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ASTRA PARLIAMENTARY LAW UNIT of Seattle


A Brief History of Parliamentary Law

Rules of order originated in the early British Parliaments. In the 1560s Sir Thomas Smith wrote an early formal statement of procedures in the House of Commons, which was published in 1583. Lex Parliamentaria (1689; “Parliamentary Law”) was a pocket manual for members of Parliament and included many precedents that are now familiar. Drawing from the Journal of the House of Commons, it included points such as the following:

  1. One subject should be discussed at a time (adopted 1581).
  2. The chair must always call for the negative vote (1604).
  3. Personal attacks and indecorous behaviour are to be avoided in debate (1604): “He that digresseth from the Matter to fall upon the Person ought to be suppressed by the Speaker....No reviling or nipping words must be used.”
  4. Debate must be limited to the merits of the question (1610): “A member speaking, and his speech, seeming impertinent, and there being much hissing and spitting, it was conceived for a Rule, that Mr. Speaker may stay impertinent speeches.”

Depending heavily on procedures developed in the British Parliament, colonists in America governed under written charters and grants, an experience that influenced the framing of state constitutions and the Constitution of the United States (1787). The first work to interpret and define parliamentary principles for the new American government was A Manual of Parliamentary Practice (1801), written by Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States.

An early attempt in the United States to serve “assemblies of every description...especially...those not legislative in their character” was the Manual of Parliamentary Practice (1845), by Luther S. Cushing (1803–56), a jurist and clerk of the Massachusetts House of Representatives. Robert’s Rules of Order (1876), codified by U.S. Army officer General Henry M. Robert (1837–1923), which has gone through various editions and reprintings and continues to be published in periodic editions, has had a lasting impact on the development of parliamentary procedure.

From: “parliamentary procedure”
Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=59991>
[Accessed February 2, 2003].

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