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The Aulic
Council commonly dealt with feudal disputes These included "imperial overlordship, protecting imperial fiefs, all issues relating to investitures, inheritance, pawning, or purchase of fiefs, and all sorts of lawsuits related to these matters." The Aulic Council also had influence in
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In the 18th century, Rheingraf Karl Magnus of
Grehweiler contracted large loans by forging the consent of his subjects. He used these funds to pay for his construction projects. When his fraud was uncovered, the Aulic Council sentenced him to 10 years in
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in 1559, the
Council was composed of a president, a vice-president, a vice-chancellor, and 18 councillors, who were all chosen and paid by the Emperor, with the exception of the vice-chancellor, who was appointed by the
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two years before. Maximilian emphasised the fact that the
Emperor embodied supreme legal authority and would continue to answer legal requests addressed to him. During the reign of
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The relationship between the Aulic
Council and the Imperial Chamber Court is described as both competitive but also cooperative, depending on the situation.
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culminated in the end of the Holy Roman Empire, the Aulic
Council likewise ceased to exist in 1806 as an imperial institution.
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type of grand residence, usually private) was originally an executive-judicial council for the Empire. Originating during the
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Der
Reichshofrat: Bedeutung und Verfassung, Schicksal und Besetzung einer obersten Reichsbehörde von 1559 bis 1806
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Each emperor summoned a new
Council upon his accession to the throne. According to a regulation issued by Emperor
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by decree of 13 December 1497. It was meant as a rival to the separate
Imperial Chamber Court, which the
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Northern Italy. The Aulic
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as a paid Council of the Emperor, it was organized in its later form by the German king
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processes, and in criminal affairs, over the immediate feudatories of the
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Order of the Aulic Council of March 16th, 1654 in full-text
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372:. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). pp. 916–917.
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