true
Wales is not governed by England. Wales has its own assemly but as a part of Britain many of its laws and legislations comes from the British parliament.
statues of the British Parliament A+ Recovery
A royal colony, even the governor was appointed by Britain
Charters were the first means of governing the 13 colonies. Each colony had a charter that stated that it was governed by either the British Parliament or directly by the king.
No... the Declaration of Independence was a statement of succession as well as a list of grievences committed against the colonies by the british Parliament and monarch.
true
There is no British Constitution, so it cannot be amended.
They have British common law (the body of court decisions going back several centuries) and the Acts of Parliament.
The British Parliament had to agree to Australia's constitution because prior to 1901, each of the Australialian colonies were part of the British Empire.
Wales is not governed by England. Wales has its own assemly but as a part of Britain many of its laws and legislations comes from the British parliament.
Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act was passed by the British Parliament in 12900.
Depends on what you mean by a "true constitution". The British don't have a codified, written document that they identify as their constitution. It consists of a number of different laws and precedents relied upon by Parliament.
The Pennsylvania Colony was governed for 100 years by the Frame of Government. The Frame of Government was the Constitution for the Province of Pennsylvania.
The Canadian Constitution was written by many members of the Canadian Parliament. It was called the British North America Act of 1967.
They each had a Constitution, a Legislative Assembly elected by adult male citizens, and a Legislative Council upper house, of which the members were elected in some colonies, appointed by the colony's governor in others. The governor of each colony was appointed by the British government (nominally by the Queen/King) and authorised laws passed by their parliament on advice from a Council comprising selected ministers of the government. The voters/citizens might have thought they were not 'ruled' but governed. In representative democracy the members of parliament represent their constituents, they don't rule them.
A constitution is a set of laws on how a country is governed. The British Constitution is unwritten in one single document, unlike the constitution in America or the proposed European Constitution, and as such, is referred to as an unclassified constitution in the sense that there is no single document that can be classed as Britain's constitution. The British Constitution can be found in a variety of documents. Supporters of our constitution believe that the current way allows for flexibility and change to occur without too many problems. Those who want a written constitution believe that it should be codified so that the public as a whole has access to it - as opposed to just constitutional experts who know where to look and how to interpret it.Amendments to Britain's unwritten constitution are made the same way - by a simply majority support in both Houses of Parliament to be followed by the Royal Assent.The British Constitution comes from a variety of sources. The main ones are:Statutes such as the Magna Carta of 1215 and the Act of Settlement of 1701.Laws and Customs of Parliament; political conventionsCase law; constitutional matters decided in a court of lawConstitutional experts who have written on the subject such as Walter Bagehot and A.V Dicey.There are two basic principles to the British Constitution:The Rule of Law The Supremacy of Parliament
"No Act of Parliament can be unconstitutional, for the law of the land knows not the word or the idea."