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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Political Science: Terms And Concepts > Salic law, rule of succession
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Salic law, rule of succession, Political Science: Terms And Concepts

Related Category: Political Science: Terms And Concepts

Salic law[sA´lik] Pronunciation Key, rule of succession in certain royal and noble families of Europe, forbidding females and those descended in the female line to succeed to the titles or offices in the family. It is called the Salic law on the mistaken supposition that it was part of the Lex Salica (see Germanic laws); provisions of that code forbade female succession to property but were not concerned with titles or offices. The rule was most prominently enforced by the house of Valois and the succeeding house of Bourbon in France. At the time of Philip V it was introduced to Spain; when it was rescinded there in favor of Isabella II, the Carlists rose in revolt on the grounds of the law. The rule was also involved in the rivalry of Stephen and Matilda for the throne of England and in the claim of Edward III to the French succession (one cause of the Hundred Years War). Because the Guelphs followed the Salic law, the union of Great Britain and Hanover : begun when the elector of Hanover ascended the British throne as George I : had to be discontinued when Victoria ascended the British throne.



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Carlists
Edward III
Ferdinand VII, king of Spain
Germanic laws
Guelphs
Hundred Years War
Isabella II
Maria Christina, 1806¢#150;78, queen of Spain
Matilda, queen of England
Philip V, king of France
Philip V, king of Spain
Philip VI, king of France
Stephen
Victoria, queen of Great Britain and Ireland

Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Political Science and Government


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