Everything about Duchy Of Lancaster totally explained
The
Duchy of Lancaster is one of the two Royal
Duchies in
England, the other being the
Duchy of Cornwall, and is the personal (inherited) property of the monarch. Despite the name, the duchy is effectively a
property company (though it pays no
corporation tax), and it consists of lands in many parts of England and Wales, as well as large holdings in
Lancashire.
In addition to holding land in Lancashire, the Duchy of Lancaster also exerts some powers and ceremonial duties of
The Crown in Lancashire and
Greater Manchester,
Merseyside and the
Furness area of
Cumbria, which together form the "County Palatine of Lancaster". Since the
Local Government Act 1972, the Duchy holds and exerts the right to appoint Sheriffs and
Lord Lieutenants in the
ceremonial counties of Greater Manchester, Merseyside and Lancashire, including those areas from the
historic county boundaries of
Cheshire and
Yorkshire.
History
The Duchy of Lancaster was created for
John of Gaunt, a younger son of King
Edward III of England, when John had acquired its constituent lands through marriage to the Lancaster heiress. As the Lancaster inheritance it goes back to 1265, when
Henry III granted to his younger son,
Edmund, lands forfeited by
Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester. In 1266 the estates of
Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby, another of the protagonists in the
Second Barons' War, were added. In 1267 the estate was formerly granted as the County, Honour and Castle of Lancaster. In 1284 Edmund was given the Manor of Savoy by his mother, Queen Eleanor, the niece of the original grantee,
Peter II, Count of Savoy. King
Edward III raised Lancashire into a
county palatine in 1351, the then holder,
Henry of Grosmont, Edmund's grandson, was made Duke of Lancaster. After his death a charter of 1362 conferred the dukedom on his son-in-law
John of Gaunt, Earl of Lancaster, and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten for ever.
The first act of King
Henry IV was to declare that the Lancastrian inheritance be held separately from the other possessions of the Crown, and should descend to his male heirs. This separation of identities was confirmed in 1461 by Edward IV when he incorporated the inheritance and the palatinate responsibilities under the title of the Duchy of Lancaster, and stipulated that it be held separate from other inheritances by him and his heirs, Kings of England. The Duchy thereafter effectively passed to the reigning monarch and its separate identity preserved it in 1760 from being surrendered with the
Crown Estates in exchange for the
Civil List. It is primarily a landed inheritance belonging to the reigning sovereign.
Role
The duchy isn't the property of
The Crown, but is instead the personal (inherited) property of the monarch and has been since 1399, when the
Dukedom of Lancaster, held by
Henry of Bolingbroke, merged with the crown on his appropriation of the throne (after the dispossession from
Richard II).
The Loyal Toast, 'The Queen, the Duke of Lancaster' is still in regular use within the Duchy.
The chief officer of the Duchy is the
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, a high position which is sometimes a cabinet post. Since for at least the last two centuries the estate has been run by a deputy, the Chancellor rarely has had any significant duties pertaining to management of the Duchy itself. He is usually available as a
minister without portfolio. In recent times his duties, administrative, financial and legal, have been said to occupy an average of one day a week.
The monarch derives the
Privy Purse from the revenues of the Duchy. The surplus for the year ended 31 March 2005 was £9.811 million and the Duchy was valued at nearly £310 million. The lands of the Duchy are not to be confused with the
Crown Estate, whose revenues have been handed to the Treasury in exchange for receiving a yearly
civil list payment since the 18th century.
Both the Duchy of Lancaster and its
counterpart in Cornwall have special statutory rights not available to other estates held by
Peers,
counties palatine - for example
Bona Vacantia operates in the advantage of the Duke rather than the Crown throughout the historic Duchy.
There are also separate
Attorneys General for the estates. Generally, though, the exemptions all tend to follow the same line: any rights pertaining to the Crown generally in most areas of the country instead pertain to the
Duke of the Duchy. Generally, any
Act of Parliament relating to these sorts of rights will specifically set out the special exemptions for the two Duchies and specify the extent to which they apply to the Duchy. They are also, however, subject to strict regulation, especially with respect to
auditing and
alienation of land. Officers of the Duchy include the Vice-Chancellor, the Attorney-General of the Duchy of Lancaster and Attorney and Serjeant within the County Palatine.
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