List of extant baronetcies#
{{Short description|Existing baronetcies}}
{{Use British English|date=February 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2014}}
Baronets are hereditary titles awarded by the Crown. The current baronetage of the United Kingdom has replaced the earlier, existing baronetages of England, Nova Scotia, Ireland and Great Britain.
To be recognised as a baronet, it is necessary to prove a claim of succession. When this has been done, the name is entered on the Official Roll of the Baronetage. Persons who have not proven their claims may not be officially styled as baronets.{{cite web |url=https://www.baronetage.org/official-roll/ |title=Official Roll of the Baronetage|date=19 January 2024 |website=Standing Council of the Baronetage|access-date=21 January 2024}} This was ordained by Royal Warrant in February 1910.{{London Gazette |issue=28804 |date=20 February 1914 |page=1464 |supp=y }} A baronetcy is considered vacant if the previous holder has died within the previous five years and if no one has proven their succession, and is considered dormant if no one has proven their succession in more than five years after the death of the previous incumbent.{{cite web |url=https://www.baronetage.org/baronets/no-succession-proved/ |title=No Succession Proved |website=Standing Council of the Baronetage|access-date=28 October 2023}}
All extant baronetcies, including vacant baronetcies, are listed below in order of precedence (i.e. date). All other baronetcies, including those which are extinct, dormant or forfeit, are on a separate list of baronetcies. The list is current as of April 2025, when it was last updated. The baronetcy lists include any peerage titles which are held by the baronet.
{{UK Peerages}}
Baronetage of England (1611–1705)
File:Arms of the Martin Baronets of Long Melford.png of Long Melford (1667) with the badge of a Baronet of England]]
King James I created the hereditary Order of Baronets in England on 22 May 1611, to fund 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 should pay a sum equivalent to three years' pay to 30 soldiers at 8d. per day per man (total – £1,095) into the King's Exchequer.
The Baronetage of England comprises all baronetcies created in the Kingdom of England before the Act of Union in 1707. In that year, the Baronetage of England and the Baronetage of Nova Scotia were replaced by the Baronetage of Great Britain.
{{clear}}
=Baronets in the Baronetage of England=
class="wikitable sortable"
! No ! Title ! Creation ! Other titles and notes |
1
| 22 May 1611 | now also Bacon baronets of Mildenhall, since 1755 |
2
| 22 May 1611 |
3
| 22 May 1611 |
4
| Hoghton, now de Hoghton of Hoghton Tower | 22 May 1611 | |
5
| 22 May 1611 |
6
| 22 May 1611 |
8
| 22 May 1611 | |
9
| 29 June 1611 | |
10
| 29 June 1611 |
11
| 29 June 1611 |
12
| 29 June 1611 |
13
| 29 June 1611 |
14
| 29 June 1611 | |
15
| 29 June 1611 |
16
| Mordaunt of Massingham Parva | 29 June 1611 | Present baronet does not use the title. |
17
| 25 November 1611 |
18
| 10 June 1615 |
19
| Egerton, formerly Grey-Egerton, of Egerton | 5 April 1617 | |
20
| 16 April 1617 |
21
| 25 June 1618 |
22
| Hicks, now Hicks Beach of Beverston | 21 July 1619 |
23
| 5 May 1620 | |
24
| 2 June 1620 |
25
| 9 November 1621 |
26
| 5 December 1621 | |
27
| 4 January 1622 |
28
| 14 January 1622 | |
29
| 23 February 1622 |
30
| 26 March 1622 |
31
| 4 July 1622 |
32
| 21 July 1622 |
33
| 20 December 1622 | |
36
| 30 May 1627 | |
38
| 26 June 1627 |
39
| 29 July 1627 | now also Bacon baronets of Redgrave, since 1755 |
40
| 7 May 1628 |
41
| 13 June 1628 | |
42
| Trelawny, now Salusbury-Trelawny of Trelawny | 1 July 1628 | |
43
| 29 August 1628 | |
44
| 1 September 1628 | |
45
| 12 September 1628 | |
46
| 24 November 1628 | |
47
| 2 March 1629 |
49
| 26 May 1641 | |
50
| Cave, now Cave-Browne-Cave of Stanford | 30 June 1641 | |
51
| 14 July 1641 |
52
| 14 July 1641 | Marquess of Bath; vacant since 2020. |
53
| 16 July 1641 |
54
| Strickland, now Strickland-Constable of Boynton | 30 July 1641 | |
55
| 4 August 1641 | |
56
| 4 August 1641 |
57
| 5 February 1642 | |
58
| Haggerston, now Constable Maxwell-Scott of Haggerston | 15 August 1642 | |
60
| 30 August 1642 |
62
| 1 August 1643 |
64
| February 1644 |
66
| 21 January 1678 | precedence of 24 June 1644 |
67
| 21 March 1645 | |
68
| 3 December 1660 |
69
| 7 June 1660 | |
70
| 7 June 1660 | |
71
| 7 June 1660 |
72
| 22 June 1660 | |
73
| 25 June 1660 |
74
| 22 June 1660 | Baron Denham; vacant since 2021. |
75
| 25 June 1660 |
76
| 25 June 1660 | |
78
| 28 June 1660 |
79
| 29 December 1660 | |
80
| 13 July 1660 | |
81
| 19 July 1660 | |
82
| Smithson, now Percy of Stanwick | 1660 |
83
| Wheler of the City of Westminster | 11 August 1660 | |
84
| 17 August 1660 |
85
| 1674 |
87
| 24 December 1660 |
88
| 29 December 1660 | |
89
| Bedingfeld, now Paston-Bedingfeld of Oxburgh | 2 January 1661 | |
90
| 10 March 1661 | |
91
| 26 April 1661 | |
92
| 10 May 1661 | |
93
| 15 May 1661 | |
94
| Jenkinson of Walcot and Hawkesbury | 18 May 1661 | |
95
| Williams-Bulkeley of Penrhyn | 17 June 1661 | |
96
| 2 August 1661 | |
97
| 28 November 1661 | |
99
| 11 February 1662 | No heir. |
100
| 17 November 1662 | |
101
| Tancred, now Lawson-Tancred of Boroughbridge | 17 November 1662 | |
102
| 29 July 1663 | No heir. |
103
| 16 August 1663 |
104
| 2 November 1664 | |
105
| Shaw, now Best-Shaw of Eltham | 15 March 1665 | |
106
| 8 June 1665 |
107
| 25 July 1665 | |
108
| 24 May 1667 | No heir. |
109
| 28 April 1670 | |
110
| 5 May 1670 |
111
| 18 November 1671 | |
112
| 13 November 1672 | also Baronet Eden of Maryland |
113
| 12 December 1673 | |
114
| 18 December 1676 | |
115
| 3 March 1677 | |
116
| 29 March 1677 |
117
| 7 April 1677 |
118
| 29 September 1677 | Baron Brownlow; vacant since 2021. |
120
| Bowyer, now Goring of Highden | 18 May 1678 | |
122
| 29 June 1681 | |
123
| Parker, now Hyde-Parker of Melford Hall | 1 July 1681 | Vacant since 2022. |
124
| 16 September 1684 | |
125
| 15 April 1686 | |
126
| 6 July 1688 | |
127
| Molesworth, now Molesworth-St Aubyn of Pencarrow | 19 July 1689 | |
128
| 30 November 1689 | |
129
| 2 March 1693 | No heir. |
130
| Colt of St James's-in-the-Fields | 2 March 1694 | No heir. |
131
| 24 December 1694 | No heir. |
133
| 6 April 1700 |
134
| 13 April 1704 |
135
| 4 October 1705 | |
136
| 29 October 1705 | |
Baronetage of Nova Scotia (1625–1706)
File:Agnew of Lochnaw coat of arms.svg of the Agnew baronets (1629) with riband and Badge of a Baronet of Nova Scotia.]]
The Baronetage of Nova Scotia was devised in 1624 as a means of settling the plantation of that province (now a province of Canada). King James VI announced his intention of creating 100 baronets, each of whom was to support six colonists for two years (or pay 2,000 merks in lieu thereof) and also to pay 1,000 merks to Sir William Alexander, to whom the province had been granted by charter in 1621.Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition article "BARONET" § 2
James died before this scheme could be implemented, but it was carried out by his son Charles I, who created the first Scottish baronet on 28 May 1625, covenanting in the creation charter that the baronets of Scotland or of Nova Scotia should never exceed 150, that their heirs apparent should be knighted on coming of age (21), and that no one should receive the honour who had not fulfilled the conditions, viz, paid 3,000 merks (£166, 13s. 4d.) towards the plantation of the colony.{{cite book| title=The Earl of Stirling's Register of Royal Letters, Relative to the Affairs of Scotland and Nova Scotia from 1615 to 1635, Volume 1|page=xxi| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=beA7AQAAIAAJ&q=%22Edinburgh+castle%22&pg=PR26| author1= Scotland. Sovereign (1625-1649: Charles I)|author2= William Alexander Earl of Stirling|author3= Charles Rogers|author3-link= Charles Rogers (author)|author4= Scotland. Sovereign (1567-1625: James VI)|editor-first=Charles|editor-last=Rogers|publisher=private circulation|year=1885|quote= The lands included in the baronies of New Scotland were resigned by Sir William Alexander into the hands of the king [Charles I], who re-granted them to the knights baronets. Thus the lands and titles were obtained directly from the sovereign. Infeftment, it was ruled, should be "expede" at the Castle of Edinburgh.}}{{cite book|url=http://digital.nls.uk/histories-of-scottish-families/pageturner.cfm?id=95005994&mode=transcription|editor-first=William|editor-last=Turnbull|title= The Stirling Peerage. Trial of Alexander Humphrys or Alexander, Styling Himself Earl of Stirling| pages=1–2|publisher=William Blackwood and Sons|year=1839| location=Edinburgh, Scotland|quote= Before this charter was ratified by the Scots Parliament, his Majesty [James VI] died; when, in 1625, the grant was renewed by his successor [Charles I] in form of a Charter of Novodamus, proceeding upon the above narrative, and conceding, over and above, additional powers to Sir William Alexander. These charters are in the usual form of feudal conveyances employed by the law of Scotland, but erecting Nova Scotia into a Barony, and declaring sasine at the castle of Edinburgh to be equivalent to sasine on the lands themselves.}}{{cite journal|journal=The Scottish Journal of Topography, Antiquities, Traditions, &c. &c.| volume= I | number=8|publisher=Thomas George Stevenson |location= Edinburgh, Scotland|date=23 October 1847| title=Origin of the Baronetage of Scotland and Nova Scotia|page= 115| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jQsIAAAAQAAJ&q=%22Nova+Scotia%22+Scotland+seisin&pg=PA115 |quote=As such like parties were not baronets of the colonising kind, and yet were desirous, no doubt, to take seisin of their purchased grants in Nova Scotia, old Sir William, always provident, had his remedy prepared. He had had it laid down in the formula of the charter, that "the realm of Nova Scotia, and original infeftment thereof, is holden of the kingdom of Scotland, and forms part of the County of Edinburgh." Argal, to take seisin and instruments of possession "on the Castle Hill of Edinburgh," formed a cure for every difficulty, and served the desired purpose as well as if the baronets had indulged in a trip to the actual site of their new possessions.}}{{cite journal|journal=The Genealogical Magazine|volume= 1|date= January 1898|publisher=Elliot Stock|location=London, U.K.|page=523| title=The Baronetage and the New Committee|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=JQxBAQAAMAAJ&q=%22baronet+of+Nova+Scotia%22+infeftment&pg=PA523 | quote=The precept for the charter for each Baronet was granted in the name of Sir William Alexander, who surrendered to the Crown the respective portions of his Lordship of Nova Scotia to be attached to the Baronetcy with all rights of regality. The Baronets were allowed to take possession of their territory by deed of infeftment within the walls of Edinburgh Castle.}}{{cite book|editor-first=David|editor-last= Laing|publisher= G. Robb|location=Edinburgh, Scotland| year= 1867| url= https://archive.org/details/royalletterscha00sovegoog | title= Royal Letters, Charters, and Tracts, Relating to the Colonization of New Scotland, and the Institution of the Order of Knight Baronets of Nova Scotia. 1621-1638| page=[https://archive.org/details/royalletterscha00sovegoog/page/n144 126]|quote= Had it been exacted ... that each Baronet, with a stated number of colonists, should take personal possession, it is certain the number of applicants would have been scanty indeed. To obviate this difficulty it was held, by a fiction of the law, that the usual legal form of taking possession by an instrument of seisin, or infeftment of lands on the other side of the Atlantic, should take place within the Castle of Edinburgh.}}{{cite journal|title=Nova Scotia, The Royal Charter of 1621 to Sir William Alexander (address)|first= Alexander|last= Fraser|journal= Transactions of the Royal Canadian Institute|volume= XIV|number= 1|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto, Canada|year=1922|pages=14–15, 45|url=https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20110202|quote= For the purpose of taking possession of his lands after the feudal fashion then prevailing, Nova Scotia was made a part of the county of Edinburgh, and at Edinburgh Castle the ceremony of Sasine was performed. … [excerpt of 1621 charter:] And we will, and grant, and, for ourselves and our successors, do decree and ordain, that one seisin, at this time, by the said Sir William, and his aforesaid, upon any part of the soil of the said lands and province above written, shall, in all time to come, stand, and be a sufficient seisin for the whole region, …}}{{cite journal|first1=John A.|last1=Cooper|first2=J. Gordan|last2=Mowat|title=Canada and Edinburgh Castle|journal=The Canadian Magazine|volume=25|number=5|date=September 1905|publisher= Ontario Publishing Company, Limited|location=Toronto, Canada|page=480|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aj4PAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Nova+Scotia%22+%22Edinburgh+Castle%22&pg=PA480
|quote= The colony was named New Scotland, and by a legal fiction, it was, for administrative purposes, connected with Edinburgh. In order to raise men to help found the colony, the King instituted the Order of Baronets of Nova Scotia. This hereditary title was given to gentlemen who arranged to send a certain number of men and to pay a certain amount of money to help to found the Plantation of New Scotland, …. The Order was instituted in 1625, the ceremony being held in the courtyard of Edinburgh Castle. By Royal Decree that place was declared to be an integral part of the new colony. This decree has never been annulled.}}{{cite book|last=McGrail|first=Thomas H.|year=1940|title= Sir William Alexander, First Earl of Stirling: A biographical study|publisher= Oliver & Boyd|page= 91|quote= To make this possible, since Nova Scotia was so distant, the King declared that sasine could be taken either in the new province or alternatively 'at the castle of Edinburgh as the most eminent and principal place of Scotland.'}}{{cite journal|publisher= Fifty Plus Outreach Association|location=St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada|date=November 1993|volume=1|title= Founding of New Scotland (Nova Scotia)|url= http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/heritage/FSCNS/Scots_NS/New_Scotland/Scotland_New_Scotland_Menstrie.html|journal=Fifty Plus|last=MacKay|first=Janet|quote= Under Scots Law, Baronets "take sasine" by receiving symbolic "earth and stone" on the actual land. Part of Edinburgh Castle was deemed granted to Sir William as part of Nova Scotia. The Baronets were installed with "earth and stone" there while standing in Nova Scotia.}}{{cite web|title=Baronets of Nova Scotia|first= Marie |last=Fraser| url=http://www.electricscotland.com/canada/fraser/baronets_novascotia.htm |access-date=2016-03-13|quote= Baronets could receive their patents in Edinburgh rather than London, and an area of Edinburgh Castle was declared Nova Scotian territory for this purpose.}} Four years later (17 November 1629) the king wrote to the contractors for baronets, recognising that they had advanced large sums to Sir William Alexander for the plantation on the security of the payments to be made by future baronets, and empowering them to offer a further inducement to applicants; and on the same day he granted to all Nova Scotia baronets the right to wear about their necks, suspended by an orange tawny ribbon, a badge bearing an azure saltire with a crowned inescutcheon of the arms of Scotland and the motto Fax mentis honestae gloria (Glory is the torch that leads on the honourable mind). As the required number, however, could not be completed, Charles announced in 1633 that English and Irish gentlemen might receive the honour, and in 1634 they began to do so. Yet even so, he was only able to create a few more than 120 in all. In 1638 the creation ceased to carry with it the grant of lands in Nova Scotia, and on the union with England (1707) the Scottish creations ceased, English and Scotsmen alike receiving thenceforth Baronetcies of Great Britain.
=Baronets in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia=
Baronetage of Ireland (1619–1800)
This is a list of extant baronetcies in the Baronetage of Ireland. They were first created in 1619, and were replaced by the Baronetage of the United Kingdom in 1801, after the Acts of Union 1800 came into force.. The baronetcies are listed in order of precedence (i.e. date order).
{{main|List of baronetcies in the Baronetage of Ireland}}
Baronetage of Great Britain (1707–1800)
{{anchor|Baronetage of Great Britain}}
The below is a list of all extant baronetcies in the Baronetage of Great Britain, which replaced the Baronetages of Nova Scotia and of England in 1707. In 1801 it was succeeded by the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. These baronetcies are listed in order of precedence, which is established by the date of the creation. For a complete list of baronetcies see List of baronetcies.
Baronetage of the United Kingdom (1801–present)
File:Arms of Baronet Agnew of Gt Stanhope St.jpg of the Agnew baronets (1895) with the badge of a Baronet of the United Kingdom.]]
The Baronetage of the United Kingdom started with the formation of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1801, replacing the Baronetage of Great Britain. (For a complete list of baronetcies, see List of Baronetcies – which includes extinct baronetcies.)
The baronetcies are listed below in order of precedence (date order). (For ease in editing, the table has been divided into 25-year periods.)
The last baronet to be created was Sir Denis Thatcher in 1990.
=1801=
=1825=
=1850=
=1875=
=1900=
=1925=
=1950=
=1975=
class="wikitable"
!No!!Title!!Creation!!Notes | |||
|1284 | Thatcher of Scotney | 7 December 1990 |
See also
Notes
{{Reflist}}
References
- {{EB1911|wstitle=Baronet|ref=none}}
- {{Rayment-bt|date=March 2012}}
External links
- [https://www.baronetage.org/official-roll/ Official Roll of the Baronetage]
- [https://www.baronetage.org/baronets/succession-to-a-baronetcy/ Succession to a baronetcy]