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Present holder also holds the Dryden baronetcy of Canons Ashby. 311: Armytage of Kirklees: 4 July 1738 312: Hulse of Lincoln's Inn Fields: 7 February 1739 Vacant since 2022. 313: Wynn of Bodvean: 25 October 1742 Baron Newborough: 316: Beauchamp-Proctor, now Proctor-Beauchamp of Langley Park: 20 February 1745 318: Harbord-Hamond of Gunton: 22 ...
Neck decoration for British baronets, depicting the Red Hand of Ulster. This article lists baronetcies, whether extant, extinct, dormant (D), unproven (U), under review (R) or forfeit, in the baronetages of England, Nova Scotia, Great Britain, Ireland and the United Kingdom.
Neck decoration for baronets, depicting the Red Hand of Ulster. A baronet (/ ˈ b æ r ə n ɪ t / or / ˈ b æ r ə ˌ n ɛ t /; [1] abbreviated Bart or Bt [1]) or the female equivalent, a baronetess (/ ˈ b æ r ə n ɪ t ɪ s /, [2] / ˈ b æ r ə n ɪ t ɛ s /, [3] or / ˌ b æ r ə ˈ n ɛ t ɛ s /; [4] abbreviation Btss), is the holder of a baronetcy, a hereditary title awarded by the ...
The Clarke baronetcy is the sole baronetcy in Australia conferred upon an Australian-born (Tasmanian-born) individual. South Australia. Sir Samuel Way, 1st Baronet, of Montefiore, in South Australia (1899), extinct 1916; Victoria. Sir William Clarke, 1st Baronet, of Rupertswood, in the Colony of Victoria (1882), extant; New South Wales
second Baronet created Baron Mostyn in 1831; baronetcy unproven (sixth baronet died 2006) Lovett of Liscombe House: 23 October 1781: Lovett: extinct 1812: A new patent of the baronetcy was gazetted in 1808, with remainder to the first Baronet's daughters and their male issue. However, it is unclear whether this creation passed the Great Seal.
The British embassy in the United States informs that "the sale of British titles is prohibited". [6] Titles in the Scottish baronage are arguably the only British nobility titles that may be passed to any person, of either sex, by inheritance or conveyance. Baronetcies are hereditary titles granted by the Crown, but are not part of the peerage ...
The baronetcy did not appear in Burke's Extinct Baronetcies 1841 Halford of Wistow: 1641: Halford: extinct 1780: the last baronet Sir Charles Halford left his estate, after a lifetime interest to his widow, to his kinsman Henry Vaughan, later Sir Henry Halford: Halton of Samford Parva: 1642: Halton: extinct 1823 Hamilton of London: 1642 ...
The Succession to Peerages and Baronetcies Bill is a proposed law of the Parliament of the United Kingdom introduced on 20 November 2023 by Lord Northbrook. [1]The Bill proposes to change the law about hereditary peerages and baronetcies by removing male primogeniture to allow female heirs to take a hereditary peerage or baronetcy.