Sefton.) (Earl William Sydney Lord Clements. of Leitrim.) George William Fox Lord Rossie. (Lord Kinnaird.) Thomas Lord Kenlis. (Marquis of Headfort.) William Lord Chaworth, (Earl of Meath.) Charles Adolphus Lord Dunmore. (Earl of Dunmore.) Robert Montgomerie Lord Hamilton. (Lord Belhaven and Stenton.) John Hobart Lord Howden. Fox Lord Panmure. (In another place as one of her Majesty's principal George Warwick Lord Poltimore. Henry Spencer Lord Templemore. Edward Lord Cloncurry, James Lord De Saumarez. George Godolphin Lord Godolphin. Lucius Bentinck Lord Hunsdon. (Vis count Falkland.) Thomas Lord Denman. MEM.-According to the Usage of Parliament, when the House appoints a Select Committee, the Lords appointed to serve upon it are named in the Order of their Rank, beginning with the Highest; and so, when the House sends a Committee to a Conference with the Commons, the Lord highest in Rank is called first, and the rest go forth in like Order: but when the Whole House is called over for any Purpose within the House, or for the purpose of proceeding forth to Westminster Hall, or upon any public Solemnity, the Call begins invariably with the Junior Baron. Kingston. I Silchester. I Maryborough. I Ravensworth. Gifford. Penshurst. I Somerhill. I Wigan. S Plunket. Rosebery. S Clanwilliam. I Skelmersdale. Wynford. Brougham and Vaux. Kilmarnock. S Fingall. I Calthorpe. Carington. I Bayning. Sefton. I Bolton. Wodehouse. Northwick. Lilford. Ribblesdale. Clements. I Rossie. S Kenlis. I Chaworth. I Dunmore. S Hamilton. S Berners. Willoughby de Broke. Braye (Baroness). Windsor (Baroness). Saye and Sele. Arundell. Clifton. I Doriner. Fitzgibbon. I Moore. I Loftus. I Carysfort. I Abercromby. Redesdale. Rivers. Sandys. Monteagle of Westport. I Lauderdale. S Howden. I Panmure. Wenman (Baroness). De L'Isle and Dudley. FEE Bateman. Lismore. I Rossmore. I Carew. I Wrottesley. Monteagle of Brandon. Campbell. Raglan. Belper. Talbot de Malahide. I Ebury. Macaulay. Skene. S Those English Peers who bear superior rank in the Scotch and Irish Peerages are pointed out by an S or I affixed to their English titles. SCOTCH PEERAGE. The is affixed to those Peers who are also Peers of the United Kingdom; the † to the 10 Peers elected to represent the Scotch Peerage in the present Parliament. The Scotch Peers bearing superior rank in the English Peerage are pointed out by an affixed to their Scotch titles. By the 23rd article of the Union, which was confirmed by stat. 5 Queen Anne, chap. 8. "All Peers of Scotland shall be Peers of Great Britain, and have rank next after the Peers of the like degree in England at the time of the Union," which commenced 1 May 1707," and before all Peers of Great Britain, of the like degree, created after the Union." |