The office of Lord Chancellor dates back to the Kingdom of England, at least as far back as the Norman Conquest, and possibly earlier. Some give the first chancellor of England as Angmendus, in 605. Originally, the Lord Chancellor was the officer responsible for keeping the Great Seal of England, the king's right hand man, and was usually a clergyman. Until well into the 17th century, the Lord Chancellor often was one of the most important officials in the English government. He still outranks the Prime Minister in official precedence.
Since the initiation of Cabinet government, the Lord Chancellor has always had a seat in the government. Occasionally, the Great Seal would be put into commission, and there would be no Lord Chancellor. In those times, the commission was led by the Lord Keeper.
As Keeper of the Queen's Conscience the Lord Chancellor was once also the chief judge of the court of Chancery in London, dispensing equity to soften the harshness of the law. (A Lord Chancellor features in Charles Dickens's novel Bleak House, where the case of Jarndyce v. Jarndyce has been tied up in Chancery for years.)
Among the most famous Lord Chancellors were Cardinal Thomas Wolsey and Sir Thomas More, Martyr, under King Henry VIII, and Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon under King Charles II.
In 1362 the Lord Chancellor addressed Parliament in English, rather than French, for the first time following the Norman Conquest.
Today, the Lord Chancellor fulfils a threefold role, which comprehends the legislative, executive and judicial parts of the constitution:
The Lord Chancellor is de facto speaker of the House of Lords. The House of Lords in theory has no speaker, the Lords governing themselves rather than accepting the rulings of a speaker, but as its most senior member, the Lord Chancellor, in full court dress and full bottomed wig, sits on the Woolsack and presides over debates. He cannot be absent without the leave of the House.
As a peer, the Lord Chancellor also participates in debates, almost always as a minister on behalf of the Government. When he does so, he moves from the Woolsack to the top of the earls' bench.
The Lord Chancellor is a member of the Cabinet and heads a department known as the Lord Chancellor's Department, responsible for the administration of the courts, the appointment of judges, etc.
As is natural for an office that is at least a thousand years old, the chancellorship has accumulated many duties and functions. In total there are 347 current Acts of Parliament that refer specifically to the Lord Chancellor, ranging from the Treason Act 1351 to the Finance Act 2003.
The Lord Chancellor exercises (on his own behalf as well as on behalf of the Crown) the job of Visitor of many universities, colleges, schools, hospitals and other charitable organisations throughout the United Kingdom. He is responsible for resolving disputes, hearing appeals, etc. In some cases he appoints office-holders such as school governors, etc.
The Lord Chancellor exercises the same functions in relation to Royal peculiars - those churches and chapels which are not under the hierarchy of the Church of England but under direct royal control, such as Westminster Abbey. In addition he has the right to appoint clergymen in over 400 parishes and 12 cathedral canonries under the patronage of the Crown. He exercises the same function in relation to livings under the patronage of the Duchy of Cornwall when the heir to the throne is a minor.
The Lord Chancellor is ex officio a Church Commissioner, a member of the body that controls Church lands. He also appoints 15 members of the Ecclesiastical committees in Parliament which consider measures of the General Synod of the Church of England before they are submitted for Royal assent.
The Lord Chancellor is the head of the judiciary in the United Kingdom. Although the Lord Chancellor is usually a senior lawyer rather than a judge, he upon appointment becomes president of the Appellate Committees of the House of Lords (which is a court and a house of Parliament) and (conventionally) of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, the highest courts that exist in the United Kingdom. He is President of the Supreme Court of Judicature of England and Wales, which comprises the Court of Appeal, the High Court of Justice and the Crown court), as well as President of the Chancery division of the High Court. See Courts of England and Wales.
Lord Chancellors have in practice exercised their judicial functions very sparingly. The convention has developed that Lord Chancellors do not sit as judge in a case which involves the Government; and in addition many cases will be outside the expertise or interest of the Lord Chancellor of the day. The job of presiding over and administering each court from day to day is in reality left to the Senior Law Lord (House of Lords), the Master of the Rolls (Court of Appeal Civil division), the Lord Chief Justice (Court of Appeal Criminal division) and the Vice Chancellor (High Court Chancery division). The other divisions of the High Court - the Queen's Bench and the Family Division - are led by their own heads: the Lord Chief Justice and Lord President respectively.
The present Lord Chancellor has announced that pending reform/abolition of the office he will no longer sit as a judge. Nevertheless, the Lord Chancellor has taken the judicial oath, and it is often said that the most important job of the Lord Chancellor is to preserve the independence of the judiciary, and to argue for the judiciary in the Cabinet. Although it is a political appointment, once appointed the Lord Chancellor is expected to be above party politics, despite being a government minister. The dignity and prestige of this ancient office has meant that on the whole (with a few exceptions) Lord Chancellors have managed to balance the competing demands with success. One political appointee was so good that he was made a saint - see Saint Thomas Becket
Nonetheless, since the enactment of the Human Rights Act 1998 the combined role of the Lord Chancellor as member of the executive and judiciary has increasingly become untenable. The previous Lord Chancellor, Lord Irvine of Lairg refused to rule out sitting as a judge, and the radical proposals that came with his replacement are partly due to his refusal to take this step.
On 12 June 2003 the Prime Minister appointed Lord Falconer of Thoroton as Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs and announced his intention to abolish the office of Lord Chancellor, to create a separate Supreme Court and a separate speaker of the House of Lords. After much confusion it became clear that Lord Falconer was also Lord Chancellor, and would be until such time as Parliament passed legislation to abolish the office, when he appeared in the House of Lords in full-bottomed wig and breeches to preside, as he is required to do by the Standing Orders of the House.
The Lord Chancellor's Department has been renamed the Department for Constitutional Affairs. Until all the new institutions that replace it are in place Lord Falconer will serve as Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs, although he will not sit as a judge.
External link: Reforming the office of Lord Chancellor
History of the office
The role of the Lord Chancellor
Legislative role
Executive role
Ecclesiastical functions
Judicial role
Reform of the Chancellorship
Lord Chancellors and Lord Keepers of England, 1068-1707
in exile
restoration
Lord Chancellors and Lord Keepers of Great Britain, 1707-present