LONDON (Reuters) - The West’s last remaining feudal system has come to an end after the Privy Council endorsed a vote by locals on the tiny Channel Island of Sark to change the way they are governed.
The West's last remaining feudal system has come to an end after the Privy Council endorsed a vote by locals on the tiny Channel Island of Sark to change the way they are governed. REUTERS/Graphics
Sark, which lies about 6 miles east of Guernsey off the coast of Normandy, has broadly held onto its political and judicial systems since Queen Elizabeth I bestowed them upon it nearly 450 years ago.
The car-free island has been governed by a mainly unelected parliament called the Chief Pleas, traditionally made up of members of landed families. It meets just a few times a year.
The seigneur, effectively the lord of Sark or head landlord, appoints the judiciary and has until recently been entitled to a cut from any property bought and sold on the island and even to the ancient system of tithe levies.
In return, he must maintain an army to keep the island “free of the Queen’s enemies”.
But locals and modernizers want a fully elected 28-member chamber and the 600 residents opted for the change in a poll at the end of 2006.
Every person who has lived on the island for more than a year is now entitled to take part in elections. The first will be in December, with the parliament sitting for the first time the following January.
The changes will also see the introduction of a legal expert who will take part in any complicated or sensitive case.
The island’s seneschal, or judge, who also presides over its parliament, Lieutenant Colonel Reg Guille, said the changes to both the judiciary and government would modernize both.
But he said island life would go on as normal.
“It’s a very quiet and peaceful place: we are a self-sufficient, close-knit community and we like to get on with life away from the public eye.”
Editing by Giles Elgood
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