Origins . Mural painting from the Palau Berenguer d'Aguilar (Barcelona), c. 1285 The origin of the Catalan Courts is located in the
Cort Comtal (County Court) of Barcelona, and was modelled on the Frankish
Curia regis, and also followed the tradition of the meetings of the
Peace and Truce that from 1021 met to discuss and agree on the termination of wars and feudal violence. One of the first precedents of the Catalan Courts date from 1192, the year in which the townspeople participated for the first time in the meeting of the
Peace and Truce. The first Catalan legal code, the
Usages of Barcelona, was promulgated by count
Ramon Berenguer I based on the decisions of these assemblies. The financial and military power of the counts of Barcelona was quite limited due to the impact of the
Feudal Revolution during the regency of countess
Ermesinde of Carcassonne (1018–1044). Their personal resources were particularly insufficient in periods of economic crisis or military expansion, of which they were many from the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries. The need to secure troops and revenue led to the steady expansion of the Count of Barcelona's court. After the formation of the
Crown of Aragon in 1164 through the dynastic union of the County of Barcelona and the Kingdom of Aragon, it became the Royal Court. The Royal Court of 1214 was convened by the papal legate, Cardinal
Peter of Benevento in the Castle of la Suda, in
Lleida and responded to the need to fix the confusing situation in the country after the death of King
Peter of Aragon at the
Battle of Muret (1213) and the beginning of the reign of his son James I who was only six years old. The new king of Aragon and count of Barcelona took his oath before prelates and magnates of the royal curia, representatives of cities and villages. At the time of
James I (1208–1276), they met summoned by the king as representative of the social classes of the time. The Court of 1218 is the first that can be considered a General Court, because in 1214 there was a lack of representation of the municipalities and only one specific issue was debated.
Regulated Courts Under the reign of
Peter the Great (1276–1285), the Catalan Courts took institutional form.
Courts of 1283 In the Courts held in Barcelona in 1283, the king was forced to hold a General Court once a year, with representative participation of the time, to discuss the good of the state and land reform. The king himself stated: . (from
Catalan: "We want, we statue and we order: if we and our successors want to make any general constitution or statute in Catalonia, we will submit them to the approval and consent of the prelates, of the barons, of the knights and of the citizens or, from those apellates, of the largest and healthiest part of those."). That decision represented a radical change in the legislative procedure of the Principality: the Catalan Courts became officially a legislative body as the king would need the consent of the Courts in order to pass the legislation.
Courts of 1289 In the Courts held in Monzón in 1289, a delegation of the General Court was appointed as a permanent council to collect the "service" or tribute that the arms granted to the king at his request. Later, this would give rise to the Deputation of the General or Generalitat of Catalonia, in the fourteenth century. Its regulation was also used to create in the fifteenth century the
Valencian Generalitat (1418).
Courts of 1358 In the Parliament of 1358–1359, held in Barcelona,
Vilafranca del Penedès and
Cervera under King
Peter IV,
Castile invaded the kingdoms of Aragon and Valencia. This caused a series of armed conflicts that resulted in considerable expenses to the
Crown of Aragon. This circumstance prompted the Courts to appoint twelve deputies with executive powers in taxation and some
oïdors de comptes ("auditors of accounts") who controlled the administration, constituting the Deputation of the General (Catalan:
Diputació del General), later often known as "Generalitat", under the authority of
Berenguer de Cruïlles, bishop of
Girona, who is regarded as the first
President of the
Generalitat.
Courts of 1480 In these Courts, the first ones of
Ferdinand II the Catholic, many issues that remained pending after the
Catalan Civil War (1462–1472) were resolved: the role of the Deputation of the General, the pactism and the return of properties. These last two points materialized in the recognition of a defeat shared by both sides, with more focus on seeking the reconstruction of the country than on the repression of the defeated. In these Courts the chapter
Poc valdría was approved, later called "Constitution of the Observance" (''Constitució de l'Observança''), in which the obligation of the king to fulfill and to respect the constitutions of Catalonia is picked up. The chapter instructed the Deputation of the General to ensure its compliance, included by both the king and his officers, and authorized it to revoke any unconstitutional order. It is considered a key piece of Catalan legal system, consecrating and guaranteeing the principle of legality.
Early modern history Habsburg dynasty In 1519, the Courts met in Barcelona to recognize the first unified monarch of all the crowns of Castile and Aragon (resulting in the composite
Monarchy of Spain),
Charles I, and to discuss the granting of financial assistance to the Royal court. It was during the king's stay in Barcelona that he got the news that Charles had been elected emperor of the
Holy Roman Empire under the name of Charles V. During the period of the
Habsburgs, the Catalan Courts were summoned less and less because of a supposed brake from the absolute power of the king. Therefore, the Generalitat, as the body responsible for ensuring compliance with the
constitutions of Catalonia, gained in strength and prominence. In order to solve the lack of representation and get advice of the troubles of the Principality, the Generalitat frequently summoned the
Junta de Braços (States-General), a non legislative assembly composed by members of the Catalan Courts which were in Barcelona at that time. During the reign of
Philip IV (1621–1665) tensions between Catalan institutions and the Monarchy arouse. In the Courts of 1626 the king tried to pass the proposal of
Union of Arms designed by his chief minister
Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares, demanding a military contribution from every realm of the Spanish Crown, including the Principality of Catalonia. However, the Courts were never concluded, due to the opposition of the estates to the measures of Olivares, many of which were contrary to the Catalan constitutions. Those events, coupled with the increased discomfort among Catalan population led to the
Reapers' War (1640–1652).
Last Courts and suppression The last General Court of Catalonia, presided by the disputed Habsburg king
Charles III were held in Barcelona in 1705–1706, which, according to historian Joaquim Albareda, represented an important advance in the guarantee of individual,
civil and political rights (among them, the establishment of the
secrecy of correspondence), while at the same time they consolidated most of the constitutional reforms of the last previous Courts (1701–1702) presided by the Bourbon
Philip V, such as the
Court of Contraventions (Catalan:
Tribunal de Contrafaccions), established in order to ensure the application of the constitutions and solve and prosecute any act (included the ones done by the king or his officers) contrary to the Catalan legislation. Philip V wrote about those constitutional changes that "The last two Courts made Catalans more
Republican than the English with
their parliament". The body was suppressed, like most of the other institutions and public law of the Principality of Catalonia, after the end of the
War of Spanish Succession in 1714, by the
Nueva Planta decrees of 1716 enacted by the new Spanish king,
Philip V, essentially establishing an absolutist system of government modelled after the French one. From that point on, the representatives of Catalonia, Aragon and Valencia were incorporated into the Courts of Castile which, unlike the suppressed Courts of the realms of the Crown of Aragon, operated primarily as an advisory body. The current
Parliament of Catalonia, established in 1932 as the legislative body of the
Generalitat of Catalonia (Catalan institution of self-government), is considered the historical successor of the Courts. ==List of Catalan Courts==