Curia (elections)
Appearance
Curia (electoral curia, Latin: cūria) is a special category of voters, a class or group of the population, which elects its deputies to representative bodies separately from other classes. Curiae are part of the curial system of elections (class system, rank system).[1] They are distinguished by social status, property, nationality, race, or any other social qualification.
History
[edit]- Three-class franchise — also known as the Prussian system, because it was in effect in Prussia from 1849 to 1918, but was also applied in many other countries.[2][3]
- The electoral system in Cisleithania within the Austria-Hungary (in the Reichsrat until 1907 the curiae of large landowners, chambers of commerce and industry, cities, rural communities, in the Landtag and municipal councils until 1918) was curial.
- It existed in the elections to the Russian Empire.
Russian Empire
[edit]In the Russian Empire, during elections to the State Duma, voters were divided into categories based on property and social status. Each curia elected a set number of deputies — usually regardless of the number of voters in that curia. Several new curiae were additionally organized several times, according to which voters were grouped and voted.
Electoral law of August 6 1905 | Law of December 11 1905 | Electoral system of June 3, 1907 |
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3 curiae | 4 curiae | 5 curiae |
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Notes
[edit]- ^ "МЭСБЕ/Классная система выборов — Викитека". ru.wikisource.org (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-09-20.
- ^ Александрович, Боков Юрий (2009). "Прусская трёхклассная избирательная система (1849 1918 гг.)". Власть (10): 163–165. ISSN 2071-5358.
- ^ "КУРИАЛЬНАЯ (РАЗРЯДНАЯ ИЛИ КЛАССНАЯ) СИСТЕМА".
- ^ "Краткий исторический словарь - курия".