Chancellery
The term Chancellery stands for the authority that supports a Chancellor in his work - or for the building that is the seat of this authority and the Chancellor.
This applies in detail to:
- in the North German Confederation and in the German Empire
- the Federal Chancellery or Reich Chancellery (1867–1878) initially the only supreme federal authority from which the Reich Office of the Interior (e.g. Ministry of the Interior) became
- the Reich Chancellery (1878-1945) as the headquarters of the Reich Chancellor (initially called the Central Authority of the Reich Chancellor ),
- their seat
- and its new building from 1938, see New Reich Chancellery
- in the Federal Republic of Germany since 1949 the Federal Chancellery, the federal authority, see Federal Chancellery (Germany)
- its headquarters in Berlin (since 2001), see Federal Chancellery (Berlin)
- its former headquarters in Berlin (1999–2001), see State Council building
- its former headquarters in Bonn (1976–1999), see Federal Chancellery (Bonn)
- its former headquarters in Bonn (1949–1976) and second headquarters since 1976, see Palais Schaumburg
- the Federal Chancellery of the Republic of Austria and its seat in Vienna, see Federal Chancellery (Austria)
- the authority of the Federal Chancellor of the Swiss Confederation, see Federal Chancellery
See also
Web links
Wiktionary: Chancellery - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations