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  1. Website. burkespeerage .com. Burke's Peerage Limited is a British genealogical publisher founded in 1826, when the Anglo-Irish genealogist John Burke began releasing books devoted to the ancestry and heraldry of the peerage, baronetage, knightage and landed gentry of Great Britain and Ireland. His first publication, a Genealogical and Heraldic ...

  2. Earls of Somerset ‎ (7 P) Earls of Southampton ‎ (7 P) Earls of Stafford ‎ (1 C, 8 P) Earls of Stamford ‎ (10 P) Earls of Strafford (1640 creation) ‎ (3 P) Earls of Suffolk ‎ (3 C, 1 P) Earls of Sunderland ‎ (5 P) Earls of Surrey ‎ (33 P) Earls of Sussex (Peerage of England) ‎ (1 C, 4 P)

  3. The second edition, revised and much enlarged by a series of editors, was issued in 13 volumes from 1910 to 1959, with one final volume published in 1998 to include in the series the peerage titles created since 1938. This huge work is “complete” in the sense that it covers all extant, extinct, and dormant peerage titles of England ...

  4. Complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct or dormant. Vol. 1–8 (1st ed.). London: George Bell & Sons. Cracroft-Brennan, Patrick. "Cracroft's Peerage" (web). Heraldic Media Limited

  5. The constitution of the peerage first became important in 1202, for the court that would try King John of England in his capacity as vassal of the French crown. Based on the principle of trial by peers, a court wishing to acquire jurisdiction over John had to include persons deemed to be of equal rank to him in his capacity as either Duke of Aquitaine or Normandy.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Debrett'sDebrett's - Wikipedia

    John Almon edited and published his first edition of The New Peerage in 1769, and went on to produce at least three further editions. [4] By 1790 he had passed the editorship on to John Debrett who, in 1802, put his name to the two small volumes that made up The Correct Peerage of England, Scotland and Ireland .

  7. R. Robes of the British peerage. Categories: Peerages in the United Kingdom. English people by occupation. Hidden category: Commons category link from Wikidata.