A special committee headed by Prince Nikita Odoyevsky was created to draft the new legal code. Members of the committee included Prince Semyon Prozorovsky, an
okolnichy prince (one of highest ranks of boyars in old Russia),
Fyodor Volkonsky, as well as the scribes Gavrila Leontyev and Fyodor Griboyedov. At that time, the practical job of the
Zemsky Sobor began. The
Zemsky Sobor was intended to consider the bill of the
Ulozheniye. It had many members, including representatives of
posad people communities. The
Zemsky Sobor consisted of two houses. The tsar, the
Boyar Duma and Consecrated Sobor comprised one house, and elected people of different ranks took part in sessions of another house.
Deputies of the
nobility and
posad people had a major impact on the adoption of many of the norms of the
Ulozheniye. On 29 January 1649, the drafting and editing of the
Ulozheniye concluded. The original of this historical document is a
scroll consisting of 959 narrow columns. At the end of the document are 315 signatures of Sobor members. The signatures of the scribes are located at the margins of the columns. Centuries later, during the reign of
Catherine II, a silver ark was created to store this original scroll. At the present time, the original of the
Sobornoye Ulozheniye is housed in the
Kremlin Armoury. Later, a copy of the scroll was transcribed in book format. From this book, the
Ulozheniye was reprinted twice in 1649, with 1200 copies made each time. The
Sobornoye Ulozheniye of 1649 is considered a new stage in the development of Russian jurisprudence. All Sobor members endorsed handwritten copies of the
Ulozheniye with their signatures, and these copies were then distributed to all state offices (
prikazes) in
Moscow as a guide for policy and law. Elected people sent their own amendments and additions to the
Duma as
petitions of Zemstvo. Some of these were enacted in cooperation with the elected officials, the Duma and the Tsar.
Vasily Klyuchevsky singles out several technical stages at process of lawmaking of the
Ulozheniye: •
Codification — (work with sources, editing) by the committee headed by Prince Odoevskii. •
Conference — bringing up petition for discussion. •
Revision — revision and editing of bills by Duma and Tsar. •
Legislative decision — a common decision about one or another article of the
Ulozheniye. •
Hand signing — signing of code of laws unanimously by members of the Sobor. The
Sobornoye Ulozheniye represents the first attempt by Russian legislators to form system of norms and classify them by
areas of law. Significant attention was given to
procedural law. == Sources of the
Ulozheniye ==