Online Encyclopedia

MAYOR OF THE PALACE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 938 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MAYOR OF THE PALACE  .—The office of mayor of the palace was an institution
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peculiar to the Franks of the Merovingian period . A landowner who did not
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manage his own estate placed it in the hands of a steward (major), who superintended the working of the estate and collected its revenues . If he had several estates, he appointed a chief steward, who managed the whole of the estates and was called the major domus . Each
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great personage had a major domus—the queen had hers, the king his; and since the royal house was called the palace, this officer took the name of " mayor of the palace." The mayor of the palace, however, did not remain restricted to domestic functions; he had the discipline of the palace and tried persons who resided there . Soon his functions
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expanded . If the king were a minor, the mayor of the palace supervised his
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education in the capacity of
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guardian (nutricius), and often also occupied himself with affairs of state . When the king came of age, the mayor exerted himself to keep this power, and succeeded . In the 7th century he be-came the head of the administration and a veritable prime minis-ter . He took
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part in the nomination of the
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counts and dukes; in the king's absence he presided over the royal tribunal; and he often commanded the armies . When the custom of commendation
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developed, the king charged the mayor of the palace to protect those who had commended themselves to him and to 1 The mayors of certain cities in the
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United
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Kingdom (
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London, York,
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Dublin) have acquired by
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prescription the prefix of " lord." In the case of London it seems to date from 1540 . It has also been conferred during the closing years of the 19th century by letters patent on other cities—Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, Bristol, Sheffield, Leeds,
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Cardiff, Bradford, Newcastle-on-
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Tyne,
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Belfast, Cork . In 1910 it was granted to Norwich .

Lord mayors are entitled to be addressed as right

honourable."intervene at law on their behalf . The mayor of the palace thus found himself at the head of the commendati, just as he was at the head of the functionaries . It is difficult to trace the names of some of the mayors of the palace, the
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post being of almost no significance in the time of Gregory of
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Tours . When the office increased in importance the mayors of the palace did not, as has been thought, pursue an identical policy . Some—for instance,
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Otto, the mayor of the palace of
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Austrasia towards 64o—were devoted to the
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Crown . On the other hand, mayors like Flaochat (in
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Burgundy) and Erkinoald (in
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Neustria) stirred up the great nobles, who claimed the right to take part in their nomination, against the king . Others again, sought to exercise the power in their own name both against the king and against the great nobles—such as Ebroin (in Neustria), and, later, the
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Carolingians Pippin II., Charles Martel, and Pippin III., who, after making use of the great nobles, kept the authority for themselves . In 751 Pippin III., fortified by his consultation with Pope
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Zacharias, could quite naturally
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exchange the title of mayor for that of king; and when he became king, he suppressed the title of mayor of the palace . It must be observed that from 639 there were generally
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separate mayors of Neustria, Austrasia and Burgundy, even when Austrasia and Burgundy formed a single kingdom; the mayor was a sign of the independence of the region . Each mayor, however, sought to supplant the others; the Pippins and Charles Martel succeeded, and their victory was at the same time the victory of Austrasia over Neustria and Burgundy . See G . H .

Pertz, Geschichte der merowingischen Hausmeier (Han-over, 1819) ; H . Bonnell, De dignitate majoris domus (Berlin, i858) ; E . Hermann, Das Hausmeieramt, ein echt germanisches Amt, vol. ix. of Untersuchungen zur deutschen Staats- and Rechtsgeschichte, ed. by O . Gierke (Breslau, 1878, seq.); G . Waitz, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte, 3rd ed., revised by K . Zeumer; and Fustel de Coulanges, Histoire
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des institutions politiques de t' ancienne France: La monarchie franque (Paris, 1888) . (C .

End of Article: MAYOR OF THE PALACE
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MAYOR (Lat. major, greater)
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JOHN EYTON BICKERSTETH MAYOR (1825– )

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