on Sark
Early history In ancient times, Sark was almost certainly occupied by the
Unelli, the
Gallic tribe of the
Cotentin Peninsula. These people were conquered by
Julius Caesar of the
Roman Republic about 56 BC in the
Gallic Wars. About three decades later under
Augustus,
Gallia Celtica was subdivided into three parts, with this area a part of
Gallia Lugdunensis, with its capital in
Lugdunum, now
Lyon. A later division was named
Lugdunensis secunda (
Lyonnaise 2nd). A Unelli town, now
Coutances,
was named Constantia in 298 by the Roman emperor
Constantius Chlorus. Around 430, the
bishopric of Coutances (much later under the
archbishopric of Rouen), was established in
Coutances, having about the same limits as the
Lyonnaise 2nd. In 933, Sark was included in the
Duchy of Normandy, based on the traditional boundaries of the
Lugdunensis secunda and the
archbishopric of Rouen. Following the
Norman conquest of England in 1066, the island was united with the
Crown of England. In the thirteenth century, the French
pirate Eustace the Monk, having served
King John, used Sark as a base of operations. During the
Middle Ages, the island was populated by
monastic communities. By the 16th century, however, the island was uninhabited and used by pirates as a refuge and base. In 1565,
Helier de Carteret,
Seigneur of
St. Ouen in
Jersey, received
letters patent from
Queen Elizabeth I granting him Sark as a
fief in perpetuity on condition that he kept the island free of pirates and occupied by at least forty men who were of her
English subjects or swore allegiance to the Crown. This he duly did, leasing 40 parcels of land (known as "Tenements") at a low rent to forty families, mostly from
St Ouen, on condition that a house be built and maintained on each parcel and that "the Tenant" provide one man, armed with a
musket, for the defence of the island. The 40 tenements survive to this day, albeit with minor boundary changes. (In 2015, the 450th anniversary of this event was commemorated with the construction of a modern
henge monument,
Sark Henge.) A subsequent attempt by the families to establish a constitution under a
bailiff, as in Jersey, was stopped by the Guernsey authorities who resented any attempt to wrest Sark from their bailiwick.
Recent history In 1844, desperate for funds to continue the operation of the silver mine on the island, the incumbent Seigneur,
Ernest le Pelley, obtained
Crown permission to mortgage Sark's
fief to local
privateer John Allaire. After the company running the mine went bankrupt, le Pelley was unable to keep up the mortgage payments and, in 1849, his son
Pierre Carey le Pelley, the new Seigneur, was forced to sell the fief to
Marie Collings for a total of £1,383 (£6,000 less the sum borrowed and an accumulated interest of £616 and 13s). During
World War II, the island, along with the other Channel Islands, was
occupied by German forces between 1940 and 1945.
German military rule on Sark began on 4 July 1940, the day after the Guernsey
Kommandant Major Albrecht Lanz and his interpreter and chief of staff Major Maas visited the island to inform the Dame and Seigneur (
Sibyl and
Robert Hathaway) of the new regime.
British Commandos raided the island several times.
Operation Basalt, during the night of 3–4 October 1942, captured a prisoner, and
Hardtack 7 was a failed British landing in December 1943. Sark was finally liberated on 10 May 1945, a full day after Guernsey. In late August 1990, an unemployed French
nuclear physicist named André Gardes, who believed he was the rightful holder of the Seigneur's title, attempted an invasion of Sark armed with a
semi-automatic weapon. The night Gardes arrived, he put up two posters declaring his intention to take over the island the following day at noon. The following day he started a solo foot patrol in front of the manor, in battle-dress, weapon in hand. While Gardes was sitting on a bench waiting for noon to arrive, the island's volunteer
connétable approached the Frenchman and complimented him on the quality of his weapon. Gardes changed the gun's magazine to illustrate how it worked, allowing the constable to tackle and arrest him. He was given a seven-day sentence, which he served in Guernsey. Gardes attempted this again the following year, but was recognized in Guernsey, arrested, and handed over to the French government.
Transition to new system of government Billionaire brothers
David and Frederick Barclay had purchased an island within Sark's territorial waters in 1993 In the mid-1990s, the brothers petitioned the
European Court of Human Rights in
Strasbourg, France, challenging Sark's inheritance law, which mandated their island be left to David's oldest son. The brothers wanted to will their estate equally to their four children. In 1999, women in Sark were given equal rights of property inheritance, mainly due to the brothers' influence. Until 2008, Sark's parliament (Chief Pleas) was a single chamber consisting of 54 members, comprising the Seigneur, the Seneschal, 40 owners of the tenements and 12 elected deputies. A change to the system was advocated largely by the
Barclay brothers. The old system was described as
feudal and undemocratic because the tenants were entitled to sit in Chief Pleas as of right. On 16 January 2008 and 21 February 2008, the Chief Pleas approved a law to reform Chief Pleas as a 30-member chamber, with 28 members elected in island-wide elections, one hereditary member (the Seigneur) and one member (the Seneschal) appointed for life. The first elections under the new law were held in December 2008 and the new chamber first convened in January 2009. Some Sark residents have complained that the new system is not democratic and have described the powers the new law granted to the Seneschal, an unelected member whose term the new law extended to the duration of his natural life, as imperial or dictatorial. The
Court of Appeal had ruled his powers to be in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights and his powers were subject to further legal challenges on these grounds. In 2012, the BBC
Today programme reported on local disquiet about the influence on the island of the Barclay brothers.
The New Yorker magazine further illustrated the ongoing and escalating tensions between the Barclays and some of the longer-term residents. In 2017,
Private Eye also reported on the situation, following the Barclays' decision to close their vineyard and a number of hotels and shops they own on Sark.
Dark Sky Community status In January 2011, the
International Dark-Sky Association designated Sark as Europe's first Dark Sky Community and the first Dark Sky Island in the world. This designation recognises that Sark is sufficiently clear of
light pollution to allow naked-eye
astronomy. Although Sark was aided in its achievement by its location, its historic ban on cars and the fact that there is no public lighting, it was also necessary for local residents to make adjustments, such as re-siting lights, to cut the light pollution. The designation was made in January 2011, following an audit by the IDA in 2010. The award is significant in that Sark is the first island community to have achieved this; other Dark-Sky Places have, up to now, been mainly uninhabited areas, and IDA chairman Martin Morgan-Taylor commended Sark residents for their effort. After the designation was granted, Sark Astronomy Society worked to secure funds for an astronomical observatory on the island. In October 2015 Sark's observatory was officially opened by
Marek Kukula, public astronomer from the Royal Observatory Greenwich. ==Politics== toward the upper right and
Brecqhou at bottom right. Until the second half of the 2000s, Sark was considered the last
feudal state in Europe. Together with the other
Channel Islands, it is the last remnant of the former
Duchy of Normandy still belonging to
the Crown. Sark belongs to the Crown in its own right and has an independent relationship with the Crown through the Lieutenant Governor in Guernsey. Formally, the Seigneur holds it as a
fief from the Crown,
reenfeoffing the landowners on the island with their respective parcels. The political consequences of this construction were abolished in recent years, particularly in the reform of the legislative body, Chief Pleas, which took place in 2008. Although part of the
Bailiwick of Guernsey, Sark is fiscally separate from the rest of the Bailiwick. Together with the islands of Alderney and Guernsey, Sark from time to time approves Bailiwick of Guernsey legislation, which, subject to the approval of all three legislatures, applies in the entire Bailiwick. Legislation cannot be made which applies on Sark without the approval of the Chief Pleas, although recently Chief Pleas has been delegating a number of ordinance-making powers to the States of Guernsey. Such powers are, however, in each case subject to dis-application, or repeal, by the Chief Pleas. By long standing custom, Sark's criminal law has been made by the States of Guernsey, and this custom was put on a statutory basis in Section 4 of the Reform (Sark) Law, 2008, by which Sark delegates criminal law making power to the States of Guernsey. Sark has its own
United Nations Standard Country or Area Code for Statistical Use (680). That code is used for statistical processing purposes by the Statistics Division of the United Nations Secretariat. The
ISO 3166-1 code element Previously Sark was represented by
Guernsey's country code (GG). Sark also fought for 20 years to get the .cq
country code top-level domain.
Seigneur Christopher Beaumont is the current and twenty-third Seigneur of Sark, having inherited the Seigneurie in 2016. Before the
constitutional reforms of 2008, the Seigneur (or Dame in the case of a woman holding the office) was the head of the government of the Isle of Sark. Many of the laws, particularly those related to inheritance and the rule of the Seigneur, had changed little since their promulgation in 1565 under
Elizabeth I of England. For example, the Seigneur held the sole right to keep pigeons or an
unspayed dog. The Seigneur remains the
lord of the manor for the island, subject only to the
Crown in Right of the Bailiwick of Guernsey as
sovereign and
liege lord. With the approval of the
Lieutenant-Governor of Guernsey, the Seigneur appoints and dismisses Sark's public officers, including the Seneschal, the Prevot, and the Greffier. The Seigneur as chairperson, together with the Seneschal, the Prevot, and the Greffier, comprise a board of trustees for the acquisition, management, and disposition of all property belonging to Chief Pleas. Likewise, the Seigneur has the right to speak at meetings of Chief Pleas, but not to vote, and the right to veto primary legislation before it is presented for
royal assent. Chief Pleas may nevertheless override this veto by a simple majority of its duly elected counseillers.
Seneschal Until 2013, the
Seneschal of Sark was the head of the Chief Pleas. From 1583 and 1675, judicial functions were exercised by five elected
jurats and a juge, but since 1675 the Seneschal has also been the judge of the island. The Seneschal was historically appointed by the Seigneur, but nowadays there is an Appointment Committee consisting of the Seigneur and two other members appointed by the Seigneur. Thus, since 2013, the Chief Pleas has elected its own President, who presides in almost all cases. The Seneschal now presides in Chief Pleas only during the election of the President. The complete list of all the Seneschals of Sark from 1675 is as follows: • Pierre Gibault (15/7/1675–1680) • Thomas de Beauvoir (1680–1683) • Phillipe Dumeresq (1683–1702) • Jean Payne (1702–1707) • Philippe de Carteret (1707–1744) • Henri de Carteret (1744–1752) • Phillipe le Masurier (1752–1777) • Henri le Masurier (1777–1785) • Amice le Couteur (1785–1808) • Jean le Couteur (1808–1812) • Jean Falle (1812–1830) • Elie le Masurier (1830–1841) • Philippe Guille (1841–1851) • Thomas Godfray (1851–1876) • William de Carteret (1876–1881) • Abraham Baker (1881–1891) • Thomas Godfray (1891–1920) • Kenneth Campbell (1920–1922) • Ashby Taylor (1922–1925) • Frederick de Carteret (1925–1937) • William Carré (1937–1945) • William Baker (1945–1969) • Bernard Jones (1969–1979) • Hilary Carré (1979–1985) • Lawrence Philip de Carteret (1985–2000) • Reginald J. Guille (2000–2013) • Jeremy la Trobe-Bateman (2013–2021) • Bethan Owen (2021–2022) • Victoria Stamps (2022–present)
Tenants Pursuant to the royal
letters patent, the Seigneur was to keep the island inhabited by at least 40 armed men. However, it was made plain by the British
Lord Chancellor,
Jack Straw, that this option was not on the table. Offered two options for reform involving an elected legislature, one fully elected, one with a number of seats reserved for elected tenants, 56% of the inhabitants expressed a preference for a totally elected legislature. Following the poll, Chief Pleas voted on 4 October 2006 to replace the twelve deputies and forty tenants in Chief Pleas by 28 '
elected by universal adult suffrage. This decision was suspended in January 2007 when it was pointed out to Chief Pleas that the 56% versus 44% majority achieved in the opinion poll did not achieve the 60% majority required for the constitutional change. The decision was replaced by the proposal that Chief Pleas should consist of sixteen tenants and twelve ' both elected by universal adult suffrage from 2008 to 2012 and that a binding referendum should then decide whether this composition should be kept or replaced by 28 '
. This proposal was rejected by the Privy Council and the 28 ' option was reinstated in February 2008 and accepted by Privy Council in April 2008. In 2003, Chief Pleas voted to vary the long-standing
ban on divorce in the island by extending to the Royal Court of Guernsey power to grant divorces. In 2017, due to a lack of candidates standing for elections, the number of was reduced from 28 to 18, with nine elected every two years. Bailiwick of Guernsey laws and United Kingdom Acts of Parliament can (the latter as in the case of all the other Channel Islands) be extended to Sark. Normally the consent of Chief Pleas is obtained for this, but the Supreme Court ruled in
R v Secretary of State for Justice that it need not be. Sark does not make its own criminal laws; the responsibility for making criminal law was assigned to the States of Guernsey by Section 4(3) of the
Reform (Sark) Law 2008. The list of current Officers of the Island of Sark: • Seneschal – Victoria Stamps • Deputy Prévôt – Joanne Godwin • Greffier – Trevor John Hamon • Constable – • Vingtenier – • Speaker of Chief Pleas – Paul Armorgie
Periodicals Since 2009, a resident of Sark has operated a weekly online newspaper called
The Sark Newspaper (previously known as
The Sark Newsletter). The publisher is a former longtime employee of the wealthy
Barclay brothers, who own the small neighbouring island of
Brecqhou. The publication has compared the local government of Sark "to fascist Germany in the 1930s". In 2014 over 50 residents of Sark filed complaints with the police about accusations made by the paper. Since 2011 a quarterly magazine called
Sark Life, which promotes a positive view of the island and welcomes contributions, is published by the Sark-based publishing company Small Island Publishing. ==Sercquiais==