Difference between revisions of "Disestablishment Act, 2003"
m |
m (→References) |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | The '''Disestablishment Act, | + | The '''Disestablishment Act, 2003''' (20 ([[Wikipedia:2003|2003]]) Robt 6 SIN c87){{ref|law}}, promulgated on [[Wikipedia:December_5|5 December]] [[Wikipedia:2003|2003]], formally disestablished the [[Reformed Church of Isselmere]] as the state religion of [[Isselmere (Region)|Isselmere]], [[Anguist (Region)|Anguist]], and [[Detmere (Region)|Detmere]], as well as the Church of Nieland as the state religion of [[Nieland (Region)|Nieland]]. With the dissolution of the ties between Church and State, the Temple Council, which had advised the King on matters of faith, was no longer part of the [[Council of State (Isselmere-Nieland)|Council of State]] and dissolved itself on [[Wikipedia:March_23|23 March]] 2004. |
==References== | ==References== | ||
− | + | {|style="font-size:90%;" | |
− | + | | | |
+ | #{{note|law}} 20th year of the reign of [[Kings and queens of Isselmere-Nieland#Isselmere-Nieland|Robert VI]], chapter 87 of the [[:Category:Laws of Isselmere-Nieland|Statutes of Isselmere-Nieland]]. Chapters 1-59 of the statutes of 2003 were said to have been promulgated betwixt the 19th and 20th years of Robert VI's reign. | ||
+ | |} | ||
{{Isselmere-Nieland}} | {{Isselmere-Nieland}} | ||
[[Category:Constitution of Isselmere-Nieland]] | [[Category:Constitution of Isselmere-Nieland]] | ||
[[Category:Laws of Isselmere-Nieland]] | [[Category:Laws of Isselmere-Nieland]] |
Latest revision as of 02:50, 4 January 2007
The Disestablishment Act, 2003 (20 (2003) Robt 6 SIN c87)[1], promulgated on 5 December 2003, formally disestablished the Reformed Church of Isselmere as the state religion of Isselmere, Anguist, and Detmere, as well as the Church of Nieland as the state religion of Nieland. With the dissolution of the ties between Church and State, the Temple Council, which had advised the King on matters of faith, was no longer part of the Council of State and dissolved itself on 23 March 2004.
References
|
Topics on Isselmere-Nieland | ||
---|---|---|
Category | Factbook Categories: Administrative divisions | Constitution | Defence Forces | Festivities | Government | Languages | Laws |