- Alternative meaning: the Commonwealth of
Nations
The English noun Commonwealth dates
originally from the fifteenth century and in different contexts indicates
one of:
- a nation, state or political unit
- a state founded on law by agreement of the people for the common good
- a republic
- a federated union of constituent states.
A Cooperative Commonwealth is the ideal of a society based on cooperative and socialist principles.
The original phrase "common wealth" or "the common weal" comprises a calque
translation of the Latin term res publica, from which the word republic comes. The Commonwealth of
England was the official title of the political unit that replaced the kingdoms of Scotland and England under the rule of
Oliver Cromwell. It formed the first republic in the English-speaking
world, though this quickly devolved into a pseudo-monarchy.
Four states in the United States designate themselves "commonwealths":
Kentucky, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, and Virginia.
They do this to emphasize that they have "government based on the common consent of the people". While the term "commonwealth"
has the same legal and economic meaning as "state," the four regions that chose to designate themselves commonwealths probably
did so as a reference to the Commonwealth period in
England, when that nation was not ruled by a king. [1] [2]
The term also served when the Australian colonies federated to form the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901. The design of
the Australian government blends the US-style republican senate and British parliamentary systems, though in the
Australian context the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act made it clear that the federation
existed as a constitutional monarchy, with the
federal state and the individual states each directly linked to the British monarch,
and each of which possesses a representative of the Crown.
Various states have used the title "commonwealth" since that time.
The term "commonwealth" is also used for the political relationship
between the United States and the unincorporated territories of Puerto Rico
and of the Northern Marianas (see: commonwealth (U.S. insular area)).
When capitalised, "Commonwealth" refers to the Commonwealth of Nations - formerly the "British Commonwealth" - a loose confederation of nations formerly members of the British Empire (with some exceptions). The Commonweath's membership involves both republics and
monarchies: the head of the Commonwealth of Nations is Queen Elizabeth II, who reigns as monarch directly in a number of states, notably
the United Kingdom, Canada,
Jamaica, Australia and New Zealand, among others. (In an Australian context, it may refer to the federal
(i.e. Commonwealth) Government.)
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Commonwealth is the direct translation of the official name of Republic of Poland (Rzeczpospolita). It is inherited from the federal country formed by Poland and Lithuania 1569-1795. In contemporary political doctrine
of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, "our
state is a Republic (Commonwealth) under presidency of the King". The commonwealth introduced a doctrine of religious tolerance,
had its own parliament Sejm (although elections were restricted to the gentry or
szlachta) and elected kings, who were bound to certain contracts
Pacta conventa from the beginning of the reign. The foundation
stones of the Commonwealth (also called the Golden Freedoms) used to be
- free election of the king
- Pacta conventa, a binding pledge agreed to by the King on his election
- rokosz, the right of rebellion against kings who did not rule in accordance with their pledge
- liberum veto (a later development), the right for a single representative to veto the entire proceedings of the
Sejm
- confederatio, a military organisation of the citizens for the attainment of common political aims.
States that use the name Commonwealth
See also
External links
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