Rigsraadet
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Rigsraadet (English The Council of the Realm or The Council of the State - sometimes translated as "Privy Council"), is the name of the councils of the Scandinavian countries that ruled the countries together with the kings from late Middle Ages to the 17th century. Norway had a Council of the Realm (Riksrådet) that was abolished by the Danish-Norwegian king in 1536. In Sweden the parallel Council gradually came under the influence of the king during the 1600s.
[edit] Rigsraadet in Denmark
The Council of Denmark its members seem have developing from being the councillors of the king to being representatives of the magnates and noblemen. From the 1320s it clearly appears as a force and from the 1440s it is the permanent opponent of the royal power.
The Council only consisted by noblemen who were appointed by the king or sometimes by their class companions. Until the Reformation 1536 the bishops were automatically members. So were the supreme officials (today the “cabinet ministers”) while the lower ranking “ministers” did not have any formal right to membership. The “backbenchers” of the council took part in the daily negotiations of the problems and the administration, voted and took on diplomatic tasks. Most of them were squires who also had to look after their lands.
As a whole it was the role of the Council to rule together with the king, to control him and to manage the affairs of State well. The councillors were seen as a guarantee towards the nobility (and in theory also towards “the people”) that everything was done right. The Council took over the rule in the space that appeared by a succession or at interregna. It led the negotiations over the creation of a new haandfæstning and in theory it also had to call for a rebellion against kings who did not keep their promises, a right that was used 1523. However in the 16th century it was not quite unusual that the councillors to some degree identified with the State rejecting too extravagant demands from the Danish gentry. The background of this normally was that they themselves represented the Danish answer to the peerage.
The number of councillors was not laid down. Normally it was about 20 but from time to time deaths might reduce their number wherefore it was supplied by mass creations. Not until 1648 it was finally fixed to 23.
The authority of the council was indisputable and within some limits the kings also tried to co-operate. However most of the kings neglected some of the rules and for instance foreign questions presented many loopholes. The many military defeats of the 17th century and especially the growing economic problems and conservatism of the nobility also weakened the prestige of the Council and the king gradually tried to strengthen his own influence. At the introduction of absolute monarchy 1660 the Council was abolished.
The word ”Rigsråd” was revived in Denmark in the 19th century. 1854-1866 it was used about a special federal council dealing with all common legislative questions of Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein, from 1863 of Denmark and Schleswig alone. It had hardly other things in common with its old namesake than the title. The loss of Schleswig 1864 made it redundant and it was abolished by the new constitution two years later.
[edit] Riksrådet in Norway
The Norwegian Riksråd gradually emerged around 1300, evolving from the King's council. It emerged clearly as a power factor after 1319, during the minority of king Magnus VII Eriksson. There doesn't seem to have been any clear rules for how many members the council should have, or who should be councillors. During the 1400s, the number could be from 30 to 40, whereas after 1500 it was barely above 10. The Norwegian bishops were automatically members. There was at the time five bishops in mainland Norway (the archbishop in Trondheim, the bishops in Oslo, Hamar, Stavanger, Bergen), plus one in the Faeroe Islands, two on Iceland, one in Greenland, and one in Orkney (lost to Scotland in 1468). The bishops from the islands rarely participated in the Norwegian riksråd. In addition, the chaplains of the royal chapels in Oslo and Bergen were permanent members. So were the commanders of the five strongest castles of Norway: Bohus, Akershus in Oslo, the castles in Bergen, Tønsberg and Trondheim. The rest of the council was recruited from the Norwegian nobility. Only Norwegians were eligible for these places in the Norwegian Riksråd - however, this was also taken to include foreigners who had married a Norwegian. As several of the bishops and commanders of the castles were foreign - mostly Danish, but also some Swedish and German - the number of Norwegians in the Norwegian Riksråd gradually diminished. The archbishop of Trondheim mostly acted as the head of the council.
As Norway had of old been a hereditary kingdom, the Norwegian Riksråd's task did not, originally include the election of the king, as in Sweden and Denmark. However, as successive kings died without leaving any issue, starting with Olav IV in 1387, it fell to the Riksråd to interpret the succession laws. This it did so freely that Norway more and more became, in reality, an elected monarchy, like its Nordic neighbours. This was formally affirmed in 1450, when Christian I of Denmark took the Norwegian throne as an elected monarch. On his death, in 1481, the Riksråd ruled the country for two years, in an interregnum, before electing Christian's son as the new king - a period which could be seen as the height of the council's power.
In the early 1500s, the power of the Norwegian council diminished. The Danish union kings conducted a policy of strengthening their own power at the cost of the nobility, and the Norwegian nobility was too weak to put up a strong opposition. In addition, the few Norwegian noble families became more and more intermarried with the Danish nobility, giving them less of an interest in maintaining separate Norwegian structures. During the troubled transition to the reign of king Christian III, the Norwegian archbishop led a rebellion in support of Christian's rival to the throne. After Christian had won, he proclaimed that the Norwegian Riksråd was abolished, in 1536. The archbishop went into exile, the protestant reformation was carried through in Denmark and Norway, and the Norwegian Riksråd never assembled again.