- A
serjeant-
at-
arms or sergeant-
at-
arms is an
officer appointed by a
deliberative body,
usually a legislature, to keep
order during its meetings. The word...
- The
Serjeant at Arms of the
House of
Commons is a
parliamentary official responsible for
order in the
House of
Commons of the
United Kingdom. The office...
-
exist in Australia,
Canada and New Zealand. The
position is
similar to
serjeant-
at-
arms in
other bodies. The
office was
created in 1350 by
royal letters patent...
- the
serjeant will
usually stand at the door to keep
authority and make sure no one else
comes in or out. The
following have
served as
serjeant-
at-
arms: Laurence...
- Army regiments,
notably The
Rifles Serjeant-
at-
arms, an
officer appointed to keep
order during meetings Serjeant-
at-law, an
obsolete class of barrister...
- Constitution.
Typical non-voting
officers include the Secretary, the Sergeant-
at-
Arms, and
other officers appointed by the
different commissions as part of their...
-
Rivera and
Manuel Palacios Salazar were
selected as
Secretary and
Sergeant at Arms respectively. In this
first instance, the
Senate was
composed of 19 members...
- by the
Serjeant acting under the Speaker's orders, the
Serjeant may use
force to
compel the MP's
obedience to the direction. The
Serjeant-
at-
Arms is also...
- who
became President of the
Royal Naval College, Greenwich. He was
Serjeant at Arms of the
House of
Commons from 1962–76. Gordon-Lennox was born in 1908...
-
chartered engineer and the
current Serjeant-
at-
Arms of the
House of Commons. Oyet is the
first black Serjeant-
at-
Arms. Oyet was born in
Nigeria in 1976...