The edict established the rights of the nobility and was among the first documents that placed constitutional limits on the powers of a European monarch.Continue reading
The 800th anniversary of the Golden Bull of 1222, an edict that established constitutional limits on the power of monarchs, was observed in Székesfehérvár, in the northwest of Hungary, on Sunday.
Constitutional Court head Tamás Sulyok and Kúria head András Zs Varga joined Székesfehérvár mayor András Cser-Palkovics laying a wreath at a memorial on a hill from where, as tradition holds, the Golden Bull was proclaimed.
Sulyok called the Golden Bull “a defining relic of our history and constitutional identity”.
Varga said the Golden Bull remains a “valid and compulsory source for interpreting the constitution”.
The Golden Bull, issued by King András II on April 24, 1222, established the rights of the nobility and served as a pillar of Hungary’s legal system for centuries.
featured image: the Golden Bull memorial on Csúcsos-hegy near Székesfehérvár; TamásVasvári/MTI