The Chapter General of the Order of Malta is the legislative body of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. The Constitution describes it as "the supreme organ of governance of the Order."[1]: Constitution Article 28 It meets every six years, mostly recently on 1-2 May 2019.[2]
The Chapter General has the following responsibilities: [1]: Constitution Article 30
electing the four High Charges (Grand Commander, Grand Chancellor, Grand Hospitaller, Receiver of the Common Treasure)
electing the other six members of the Sovereign Council
electing the members of the Government Council
electing the members of the Board of Auditors
making amendments to the Constitution (by a two-thirds vote)
making amendments to the Code (amendments to articles 6-93 also require a majority vote by the Knights of Justice who are members of the Chapter General)
two Professed Knights elected by the Chapter of each Priory (a Knight in Obedience may be substituted for one of the Professed Knights);
a Professed Knight and a Knight in Obedience delegated by the Knights in gremio religionis (i.e. those not holding membership in any Priory or Sub-Priory);
five Regents of the Sub-Priories, elected from the six Regents;
fifteen representatives of the Associations, elected by the Presidents of the Associations;
Since it was considered that this body was too numerous for creating and establishing laws, the members of the Chapter General divided into the eight Langues. The members in each Langue then elected two of their number to form the Sixteen.[7] The Sixteen were joined at their meetings by the Procurator of the Grand Master, the Vice-Chancellor, and the Secretary of the Treasury.[8]
Each meeting of the Chapter General lasted fifteen days; the Sixteen could extend this term for an additional eight days.[9]
The Code did not fix a particular frequency for meetings of the Chapter General. Instead, at the end of each meeting, a date was set for the next meeting.[10] The Chapter General of 1631 ordered that the next meeting take place in 1641, but in fact it did not occur until 1776.[10]
^ abAntonio Micallef, Lectures on the Statutes of the Sacred Order of St. John of Jerusalem at the University (of Studies) of Malta 1792, edited by Wolf-Dieter Barz and Michael Galea, translated by Michael Galea (Karlsruhe, Germany: KIT Scientific Publishing, 2012), 51.
First Category: Knights and Dames of Honour and Devotion (nobility proof required)
Second Category: Conventual Chaplains ad honorem Third Category: Knights and Dames of Grace and Devotion (nobility proof required) Fourth Category: Magistral Chaplains Fifth Category: Knights and Dames of Magistral Grace
Sixth Category: Donats of Devotion (male and female)