Seigneur of Sark explained

Post:Seigneur of Sark
Insignia:Coat of arms of Sark.svg
Insigniacaption:Coat of arms of Sark
Flag:Flag of Sark.svg
Flagborder:yes
Flagcaption:Flag of Sark
Incumbent:Christopher Beaumont
Incumbentsince:3 July 2016
Appointer:Hereditary (male-preference primogeniture)
Inaugural:Hellier de Carteret
Formation:1563

The Seigneur of Sark is the head of Sark in the Channel Islands. "Seigneur" is the French word for "lord", and a female head of Sark is called Dame of Sark, of which there have been three. The husband of a female ruler of Sark is not a consort but is jure uxoris ("by right of (his) wife"[1]) a seigneur himself.[2]

Description

The Seigneur's office is hereditary, but with permission of the Crown, it may be mortgaged or sold, as happened in 1849 when Pierre Carey le Pelley sold the fief to Marie Collings for £6,000.[3]

The Seigneur was, before the constitutional reforms of 2008, the head of the feudal government of Sark, with the British monarch being the feudal overlord. The Seigneur had a suspensive veto power and the right to appoint most of the island's officers. Many of the laws, particularly those related to inheritance and the rule of the Seigneur, had changed little since Queen Elizabeth I, by Letters Patent, granted a fiefdom to Hellier de Carteret in 1565.[4] [5]

The residents of Sark voted to introduce a fully elected legislature to replace the feudal government in a 2006 referendum,[6] and the law change was approved on 9 April 2008.[7] The first democratic election was held on 10 December 2008.[8] The changes in the political system mostly apply to the parliament, the Chief Pleas, not to the Seigneur.

Many seigneurs are buried at St. Peter's Anglican Church, Sark.

Seigneurs of Sark

  1. Hellier de Carteret (1563–1578)
  2. Philippe de Carteret I (1578–1594)
  3. Philippe de Carteret II (1594–1643)
  4. Philippe de Carteret III (1643–1663)
  5. Philippe de Carteret IV (1663–1693)
  6. Charles de Carteret (1693–1715)
  7. John Carteret (1715–1720)
  8. John Johnson (1720–1723)
  9. James Milner (1723–1730)
  10. Susanne le Pelley (1730–1733)
  11. Nicolas le Pelley (1733–1742)
  12. Daniel le Pelley (1742–1752)
  13. Pierre le Pelley I (1752–1778)
  14. Pierre le Pelley II (1778–1820)
  15. Pierre le Pelley III (1820–1839)
  16. Ernest le Pelley (1839–1849)
  17. Pierre Carey le Pelley (1849–1852)
  18. Marie Collings (1852–1853)
  19. William Thomas Collings (1853–1882)
  20. William Frederick Collings (1882–1927)
  21. Sibyl Hathaway (1927–1974)[9]
    Robert Hathaway (1929–1954)
  22. Michael Beaumont (1974–2016)
  23. Christopher Beaumont (2016–present)

The heir apparent to the seigneurship is the present seigneur's son, Hugh Rees-Beaumont.

Notes and References

  1. , citing
  2. Book: Collings Hathaway, Sibyl . Dame of Sark, an autobiography . Heinemann . 1975 .
  3. Book: Marr, James . James Marr (author) . Guernsey people . 1984 . 0850335299 . Phillimore .
  4. News: Sark marks 450 years of Royal Charter. BBC. 6 August 2015. BBC News.
  5. Web site: Jersey Post celebrates the island of Sark. SEPAC. 16 July 2015. "On 6 August 1565, Helier De Carteret, the Seigneur of the parish of St Ouen in Jersey, was granted the Isle of Sark by Queen Elizabeth I. Sark was thereby made an inheritable fief, which Helier held from the Crown of England on certain conditions: he had to maintain at least forty men to defend the Island from pirates, do homage to the sovereign and pay an annual 1/20th part of a knight’s fee.".
  6. News: After four centuries, Sark gives power to the people. Times Online. 5 October 2006. 2007-08-20 . London . Simon . de Bruxelles.
  7. News: After 450 years, Sark turns back on feudal law. The Independent. 10 April 2008. London . Mark . Hughes . 2010-05-08.
  8. News: European feudalism finally ends as Sark heads for democracy. The Independent. 11 December 2008. 11 December 2008.
  9. Death of a Dame. https://web.archive.org/web/20081215060322/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,911448,00.html?iid=chix-sphere. dead. 15 December 2008. Nearly all 560 subjects of the medieval fiefdom of Sark gathered last week around a gnarled oak tree in their parish churchyard to mourn Dame Sibyl Mary Collings Beaumont Hathaway, 21st Seigneur of Sark. . 29 July 1974. Time. 2008-12-11.