In 1925 Asquith accepted a peerage as Earl of Oxford and Asquith and was created a knight of the garter shortly afterwards. |
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In 1999 his charity work gained him a knighthood to add to his life peerage from Margaret Thatcher. |
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In 1941 he was raised to the peerage as Lord Cherwell and in 1942 was appointed paymaster-general. |
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The spiritual peerage consists of the archbishops and diocesan bishops of the Church of England. |
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Until the Reformation, the spiritual peerage also included abbots and priors, and spiritual peers formed a majority of the House of Lords. |
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The fortunes of the family continued to rise and, in 1789, the 7th Earl, James Cecil, was elevated in the peerage to a marquess. |
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As a Lord, he gets entered into the books of peerage and is entitled to display his coat-of-arms. |
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Lord Stevenson is of the opinion that candidates for the peerage might range from midwives to tycoons. |
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He wrote to me to share a little part of the treasure trove of maladdressed mail he has picked up since his elevation to the peerage. |
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His unsuccessful plea for an upper house based on a hereditary colonial peerage was mocked as a bunyip aristocracy. |
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From 1766 to 1770 he was master-general of the ordnance, vice-treasurer of Ireland 1781-9, and given a British peerage in 1786 as Baron Carleton. |
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That was a problem because a duke is a nobleman of the highest hereditary rank and a member of the highest grade of the British peerage. |
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Labour will table another bill in 2007 proposing the total abolition of the peerage, making the upper house an all-appointed chamber. |
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As a reward for taking defeat with dignity he was awarded a peerage, becoming Lord Watson of Invergowrie. |
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But an actual recipient of a peerage is addressed by Lord plus whatever name he chooses at the time of receiving the status. |
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He was elevated to the peerage of Ireland as Lord Kilmaine, for services to the British Crown. |
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He was proud to be the first actor to be elevated to the peerage, though he never spoke in the Lords after his maiden speech. |
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In 1942 Keynes was elevated to the peerage and took his seat in the House of Lords, where he sat on the Liberal benches. |
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Today the Speaker stands in the order of social precedence immediately after the peerage, ranking higher than any other commoner. |
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The next thing you know, Michael Forsyth will be jacking in his peerage, and trying to get Stirling back. |
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The title, in the letters patent creating the peerage, was gazetted as Earl of Scarbrough and not Scarborough. |
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In September 1945 he was raised to the peerage, and retired the following March. |
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He deftly sidestepped the falls of Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell and was raised to the peerage. |
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He was the epitome of the cockney wide boy but what a shock to the system of his new found well-to-do relatives when he inherited a country seat and peerage. |
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In 1923 he became MP for Warwick and Leamington, a seat he held until 1957 when, as prime minister, he resigned and was subsequently raised to the peerage as the Earl of Avon. |
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Over time the issue was complicated by the idea of the gentleman, a social construct which could incorporate all members of the peerage and gentry. |
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In Parliament the House of Lords was dominated by the landed aristocracy, and the landed gentry, often related to the peerage, held sway in the House of Commons. |
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Although the peerage is granted at the Prime Minister's request, it is non-party political, and Bishop Hope is expected to sit as a cross-bencher in the House of Lords. |
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Yet the feat she trumpets most was, in June, gaining her peerage. |
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Richard Chenevix Trench, who succeeded to the deanery on the death of Dr. Buckland, in 1856, is a nephew of the first Lord Ashtown, in the Irish peerage. |
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Only a few years later the Scottish physicist William Thomson, later elevated to the peerage as Lord Kelvin, attempted an estimate on a completely different basis. |
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Together with other scientists Boyle formed the Royal Society in London in 1660, but refused the presidency, as well as the provostship of Eton, and a peerage. |
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Marlborough prospered after Charles's victory over the Exclusionists in 1681, becoming a baron in the Scots peerage and colonel of the Royal Dragoons. |
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In the 1980s, the Conservative Party also received loans that magically resulted in the loaner getting a peerage, and it still does the same thing today. |
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Being museum types, it was a plastic file with photocopies, but as a memorial to achievement, it meant more than the Garter or a peerage or a letterhead of doctorates. |
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Suspicion has shadowed him ever since he gave up the chairmanship of his family's supermarket chain and took his government post in 1998, collecting a peerage along the way. |
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The next few years saw his titles change rapidly, from principal secretary and master of the rolls to lord privy seal, where he also gained a peerage. |
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Normally, a peerage passes to the next holder on the death of the previous holder. |
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The peerage remains without a holder until the death of the peer making the disclaimer, when it descends normally. |
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The only other Duchy in the United Kingdom is the Duchy of Lancaster, which is also an estate rather than a peerage dignity. |
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This was not medieval practice, and it is doubtful whether any writ was ever issued with the intent of creating such a peerage. |
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The limitation indicates that only lineal descendants of the original peer may succeed to the peerage. |
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The peerage has traditionally been associated with high gentry, the British nobility, and in recent times, the Conservative Party. |
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Newly appointed members of the Court take no peerage, instead bearing the formal title Justice of the Supreme Court. |
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A peerage is a legal system historically comprising hereditary titles in various countries, comprising various noble ranks. |
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Lord Curzon, for example, specifically requested an Irish peerage so he would not be debarred from sitting in the House of Commons. |
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No further hereditary peerage may be conferred upon the person, but a life peerage may be. |
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But Blair has said publicly that he does not want a peerage. |
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Blair reportedly indicated that he did not want the traditional knighthood or peerage bestowed on former prime ministers. |
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Viscount Hailsham was given a life peerage in 2015 as Baron Hailsham of Kettlethorpe, of Kettlethorpe in the County of Lincolnshire. |
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The first national grouping, the Federation of Rambling Clubs, was formed in London in 1905 and was heavily patronized by the peerage. |
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After retiring from Parliament in 1984 to chair private coalmining company Coalite, he was given a life peerage as Baron Varley of Chesterfield. |
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Think aesthetics as politics, and academic credentials as peerage. |
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The 2nd Baroness Ravensdale had already entered the Lords in 1958 through the receipt of a life peerage. |
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He was given the peerage after years of devoted service to the community. |
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The Life Peerages Act 1958 authorised the regular creation of life peerage dignities. |
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At the same time, Edward expanded the ranks of the peerage upwards, by introducing the new title of duke for close relatives of the king. |
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It was possible to assemble the entire peerage and senior clergy of the realm in one place to form the estate of the Upper Chamber. |
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Theoretically, the Crown, as fount of honour, is entitled to decide all questions relating to peerage disputes. |
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In 1856, it was desired to increase the number of Law Lords by creating a life peerage. |
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The House, however, ruled that the recipient of the peerage, Sir James Parke, was not entitled thereby to sit as a Lord of Parliament. |
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Disputes over peerage claims are considered before the House of Lords Committee for Privileges. |
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In hearing peerage claims, at least three Law Lords had to be present in order to maintain a quorum. |
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In 1897 he was further honoured when Her Majesty raised him to the peerage as Baron Lister, of Lyme Regis in the County of Dorset. |
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Occasionally cabinet members are selected from outside the Houses of Parliament and if necessary granted a peerage. |
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Thatcher became a member of the House of Lords in 1992 with a life peerage as Baroness Thatcher, of Kesteven in the County of Lincolnshire. |
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The membership of the House of Lords is drawn from the peerage and is made up of Lords Spiritual and Lords Temporal. |
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The Labour Party included in its 1997 general election Manifesto a commitment to remove the hereditary peerage from the House of Lords. |
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Formerly, the peerage bestowed was usually an earldom, with Churchill offered a dukedom. |
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The aristocracy gained strength as businessmen discovered they could use their wealth to buy a peerage and a country estate. |
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In modern Britain, an earl is a member of the peerage, ranking below a marquess and above a viscount. |
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An earldom became, with a few exceptions, the default peerage to which a former Prime Minister was elevated. |
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Part III of the schedule lays down nine pro forma texts for creating various ranks of the peerage, lords of appeal in ordinary, and baronets. |
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He was created Earl of Hereford before 22 February 1067, one of the first peerage titles in the English peerage. |
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Palmerston was eligible as an MP because his late father did not convert his Irish peerage into a United Kingdom peerage. |
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Since then, only 92 of them have this entitlement, of whom 90 are elected by the hereditary peers as a whole to represent the peerage. |
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He retired in 1917, moved to London, and was given a peerage as first Baron Morris, the only Newfoundlander ever so honored. |
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A Lord Keeper who acquired a peerage dignity would subsequently be appointed Lord Chancellor. |
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It is traditional to offer a peerage to every outgoing Speaker of the House of Commons. |
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It is usual that retiring Archbishops, and certain other Bishops, are appointed to the Crossbenches and given a life peerage. |
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In the United Kingdom, life peers are appointed members of the peerage whose titles cannot be inherited, in contrast to hereditary peers. |
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In the early days of the peerage, the Sovereign had the right to summon individuals to one Parliament without being bound to summon them again. |
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It is unclear whether Gordon Brown, who remained a member of the House of Commons until 2015, would accept a peerage. |
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None of the peers of the first creation who were members of the Royal Family was granted a life peerage, as they had all declined. |
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The Peerage Act 1963 allows the holder of an hereditary peerage to disclaim their title for life. |
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The hereditary peerage, as it now exists, combines several different English institutions with analogous ones from Scotland and Ireland. |
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The law applicable to a British hereditary peerage depends on which Kingdom it belongs to. |
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In the Scottish peerage, the lowest rank is lordship of Parliament, the male holder thereof being known as a lord of Parliament. |
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The mode of inheritance of a hereditary peerage is determined by the method of its creation. |
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The latter method explicitly creates a peerage and names the dignity in question. |
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The man who invented the zip fastener was today honoured with a peerage. |
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The peerage remains without a holder until the death of the peer who had made the disclaimer, when it descends to his or her heir in the usual manner. |
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Tony Benn, his younger brother, instead became the heir to the peerage. |
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He is the last Prime Minister to have been given an hereditary peerage, although Margaret Thatcher's husband was later given a baronetage, which passed onto her own son. |
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He returned to the House of Lords at the end of 1974 when he accepted a life peerage, becoming known as Baron Home of the Hirsel, of Coldstream in the County of Berwick. |
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Within weeks of the general election Butler retired from politics, accepting the post of Master of Trinity College, Cambridge together with a life peerage. |
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Before being awarded a peerage, Arthur Wellesley, later Duke of Wellington, served in the Irish House of Commons as a Member for the rotten borough of Trim. |
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Until 1963 peers could not disclaim their peerage in order to sit in the House of Commons, and thus a peerage was sometimes seen as an impediment to a future political career. |
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The Hereditary peers form part of the peerage in the United Kingdom. |
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Women, however, were excluded from sitting in the House of Lords, so it was unclear whether or not a life peerage would entitle a man to do the same. |
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On 26 December 2012, 10 Downing St announced Williams' elevation to the peerage as a Life Baron, so that he could continue to speak in the Upper House of Parliament. |
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Tennyson was the first to be raised to a British peerage for his writing. |
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The name baronet is a diminutive of the peerage title baron. |
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In contrast, a coat of arms in Scotland is often, not without controversy, said to be a fief annoblissant, similar to a Scottish territorial peerage or barony. |
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He was not offered a peerage, having earlier declined an earldom. |
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Historically it has also been common for Prime Ministers to be granted a peerage upon retirement from the Commons, which elevates the individual to the House of Lords. |
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In his last year, he was the first composer to be given a life peerage. |
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One of the most significant figures of the Romantic movement, Lord Byron, was brought up in Scotland until he inherited his family's English peerage. |
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In 1946 Beveridge was raised to the peerage as Baron Beveridge, of Tuggal in the County of Northumberland, and eventually became leader of the Liberals in the House of Lords. |
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In 1564, Elizabeth raised Dudley to the peerage as Earl of Leicester. |
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The peerage was recreated by Edward III in 1385, this time in the form of the prestigious title of Duke of York which he gave to his son Edmund of Langley. |
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