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- Incompatibilitas abstract "This article is about a historic Polish law. For a modern political-science term, see political incompatibility or political incompatibilitas.Incompatibilitas (a Latin term, meaning "incompatibility") was a principle instituted in the Kingdom of Poland (later, from 1569, in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) which forbade an individual to hold two or more official administrative positions. The principle of incompatibilitas evolved in the 15th-16th centuries in response to a demand from middle and lesser nobility (Szlachta), and was designed to curtail the sway of more powerful high nobility/aristocracy/plutocracy (the Magnates).The specific acts of law that constituted the incompatibilitas rule were bans on holding: a district office simultaneously with a starosta's office (przywilej czerwiński, 1422); two separate district offices; a voivode's office simultaneously with a starosta's office (przywilej nieszawski, 1454); a kanclerz's (chancellor's) office simultaneously with a starosta's, voivode's or castellan's office; a voivode's or castellan's office simultaneously with a starosta's office (1538); two or more city starosta offices (starostwo grodowe) (1562 or 1563); a voivode's and castellan's offices simultaneously with another ministerial office other than that of hetman (1565, as each of those offices, except that of hetman, granted its holder a seat in the Senate of Poland, a Privy council rather than an upper chamber).[1]Commonwealth ministers were the equivalents of modern central-government officials. They comprised 10 officials (5 for Poland, 5 for Lithuania): a Great Crown Marshal, Great Lithuanian Marshal, Great Crown Chancellor, Great Lithuanian Chancellor, Crown Deputy Chancellor, Lithuanian Deputy Chancellor, Great Crown Treasurer, Great Lithuanian Treasurer, Court Crown Marshal and Court Lithuanian Marshal. The Court Marshals were considered subordinate to the Great Marshals. Lithuanian ministers, while enjoying the same powers as Crown ministers, were considered to stand lower in the hierarchy. Hetmans were also considered "ministers," but had no seat in the Senat.".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageExternalLink 30098_1.html.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageExternalLink poczatki.html.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageID "3578282".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageLength "3163".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageOutDegree "29".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageRevisionID "622328019".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Aristocracy.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Castellan.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Poland_(1385–1569).
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Poland_(1569–1795).
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Category:Legal_history_of_Poland.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Chancellor_(Poland).
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Crown_of_the_Kingdom_of_Poland.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Crown_of_the_Polish_Kingdom.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Execution_movement.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Executionist_movement.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Hetman.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Internetowa_encyklopedia_PWN.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Kanclerz.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Poland_(1385–1569).
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Lithuania.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Magnate.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Minister_(government).
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Offices_in_the_Polish-Lithuanian_Commonwealth.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Offices_in_the_Polish–Lithuanian_Commonwealth.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Plutocracy.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Polish-Lithuanian_Commonwealth.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Polish–Lithuanian_Commonwealth.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Political_incompatibilitas.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Political_incompatibility.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Political_minister.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Privy_council.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Przywilej_czerwiński.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Przywilej_nieszawski.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Public_administration.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Senate_of_Poland.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Starosta.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Szlachta.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLink Voivode.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLinkText "Incompatibilitas".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLinkText "incompatibilitas".
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageWikiLinkText "technically illegal".
- Incompatibilitas hasPhotoCollection Incompatibilitas.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Europe-law-stub.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Latin-legal-phrase-stub.
- Incompatibilitas wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Poland-hist-stub.
- Incompatibilitas subject Category:History_of_Poland_(1385–1569).
- Incompatibilitas subject Category:History_of_Poland_(1569–1795).
- Incompatibilitas subject Category:Legal_history_of_Poland.
- Incompatibilitas comment "This article is about a historic Polish law. For a modern political-science term, see political incompatibility or political incompatibilitas.Incompatibilitas (a Latin term, meaning "incompatibility") was a principle instituted in the Kingdom of Poland (later, from 1569, in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) which forbade an individual to hold two or more official administrative positions.".
- Incompatibilitas label "Incompatibilitas".
- Incompatibilitas sameAs Incompatibilitas.
- Incompatibilitas sameAs m.09mr1x.
- Incompatibilitas sameAs Q6015147.
- Incompatibilitas sameAs Q6015147.
- Incompatibilitas wasDerivedFrom Incompatibilitas?oldid=622328019.
- Incompatibilitas isPrimaryTopicOf Incompatibilitas.