The curia regis (), Latin for "the royal council" or "Royal court", was any of various councils of advisers and administrators in medieval Europe who served kings, including kings of France, Norman kings of England and Sicily, kings of Poland and the kings of Scotland.
The curia regis conducted the business of state whether legislative, judicial, or diplomatic. Its membership was the Tenant-in-chief (i.e. the baronage, including and ) along with the great officers of state and of the royal household, such as the Lord Chancellor, constable, treasurer or chamberlain, Earl Marshal, and Lord Steward. Occasionally, these would be summoned by the king to meet as a magnum concilium (Latin for "great council").
In between great councils, the curia regis remained in session; though, its membership was much smaller. The smaller curia was composed of royal officers and Courtier. English kings had during this period, and the small curia followed the king in all his travels. As they traveled the kingdom, the king and curia often heard suitors in person. The powers and functions of the great council and the small curia were identical since they were considered the same institution meeting under different circumstances.
During the 13th century, the great council and the small curia separated into two distinct bodies. The great council evolved into Parliament and the small curia evolved into the Privy Council. The small curia regis then is "the very distant ancestor of the modern executive, the Cabinet acting for the authority of the crown." Early government departments also developed out of the small curia regis, such as the chancery, the HM Treasury, and the exchequer.
By the fourteenth century the term curia regis was no longer used. However, it was a predecessor to later sovereign assemblies: the Parlement, which was a judiciary body, the Chamber of Accounts, which was a financial body, and the King's Council.Arthur Augustus Tilley, Medieval France: A Companion to French Studies (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1922), p. 72
By the end of the 15th century the Royal Council was transformed into the Senate of Poland.
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