Peerage
(Redirected from Peerages)
A peerage is a legal system historically comprising various hereditary titles (and sometimes non-hereditary titles) in a number of countries, and composed of assorted noble ranks.
Peerages include:
Australia
[edit | edit source]Belgium
[edit | edit source]Canada
[edit | edit source]- British peerage titles granted to Canadian subjects of the Crown
- Canadian nobility in the aristocracy of France
China
[edit | edit source]France
[edit | edit source]Malta
[edit | edit source]Japan
[edit | edit source]Portugal
[edit | edit source]Spain
[edit | edit source]- Chamber of Peers (Spain)
- List of dukes in the peerage of Spain
- List of viscounts in the peerage of Spain
- List of barons in the peerage of Spain
- List of lords in the peerage of Spain
United Kingdom
[edit | edit source]Overview
- Peerage (general introduction)
Peerage Titles (nobility), ranked by order
(highest-ranking hereditary titles in the British peerage system)
- Duke Β§ United Kingdom File:Coronet of a British Duke.svg
- Marquess Β§ United Kingdom File:Coronet of a British Marquess.svg
- Earl File:Coronet of a British Earl.svg
- Baron File:Coronet of a British Baron.svg
- Victory title π (peerage granted for military victories, e.g., Duke of Wellington; coronet varies by rank)
- Peer of the realm (legal term for members of the peerage with full rights)
- Lord (general title for many peers, also used informally)
- Representative peer (elected member of the Scottish [1707β1963] or Irish [1801β1922] peerage who sat in the UK House of Lords on behalf of their peerage group)
- Hereditary peer File:Coronet of a British Baron.svg (peerage title that is passed down through inheritance; coronet depends on rank)
- Life peer File:Coronet of a British Baron.svg (peerage title granted for lifetime service; and, the title cannot be inherited; wears a Baronβs coronet)
Titled but Below the Peerage
(honorary or hereditary titles that do not grant peerage status)
- Baronet (hereditary title ranking below a baron, but above a knight)
- Knight (non-hereditary honor awarded for service or merit)
- Dame (female equivalent of a Knight, awarded for distinguished service)
- Privilege of peerage (legal rights and privileges associated with being a peer, even if not sitting in Parliament)
Commoners and Gentry
(non-peerage ranks historically associated with privilege and status)
- Courtesy title (honorific used by heirs of peers, not legally recognized)
- Esquire (once a rank below knight, now an informal designation)
- Gentleman File:Torse of a British Gentleman.svg (traditional term for men of status and refinement)
- Baronage (collective term for barons, historically linked to landownership)
- Laird (Scottish landowner, similar to an esquire or lord of the manor, but not a peer)
- Scottish clan (traditional kinship-based groups in Scotland, some led by clan chiefs)
- Scottish clan chief (leader of a Scottish clan, recognized under Scottish heraldic law)
- List of Scottish clans (directory of notable historical and modern Scottish clans)
Concepts Related to the Peerage (and Non-Peerage)
(broader ideas, historical context, and legislative aspects of the peerage system)
- Peerage Bill (legislation related to the peerage, including reforms)
- British nobility (wider concept of noble ranks, including those not part of the peerage)
- Noblesse in Scotland (Scottish equivalent of nobility, often distinct from peerage)
- English heraldry (system of coats of arms and noble symbols in England)
- Forms of address in the United Kingdom (proper ways to address peers and titled individuals)
- Lord Β§ Modern usage (explanation of how "Lord" is used today, both formally and informally)
Regalia and Symbols
(items associated with noble status and rank)
- Robes of the British peerage (ceremonial garments worn by peers at state occasions)
- Coronet (small crown worn by peers, indicating rank in the hierarchy)
- Orders of precedence in the United Kingdom β (hierarchy of ranking among nobles and officials)
- Order of precedence in Northern Ireland
Honors and Nobiliary Elements
- Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom
- Post-nominal letters Β§ Civil usage in the UK
- Post-nominal letters Β§ Academic usage in the UK
- List of post-nominal letters (United Kingdom)
- Nobiliary particle Β§ United Kingdom
- College of Arms File:Coat of Arms of the College of Arms.svg
- Herald File:Crown of a British King of Arms.svg (officer of arms responsible for heraldry and ceremonial functions)
- Garter Principal King of Arms File:Coat of Arms of the Garter King of Arms.svg
- King of Arms
- Lord Lyon King of Arms File:Crown of a British King of Arms.svg
- Order of the Garter File:Arms of the Most Noble Order of the Garter.svg
- Order of the British Empire
- Order of St Michael and St George
- List of people who have declined a British honour
Scottish and Other Nobility Structures File:Flag of Scotland.svg
π° Early Peerages (Before 1707)
- Peerage of England (English titles created before the 1707 Acts of Union)
- Welsh peers and baronets (holders of British peerage and baronetcy titles associated with Welsh lands or heritage)
- Peerage of Scotland (Scottish titles created before 1707; some later sat in the House of Lords, with all gaining seats from 1964 to 1999)
- List of Scottish representative peers (elected Scottish peers in the House of Lords from 1707 to 1963)
- Jacobite peerage (titles granted by exiled Stuart monarchs (1689β1766) in opposition to the British and Irish peerage systems)
π¬π§ Peerages of Great Britain and Ireland (1707β1801)
- Peerage of Great Britain (titles created in the Kingdom of Great Britain between 1707 and 1800)
- Peerage of Ireland (Irish titles created before 1920; held seats in the Irish House of Lords until 1801, with some later sitting in the UK House of Lords)
- List of Irish representative peers (elected Irish peers in the House of Lords from 1801 to 1922)
π Peerages of the United Kingdom (1801βPresent)
- Peerages in the United Kingdom (titles created since 1801 in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland β renamed the UK of Great Britain and Northern Ireland after 1921)
- Life Peerages Act 1958 (established non-hereditary life peerages in the House of Lords)
- Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 (created judicial life peers for the House of Lords)
- List of spiritual peers (Bishops in the House of Lords as Lords Spiritual)
πOther Peerage-Related Topics
- Peerage Act 1963 (allowed hereditary peers to disclaim their titles for life; ended Scottish representative peers)
- History of the British peerage (development and evolution of the peerage system)
- Peerage of Britain and Ireland by date (chronological list of peerage creations)
- List of British Jewish nobility and gentry (Jewish peers, baronets, and gentry in the UK)
- Courtesy titles in the United Kingdom (honorific titles used by heirs of peers)
- List of courtesy titles in the peerages of Britain and Ireland (specific courtesy titles and their holders)
(not part of the United Kingdom, but Crown Dependencies)
- Bailiwick of Jersey File:Flag of Jersey.svg (seigneurs, but no peerage system)
- Bailiwick of Guernsey File:Flag of Guernsey.svg (seigneurs, but no peerage system)
Other Crown Dependencies
- Cornwall File:Flag of Cornwall.svg (Duchy of Cornwall, but no separate peerage)
- Isle of Man File:Flag of the Isle of Mann.svg (Lord of Mann, no separate peerage)
- Order of precedence in the Isle of Man
Peerages in the Commonwealth
Peerages in the Australia Error creating thumbnail:
- Australian peers and baronets
- Australian knights and dames
- Order of the Thistle
- Table of precedence for the Commonwealth of Australia
- Order of Australia (established February 14, 1975)
Peerages in the Canada File:Flag of Canada.svg
Peerages in the New Zealand File:Flag of New Zealand.svg
- New Zealand royal honours system
- Orders, decorations, and medals of New Zealand
- New Zealand Order of Merit (established May 30, 1996)
- New Zealand royal honours system
Lists of Titles and Holders
Dukes and Dukedoms
- Royal dukedoms in the United Kingdom
- Dukes in the United Kingdom
- List of dukes in the peerages of Britain and Ireland
- List of dukedoms in the peerages of Britain and Ireland
- Earls, Marquises and Dukes in the Baronage of Scotland Β§ List of Marquisates and Dukedoms in the Baronage of Scotland
Marquesses and Marquessates
- Marquesses in the United Kingdom
- Britain and Ireland
- Scotland
Earls and Earldoms
Viscounts and Viscountcies
- List of viscounts in the peerages of Britain and Ireland
- List of viscountcies in the peerages of Britain and Ireland
Barons, Lords of Parliament, and Baronetcies
- List of barons in the peerages of Britain and Ireland
- List of hereditary baronies in the Peerage of the United Kingdom
- List of baronies in the Peerage of England
- List of baronies in the peerages of Britain and Ireland
- List of life peerages
- List of lordships of Parliament
- List of peers 1790β1799
- List of peerages created for women
- List of peerages inherited by women
- Standing Council of the Baronetage
Dormant, Extinct, and Forfeited Peerages
- Category:Dormant peerages
- List of extinct baronetcies
- Category:Extinct dukedoms in the Peerage of England
- Category:Extinct baronies
- Category:Extinct dukedoms
- Category:Extinct earldoms
- Category:Extinct marquessates
- Category:Extinct viscountcies
- Category:Forfeited peerages
- Category:Forfeited earldoms in the Peerage of England
Legal Aspects of the Peerage
- Peerage law
- Baronies created by error
- Cash-for-Honours scandal
- False titles of nobility
- Titles Deprivation Act 1917
Fictional Nobility
See also
[edit | edit source]Wikiquote has quotations related to Peerage.
Further reading
[edit | edit source]- Burke's Peerage
- Burke's Landed Gentry (1833; 1st ed.) β by John Burke (1786β1848).
- The Complete Peerage (1887β1898) β In 8 Vols. by George Edward Cokayne (1825β1911).
- Noblesse Oblige (1956) β An anthology of four essays.
- Debrett's β John Debrett (1753β1822), compiler and publisher of The New Peerage in 1769.
- International Register of Arms, formerly Burke's Peerage & Gentry International Register of Arms
- The Scots Peerage
- Roll of the Peerage