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See also: ling), etymologically, and also to a large extent historically, an officer charged with the superintendence of domestic affairs
.
Such were the chamberlains of monasteries or cathedrals, who had See also: charge of the finances, gave See also: notice of chapter meetings, and provided the materials necessary for the various services
.
In these cases, as in that of the apostolic See also: chamberlain of the
See also: Roman see, the title was borrowed from the usage of the courts of the western secular princes
.
A royal chamberlain is now a See also: court official whose See also: function is in general to attend on the See also: person of the See also: sovereign and to regulate the See also: etiquette of the palace
.
He is the representative of the See also: medieval camberlanus, cambellanus, or cubicularius, whose office was modelled on that of the praefectus sacri cubiculi or cubicularius of the Roman emperors
.
But at the outset there was another class of chamberlains, the camerarii, i.e. high officials charged with the administration of the royal See also: treasury (camera)
.
The See also: camerarius of the Carolingian emperors was the See also: equivalent of the hordere or thesaurarius (treasurer) of the Anglo-Saxon See also: kings; he develops into the Erzk¢mmerer (archicamerarius) of the See also: Holy Roman See also: Empire, an office held by the margraves of See also: Brandenburg, and the See also: grand chambrier of See also: France, who held his chamberie as a See also: fief
.
Similarly in See also: England after the Norman See also: conquest the hordere becomes the chamberlain
.
This office was of See also: great importance
.
Before the Conquest he had been, with the marshal, the See also: principal officer of the See also: king's court; and under the Norman sovereigns his functions were manifold
.
As he had charge of the administration of the royal
See also: household, his office was of See also: financial importance, for a portion of the royal revenue was paid, not into the See also: exchequer, but in camera regis
.
In course of See also: time the office became hereditary and titular, but the complexities of the duties necessitated a division of the See also: work, and the office was split up into three: the hereditary and sinecure office of magister camerarius or See also: lord great chamberlain (see LORD GREAT CHAMBERLAIN), the more important domestic office of camerarius regis, king's chamberlain or lord chamberlain (see LoRD CHAMBERLAIN), and the chamberlains (camerarii) of the exchequer, two in number, who were originally representatives of the chamberlain at the exchequer, and afterwards in conjunction with the treasurer presided over that department
.
In 1826 the last of these officials died, when by an See also: act passed See also: forty-four years earlier they disappeared
.
In France the office of grand chambrier was early overshadowed by the chamberlains (cubicularii, cambellani, but sometimes also camerarii), officials in close See also: personal attendance on the king, men at first of low See also: rank, but of great and ever-increasing influence
.
As the office of grand chambrier, held by great feudal nobles seldom at court, became more and more honorary, the chamberlains See also: grew in power, in numbers and in rank, until, in the 13th century, one of them emerges as a great officer of See also: state, the chambellan de France or grand chambellan (also magister cambellanorum, mestre chamberlenc), who at times shares with the grand chambrier the revenues derived from certain
trades in the city of See also: Paris (see Regestum Memoralium Camerae computorum, quoted in du Cange, s
.
Camerarius)
.
The honorary office of grand chambrier survived till the time of See also: Henry II., who was himself the last to hold it before his accession; that of grand chambellan, which in its turn soon became purely honorary, survived till the Revolution
.
Among the prerogatives of the grand chambellan which survived to the last not the least valued was the right to
See also: hand the king his See also: shirt at the ceremonial See also: levee
.
The offices of grand chambellan, premier chambellan, and chambellan were revived by See also: Napoleon, continued under the Restoration, abolished by See also: Louis Philippe, and again restored by Napoleon III
.
In the papal
See also: Curia the apostolic chamberlain (See also: Lat. camerarius, Ital. camerlingo) occupies a very important position
.
He is at the See also: head of the treasury (camera thesauraria) and, in the days of the temporal power, not only administered the papal finances but possessed an extensive See also: civil and criminal jurisdiction
.
During a vacancy of the Holy See he is at the head of the ad-ministration of the Roman See also: Church
.
The office
See also: dates from the Isth century, when it superseded that of archdeacon of the Roman Church, and the close personal relations of the camerarius with the See also: pope, together with the fact that he is the official See also: guardian of the ceremonial See also: vestments and treasures, point to the fact that he is also the representative of the former vestararius and See also: vice-dominus, whose functions were merged in the new office, of which the idea and title were probably borrowed from the usage of the secular courts of the West (See also: Hinschius, Kirchenrecht, i
.
405, &c.)
.
There are also attached to the papal household (famiglia pontificia) a large number of chamberlains whose functions are more or less ornamental . These are divided into several categories: privy chamberlains (camerieri segreti), chamberlains, assistant and honorary chamberlains . These are gentlemen of rank and belong to the highest class of the household (fa:miglia nobile) . In England the See also: modern representatives of the cubicularii are the gentlemen and grooms of the See also: bed-chamber, in See also: Germany the Kammerherr (Kammerer, from camerarius, in See also: Bavaria and See also: Austria) and Kammerjunker
.
The insignia of their office is a gold See also: key attached to their coats behind
.
Many corporations appoint a chamberlain
.
The most important in England is the chamberlain of the corporation of the city of
See also: London, who is treasurer of the corporation, admits persons entitled to the freedom of the city, and, in the chamberlain's court, of which he and the vice-chamberlain are See also: judges, exercises concurrent jurisdiction with the police court in determining disputes between masters and apprentices
.
Formerly nominated by the See also: crown, since 1688 he has been elected annually by the liverymen
.
He has a See also: salary of £2000 a See also: year
.
Similarly in Germany the administration of the finances of a city is called the Kammerei and the official in charge of it the Kammerer
.
See also STATE, GREAT See also: OFFICERS OF ; HOUSEHOLD, ROYAL ; Du
Cange, Glossarium, s
.
" Camerarius " and " Cambellanus " ; Pere Anselme (See also: Pierre de Guibours), Hist. genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, £sc
.
(9 vols., 3rd ed., 1726—1733) ; A . Luchaire,See also: Manuel See also: des institutions francaises (Paris, 1892); W
.
R
.
Anson, See also: Law and See also: Custom of the Constitution (See also: Oxford, 1896) ; Hinschius, Kirchenrecht, i
.
405 (Berlin, 1869)
.
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