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His Grace The Duke of Wellington
Divorced wives also have their own styles. Like in the Royal Family, the styling for a divorced wife of a peer is the same. For example, the former wife of the Marquess of Northampton instead of being styled as THE Marchioness of Northampton, is now Pamela, Marchioness of Northampton.
Widows of peers have their own titles – they simply insert the word ‘Dowager’ before the title. Therefore, the widow of the late 11th Duke of Devonshire is styled as Her Grace The Dowager Duchess of Devonshire.
Succession to peerages is a story in itself. Most peerages currently only allow for male children to succeed to them (though there is a bill in parliament which seeks to effectively change this). This means, if a peer has only female children, in most cases none of them may succeed to the title and it could end up going to a distant cousin or even becoming extinct. It is also worth noting that under English common law, there is no primogeniture amongst women. This means that even if there are female children, a title may go into abeyance because age is not used to decide succession, creating co-heirs out of all of a peer’s female children – this is a big problem with the peerage, which is one of the reasons for the bill in the House of Lords to change things.
The Equality (titles) Bill in the Lords will change several things. It will allow a hereditary peer to petition the Lord Chancellor to change the succession to their title to mean the eldest child, regardless of gender, would succeed. It will also give husbands of female peers and civil partners the courtesy title of ‘The Honourable’.
The peerage may be an antiquated institution, but the rich history of Britain’s lords and ladies is far from over yet.
See Royal Central’s new information site on the Peerage, setup as part of this series at thepeerage.info
photo credits: UK Parliament via photopin and Allan Warren [GFDL], via WC
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Part 3 was published on 9th February.]]>
Excellent and informative post! Thank you.
Good stuff: just a pity that the photograph is of Law Lords (in the House of Lords presumably) rather than peers. Would love a picture of the aristocracy in its ermine