The royal court of Britain, including the queen or king and a group of officials who aid in ruling the country.
| Politics: Court of St. James's |
The royal court of Britain, including the queen or king and a group of officials who aid in ruling the country.
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The Court of St. James's is the name of the royal court of the United Kingdom.[1]
The Court of St. James's is named after St. James's Palace which is the senior Palace[2] of the Sovereign, currently Queen Elizabeth II. It remains the official residence[1] of the British Monarchy despite Queen Victoria moving to Buckingham Palace after her accession in 1837.[1] [3]
Though St James's Palace is the official residence of the Sovereign, the Court moves with The Queen. As Buckingham Palace is the official London residence,[3] the court and consequently meetings of the Privy Council occur there as the Queen does not live at St James's. During her extended stays at Windsor Castle (typically during Easter), Sandringham during Christmas and at Holyrood Palace or Balmoral Castle in Scotland in the summer the Court will be at Windsor, Sandringham, Holyrood or Balmoral. When the Queen travels overseas, the court also travels with her.
All Ambassadors and High Commissioners to the United Kingdom are accredited to and received at the Court of St. James's[1] and, as it would not be feasible to do this to a moving Court, a static name was needed. The official residence was therefore chosen because the Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps (before 1920, Master of the Ceremonies), who acts as the link between the Queen and the foreign diplomatic missions, is permanently based there.[2]
As of 2009 there were 172 foreign missions accredited to the Court of St James's in London.[4]. This total is made up of 46 high commissions (missions from Commonwealth countries) and 128 embassies (missions from non-Commonwealth, foreign countries).
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