Extensive Definition
A baronet (traditional abbreviation Bart, modern
abbreviation Bt) or the rare female equivalent, a baronetess
(abbreviation Btss), is the holder of a hereditary title awarded by
the British Crown known as a baronetcy. The current practice of
awarding baronetcies was originally introduced in England and
Ireland by James
I of England in 1611 in order to raise
funds.
Baronetcies have three European equivalents from
a ranking perspective: the Italian title of nobility Nobile, the Austrian
and South German title of Edler von and the
extinct old-Polish panek ("lordling"), although hereditary knights, such as the German and
Austrian and the Dutch , may be held to be similar. There were
originally three hereditary knighthoods in Ireland, of which
two remain today.
The name baronet is a diminutive of the peerage
title baron. The rank of a
baronet is between that of a baron and a knight.
A baronetcy is unique in two ways:
- It is a hereditary honour but is not a peerage and has never entitled the holder to a seat in the House of Lords.
- A baronet is styled "Sir", but a baronetcy is not considered an order of knighthood. It ranks above all knighthoods except the Order of the Garter and the Order of the Thistle.
History of the term
The term baronet is of ancient origin. Sir Thomas de la More, describing the Battle of Barrenberg (1321), mentioned that baronets took part, along with barons and knights. Edward III is known to have created eight baronets in 1328: St Leger, Baronet of Sledmarge; Den, Baronet of Pormanston; Fitzgerald, Baronet of Burnchurch; Welleslye, Baronet of Narraghe; Husee, Baronet of Gattrim; St Michell, Baronet of Reban; Marwarde, Baronet of Scryne; and Nangle, Baronet of the Navan. Further creations were made in 1340, 1446 and 1551. At least one of these, Sir William de la Pole in 1340, was created for payment of money, presumably needed by the king to help maintain his army. It is not known if these early creations were hereditary, but all seem to have died out.The term baronet was applied to the noblemen who
lost the right of individual summons to Parliament, and was used in
this sense in a statute of Richard
II. A similar rank of lower stature is the banneret.
The revival of baronetcies can be dated to
Sir
Robert Cotton's discovery in the late 16th or
early 17th century
of William
de la Pole's patent
(issued in the 13th year of Edward
III's reign), conferring upon him the dignity of a baronet in
return for a sum of money.
Subsequent baronetcies fall into the following
five creations:
- King James I erected the hereditary Order of Baronets in England on 22 May 1611 for the settlement of Ireland. He offered the dignity to 200 gentlemen of good birth, with a clear estate of £1,000 a year, on condition that each one paid a sum equivalent to three years' pay for 30 soldiers at 8d per day per man into the King's Exchequer. The idea came from the Earl of Salisbury, who averred: "The Honour will do the Gentry very little Harm," while doing the Exchequer a lot of good.
- The Baronetage of Ireland was erected on 30 September 1611.
- King Charles I erected the hereditary Baronetage of Scotland or Nova Scotia on 28 May 1625, for the establishment of the plantation of Nova Scotia.
- After the union of England and Scotland in 1707, no further Baronets of England or Scotland were created, the style being changed to Baronet of Great Britain.
- After the union of Great Britain and Ireland on January 1, 1801 to create the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, all baronetcies created were under the style of the United Kingdom.
Since 1965 only one new baronetcy has been
created, for Sir Denis
Thatcher, the husband of former Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher (now Baroness Thatcher).
Upon his death in 2003, their eldest son
became the 2nd Baronet, Sir Mark
Thatcher.
Conventions
Like knights, baronets use the title "Sir" before their name. Baronetesses in their own right use "Dame", while wives of baronets (though legally a Dame) use "Lady" by longstanding courtesy. Unlike knighthoods however, which apply to an individual only, a baronetcy is hereditary. The eldest son of a baronet who is born in wedlock is entitled to accede to the baronetcy upon the death of his father, but he will not be officially recognised until his name is on the Roll. With a few exceptions, baronetcies can be inherited only by or through males. Wives of baronets are not baronetesses; only females holding baronetcies in their own right are baronetesses.A full list of extant baronets can be found in
Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, which includes a few extinct
baronetcies.
Because baronet is not a peerage title, it does
not disqualify the holder from standing for election to the
British House of Commons. Since 1999 hereditary
peerages do not either, so the distinction has become largely
historical. A number of baronets were returned to the House of
Commons in the
2001 General Election.
Originally baronets also had other rights,
including the right to have the eldest son knighted on his 21st
birthday. However, beginning in the reign of
George IV, these rights have been gradually revoked (by Order
in Privy
Council, which was not competent to make such an Order revoking
a right granted by a Sovereign), on the grounds that sovereigns
should not be bound by acts made by their predecessors.
According to the Home Office there is a tangible
benefit to the honour. According to law, a baronet is entitled to
have "a pall supported by two men, a principal mourner and four
others" assisting at his funeral.
Baronets of Scotland or
Nova
Scotia were granted the Arms of Nova Scotia in their armorial
bearings and the right to wear about the neck the badge of Nova
Scotia, suspended by an orange-tawny ribbon. This consists of an
escutcheon argent with a saltire azure thereon, an inescutcheon of
the arms of Scotland, with an
Imperial Crown above the escutcheon, and encircled with the motto
Fax mentis Honestae Gloria. This Badge may be shown suspended by
the ribbon below the shield of arms.
Baronets of England and
Ireland
applied to King
Charles I for permission to wear a badge. Although a badge was
worn in the 17th century, it was not until 1929 that permission
was granted (by
King George V) for all baronets other than those of Scotland to
wear a badge.
The left hand
Baronets were granted the Arms of Ulster as a canton or inescutcheon in armorial bearings, argent a sinister hand couped at the wrist and erect gules, known as the Badge of Ulster (although the Ulster hand is dexter).Somewhere along the line a mistake has been made,
as the Red Hand of Ulster is definitely a dexter or right
one.
The Baronets' Badge was created by Royal Warrant
of George V, dated 13 April
1929. The
relevant part of the text is as follows:
"A shield of the Arms
of Ulster on a silver field, viz. on a silver field a left hand
Gules surmounted by an Imperial
Crown enamelled in its proper colours the whole enclosed by an
oval border embossed with gilt scrollwork having a design of roses,
of shamrocks and of roses and thistles combined for those Baronets
who were created Baronets
of England, of Ireland
and of
Great Britain respectively and for all
other Baronets other than
Baronets of Scotland a design of roses, thistles and shamrocks
combined such Badge to be suspended from an orange riband with a
narrow edge of dark blue on both sides the total breadth of the
riband to be one inch and
three quarters and the breadth of each edge to be one quarter of an
inch." The Badge may be shown suspended by its riband below the
shield of arms.
Addressing a baronet
The correct style on an envelope for a baronet who has no other titles is "Sir , Bt" or "Sir , Bart". The letter would commence: "Dear Sir ".Wives of baronets are addressed and referred to
as "Lady "; at the head of a letter as "Dear Lady ". Their given
name is used only when necessary to distinguish , Lady from ,
.
Addressing a baronetess
As for the very rare baronetess, one should write "Dame Daisy Dunbar, Btss" on the envelope. At the head of the letter, one would write "Dear Dame Daisy," and to refer to her, you would say "Dame Daisy" or "Dame Daisy Dunbar" (never "Dame Dunbar").Baronetcy conferred upon a woman
There have been only three baronetesses:- Dame Daisy Dunbar, 8th Btss of Baldoon (1906–97), cr.1664
- Dame Mary Bolles, 1st Btss (1579–1662); the only woman to be created a baronetess). Her grandson succeeded to the title, after which it died out.
- Eleanor Dalyell, 10th Btss (1895–1972) (cr.1685), whose title passed to her son, the Labour politician Tam Dalyell.
- Maxwell, now Stirling-Maxwell of Pollock (cr.1682), can pass through the female line
In 1976 Lord Lyon said that, without examining
the Patent of every Scottish Baronetcy, he was not in a position to
confirm that only these four can pass through the female
line.
Territorial designations
All Baronetcies are distinguished by having a territorial designation. So, for example, there are Baronetcies Moore of Colchester, Moore of Hancox, Moore of Kyleburn and Moore of Moore Lodge.The number of baronetcies
The first publication listing all baronetcies ever created was C.J. Parry's Index of Baronetcy Creations (1967). This listed them in alphabetical order, other than the last five creations (Dodd of West Chillington, Redmayne of Rushcliffe, Pearson of Gressingham, Finlay of Epping and Thatcher of Scotney). It showed the total number created from 1611 to 1964 to have been 3482. They include five of Oliver Cromwell, several of which were recreated by Charles II. Twenty-five were created between 1688 and 1784 by James II in exile after his dethronement, by his son James Stuart ("The Old Pretender") and his grandson Charles Edward Stuart ("Bonny Prince Charlie"). These are known as Jacobite baronetcies. These were never accepted by the English establishment and have all disappeared. They should properly be excluded from the 3,482, making the effective number of baronetcy creations 3,457. A close examination of Perry's publication shows he missed one or two, so there have evidently been a few more.The total number of baronetcies today is
approximately 1,380, although only some 1,280 are on the Official
Roll. It is unknown whether some baronetcies, such as the Earl of
Breadalbane, remain extant and it may be that nobody can prove
himself to be the heir incumbent. Over 200 baronetcies are now held
by peers.
Notable baronets
- Sir Crispin Agnew of Lochnaw, 11th Bt (Chief of Clan Agnew, Her Majesty's Rothesay Herald of Arms) (born 1944)
- Sir Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Bt (founder of the world Scouting movement) (1857-1941)
- Sir James Matthew Barrie, 1st Bt (J M Barrie, Scottish author, creator of Peter Pan) (1860-1937)
- Sir Thomas Beecham, 2nd Bt (conductor)
- Sir William Bowman, 1st Bt (histologist & anatomist)
- Sir George Cayley, 6th Bt (aviation pioneer)
- Sir Samuel Cunard, 1st Bt (shipping magnate)
- Sir Humphry Davy, 1st Bt (chemist)
- Sir Edward Elgar, 1st (and last) Bt (composer) (1857-1934)
- Sir Ranulph Fiennes, 3rd Bt (explorer)
- Sir De Villiers Graaff, 2nd Bt (South African politician).
- Sir Benjamin Guinness, 1st Bt (Irish brewer and philanthropist).
- Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Bt (chief manager of original HSBC)
- Sir Thomas Graham Jackson, 1st Bt (Architect and Royal Academician) (1835-1924)
- Sir Keith Joseph, 2nd Bt (politician) (1918-1994)
- Sir John Lauder, Lord Fountainhall, 2nd Bt., Scottish judge and Legal writer.
- Sir Charles Lyell, 1st Bt (geologist) (1797-1875)
- Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Bt, artist
- Sir Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk, 11th Bt (herald, genealogist, writer)
- Sir Oswald Mosley, 6th Bt (politician)
- Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Bt (Prime Minister)
- Sir John Pringle, Bt (Royal Physician)
- Sir Walter Scott, 1st Bt (writer) (1771-1832)
- Sir George Gabriel Stokes, 1st Bt (mathematician and physicist)
- Sir Denis Thatcher, 1st Bt (businessman; husband of Margaret Thatcher)
- Sir Frederick Treves, 1st Bt (doctor, treated King Edward VII, and Joseph Merrick, "The Elephant Man.")
- Sir Brook Watson, 1st Bt (merchant, politician, Lord Mayor of London and subject of Watson and the Shark)
- Sir John Yeamans, 2nd Bt (slave and sugar merchant; Governor of Carolina)
Baronetcies the subject of attainders
- Sir James Harington, 3rd Baronet (suspended for his lifetime by Act of Parliament 1673 for having taken part in the trial of Charles I).
- Radclyffe of Derwentwater, 1715 (extinct soon afterwards)
- Widrington of Widrington, 1741 (extinct soon afterwards)
- Goodere of Burhope, 1741 (extinct soon afterwards)
Baronetcies with special remainders
- James II made Cornelis Speelman a baronet in 1686. He was a Dutch general. By a special clause his mother was given the rank of widow of a Baronet of England. His descendant, Sir Cornelis, is now the 8th Baronet.
- When Sir George Stonhouse, 1st Baronet was made a Baronet, the remainder specifically excluded his eldest son.
- When Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy was made a baronet, it was realised that the Parsi custom was for a change of names for each generation. An Act was passed providing that all the male heirs should take these names and no other. Similar provision was made for subsequent Parsi baronets.
Baronets who do not use their baronetcy
- Tam Dalyell
- Rev John Walter Brooke Halsey
- Charles Richard Musgrave Harvey
- Trevor Oswin Lewis, 4th Baron Merthyr, 4th Bt - who also disclaimed his peerage 1977
- Richard Nigel Charles Mordaunt
- Robert Shane McConnell
- Ferdinand Mount
- Jonathon Porritt (he has not proved or claimed the baronetcy)
- Tom Shakespeare
- John Standing, otherwise Sir John Leon, 4th Bt
- John Brewer Sutherland
- Sebastian Verney (he has not proved or claimed the baronetcy)
Baronetcies conferred upon non-Britons
Baronetcies conferred on the recommendation of Canadian governments
- See also :Category:Canadian Baronets
- Sir James Stuart 1841
- Sir Louis Hippolyte LaFontaine 1854
- Sir John Beverley Robinson 1854
- Sir Allan Napier MacNab 1858
- Sir George-Étienne Cartier 1868
- Sir John Rose 1872
- Sir George Stephen (Lord Mount Stephen)1886
- Sir Charles Tupper 1888
- Sir Edward Seaborne Clouston 1908
- Sir Henry Vincent Meredith 1916
- Sir Joseph Wesley Flavelle 1917
Australia
- Sir Samuel James Way, 1st Baronet of Montefiore, South Australia (1899), extinct
- Sir William John Clarke 1st Baronet of Rupertswood - extant. Application has been made by the prospective 4th Baronet, Rupert Grant Alexander Clarke
The Netherlands
- Sir Cornelis Speelman, Dutch general, extant (1686)
- Sir Cornelis Van Tromp, Dutch general, extinct (1675)
- Sir William de Boreel, 1st Baronet, of Amsterdam, extant (1645)
- Sir Joseph van Colster, 1st Baronet, of Amsterdam, Holland (1645)
- Sir Gelebrand Sas van Bosch, 1st Baronet, of Holland (1680)
India
- Sir Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, 1st Baronet, Bombay, India, extant. A Parsee.
- Sir Jehangir Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney, 1st Baronet, Bombay, India, extant. A Parsee.
- Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, 1st Baronet, ?, India, extant. A Parsee.
- Sir Chinubhai Madhowlal Ranchhodlal, 1st Baronet, Shahpur, India, extant. A Hindu.
- Sir Currimbhoy Ebrahim, 1st Baronet, of Pabaney Villa, India, extant. A Muslim.
Iraq
- Sir Albert Abdullah David Sassoon, 1st Baronet, born a Jew in Iraq, moved to Iran, then to Bombay where he made his fortune, finally settling in England. Knighted in 1872 and created a baronet in 1890.
New Zealand
- Sir Joseph Ward, 1st Baronet, of Wellington, New Zealand, extant
- Sir Charles Clifford, 1st Baronet of Flaxbourne, New Zealand, extant
South Africa
- Sir George Albu, 1st Baronet, South Africa
- Sir Otto Beit, 1st Baronet, South Africa
- Sir Lionel Phillips, 1st Bt, mining magnate, South Africa 1912
- Sir Joseph Robinson, 1st Baronet, mining magnate, South Africa 1908
- Sir Julius Wernher, 1st Bt, mining magnate, South Africa 1905
- Sir David Pieter de Villiers Graaf, 1st Baronet, extant, South Africa (then the Cape Colony)
- Sir Andries Stockenstrom, 1st Baronet (colonial administrator) South Africa 1840
- Sir George Farrar, 1st Baronet (mining magnate) (baronetcy extinct) South Africa 1911
- Sir Leander Starr Jameson, 1st Baronet (politician) (baronetcy extinct) South Africa 1911
- Sir George Albu, 1st Baronet, mining magnate, South Africa 1912
- Sir Sothern Holland, 1st Baronet South Africa 1917
- Sir Abe Bailey, 1st Baronet (mining magnate, philanthropist) South Africa 1919
- Sir Bernard Oppenheimer, 1st Baronet South Africa 1921
- Sir Lewis Richardson, 1st Baronet South Africa 1924
Sweden
- Sir John Frederick van Freisendorf, 1st Baronet, of Hirdech, Sweden (1661)
United States
In Fiction
- Sir Percy Blakeney, The Scarlet Pimpernel.
- Sir Charles Baskerville The Hound of the Baskervilles.
- Sir Henry Baskerville The Hound of the Baskervilles.
- Sir Despard Murgatroyd, Gilbert & Sullivan's Ruddigore.
- Sir Walter Elliot, Jane Austen's Persuasion
See also
- List of extant Baronetcies
- List of baronetcies (currently incomplete)
- British Honours System
- Letters patent
References
- The Baronetage, 2nd edition
- Debrett's website
baronetage in Danish: Baronet
baronetage in German: Baronet
baronetage in Spanish: Baronet
baronetage in French: Baronnet
baronetage in Italian: Baronetto
baronetage in Latvian: Baronets
baronetage in Lithuanian: Baronetas
baronetage in Dutch: Baronet
baronetage in Japanese: 準男爵
baronetage in Polish: Baronet
baronetage in Portuguese: Baronete
baronetage in Russian: Баронет
baronetage in Simple English: Baronet
baronetage in Finnish: Baronetti
baronetage in Swedish: Baronet
baronetage in Chinese: 從男爵