Political Science, asked by aa1097995, 7 months ago

Discuss the origin of British Parliament.​

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Answered by k9ckusuma
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Answer:

Parliament is the legislative body of the United Kingdom and is the primary law-making institution in Great Britain’s constitutional monarchy. The history of the legislative body—which meets in the Palace of Westminster in London—shows how it evolved almost organically, partly in response to the needs of the country’s reigning monarch. Parliament traces its roots back to the earliest meetings of English barons and commoners in the 8th century.

Parliament’s Humble Beginnings

The present-day Parliament is a bicameral (“two chambers”) legislature with a House of Lords and a House of Commons. These two houses, however, weren’t always joined, and had their earliest beginnings in the Anglo-Saxon council governments of the 8th century.

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Answered by sristhibose270273
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The first English Parliament was convened in 1215, with the creation and signing of the Magna Carta, which established the rights of barons (wealthy landowners) to serve as consultants to the king on governmental matters in his Great Council. ... The Great Council was first referred to as “Parliament” in 1236

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