Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The administrative threshold
- 2 The emerging government of Charles V
- 3 The conflict between chancellor and emperor
- 4 The imperial chancellery
- 5 The imperial propaganda campaign of 1526–1527
- 6 The last years of the chancellorship
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 The Summary by Philippe Hanneton, audiencier of the Burgundian chancellery, regarding the office of the Grand Chancellor
- Appendix II ‘The Doubts of [Alonso de] Soria’, lieutenant protonotary, concerning Gattinara's proposals for reforming the Aragonese chancellery
- Appendix III Gattinara's ‘Brussels Remonstrance’
- Appendix IV Gattinara's proposals for the more effective operation of the Council of State
- Appendix V A comparative analysis of the movements of the imperial court and the imperial chancellery 1518–1530
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix 1 - The Summary by Philippe Hanneton, audiencier of the Burgundian chancellery, regarding the office of the Grand Chancellor
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 The administrative threshold
- 2 The emerging government of Charles V
- 3 The conflict between chancellor and emperor
- 4 The imperial chancellery
- 5 The imperial propaganda campaign of 1526–1527
- 6 The last years of the chancellorship
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 The Summary by Philippe Hanneton, audiencier of the Burgundian chancellery, regarding the office of the Grand Chancellor
- Appendix II ‘The Doubts of [Alonso de] Soria’, lieutenant protonotary, concerning Gattinara's proposals for reforming the Aragonese chancellery
- Appendix III Gattinara's ‘Brussels Remonstrance’
- Appendix IV Gattinara's proposals for the more effective operation of the Council of State
- Appendix V A comparative analysis of the movements of the imperial court and the imperial chancellery 1518–1530
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
(The following documents (Apps. I–IV) have been most conservatively transcribed with every effort to preserve the original spelling, punctuation and format. Only in one respect has there been editorial intrusion: for the sake of intelligibility all contractions and abbreviations, often numerous and sometimes obscure, have been silently expanded.)
Ung chancelier de bourgoingne a tousiours este fort exstime et auctorise | tellement quil a este tenu pour la seconde personne de la maison
Et comme tel a tenu et garde les seaulx du prince desquelz il a use a la despeshe et sigillature des lettres qui ont este ordonnees et commandees tant pour les affaires du prince et de ses pays | comme des parties qui en ont eu a besoigne
Ledit chancelier a este | et est chief de la justice | preside en tous consaulx tant secretz et privez que aultres | et en iceulx propose et mis en deliberacion toutes matieres qui ont este tractees es lesdits consaulx tant en la presence du prince comme en son absance | demande et recully les oppinions des assistens tant de courte que de longue robe | et icelles oyes et resumes a dit la sienne au prince quant il a este presente pour y conclure | et en son absance luy mesmes a fait et pronunce les conclusions | ordonne et commande aux secretaires les expedicions et despesches tant de lettres closes et patentes memoires instrucions que aultres provisions selon lesdites conclusions |
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- Information
- The Emperor and His ChancellorA Study of the Imperial Chancellery under Gattinara, pp. 144 - 147Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1983