Széchényi maintaining clusters of 10 or more members.[17] Hereditary peers thus continued to dominate deliberations, reflecting the nobility's entrenched role in Hungarian governance during the Dual Monarchy era, though the threshold shifted emphasis toward economically viable estates amid broader liberalization pressures.[17] This structure underscored a deliberate balance between tradition and fiscal realism, prioritizing magnates capable of sustaining influence through land-based wealth.[18]Ecclesiastical and Institutional Members
The ecclesiastical members of the House of Magnates served ex officio as representatives of Hungary's recognized churches, reflecting the chamber's role in incorporating religious dignitaries into legislative oversight during the Dual Monarchy period (1867–1918). These included high-ranking Catholic prelates such as the Prince-Primate of Esztergom, the archbishops of Kalocsa and Eger, diocesan bishops, the archabbot of Pannonhalma, the provost of Jászó, and the prior of Auranien, alongside Orthodox representatives like the patriarch of Karlocza and the metropolitan of Gyulafehérvár. Protestant churches were also entitled to seats for their highest clerical and lay dignitaries, encompassing Reformed, Lutheran, Unitarian, and Greek Catholic leaders, with post-1885 reforms explicitly admitting Protestant and Reformed representatives to balance Catholic dominance.[20][21][4] Prior to the 1885 reform (Act VII), Catholic prelates occupied approximately 50 seats, a figure reduced by about one-third through the exclusion of most auxiliary and titular bishops, streamlining membership while preserving core diocesan representation; total ecclesiastical seats stabilized at 50–60, varying with episcopal vacancies.[20][22] These members voiced denominational interests, often navigating tensions between state loyalty, ecclesiastical duties, and ethnic constituencies within multi-confessional Hungary.[21] Institutional members complemented the ecclesiastical element by providing representation from economic and cultural bodies, elected or delegated rather than serving ex officio. These encompassed delegates from chambers of commerce and industry—one per major chamber—as well as representatives from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and select professional associations, ensuring input from mercantile and intellectual elites into legislative review.[21] The 1885 reform further refined this category by excluding certain administrative officials like lord-lieutenants, focusing seats on merit-based or representational roles to cap total membership at around 350 and enhance deliberative efficiency.[17][23] Such members typically numbered in the dozens, advocating for commercial policies and institutional reforms amid Hungary's industrialization.[21]Evolution of Membership Criteria
The membership of the House of Magnates, established under the 1867 constitutional framework following the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, initially encompassed all hereditary peers (including princes of the royal house, counts, barons, and ancient nobles or indigenae), senior ecclesiastical leaders (such as Catholic archbishops and bishops, Orthodox metropolitans, and heads of Protestant confessions), select state officials (e.g., banner lords or zászlósurak, crown guards or koronaőrök, and county lords-lieutenant or főispánok), and members of the royal family upon reaching adulthood.[23] No fixed numerical cap existed, resulting in potentially over 800 eligible members by the mid-1880s, though actual attendance remained low, with hereditary peers dominating but many inactive due to absence of incentives or quorum requirements.[24] Criteria emphasized birthright, ecclesiastical rank, or ex officio status, excluding titular bishops and lower clergy, with Croatian magnates limited to participation in joint Austro-Hungarian affairs unless holding Hungarian estates.[23] Reform debates from the 1870s, driven by figures like Kálmán Tisza, highlighted the chamber's anachronistic size and aristocratic exclusivity amid industrialization and fiscal pressures, proposing property qualifications to prune inactive or impoverished nobles while incorporating merit-based elements.[24] These culminated in Act VII of 1885, which fundamentally altered criteria to balance tradition with functionality: hereditary membership required payment of at least 3,000 forints in annual land tax (later adjusted in practice but not formally lowered), slashing eligible peers from around 728 to 170–250 by excluding those below the threshold or non-residents; up to 50 life peers could be appointed by the king for "distinguished service" (e.g., scholars, industrialists, former ministers), without census requirements; and a transitional one-time election of 50 life members occurred on May 15, 1885, by secret ballot among sitting members, selecting from disqualified aristocrats to mitigate backlash and ensure continuity, with these seats held for life but diminishing via attrition.[23][4] Ecclesiastical and official categories persisted, though titular bishops were formally excluded, and Protestant representation expanded slightly (e.g., to 13 seats by 1918); total membership stabilized at approximately 350, with aristocrats comprising 71–77% by 1914.[24][17] Subsequent adjustments were incremental: Act VIII of 1886 mandated registration of hereditary families in a "Family Book" to verify eligibility, while 1896 added ex officio seats for judicial leaders like the president of the Royal Curia; new noble titles (e.g., 32 families granted 1885–1918) and life appointments periodically expanded ranks, incorporating non-aristocrats like industrialists and even 9% Jewish members by 1918.[24] After suspension post-1918 revolution, the chamber was reconstituted in 1927 as the Upper House under Law XXVI of 1927, retaining core 1885 categories—hereditary peers meeting the tax census, clergy, life appointees, and officials—but adapting to post-Trianon territorial losses by emphasizing loyalist appointments and reducing overall scale to 235–240 members, without introducing broad elections or abolishing aristocratic primacy, until dissolution in 1945.[25][26]| Membership Category | Pre-1885 Criteria (1867–1884) | Post-1885 Criteria (1885–1918/1945) |
|---|---|---|
| Hereditary Peers | Birthright noble status; no tax minimum; ~728 eligible | ≥3,000 Ft annual land tax; reduced to ~170–250; registration required |
| Life Appointees | None formalized | Royal nomination for service; capped at 50 |
| Elected Members | None | One-time 50 seats (1885) from disqualified peers; lifelong, no reelection |
| Ecclesiastical | Senior bishops/heads by rank | Retained seniors; excluded titulars; Protestant expansion |
| Officials/Royal | Ex officio select roles | Retained/expanded (e.g., judges 1896); royal family upon majority |