rdfs:comment
| - Denization is een voormalige rechtsfiguur die vreemdelingen in het Verenigd Koninkrijk toeliet door middel van een patentbrief een ingezetene (denizen) te worden. De procedure, die terugging tot de 13e eeuw, verleende geen volwaardig burgerschap of nationaliteit, maar een statuut dat kan worden vergeleken met permanent verblijfsrecht. Belangrijk daarin was het recht van de ingezetene om land in eigendom te mogen houden. Naturalisatie bestond ook, maar vergde een meer omslachtige en duurdere procedure via het parlement. Denization raakte in onbruik nadat de British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 het naturalisatieproces had vereenvoudigd. (nl)
- Denization is an obsolete or defunct process in England and Ireland and the later Kingdom of Great Britain, the United Kingdom, and the British Empire, dating back to the 13th century, by which an alien (foreigner), through letters patent, became a denizen, thereby obtaining certain rights otherwise normally enjoyed only by the King's (or Queen's) subjects, including the right to hold land. The denizen was neither a subject (with citizenship or nationality) nor an alien, but had a status akin to permanent residency today. While one could become a subject via naturalisation, this required a private act of Parliament (or latterly of a colonial legislature); in contrast, denization was cheaper, quicker, and simpler. Denization fell into obsolescence when the British Nationality and Status of (en)
- Denization är den process i Kungariket England och Kungariket Irland, samt senare Kungariket Storbritannien, Storbritannien och Brittiska imperiet, vilket går tillbaks till 1200-talet, genom vilket en utlänning genom patentbrev blev en så kallad denizen. Som denizen fick personen ifråga vissa rättigheter som normalt endast tillkom Kungens eller Drottningens "subjekt", däribland rätten att inneha land. Processen upphörde i och med (4 & 5 ). En denizen var varken en medborgare eller en främling, utan hade en status liknande som permanent uppehållstillstånd idag. Denizenen var inte en medborgare eftersom denne inte hade några politiska rättigheter, kunde inte bli medlem av parlamentet eller hålla några civila eller militära officiella uppdrag etc. Dock gav det personen ifråga rättigheter att (sv)
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has abstract
| - Denization is an obsolete or defunct process in England and Ireland and the later Kingdom of Great Britain, the United Kingdom, and the British Empire, dating back to the 13th century, by which an alien (foreigner), through letters patent, became a denizen, thereby obtaining certain rights otherwise normally enjoyed only by the King's (or Queen's) subjects, including the right to hold land. The denizen was neither a subject (with citizenship or nationality) nor an alien, but had a status akin to permanent residency today. While one could become a subject via naturalisation, this required a private act of Parliament (or latterly of a colonial legislature); in contrast, denization was cheaper, quicker, and simpler. Denization fell into obsolescence when the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 simplified the naturalisation process. Denization occurred by a grant of letters patent, an exercise of the royal prerogative. Denizens paid a fee and took an oath of allegiance to the crown. For example, when Venetian mariner Gabriel Corbet was granted letters of denization in 1431 for service upon the seas to Henry V and Henry VI, he was required to pay 40 shillings into the hanaper for the privilege. The status of denizen allowed a foreigner to purchase property, although a denizen could not inherit property. Sir William Blackstone wrote "A denizen is a kind of middle state, between an alien and a natural-born subject, and partakes of both." The denizen had limited political rights: he could vote, but could not be a member of parliament or hold any civil or military office of trust. Denizenship has also been compared to the Roman civitas sine suffragio, although the rights of denizens were restricted by the Act of Settlement 1701, not by common or immemorial law. Denization was expressly preserved by the and by s25 of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914. According to the British Home Office, the last denization was granted to the Dutch painter Lawrence Alma-Tadema in 1873; the Home Office considered it obsolete when the Prince of Pless applied for it in 1933, and instructed him to apply for naturalisation instead. The British Nationality Act 1948, a major reform of citizenship law in Britain, made no mention of denization and neither abolished nor preserved the practice. Denization, as an exercise of royal power, was applicable throughout the British dominion to all British subjects. That is, it was exercisable in the colonies. For example, denization occurred in the colony of New South Wales. As in Britain, the practice became obsolete to naturalisation, with the last known denization in 1848. The term denizen may also refer to any national of a country, whether citizen or non-citizen, with a right to remain in and return to the country. In the United States, unassimilated Native Americans, although born on U.S. soil, were not deemed to be citizens of the United States or any state, but of a domestic dependent nation contained within the United States. However, in 1924 the Indian Citizenship Act, made all Native Americans born in the United States and its territories American citizens. (en)
- Denization is een voormalige rechtsfiguur die vreemdelingen in het Verenigd Koninkrijk toeliet door middel van een patentbrief een ingezetene (denizen) te worden. De procedure, die terugging tot de 13e eeuw, verleende geen volwaardig burgerschap of nationaliteit, maar een statuut dat kan worden vergeleken met permanent verblijfsrecht. Belangrijk daarin was het recht van de ingezetene om land in eigendom te mogen houden. Naturalisatie bestond ook, maar vergde een meer omslachtige en duurdere procedure via het parlement. Denization raakte in onbruik nadat de British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 het naturalisatieproces had vereenvoudigd. (nl)
- Denization är den process i Kungariket England och Kungariket Irland, samt senare Kungariket Storbritannien, Storbritannien och Brittiska imperiet, vilket går tillbaks till 1200-talet, genom vilket en utlänning genom patentbrev blev en så kallad denizen. Som denizen fick personen ifråga vissa rättigheter som normalt endast tillkom Kungens eller Drottningens "subjekt", däribland rätten att inneha land. Processen upphörde i och med (4 & 5 ). En denizen var varken en medborgare eller en främling, utan hade en status liknande som permanent uppehållstillstånd idag. Denizenen var inte en medborgare eftersom denne inte hade några politiska rättigheter, kunde inte bli medlem av parlamentet eller hålla några civila eller militära officiella uppdrag etc. Dock gav det personen ifråga rättigheter att köpa egendom, även om en denizen inte hade arvsrätt på egendom. (sv)
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