The Holy Roman Empire: Why It Was Neither Holy Nor Roman — Fexingo History
Long before the Supreme Court or the European Court of Justice, the Holy Roman Empire had its own supreme court: the Reichskammergericht. Founded in 1495 by King Maximilian I, this court was meant to enforce the Eternal Peace, settle disputes between imperial estates, and check the emperor's power. Lucas and Luna explore how the court worked, its famous rulings, and its eventual decline. They discuss the unique structure where half the judges were appointed by the emperor and half by the estates, the court's role in protecting peasants against local lords, and its slow, famously tedious proceedings that could drag on for generations. They also look at a specific case from 1582 involving the city of Frankfurt and the Count of Solms, and the court's ultimate dissolution in 1806 alongside the empire. Along the way, they touch on the court's archives at Wetzlar, its influence on German legal thinking, and why it's remembered as both a symbol of justice and a bureaucratic nightmare. #Reichskammergericht #HolyRomanEmpire #MaximilianI #ImperialJustice #SupremeCourt #Wetzlar #EwigerLandfriede #Cameralis #History #FexingoHistory #LegalHistory #Germany #16thCentury #17thCentury #18thCentury #ConstitutionalHistory #MedievalLaw #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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