The duly accredited delegates, proxy holders, and delegates-at-large which constitute the voting body of the convention
The high German princes who were entitled to vote in the elections of new King-Emperors of the Holy Roman (German) Empire from about 1257 to 1806 Originally seven in number, and never more than nine, they also formed the top college of the three-college Imperial Diet or Reichstag, the other two consisting of (1) lesser lay and spiritual princes, and (2) representatives of the towns
Those chosen by vote of the people to the electoral college, the function of which is to elect the President of the United States Each state has as many electors as it has Members of the House of Representatives plus its two Members of the Senate
One who elects, or has the right of choice; a person who is entitled to take part in an election, or to give his vote in favor of a candidate for office
An elector is a member of the electoral college. People vote for electors in each state to represent them in the presidential elections. someone who has the right to vote in an election. German Kurfürst. Prince of the Holy Roman Empire who had a right to participate in electing the German emperor. Beginning 1273, and with the confirmation of the Golden Bull, there were seven electors: the archbishops of Trier, Mainz, and Cologne; the duke of Saxony; the count palatine of the Rhine; the margrave of Brandenburg; and the king of Bohemia. Other electorates were created much later for Bavaria (1623-1778), Hanover (1708), and Hesse-Kassel (1803), but by the 17th century the electors' office had become meaningless because the Habsburg dynasty produced the de facto emperors. The office disappeared when the empire was abolished in 1806