History, asked by sukesh65, 1 year ago

According to the new constitution of 1791, the national assembly was to be​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
43

\huge\underline\orange{\mathcal Answer}

Fascination with constitutions and constitutional government was a creature of the Enlightenment. Before the 18th century, monarchical and absolutist governments acted without any written constitution. The structures and power of government were shaped and limited by internal forces and events – if they were limited at all. Britain, to cite one example, had no written constitution.

Answered by krishna210398
0

Answer:

According to the new constitution of 1791, the national assembly was__

Explanation:

The Assembly's belief in an autonomous nation and equal representation can be seen in the indigenous separation of powers. The National Assembly was the legislative body, the king and royal ministers made up the administrative branch and the bar was independent of the other two branches.

In terms of administrative power, the king retained the right to form a press and elect and appoint ministers. A more burning question was whether he'd have the power to block laws passed by the council.

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