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The Sovereign
Order of Malta is a sovereign subject of international law. The
Order's life is governed by the Constitutional Charter and the Code,
reformed in 1997.
The Order has its own Government, an independent magistracy,
bilateral diplomatic relations with 90 countries and is granted the
status of Permanent Observer in many international organizations,
such as the United Nations. The Order issues its own passports and
stamps and creates public institutions.
The Grand Master governs the Order with the assistance of the
Sovereign Council, presided over by himself and composed of the four
High Officers. These are the Grand Commander, the Grand Chancellor,
the Grand Hospitaller, the Receiver of the Common Treasure, as well
as six other members elected by the General Chapter. The holders of
these offices are chosen from among the professed Knights and the
Knights in Obedience.
The legal
system of the Order is expressed by the usual division into three
powers:
- legislative
power rests with the Chapter General, representing the Supreme
Assembly of Knights, as far as constitutional rules are concerned,
and with the Grand Master and Sovereign Council for
non-constitutional matters;
- executive
power rests with the Sovereign Council, chaired by the Grand Master
and composed of 10 Knights elected by the Chapter General;
- judicial
power is exercised by the Magisterial Courts of First Instance and
of Appeal, composed of judges appointed by the Grand Master and the
Sovereign Council from Order members of legal expertise.
The 10,000
Knights of the Order are divided into three Classes. They must abide
by the precepts dictated by the Church and are required to
participate in the humanitarian assistance activities of the Order.
The Order is
based in Rome in via Condotti 68. Its operational activities are
managed by the six Grand Priories, three Subpriories and 45 National
Associations of Knights in the five continents. |
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Grand Master
The Prince
and Grand Master
The
Grand Master is elected for life from the Professed Knights by the
Council Complete of State. According to the Constitution, as the
religious Superior and Sovereign, he must dedicate himself
completely to enhancing the Order's works and be an example of
religious conformity for all members. He is vested with supreme
authorities. Together with the Sovereign Council, the Grand Master
issues the legislative measures not covered by the Constitutional
Charter, promulgates government acts, manages Common Treasure
assets, informs the Holy See of the Order's needs, ratifies, with
the deciding vote of the Sovereign Council, international agreements
and the summoning of the Chapter General.
The
States with which the Order has diplomatic relations recognize the
Grand Master as the Supreme Head of the Order, with the
prerogatives, immunities, privileges and honours reserved for Heads
of State. He is bestowed the title of Most Eminent Highness, and the
Holy Roman Church confers him the rank of Cardinal.
The
Grand Master resides at the seat of the Order in Rome, Via Condotti
68.
Profile of His Most
Eminent Highness the Prince and Grand Master
Fra' Matthew FESTING
Fra’ Matthew Festing, an
Englishman, was elected Prince and Grand Master of the Order of
Malta on 11th March 2008 by the Council Complete of State of the
Order of Malta. He succeeds Fra’ Andrew Bertie, 78th Grand Master
(1988-2008), who died on 7 February.
Born in Northumberland on 30 november
1949, educated at Ampleforth and St. John’s College Cambridge, where
he read history, Fra’ Matthew, an art expert, has for most of his
professional life worked at an international art auction house. As a
child he lived in Egypt and Singapore, where his father, Field
Marshal Sir Francis Festing, Chief of the Imperial General Staff,
had earlier postings. He is also descended from Sir Adrian Fortescue,
a knight of Malta, who was martyred in 1539.
Fra’ Matthew Festing served in the
Grenadier Guards and holds the rank of colonel in the Territorial
Army. He was appointed OBE (Officer of the Order of the British
Empire) by the Queen and served as her Deputy Lieutenant in the
county of Northumberland.
He became a member of the Sovereign
Order of Malta in 1977, and took solemn religious vows in 1991,
becoming a Professed Knight of the Order. Between 1993 and 2008 he
was the Grand Prior of England. In this capacity, he has led
missions of humanitarian aid to Kosovo, Serbia and Croatia after the
recent disturbances in those countries, and he attends the Order’s
international annual pilgrimage to Lourdes.
As well as his passion for the
decorative arts and for history, his encyclopaedic knowledge of the
history of the Order of Malta is well known.

The Coat of Arms of
Grand Master Festing
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Grand Commander
The Grand
Commander is the religious superior of the Professed Knights and of
the Knights and Dames in Obedience. His duties include: spreading
the principles of Faith, supervising Priories and Subpriories and
compiling visitational reports to be sent to the Holy See on the
state and life of the Order.
He sees to the
religious aspects of the activities of Professed Knights and Knights
in Obedience.
In particular he is in charge of instructing the members of the
Sovereign Order in the fulfillment of the principles of Tuitio Fidei
e Obsequium Pauperum.
The Grand
Commander also takes care of the Magisterial Palace Chapel and the
organization of pilgrimages. He acts as Interim Lieutenant in case
of the death, resignation from office or permanent incapacity of the
Grand Master.
Profile of
the Grand Commander
H.E. the Venerable Bailiff
Fra’ Giacomo DALLA TORRE del TEMPIO di SANGUINETTO
He was born in Rome on 9 December 1944. He graduated in literature,
and specialised in Christian archaeology and art history. Professor
of literature and art history, he taught classical Greek in the
Pontificia Università Urbaniana of Rome where he currently holds the
position of Library Assistant. He has written articles on the arts
and bibliographic studies. He was received into the Sovereign
Military Order of Malta in 1985, becoming a Professed Knight in
Perpetual Vows in 1993.
From 1994 to 1999 he was the Grand Prior of the Grand Priory of
Lombardy and Venice.
From 1999 to 2004 he has been a member of the Sovereign Council and
various commissions.
He was elected Grand Commander of the Sovereign Order by the Chapter
General of 2004. |
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Grand Chancellor
The Grand
Chancellor, whose office includes the offices of the Ministry of the
Interior and Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is at the head of the
Chancellery and its related offices. He is responsible for Foreign
Affairs, the Associations and matters concerning members of the
Third Class. His duties include the representation of the Order with
third parties, the conduct of policy and the internal administration
of the Order (without prejudice to the competencies of the other
High Officers), the preparation and dispatch of the acts of
government, countersigning the Grand Master's decrees, the
arrangement, examination and presentation of subjects to be treated
in the Sovereign Council. The Grand Chancellor is also in charge of
diplomatic representation.
Profile of
the Grand Chancellor
H.E. Jean-Pierre MAZERY
Grand Cross of Grace and Devotion in Obedience
H.E. Jean-Pierre Mazery was elected Grand Chancellor by the
Sovereign Council (the government of the Order) on 16 April 2005,
following the resignation for family reasons of H.E. Bailiff Count
Jacques de Liedekerke.
He is a graduate of the Sorbonne, Paris, in Economics, Social
Sciences and Philosophy and the Faculty of Law, and of Harvard
Business School. He is a fellow of the Hague Academy of
International Law and former adviser to the Centre for Post-Graduate
Studies in Armaments, of the French Ministry of Defense.
An economist and a professor of strategic business studies, he has
consulted for the OECD, was head of mission, Ministry of the
Environment, councilor to the Ministry for Cultural Affairs, the
Paris Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Ministry for Culture and
Francophonie, and the Ministry of Defense. He has been a counselor
for International Trade to the French government, an expert adviser
to the French Economic and Social Council, and a professor at the
Centre for Post-Graduate Studies in Business and at the Centre for
Diplomatic and Strategic Studies in Paris. He is honorary chairman
of the Association of the Fellows of the Institute for Higher
Studies in National Defense in France.
Jean-Pierre Mazery, Knight Grand Cross of Grace and Devotion in
Obedience, was received into the Order of Malta in 1975. He was
elected member of the Council of the French Association in 1979;
Chairman of the Foundation des Oeuvres Hospitalières Françaises de
l’Ordre de Malte (2002), and Vice-chairman and General Treasurer of
the Association des Œuvres Hospitalières Françaises de l’Ordre de
Malte (1990-2005).
From 1984 to 1994 he was a member of the Board of Auditors of the
Sovereign Order. From 1990 to 2002 he was a member of the Council of
the Holy Family Hospital in Bethlehem.
Elected a member of the Sovereign Council by the Chapter General of
June 1999, he was President of the Order’s Board of Communications
from 1999 to 2004. Re-elected a member of the Sovereign Council by
the Chapter General of June 2004, was appointed Vice-Chancellor in
October 2004.
HE Jean-Pierre Mazery is Chevalier of the Legion d’Honneur, Grand
Cross of the Order Piano (Holy See), Grand Cross of the Italian
Republic and holder of many decorations from other nations.
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Grand Hospitaller
The Grand
Hospitaller's office includes the offices of Minister of Health and
of Social Affairs, Minister for Humanitarian Action and Minister for
International Co-operation. He co-ordinates and supervises the
initiatives of Grand Priories and National Associations and other
Order institutions world-wide involved in charitable and
humanitarian actions, and ensures that Christian principles are
respected.
The Grand Hospitaller is assisted by a Council composed of
representatives of the various territorial regions where the Order
operates.
Profile of the
Grand Hospitaller
H. E. Albrecht Freiherr von BOESELAGER,
Bailiff Grand Cross of Honour and Devotion in Obedience
He was born on
October 4, 1949 in Kreuzberg/Ahr near Bonn; he is married, and has 5
children.
He was
educated in Bonn at the Jesuit college Aloisiuskolleg and graduated
in Law in 1974 after studies in Bonn, Geneva and Freiburg.
From 1968 to
1970 he served in the military force as reserve lieutenant.
From 1976 to
1990 he worked as a professional lawyer.
He was
admitted to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta in 1976, and in
1985 became a Knight in Obedience.
Since 1982 he
has been the Chancellor of the German Association of the Order.
Since the same year he has also been a member of the Executive
Committee of the German Association's Ambulance Corps (Malteser
Hilfsdienst).
He was elected
member of the Sovereign Council of the Order of Malta as Grand
Hospitaller in 1989, and was re-elected in 1994, 1999 and 2004.
He has been a
member of the Papal Council of the Pastoral for Health-Care
Operators since 1990 and in the Pontificium Consilium Cor Unum since
1994. |
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Receiver of the Common
Treasure
The Receiver
of the Common Treasure - who is the Minister of Finance and Budget -
directs the administration of the finances and the property of the
Order in co-ordination with the Grand Chancellor, under the
authority of the Grand Master and the surveillance of the Board of
Auditors.
He is responsible for drawing up the annual accounts, budgeted and
actual, relating to the economic and financial state of the Order,
submitting them to the Board of Auditors and to the Grand Master for
approval with the advice of the Sovereign Council.
With the advice of the Sovereign Council, he also submits the
acceptance of inheritances, bequests and donations, and the disposal
and subsequent reinvestment of the goods of the Order to the Grand
Master for approval.
He manages and supervises the Magisterial Post Service and, through
the Secretary General, the internal services of the Magisterial
household, in particular the Office of Personnel of the Grand
Magistry, the Office of Technical Services and the superintendence
of the Magisterial Palace and other buildings.
With the mandate of the Grand Master, the Receiver also supervises
the administration of the organizations and work of the Order. He
must countersign acts of disposal or assignment and contracts which
involve the property of the Grand Magistry and the Priories.
Profile of the
Receiver of the Common Treasure
H.E. the Marchese Gian Luca CHIAVARI Patrician Genoese,
Bailiff Grand Cross of Honour and Devotion in Obedience
He was born in
Rome on January 11, 1935, to H.E the Ambassador to the Italian
Republic Marchese Gian Gerolamo Chiavari and Marchesa Laura
Pallavicino. Married to Marchesa Elena Cattaneo della Volta di
Belforte, Dame of Honour and Devotion in Obedience of the Order of
Malta, he has three children: Fabiano, Violantina and Giacomo.
He graduated
with honours in Business Administration at the University of Genova
and was the Italian delegate to the International Associations of
Students of Business Administration.
He served in
the military as Officer of the Cavalry Regiment of Genova.
Until 1994 he
was a member of the Executive Committee of the Shell Group in Italy
and has worked for many years abroad with the Shell Group.
He was
admitted to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta in 1979, took the
vow of Obedience in 1983 and was bestowed the Grand Cross in 1996.
He was elected Receiver of the Common Treasure by the Chapter
General on 1999 and was re-elected in 2004.
He is Vice
President of the Pilgrimages of the Italian Language and Director in
the Magisterial Committee for Pilgrimages to Lourdes. He has also
been Director of ACISMOM and member of the Council for
Communications of the Order.
He is Vice
President of the Corps of Italian Nobility and President emeritus of
the Association of Nobles of Liguria. |
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Government Bodies
Council
Complete of State
The Council
Complete of State meets to elect the Grand Master or the Lieutenant
of the Grand Master. The election of the Grand Master requires a
majority plus one of those present entitled to vote, as provided for
in Art. 23 of the Constitutional Charter. Among the holders of
voting rights are the Lieutenant of the Grand Master or Interim
Lieutenant, the members of the Sovereign Council, the Prelate, the
Priors, the professed Bailiffs, two professed Knights delegated by
each Priory and fifteen representatives of the National
Associations.
Chapter
General
The Chapter
General represents the Supreme Assembly of Knights and meets every
five years to elect the members of the Sovereign Council, the
Government Council and the Board of Auditors, to amend the
Constitutional Charter and Code as appropriate and to discuss
important issues such as spiritual status, the humanitarian
activities programme and international relations of the Order. It is
composed, among others, of representatives of Order bodies in the
world: Grand Priories, Subpriories and National Associations.
Sovereign
Council
The Sovereign
Council is the government of the Order. It is composed of the Grand
Master, the holders of the four High Offices (Grand Commander, Grand
Chancellor, Grand Hospitaller and Receiver of the Common Treasure)
and six other members. Apart from the Grand Master, they are elected
by the Chapter General, by a majority of the Knights present. The
Sovereign Council is called by the Grand Master and meets at the
seat of the Order at least six times a year and whenever special
circumstances require it.
The other six members of the Sovereign Council are:
H.E. Fra’ Gherardo HERCOLANI FAVA SIMONETTI
H.E. Fra’ John A. MacPHERSON
H.E. Fra’ Elie de COMMINGES
H.E. Fra' Carlo d'IPPOLITO di SANT'IPPOLITO
H.E. Antonio R. SANCHEZ-COREA, Jr.
H.E. Winfried HENCKEL von DONNERSMARCK
Government
Council
This is the
advisory board to the Sovereign Council in charge of studying
political, religious, humanitarian assistance and international
issues. It is convened and chaired by the Grand Master and is
composed of six Chancellors from various geographical regions
elected by the Chapter General among Knights in the three Classes of
the Order. It meets at least twice a year.
Board of
Auditors
Is in charge
of overseeing and auditing the income, the expenditures and all the
assets of the Order. It consists of a President, four ordinary
Chancellors and two alternates, elected by the Chapter General, from
amongst Knights with particular expertise in legal, economic and
financial disciplines. It also serves as an advisory board of the
Receiver of the Common Treasure.
Communications
Board
The
Communication Board supervises the internal and external
communication activities of the Order and assists the Grand
Chancellor in the development and implementation of communication
programmes. It is composed of a President and six Chancellors chosen
from members of the Order, competent in various sectors of
communication, management, public relations and mass-media.
Juridical
Council
This is an
expert advisory collegial body that may advise the Grand Master,
subject to consultation with the Sovereign Council, on relevant
legal issues. It meets at the seat of the Order and is composed of a
Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, a Secretary General and four members.
These are appointed by the Grand Master with the advice of the
Sovereign Council ideally from members of the Order, and are law
experts, particularly in Order Law, public and international law and
Canon Law.
Magisterial
Courts
Pursuant to
the Code, the Magisterial Courts exercise the jurisdictional
function of court of first resort and of appeal. The Presidents of
the Court, the Justices and the Chancellor are appointed by the
Grand Master, with the deciding vote of the Sovereign Council, among
Order members with legal expertise. Trial procedures, except for
directives set forth by the Code, are subject to the rules of civil
procedure of the State of the Vatican City. Upon written request of
States or international law entities, the Magisterial Courts may
also act as an arbitration venue for international controversies.
The Office of
Advocate General
The Office of
Advocate General provides legal assistance pursuant to the Code and
is made up of independent members of the legal profession of eminent
repute who are experts in law and versed in the traditions and
customs of the Order. It is composed of the Advocate General and two
alternates who are appointed by the Grand Master with the Sovereign
Council for a period of three years renewable. The organizations of
the Order should seek the advice and the assistance of the Office of
the Advocate General whenever necessary and especially in cases
which involve complex legal issue. |
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Members of the Order
The Order of Malta is one of the few
Orders created in the Middle Ages and still active today. It is also
the only one that is at the same time religious and sovereign. This
is due to the fact that most of the other Orders of chivalry lacked
the hospitaller function which characterizes the Order of Malta, so
they disappeared as soon as the military purposes that represented
the reasons for their existence ceased.
The knighthood
nature explains and justifies the maintenance of the noble nature of
the Order, as most of its Religious Knights came from chivalrous and
noble Christian families. Today the majority of Knights belong to
all classes of society. The members of the Order may be defined as
Catholics enlivened by altruistic nobleness of spirit and behavior.
All Knights must meet the traditional requirement for the bestowing
of knighthood: distinguish themselves for special virtues. The
knighthood nature of the Order has kept its moral value,
characterized by the spirit of service, sacrifice and discipline of
today's Knights. Battles are no longer fought with swords, but with
the peaceful tools of the fight against disease, poverty, social
isolation and intolerance, as well as the defense and promotion of
the faith.
All the 12,500
Knights and Dames of the Order, whether professed friars or lay
members, are devoted to the exercise of Christian virtue and
charity, and committed to achieving their spiritual perfection
within the Church and to expending their energies caring for others.
The three
Classes
According to
the Constitutional Charter, the members of the Order are divided
into three Classes. The members are to conduct their lives in an
exemplary manner in conformity with the teachings and precepts of
the Church and to devote themselves to the humanitarian assistance
activities of the Order.
Members of the
First Class are Knights of Justice, or Professed Knights, and
the Professed Conventual Chaplains, who have made vows of "poverty,
chastity and obedience aspiring to perfection according to the
Gospel". They are religious for all purposes of Canon Law but are
not obliged to live in community.
The members of
the Second Class, by virtue of the Promise of Obedience, are
committed to living according to Christian principles and the
inspiring principles of the Order. They are subdivided into three
categories:
- Knights and
Dames of Honour and Devotion in Obedience
- Knights and Dames of Grace and Devotion in Obedience
- Knights and Dames of Magistral Grace in Obedience
The Third
Class consists of lay members who do not profess religious vows
or the Promise, but who live according to the principles of the
Church and the Order. They are divided into six categories:
- Knights and
Dames of Honour and Devotion
- Conventual Chaplains ad honorem
- Knights and Dames of Grace and Devotion
- Magistral Chaplains
- Knights and Dames of Magistral Grace
- Donats (male and female) of Devotion
The requisites
for admission to the various classes and categories are determined
by the Code. |
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