Od Maapäev do Riigikogu. Proces tworzenia estońskiego parlamentaryzmu po I wojnie światowej

Journal Title: PRZEGLĄD SEJMOWY - Year 2019, Vol 150, Issue 1

Abstract

The actions of the Russian Provisional Government which came to power in February 1917 were in general supported by the Estonian nationalists. The Committee of the Estonian Knighthood stated in the name of the Estonian Baltic nobles and local governments that it supported the actions of the Provisional Government and called all classes to follow its instructions and orders. After the February revolution the Estonian national movement urged the reform of local self-governments and the uniting of the Governorate of Livonia counties inhabited by Estonians with the Governorate of Estonia. This was achieved. In October of 1917, after the Bolsheviks came to power in Petrograd, representatives of Estonian bourgeois circles raised the call for independence. This resulted primarily from the Bolsheviks’ approach to property rights. Estonian Bolsheviks, however, believed that the future of the Governorate of Estonia could only be bound to Soviet Russia. For the Baltic Germans, the 1917 Russian revolutions and the resultant seeking of autonomy by the Estonians and Latvians was a threat to their elitist position and the class system. Therefore, they welcomed the German occupation and strove for Estonia’s union with Germany or for the creation of a dukedom allied with Germany. The plan for a dukedom did not materialize. The German occupation of Estonia brought with it, on the one hand, the destruction of Bolshevik power, and on the other hand, the genesis of Estonian national unity and the feeling of belonging together. The Constituent Assembly, elected in February–March of 1919, established the bases for Estonia’s governing system: the constitution and the agrarian law. The adoption of the Agrarian Reform Law and the solving of land issues so that it met the expectations of the majority of the people created a situation where thousands of soldiers felt that they were fighting for their own land. This contributed markedly to winning the War for Independence. Based on the agrarian law and other supplemental decisions, during the period 1919–1939, 48,288 smallholdings were established. The constitution and the agrarian law finally ended the power of the Baltic nobility over the fate of the Estonian people. The text of the constitution adopted by the Constituent Assembly in 1920 remained largely in effect in the subsequent constitution but what changed was the structure of the government. In 1932 and 1933, the electorate was asked to vote on a total of three constitution projects. The last of these received the majority of votes in the October 1933 voting and went into effect as the constitution on 24 February 1934. This second constitution provided for the creation of the office of a president with far-reaching powers. The presidential election could not be held, as on 12 March 1934 a coup took place which insured that the Head of State, Konstantin Päts, retained power. In February 1936 the Head of State decided to ask the people to vote on whether a new constitution should be framed and whether a bicameral National Assembly (Rahvuskogu) should be elected. A general election was held and in early summer of 1937 the National Assembly prepared the text of the constitution, using as model also the constitution of Poland. This became law after a vote in the National Assembly and after the Head of State’s decree and went into effect on 1 January 1938.

Authors and Affiliations

Magnus Ilmjärv

Keywords

Related Articles

Słowenia: ustawa o Radzie Państwa Republiki Słowenii z 10 września 1992 r.

The translated text in the Slovenian act on the National Council of 10 September 1992. The second chamber of the parliament was established in accordance with the Slovenian Constitution of 23 December 1991. Such concept...

Wstępne koncepcje unormowania zasady powszechności prawa wyborczego do Sejmu na ziemiach Królestwa Polskiego po wybuchu I wojny światowej (styczeń–lipiec 1917 r.)

The legislative work carried out by the Parliamentary-Constitutional Commission of the Provisional Council of State from February to July 1917 was an important step in the process of establishing the system of government...

Naczelność Najwyższej Izby Kontroli

The Constitution provides that the Supreme Audit Office (NIK) is the primary state audit institution. The profoundness of its “primacy” still awaits to be discovered. Legal scholars have not yet examined the meaning and...

Uzasadnienie dynamicznej wykładni Konwencji o ochronie praw człowieka i podstawowych wolności — pytania krytyczne

In the light of the case law of the European Court of Human Rights, the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms is a living instrument “which must be interpreted in the light of present-day...

W sprawie problematyki prawa do informacji publicznej w kontekście przepisów rozporządzenia o ochronie danych osobowych

The opinion refers to the issue of the right to public information in the context of the provisions of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The opinion was prepared in connection with the state in which the pub...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP563087
  • DOI 10.31268/PS.2019.06
  • Views 63
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Magnus Ilmjärv (2019). Od Maapäev do Riigikogu. Proces tworzenia estońskiego parlamentaryzmu po I wojnie światowej. PRZEGLĄD SEJMOWY, 150(1), 85-109. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-563087