Canonum De Ius Rex
Canons of Sovereign Law

one heaven iconIII.   Instruction

3.1 Rogation

Article 218 - Prerogate

Canon 6904 (link)

Prerogative is to exercise an exclusive or peculiar privilege by hereditary or official right or privilege of a sovereign by rogation.

Canon 6905 (link)

The word Prerogate comes from the Latin word praerogativa meaning “first right of vote or decision” from prae meaning “in front of, before” and rogatio meaning “a solemn prayer and spiritual entreaty concerning an official question, inquiry, proposal, nomination or motion of law expressed through speech”.

Canon 6906 (link)

No valid Prerogate may be used in opposition to these Canons of Astrum Iuris Divini Canonum or Articles of Pactum De Singularis Caelum or its associated charters and covenants or codes of law.

Canon 6907 (link)

In English law, the royal prerogative is a body of fraudulently created presumptions, arguments and laws claiming customary authority, privilege, and immunity by which the sovereign has over and above all other persons, in right of his or her regal dignity.

Canon 6908 (link)

The statute known as De Praerogativa Regis and claimed as having been promulgated during the 17th year of reign of King Edward 1st claiming to define the prerogatives of the crown on certain subjects, but especially directing that the king shall have ward of the lands of idiots, taking the profits without waste and finding them necessaries is hereby declared as fraud, having no force nor effect ecclesiastically, legally or lawfully.