Return to search

Conseil d'Etat du roi

Corporate body | XIIIe siècle - 1791 Identifier: FRAN_NP_051770
View in original presentation

View context

France
Archives nationales

Date of foundation:

XIIIe siècle

Date of closing:

1791

Note:

Le Conseil du roi se détache progressivement de la Curia regis au cours d'un long XIIIe siècle.

Alternative names:

Conseil d'Etat

France. Conseil du roi (12..-1791)

LEGAL STATUS

Legal status:

organe gouvernemental de la monarchie (Ancien Régime)

FUNCTION

Function:

action gouvernementale

Function:

Function:

contentieux

Function:

Function:

Function:

législation

MANDATE

Citation:

Règlement du 28 juin 1738, rédigé sous le chancelier d'Aguesseau en 1738, dont le commentaire, par les fils de ce dernier, conseillers d'Etat, est publié en 1786 par Jean François Tolozan, maître des requêtes et intendant du commerce : Règlement du Conseil, précédé de l'explication des différents articles compris dans chacun des chapitres..., Paris, 1786. [concerne surtout le Conseil privé mais intéresse aussi l'histoire du Conseil en général].

Citation:

Règlement fait par le roi pour la réunion de ses conseils, 9 août 1789, dans Collection complète des lois, décrets, ordonnances, règlements, avis du Conseil-d'État, de 1788 à 1830, par DUVERGIER (J.-B.), tome 1, 1834, p. 36-37.

Citation:

Décret du 27 avril 1791 "relatif aux affaires ci-devant pendantes aux conseils des finances, des dépêches, grande direction, commissions particulières, soit par appel, soit par évocation ou attribution" , Ibidem, p. 333-334.

Citation:

Ordonnance de juillet 1316 sur le Conseil, le Parlement et la Chambre des comptes (AN, JJ 57, fol. 40v)

Citation:

Ordonnance du 18 juillet 1318, donnée à Pontoise (AN, JJ 57, fol. 88r).

Citation:

Règlement du 30 novembre 1380 (Ordonnances des rois de France de la troisième race, t. VI, p. 529).

Citation:

Ordonnance du 2 août 1497 sur le Grand Conseil (Ordonnance des rois de France de la troisième race, t. XXI, p. 4).

Citation:

Règlement du 30 octobre 1557 (BnF, Fr 18152, fol. 1r).

Citation:

Règlement du 23 octobre 1563 (copie, KK 65, fol. 73r).

STRUCTURE

Note:

À partir du règne personnel de Louis XIV, le Conseil du roi comprend principalement trois conseils de gouvernement :

le Conseil d'En-haut, dont les membres portent à vie le titre de « ministres d'État », voué à la haute politique, à la diplomatie, à la conduite des opérations militaires, aux affaires intérieures les plus importantes ;

le Conseil des Dépêches, chargé des affaires intérieures du royaume ;

le Conseil royal des finances, à la tête de la politique financière et économique du royaume.

S'y ajoutent le Conseil royal de commerce créé en 1664, disparu en 1676, réapparu en 1730 mais réuni au précédent en 1787, ainsi que des conseils plus ou moins éphémères institués en fonction de l'actualité (Conseil de conscience sous les régences d'Anne d'Autriche et de Philippe d'Orléans, Conseil de religion chargé sous Louis XIV des affaires protestantes, Conseil de santé créé dans le contexte de la peste de Marseille en 1720, etc.).

Les conseils de justice et d'administration présidés par le chancelier tendent à se réduire à partir de Louis XIV au seul Conseil privé ou des Parties, ancêtre de la cour de cassation, qui exerce la justice retenue du roi. Le Conseil d'État et des finances, chargé de l'administration et du contentieux en matière financière n'est plus en réalité qu'une fiction : les nombreux arrêts simples en finances émanent dorénavant du Conseil royal des finances, des directions des finances, ou même le plus souvent échappent à toute délibération, évolution considérée comme le triomphe de « l’État de finance » sur « l’État de justice ».

HISTORICAL NOTE

Historical note:

Dans la France du Moyen Âge et de l'Ancien Régime, le roi gouverne par conseil. Aussi le roi et le Conseil ne peuvent-ils se concevoir l'un sans l'autre. En tant qu'organe de gouvernement, le Conseil du roi, comme le Parlement, la Chambre des comptes et l'hôtel du roi, est issu du démembrement de la Curia regis au cours d'un long XIIIe siècle. Cependant, le Conseil ne s'institutionnalise que tardivement, et ses contours sont longtemps restés éminemment flexibles.

Un règlement de l'hôtel, en date du 23 janvier 1286, institue treize « clercs de conseils », appelés tantôt à la Cour, près du monarque, tantôt au Parlement. A la fin du XIIIe siècle, le mot « Conseil » peut ainsi désigner l'ensemble des organes issus de l'ancienne Curia regis, ou le seul Conseil de gouvernement. Ce dernier est parfois désigné par l'expression Magnum Consilium ou « Grand Conseil » à partir du règne de Philippe le Bel, sans exclusive toutefois. A mesure qu’on avance dans le temps, le personnel du Conseil, du Parlement et de la Chambre des comptes tend à devenir distinct, mais les trois organismes conservent une grande porosité. À de très nombreuses reprises, des membres des deux cours souveraines sont invités à siéger au Conseil, et pendant très longtemps, les membres du Conseil ont eu leurs entrées au Parlement et à la Chambre des comptes. Ce n'est qu'en 1673 qu'un règlement déclare incompatibles la dignité de conseiller d’État et les offices de judicature, interdisant ainsi aux présidents des cours souveraines l'entrée au Conseil.

Le Conseil du roi, tout en gardant son unicité, caractéristique essentielle de son fonctionnement et de son identité, donne naissance à plusieurs sections spécialisées, correspondant à ses fonctions principales, à savoir :

- la conduite des affaires politiques les plus importantes, en petit comité, autour du monarque, ou au contraire en formation plus large - on gagne alors en solennité et en légitimité ce qu'on perd en efficacité et en discrétion ;

- la conduite de la politique financière ;

- l'exercice de la justice retenue et le suivi de la bonne marche de l'administration.

Au début du XVIe siècle, le Conseil peut se tenir en formation plénière, sous la présidence du roi ou du chancelier : c'est le « Conseil d’État ». Sa compétence est universelle. Cependant, le roi s'est toujours entouré, pour les affaires les plus sensibles et les plus importantes, d'un très petit nombre de proches conseillers. Informel par nature, ce « Conseil secret » ou « Conseil des affaires » est en quelque sorte officialisé sous le règne de François Ier, lorsque le roi décide de le réunir chaque matin, avant la messe. À partir de 1615, s'en détache à son tour le « Conseil des dépêches », en charge principalement de l'administration intérieure.

À partir du règne de Charles VII, plusieurs jours de la semaine sont consacrés aux affaires judiciaires. De ces sessions spécialisées va naître une véritable cour de justice, le Grand Conseil, dont les compétences et l'organisation sont définies par l'ordonnance du 2 août 1497. En raison de son institutionnalisation et de l’opposition du Parlement, le Grand Conseil finit par se cantonner à certaines catégories d’affaires, notamment en matière de bénéfices ecclésiastiques. Cependant, de nombreux procès continuent de remonter jusqu’au roi, sur requête ou sur évocation, de sorte que dans le courant du XVIe siècle, le Conseil accouche d'une nouvelle section spécialisée en matière judiciaire, mais où peut être évoqué tout type de contentieux, le « Conseil privé » ou « Conseil des parties ».

La direction des finances est d'abord exercée par le collège des trésoriers de France et des généraux des finances, organe informel qui s'est développé à l'extérieur du Conseil. Les réformes financières de François Ier y mettent fin, et il faut attendre 1563 pour que soit à nouveau constituée une formation spécialisée en matière financière. Ce premier Conseil des finances est supprimé en 1574, puis reconstitué en 1580. Il prend le nom de « Conseil d’État et des finances » à partir de Sully, mais il est ensuite concurrencé par le « Conseil de direction des finances » créé en 1615, comité plus restreint. Le Conseil d’État et des finances se cantonne alors au contentieux administratif et fiscal.

Sous l'Ancien Régime, le Conseil est au sommet de la vie politique du royaume. Premier organisme de décision, il est aussi une instance judiciaire et administrative par lequel le roi exerce notamment sa justice retenue. À partir de Louis XIV, on distingue nettement les conseils dits « de gouvernement », présidés par le roi et voués aux affaires les plus importantes (notamment celles relevant du domaine de la grande politique) et les « conseils de justice et d’administration » présidés par le chancelier. Le Conseil était assisté de bureaux et commissions qui se multiplient au XVIIIe s.

La majorité des décisions prises par le Conseil (plus exactement par le roi en son Conseil) prenaient la forme d’arrêts. On distingue les arrêts « simples » (rendus en principe en l’absence du roi, au cours des séances présidées par le chancelier), et les arrêts « en commandement », rendus en présence du roi.

Le Conseil du Roi, devenu conseil unique sous le nom de Conseil d’État par le règlement du 9 août 1789, fut supprimé le 27 avril 1791.


Rate this content

Was this content helpful? Let Archives Portal Europe and the archival institution know what you think.

Add feedback

Contact this institution

Feedback is sent directly to the institution holding this material and should preferably be submitted in English or in the language of the institution, if possible. The institution will aim at getting back to you as soon as possible to help you with your request, though you might need to allow between two and four weeks for this depending on the current workload at the institution.

Not all required fields have been filled in.

Full name*

Your full name is required

Email address*

Your email address is required

Your message*

A message is required

Archives Portal Europe help guide

Please select amongst the relevant tips we can help with. If you still have questions, please do not hesitate to contact us, and we will be in touch as soon as possible.

Starting your search here will include all content available in Archives Portal Europe. Simply enter your keyword(s) and hit the search button. Wrap fixed expressions in quotation marks, e.g. “French Revolution”. Check the box to “Search each term separately” in case you are looking for documents containing at least one word, but not necessarily all keywords; this will also allow you to search for the same term in multiple languages at the same time (e.g. “French Revolution” “Révolution Française”). You can also use wildcards - find more about Research Tools here. If you would like to use more specific settings, try our Advanced search

The additional advanced search options give you the possibility to focus your search in:

  • archival documents (Search in archives),
  • names of person and organisations that created, worked with and maintained these documents (Search in names),
  • Institutions currently holding the documents (Search in institutions).

When searching with multiple terms at the same time, wrap fixed expressions in quotation marks (e.g. "French Revolution"), or check the box "Search each term separately" in case you are looking for either one term of the other. This will also allow you to search for the same term in multiple languages (e.g. "French Revolution" "Révolution française"). You can also choose one of the suggestions matching your search term once you start typing.

This will only show results that include documents that have been digitised and are available online

Use this option to search only one or more keywords, rather than all of them

Select where your search terms should appear specifically inside the archival description:

  • Title: search terms will appear in the title, or name, of the description
  • Content Summary: search terms will appear in the main description of the document or of the collection
  • Reference code: it is the identifier of the archival material as provided by the institution. Use this option if you know the exact reference code of the material you are looking for

You can filter results by selecting where your search terms appears specifically inside the archival description:

  • The name can be the full name of a person, family or organisation as well as only parts of it, e.g. only the last name.
  • The identifier is used internally by the institution or refers to (inter)national vocabularies such as the Virtual International Authority File (VIAF).
  • The place can be the place of birth (or foundation), the place of death (or closing), the place of work or any other place of importance.
  • The occupation is the profession or job of a person.
  • The mandate is a law, directive or charter that establishes and defines an organisation's powers, functions, responsibilities or sphere of activities.
  • The function is an activity, role, or purpose performed or manifested by a person, family or organisation.

You can filter results by selecting where your search terms appears specifically inside the description of the archive:

  • Name: search term appears in the name of the institution. It can be the full name of an archival institution or only parts of it.
  • Place: search term appears in the address or area of the institution. It can be the city or town, where the archival institution is located or any other place of importance (e.g. previous locations)

  • A finding aid is a structured description of archival materials per collection or fonds, up to item level.
  • A holdings guide is an overview of the collections and fonds of one archival institution.
  • A source guide is a topic-oriented overview of collections and fonds of one or several institutions.
    You can filter by one or more entity types:
  • A person (e.g. John Locke, or Jean Jaques Rousseau);
  • A family (e.g. Bonaparte, or Helgason);
  • A corporate body, i.e. the name of an institution, organisation, or company (e.g. Ministerie van Justitie, or Electro Mecánica Antonio Armentano)

Please note that this filter will only include institutions, for which a type has been provided as part of their descriptions:

  • A business archive holds the records of (often) commercial organisations.
  • A church or religious archive holds the records of church parishes or religious organisations, e.g. birth or death registers.
  • A county or local authority archive holds the records of the county's administrative bodies.
  • A media archive holds audiovisual or sound records, e.g. a film archive or the archive of a broadcasting company.
  • A municipal archive holds the records of a town or city administration.
  • A national archive holds the records of a country's administrative bodies, i.e. from ministries and other public bodies, sometimes also private papers of former ministers, chancellors, or presidents.
  • A private person or family archive holds the records forming the legacy of a prominent person or family.
  • A regional archive holds the records of a region's administrative bodies.
  • A specialised governmental archive holds records of public bodies, often operating on a national level, that are not part of the national archives' holdings.
  • A specialised non-governmental archive or archive of another cultural heritage institution hold collections from various cultural heritage institutions, eg. museum archives, libraries archives, etc
  • A university archive or archive of another research organisation holds the records pertaining to the administration of the according educational or research body.
  • Political parties, popular/labour movements and other non-governmental organisations, associations, agencies and foundations hold the archival collections of these institutions, outside of governmental records and outside of business archives (e.g., NGOs)

Enter a start and/or end date in the format DD-MM-YYYY, i.e. 01-01-1900 for 1 January 1900. This will allow you to focus your search on a specific period of time. You can use the calendar function or type directly in the text field. The checkbox "Exact date search" concentrates the search on one specific date.

Check "View in context" to view the results in the hierarchical structure of archives.

  • Choose "List view" to view the results in a simple list, ordered according to relevance or date
  • Choose "Context view" to view the results in the hierarchical structure of the holding archives.

For more details see Research Tools

Please sign in to save your searches.

A holdings guide is an overview of the collections and fonds of one archival institution.

A finding aid is a structured description of archival materials per collection or fonds up to item level.

You can filter results by selecting one or more countries of interest. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results by one or more holding archival institutions. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can select to view results from a specific Finding Aid, i.e., a structured description of archival materials per collection or fonds up to item level. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter by type of descriptive document:

  • "Holdings Guide": an overview of the collections and fonds of one archival institution.
  • "Source guide": a topic-oriented overview of collections and fonds of one or several institutions. a description of the archival collections available. Similar to Holdings guides
  • "Finding aid" provides more detailed descriptions of the archival materials of specific collections or fonds

You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results by selecting "Fonds description" for a general overview or "Other descriptions" for item level. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results by selecting only those containing digital objects, i.e. the link to the digitised version of the archival material you are looking for. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results by type of digital object you are interested in:

  • Text: most documental material, such as administrative records, letters, manuscripts etc.
  • Image: includes photographs, posters, maps.
  • Sound: sound recording with no images
  • Video: moving images with or without sound
  • Unspecified: indicates that the holding institution has not specified the type of digital object
  • 3D: 3-d digital objects

You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your filter selection will appear above. Click "Clear filters" to see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results based on the date of creation of the archival material (which may differ from the time period you are interested in - e.g., philosophers from the Enlightenment period reflecting on classic thinkers)

  • Full dates includes normalised date information available for date-based searches. It is recommended to combine this selection with the filters "Start timespan" and "End timespan" for more details.
  • Only descriptive dates provides the date information in human-readable format.
  • No date either includes documents where the creation date is unknown, or where date information is not in a machine-readable format

Please note that not all documents contain a machine-readable date. More information here

You can filter results based on the date of creation of the archival material (which may differ from the time period you are interested in - e.g., philosophers from the Enlightenment period reflecting on classic thinkers). This filter will only include materials with "Full dates", i.e. those that include date information available for date-based searches. You can either search for a specific date of interest or focus step by step on the time span of a century, decade, year or month. When searching for a specific date, enter the date in the format DD-MM-YYYY, i.e. 01/01/1900 for 1 January 1900, via the calendar function or by typing directly in the text field.
This filter concentrates on the earliest dates mentioned in the materials.

You can filter results based on the date of creation of the archival material (which may differ from the time period you are interested in - e.g., philosophers from the Enlightenment period reflecting on classic thinkers). This filter will only include materials with "Full dates", i.e. those that include date information available for date-based searches. You can either search for a specific date of interest or focus step by step on the time span of a century, decade, year or month. When searching for a specific date, enter the date in the format DD-MM-YYYY, i.e. 01/01/1900 for 1 January 1900, via the calendar function or by typing directly in the text field.
This filter concentrates on the latest dates mentioned in the materials.

You can filter results based on the language in which the material is written. Please note that this filter will only include materials where specific language information has been provided by the institution and is therefore in a machine-readable format. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your selection will then be displayed above the search results (see "Search filters"). Clicking "Clear filters" will remove your selection and you will see all results matching your initial search request again.



You can filter results by selecting one or more topics of interest. Please note that this filter will only include materials where the topic has been assigned and is therefore in a machine-readable format. Read how to assign a topic to documents on the Topics page. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your selection will then be displayed above the search results (see "Search filters"). Clicking "Clear filters" will remove your selection and you will see all results matching your initial search request again.



You can filter results by selecting where your search terms appears specifically inside the archival description:

  • The name can be the full name of a person, family or organisation as well as only parts of it, e.g. only the last name.
  • The identifier is used internally by the institution or refers to (inter)national vocabularies such as the Virtual International Authority File (VIAF).
  • The place can be the place of birth (or foundation), the place of death (or closing), the place of work or any other place of importance.
  • The occupation is the profession or job of a person
  • The mandate is a law, directive or charter that establishes and defines an organisation's powers, functions, responsibilities or sphere of activities.
  • The function is an activity, role, or purpose performed or manifested by a person, family or organisation

You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your selection will then be displayed above the search results (see "Search filters"). Clicking "Clear filters" will remove your selection and you will see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results by type of entities:

  • Person (e.g., John Locke or Jean Jaques Rousseau)
  • Family (e.g., the family Bonaparte)
  • Corporate body (an institution, organisation, or company, e.g. the "Ministerie van Justitie")
You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your selection will then be displayed above the search results (see "Search filters"). Clicking "Clear filters" will remove your selection and you will see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results based on the language in which the material is written. Please note that this filter will only include materials where specific language information has been provided by the institution and is therefore in a machine-readable format. You can also combine this filter with other filters. Your selection will then be displayed above the search results (see "Search filters"). Clicking "Clear filters" will remove your selection and you will see all results matching your initial search request again.

You can filter results based on the type of holding institution. Please note that this filter will only include institutions, for which a type has been provided as part of their descriptions.

  • A business archive holds the records of (often) commercial organisations.
  • A church or religious archive holds the records of church parishes or religious organisations, e.g. birth or death registers.
  • A county or local authority archive holds the records of the county's administrative bodies.
  • A media archive holds audiovisual or sound records, e.g. a film archive or the archive of a broadcasting company.
  • A municipal archive holds the records of a town or city administration.
  • A national archive holds the records of a country's administrative bodies, i.e. from ministries and other public bodies, sometimes also private papers of former ministers, chancellors, or presidents.
  • A private person or family archive holds the records forming the legacy of a prominent person or family.
  • A regional archive holds the records of a region's administrative bodies.
  • A specialised governmental archive holds records of public bodies, often operating on a national level, that are not part of the national archives' holdings.
  • A specialised non-governmental archive or archive of another cultural heritage institution hold collections from various cultural heritage institutions, eg. museum archives, libraries archives, etc
  • A university archive or archive of another research organisation holds the records pertaining to the administration of the according educational or research body.
  • Political parties, popular/labour movements and other non-governmental organisations, associations, agencies and foundations hold the archival collections of these institutions, outside of governmental records and outside of business archives (e.g., NGOs)

Write your message in your own language and use this drop-down menu to have your message translated into English or in the language of the institution for a swifter response. By checking this box and selecting a language you will send your original message along with the translated version

What kind of suggestion would you like to make?

  • Assign to topic: assign this record to one of our Topics. Topics are created following the Unesco Thesaurus
  • Suggest translation: If you have translated this archival description or the documents themselves, please send it to us as a .doc or .pdf file
  • Connect to another resource: If this object relates to another resource in Archives Portal Europe, or anywhere else on the web (e.g., an article on Wikipedia), you can suggest it to be linked to this resource
  • Other: If you have any other relevant material, such as a transcription of the document, please upload it and let us know here

This is a test area to fill out all the copyright details for Attribution Creative Commons Licence

This object is not or no longer protected by copyright and has been labelled with the Public Domain Mark. It can be used by anyone without any restrictions.

This object is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication. All possible existing rights in the content are waived, and the object can be used by anyone without any restrictions.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution (BY) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the licensed object, even commercially, as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

This is a test area to fill out all the copyright details for Attribution Creative Commons Share Alike Licence

This is a test area to fill out all the copyright details for NoDerivs

This is a test area to fill out all the copyright details for NonCommercial

This object is in the public domain, but has been digitised as the outcome of a public-private partnership, where the terms of the contractual agreement limit commercial use for a certain period of time. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the object for non-commercial use only.

This object has been identified as an Orphan Work in the country of first publication and in line with the requirements of the national law implementing Directive 2012/28/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on certain permitted uses of orphan works.

You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy or moral rights.

This object is in the public domain, but is subject to known legal restrictions other than copyright which prevent its free re-use. Please contact the providing institution for more information.

This object is currently in copyright. Please contact the providing institution for more information and in order to acquire additional permissions for re-use.

The copyright status of this object has not been evaluated yet. Please contact the providing institution for more information.

You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy, or moral rights.

This object is currently in copyright and the rights holder(s) have allowed re-use for educational purposes only. You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy or moral rights.

Please contact the providing institution for more information and in order to acquire additional permissions for any other uses.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, ShareAlike (BY-SA) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak and build upon the licensed object, even for commercial purposes, as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence, and you license your adaptations of the object under the same terms.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, ShareAlike (BY-SA) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak and build upon the licensed object, even for commercial purposes, as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence, and you license your adaptations of the object under the same terms.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, No Derivates (BY-ND) licence. You can copy and redistribute the object, even commercially, as long as no alteration is made to the object and you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

If you remix, transform or build upon the object, you may not distribute the modified material.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, Non-Commercial (BY-NC) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the licensed object for non-commercial use only and as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, Non-Commercial, ShareAlike (BY-NC-SA) licence. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the licensed object for non-commercial use only, as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence, and as long as you license your adaptations of the object under the same terms.

This object is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons - Attribution, Non-Commercial, No Derivates (BY-NC-ND) licence. You can copy and redistribute the object for non-commercial use only, as long as no alteration is made to the object and as long as you attribute the rights holder as described in the licence.

If you remix, transform or build upon the object, you may not distribute the modified material.

This object is in the public domain, but has been digitised as the outcome of a public-private partnership, where the terms of the contractual agreement limit commercial use for a certain period of time. You can copy, redistribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the object for non-commercial use only.

This object has been identified as an Orphan Work in the country of first publication and in line with the requirements of the national law implementing Directive 2012/28/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on certain permitted uses of orphan works.

You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy or moral rights.

This object is in the public domain, but is subject to known legal restrictions other than copyright which prevent its free re-use. Please contact the providing institution for more information.

This object is currently in copyright. Please contact the providing institution for more information and in order to acquire additional permissions for re-use.

The copyright status of this object has not been evaluated yet. Please contact the providing institution for more information.

You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy, or moral rights.

This object is currently in copyright and the rights holder(s) have allowed re-use for educational purposes only. You are free to use this object in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. Please note that you are responsible for your own use, including the need to obtain other permissions e.g. with regard to publicity, privacy or moral rights.

Please contact the providing institution for more information and in order to acquire additional permissions for any other uses.

Return to search Make a suggestion Contact this institution