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Opening of the Legal Year – 1 October 2008

Judicial Communications Office news release

News release 17/08

25/08/2008

 
The legal year traditionally begins in October and courts sit for four terms during the year. The 2007/2008 term dates are:
  • Michaelmas: 1 October 2008 – 19 December 2008
  • Hilary: 12th January 2009 – 8th April 2009
  • Easter: 21st April 2009 – 22nd May 2009
  • Trinity: 2nd June 2009 – 31st July 2009

Courts will not sit on Monday 4th May 2009 as this will be a Bank Holiday.

The start of the legal year is marked by a procession of judges arriving at Westminster Abbey from the Royal Courts of Justice in The Strand for a religious service, followed by the Lord Chancellor’s ‘breakfast’ in the Great Hall in the Houses of Parliament.

Timetable

10.30am People start arriving at Westminster Abbey
11.30am Service begins
12.35pm Leave Westminster Abbey for the Great Hall

History

The service in Westminster Abbey dates back to the Middle Ages when judges prayed for guidance at the start of the legal term. Judges, whose courts were held in Westminster Hall, left the City and walked to the Abbey to take part in the service.
Before the Reformation it was customary to fast for several hours before taking communion during the service. After the ceremony the Lord Chancellor would offer the judge some food to break their fast before they took their seats in courts, hence the term ‘breakfast’.

Present Day
The ceremonies now are more or less as they have always been but, instead of the two mile walk from the Royal Courts of Justice to Westminster Abbey, which has been the case since the late nineteenth century, the judges now travel by car.
The 45-minute service, which starts at 11:30am, is conducted by the Dean of Westminster. It includes prayers, hymns, psalms and anthems; the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, and the Lord Chief Justice read lessons.
Around 1,000 people are invited to attend the service and 500 to attend the breakfast. These include judges, senior judicial officers, the Law Officers, Queen's Counsel (QC), Government ministers, lawyers, members of the European Court and other overseas judges and lawyers. Judges and QCs wear ceremonial dress; the Lord Chancellor will wear formal dress (No wig).
After the service the guests will walk from Westminster Abbey to the Great Hall for the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice’s breakfast, which will consist of a light buffet.

Disruption of Ceremonies
Although well-established traditions, both ceremonies were cancelled on occasion during the last century. The breakfast was cancelled during the First World War and was only held four times during the 22 years 1931-1953. In 1940 the service had to be cancelled due to bomb damage in the Abbey and it was not held again until 1946. In 1953 the ceremony took place in St Margaret’s Church because structures and decorations for the Coronation in the Abbey had not been removed.

Ends

 

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