In the 14th century, King
Edward III said that his Lord Chancellor, while in council, should sit on a
wool bale, now known as "The Woolsack", to symbolise the central nature and great importance of the wool trade to the
economy of England in the Middle Ages. Indeed, it was largely to protect the vital
English wool trade routes with continental Europe that the
Battle of Crécy was fought with the French in 1346. In 1938, it was discovered that the Woolsack was stuffed with horsehair. When it was remade, it was re-stuffed with wool from the
British Isles and 15 countries across the
Commonwealth, supplied by the
International Wool Secretariat, as a symbol of the country's trading routes overseas. From the
Middle Ages until 2006, the presiding officer in the House of Lords was the
Lord Chancellor, and the Woolsack was usually mentioned in association with the office of Lord Chancellor. In July of that year, the function of
Lord Speaker was split from that of Lord Chancellor under the
Constitutional Reform Act 2005, with the former now sitting on the Woolsack. Until 1949, Canada's
Senate had a judges' woolsack. At the behest of
Jean-François Pouliot, an MP from
Quebec, who decried the use of a cushion on which the
Supreme Court of Canada's judges had to sprawl "like urchins," the woolsack was eventually abolished and replaced with conventional chairs. The original woolsack is still extant. ==Ceremonial role==