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Encyclopedia Britannica



BASOCHE, or BAZOCHE

This article appears in Volume V03, Page 485 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: BAR-BEC
BASOCHE, or BAZOCHE , with the analogous forms BASOQUE, BASOGUE and BAZOUGES; from the Lat. basilica, in the sense of law courts, a French gild of clerks, from among whom legal representatives (procureurs) were recruited. This gild was very ancient, even older than the gild of the procureurs, with which it was often at variance. It dated, no doubt, from the time when the profession of procureur (procurator, advocate or legal representative) was still free in the sense that persons rendering that service to others when so permitted by the law were not yet public and ministerial officers. For this purpose there wasestablished near each important juridical centre a group of clerks, that is to say, of men skilled in law (or reputed to be so), who at first would probably fill indifferently the roles of representative or advocate. Such was the origin of the Basoche of the parlement of Paris; which naturally formed itself into a gild, like other professions and trades in the middle ages. But this organization eventually became disintegrated, dividing up into more specialized bodies: that of the
advocates
 , whose history then begins; and that of legal representatives, whose profession was regularized in 1344, and speedily became a sale-able charge. The remnant of the
original
  clerks constituted the new Basoche, which thenceforward consisted only of those who worked as clerks for the procureurs, the richer ones among them aspiring themselves to attain the position of procureur. They all, however, retained some traces of their
original
  conditions. " They are admitted," writes an 18th-century author, " to plead before M. le lieutenant civil sur les referes' and before M. le juge auditeur; so that the procureurs of these days are but the former clerks of the Basoche, admitted to officiate in important cases in preference to other clerks and to their exclusion." From its ancient past the Basoche had also preserved certain picturesque forms and names. It was called the " kingdom of the Basoche," and for a long time its
chief
 , elected each year in general assembly, bore the title of " king." This he had to give up towards the end of the 16th century, by order, it is said, of
Henry
  III., and was thenceforth called the " chancellor." The Basoche had besides its maitres des regales, a grand court-crier, a referendary, an advocate-general, a procureur-general, a chaplain, &c. In early days, and until the first half of the 16th century, it was organized in companies in a military manner and held periodical reviews or parades (montres), sometimes taking up arms in the king's service in time of war. Of this there survived later only an annual cavalcade, when the members of the Basoche went to the royal forest of Bondy to cut the maypole, which they afterwards set up in the court-yard of the Palais. We hear also of satirical and literary entertainments given by clerks of the Palais de Justice, and of the moralities played by then in public, which form an important
element
  in the history of the national theatre; but at the end of the 16th century these performances were restricted to the
great
 
hall
  of the Palais.
To the last the Basoche retained two principal prerogatives. (1) In order to be recognized as a qualified procureur it was necessary to have gone through one's "stage" in the Basoche, to have been entered by name for ten years on its register. It was not sufficient to have been merely clerk to a procureur during the period and to have been registered at his office. This rule was the occasion of frequent conflicts during the 17th and 18th centuries between the members of the Basoche and the procureurs, and on the whole, despite certain decisions favouring the latter, the parlement maintained the rights of the Basoche.
Opinion
  was favourable to it because the certificats de complaisance issued by the procureurs were dreaded. These certificate held good, moreover, in places where there was no Basoche. (2) The Basoche had judiciary powers recognized by the law. It had disciplinary jurisdiction over its members and decided personal actions in civil law brought by one clerk against another or by an outsider against a clerk. The judgment, at any rate if delivered by a maitre des regales, was authoritative, and could only be contested by a civil petition before the ancient council of the Basoche. The Chatelet of Paris had its
special
  basoche, which claimed to be older even than that of the Palais de Justice, and there was contention between them as to certain rights. The clerks of the procureurs at the tour des comptes of Paris had their own Basoche of
great
  antiquity, called the " empire de Galilee." The Basoche of the Palais de Justice had in its ancient days the right to create provostships in localities within the jurisdiction of the parlement of Paris, and thus there sprang up a certain number of local basoches. Others were independent in origin; among such being the " regency " of Rouen and the Basoche of the parlement of Toulouse.
1 A procedure for obtaining a provisional judgment on urgent cases.
See also Repertoire de jurisprudence des Guyot; Recueil des Statuts du royaume de la basoche (Paris, 1654); L. A. Fabre, Etudes historiques sur les clercs de la basoche (Paris, 1856). (J. P. E.)


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