What is the Peerage?
The Peerage
A peer of the realm is someone who holds one (or more) of five possible titles (duke, marquess, earl, viscount, baron) inherited from a direct ancestor or bestowed upon him by the monarch.
Tracing its origins to feudal times, peers were
vassals of the monarch (servants who swore an oath of loyalty in
exchange for protection or a fief - a bequest of land or money).
These barons were periodically summoned to the Counsel or
Parliament, forming the origins of the House of Lords.
Historically the peerage formed a tightly knit group of powerful
nobles, inter-related through blood and marriage in successive
generations, and highly protective of their lands and rights. Their
fortunes rose and fell according to the stability of the kingdom
and their favour with the Sovereign. The Tudors, for example,
executed, imprisoned or suppressed almost every nobleman who had
any Plantagenet blood in his veins, and instead created a new
aristocracy from the lesser branches of old families, and from the
gentry and knightly classes.
Subsequent changes made by the royal houses of Stuart, Hanover and
Windsor have similarly brought new blood and new titles to the
peerage. The ranks of the peerage were further enlarged by the
passing of the Life Peerages Act of 1958.
The last three hereditary peerages (excluding royal peerages) were created in 1984, when Harold Macmillan was created Earl of Stockton, and William Whitelaw and George Thomas were created Viscounts. Of these three, only Macmillan had an heir.
The separate Peerages of England and Scotland continued until
1707, when the two Kingdoms combined under the Act of Union as the
Peerage of Great Britain. The separate Peerage of Ireland
existed until 1801, when Great Britain and Ireland were combined
under a second Act of Union. Since 1801 the peerage has been styled
the Peerage of the United Kingdom.
The establishment of the Irish Free State in 1922 did not affect
the rights of the hereditary peers of Ireland to their titles, and
the Lord Chancellor's Office continues to receive and report on
their claims to have their names added to the Roll of the
Peerage.
While the (reform of the) House of Lords Act in 1999 has greatly
reduced the political power of the peerage, their social influence
remains undimmed, and their lives remain a source of interest and
speculation.
The Baronetage
A new, lower, degree was added to the nobility by King James I when he created the hereditary order of baronets in 1611 (the Baronetage). This was, in effect, a hereditary knighthood. Baronets had no political influence integral to their titles; they were quite separate from the peerage and never had seats in the House of Lords.
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