lord chamberlain
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lord chamberlain, an important officer of the British royal household, to be distinguished from the lord great chamberlain, whose office also evolved from that of the chamberlain at the Norman court. The office of lord chamberlain, unlike that of the lord great chamberlain, is not hereditary, but it is always held by a peer and a privy councilor. Formerly, the lord chamberlain was a member of the government, appointed by the prime minister, and before 1782 the office carried a cabinet rank. In 1924, when the first Labour government was in power, it was decided that the office should be nonpolitical and that the holder should be appointed by agreement between the sovereign and the prime minister.
The lord chamberlain is the second dignitary of the court. On ceremonial occasions he carries a white staff and wears a golden or jeweled key representing the key of the palace, which is supposed to be in his care. He does, in fact, control the state apartments at Windsor Castle and at St. James’s Palace. He is in charge of all court ceremonies and of the arrangements for all state ceremonies, such as state visits of foreign dignitaries, royal marriages, christenings, and funerals except that of the sovereign, which is the responsibility of the earl marshal. He also organizes the royal garden parties, where he is in close personal attendance of the sovereign. He has an office in St. James’s Palace where he is assisted by a staff under a comptroller and an assistant comptroller.
At one time the lord chamberlain discharged important political duties, but these are now mainly confined to presenting addresses from the House of Lords to the sovereign and conveying the reply to them. The same duty is performed for the House of Commons by the vice chamberlain, whose office is still a political appointment. The vice chamberlain is a member of the government of the day, usually one of the junior whips. Like the lord chamberlain, the vice chamberlain carries a white staff as a badge of office on ceremonial occasions.
The lord chamberlain is the head of the royal household and is responsible for the ecclesiastical and medical households, the honourable corps of gentlemen at arms, and the sovereign’s bodyguard of the yeomen of the guard. Under him, too, are such varied officials as the surveyors of the sovereign’s pictures and works of art, the librarian of the royal library, the poet laureate, the master of music, the bargemaster and watermen, and the keeper of the royal swans. When any article of the regalia is required for a state ceremony, such as the opening of Parliament or the distribution of the royal maundy, it is the lord chamberlain who issues the necessary instructions to the keeper of the jewel house at the Tower of London. On the more ceremonial side, the marshal of the diplomatic corps, the officials of the central chancery of orders in knighthood whose province it is to regulate investitures, and the gentlemen ushers and sergeants at arms also come under the lord chamberlain’s office.
Of the gentlemen ushers, the principal usher is the Gentleman or Lady Usher of the Black Rod, whose title is derived from the black rod which is carried as a badge of office. Black Rod is an officer of the Order of the Garter and is in constant attendance at the House of Lords, where it is part of his or her duty to carry messages and summonses to the House of Commons. It is Black Rod, for instance, who is sent at the opening of Parliament to summon members of the House of Commons to attend the upper house in order to hear the speech from the throne.
The lord chamberlain is also chairman of the committee that recommends for the sovereign’s consideration applications for the grant of the royal warrants of appointment for the supply of goods. One of the duties for which the lord chamberlain was best known was the licensing of London theatres and the censorship of stage plays throughout the United Kingdom. This dates back to the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, when the lord chamberlain was in charge of all court entertainments and took the players under his personal protection. To assist him, there were three examiners who advised on plays submitted to them. This persisted until 1968, when Parliament passed the Theatres Act, abolishing censorship on the British stage.
When there is a queen consort or a queen mother, she has her own lord chamberlain, treasurer, mistress of the robes, and ladies-in-waiting.