II. Sovereign
2.10 Anglo-Saxon Law Form
Article 107 - Parlomentum (Parliament)
Parlomentum, from which the word “Parliament” originates, is an official term first created under Charles Martel (737-741 CE) in March 738 CE to uniquely describe a mandated assembly of all nobles and clergy summonsed each year from across the Carolingian Empire to hear, discuss, debate and approve matters of legal importance.
A “parliament” by definition and the original legal and ecclesiastical meaning of the term, is a legislature whose power and function are in accordance with Sacré Loi (Sacred Law) as first instituted by the Franks from the 8th Century. A body that is not in accord with the precepts of Sacré Loi (Sacred Law) cannot therefore be properly called a “parliament” but some lesser body.
As Parlomentum (Parliament) officially met each year on the “Ides” or middle of March (14th / 15th), another traditional title was used for the assembly being “Campus De Marche” or simply “the meeting in March”. However, at the beginning of the Reign of Charles the Younger (741-768), Parlomentum was officially moved to the first of May and became a body exclusively of Barons, while the original assembly retaining the name Campus De Marche became exclusively for Lords.
Under the bicameral legislative model first introduced by Carolingian leader Charles the Younger (741-768), the House of Lords being the Campus De Marche were required to first “pass” any capitulum (cap.) in March before it was permitted to be sent to the House of Barons being Parlomentum (Parliament) for a vote in May. Thus, from 741 CE, the Franks invented for the first time in history an “upper house” and “lower house” or bicameral legislative model of government.
Both Parlomentum (Parliament) and the Campus De Marche were effectively dissolved upon the arrival in West Francia (France) of the self styled “Capet” Dynasty in the early 10th Century and the powerful Archbishop (Metropolitan) of Mainz Henry “the traitor”, who proclaimed himself King of East Francia in 919 CE after conspiring with the Capet to murder ever last blood descendent of the Carolingians.
The word Parlomentum was briefly revived for a few months by Lord de Montfort of Gascony in 1265 during his bitter struggle with the Plantagenet Dynasty for approval of the Venetian-Magyar and control of England. However, the term did not return to permanent use until the reign of Edward III of England in 1341 when he abolished the old Royal Council and replaced it with a Parliament of two (2) Chambers an Upper Chamber and Lower Chamber, thus separating the clergy and nobles into the higher and knights and burgesses into the lower. The presiding officer of the Lower Chamber was the Prolocutor.
While ordinances issued by various Monarchs of England since Edward I (1272-1307) revived the tradition in Sacré Loi (Sacred Law) of naming ordinances as “capitulum” or cap. for short, the first time ordinances were properly debated and passed by a “parliament” was under King Henry VIII (1509-1547). Therefore, all ordinances called cap. or c. or caput. or capitulum prior to the reign of Henry VIII may be argued as invalid by such fraud and deliberate error.
Any court, owing its origin and general functions to the court system of Great Britain no longer issues valid writs to commence any legal action, such failure to adhere to the foundations of sacred law, western law and true Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) renders any subsequent judgments, orders, motions and sentences from the time of abandonment therefore invalid, illegal, unlawful and null and void.
While ordinances issued by various Monarchs of England since Edward I (1272-1307) revived the tradition in Sacré Loi (Sacred Law) of naming ordinances as “capitulum” or cap. for short, the first time ordinances were properly debated and passed by a “parliament” was under King Henry VIII (1509-1547). Therefore, all ordinances called cap. or c. or caput. or capitulum prior to the reign of Henry VIII may be argued as invalid by such fraud and deliberate error.