Tunisian Constitution of 1861
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| Tunisian Constitution of 1861 | |
|---|---|
| Created | 26 April 1861 |
| Ratified | 26 April 1861 |
| Date effective | 30 April 1861 |
| Location | Tunisia |
| Purpose | To replace the Tunisian fundamental Pact of 1857 |
The Tunisian Constitution of 1861 came into force on 26 April 1861. It succeeded the Fundamental Pact granted on 10 September 1857 by the sovereign Muhammad II ibn al-Husayn.

The text, submitted on 17 September 1860 by Muhammad III as-Sadiq, successor of Muhammad II ibn al-Husayn, to Emperor Napoleon III in Algiers,[1] contains a total of 114 articles. It establishes a sharing of power, between an executive power composed of the bey and a Prime Minister, a legislative power with important prerogatives — entrusted to an oligarchic-type Supreme Council — and an independent judicial power. Guardian of the Constitution, the legislative power endowed with sovereign authority can depose the bey in the event of unconstitutional acts, thus favoring the participation of elites in the management of affairs2. In addition, the sovereign is no longer free to dispose of the resources of the State and must receive a civil list of 1,200,000 piastres while the princes of his family receive pensions provided for in the text.