Talk:Christiansborg Palace
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[edit] Moved article to new name
According to the Danish Palaces and Properties Agency the correct name of this property should be Christiansborg Palace not Christiansborg Castle. Also, see consolidated List of castles and palaces in Denmark for standardized naming. Thanks. -SFDan 10:24, 25 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Executive Power, not Royal Power
I changed royal power to executive power, because the orignial wording gave the impression that the Royal power is the execute power, however the real executive power isthe government, not the king. The Monarch is above the three pillars of power and is also the supreme executive power, legislative power and judical power. The executive because the monarch appoints the ministers of government, the legeislative power, because no law is in function until the monarch signs it, and absolves the parliament and calls for new election. The judical power because the monarch can pardon anybody at will.
The use of the typical republic three pillars of power model is also aplicable, if you set the Monarch as the supreme power of all three, becuse the Kingdom of Denmark is NOT a republic, but a Monarchy. Angelbo 19:38, 1 January 2006 (UTC)
- I think that the point is that the current Christiansborg was intended to be the home of the three important sources of power: the Royal family, Parliamant, and the Supreme Court. However, King Christian X refused to leave Amalienborg, so the plan was never fulfilled. The Queen does, however, use the building for a number of ceremonial purposes. Whenever an official throne room is needed, the ceremony takes place at Christiansborg. --Valentinian 23:22, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
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- thanks for the clarification Angelbo 23:23, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] What about Ghana?
There is also a Christiansborg Castle in Accra, Ghana. It was constructed by the Danes in the 17th Century. Most people know it today as Osu Castle where the President works.
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- Yes, Osu Castle is an old colonial fort. It was one of the strogest, if not the strongest, in the region. In Danish, it was known as "Christiansborg i Guinea", but today it would probably better known as "Fort Christiansborg". Valentinian T / C 15:02, 11 February 2007 (UTC)