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  1. Hereditary peerages are not "honours under the crown" and cannot normally be withdrawn. A peerage can be revoked only by a specific Act of Parliament, and then only for the current holder, in the case of hereditary peerages. A hereditary peer can disclaim his peerage for his own lifetime under Peerage Act 1963 within a year of inheriting the title.

  2. Template:Current barons in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. This template's initial visibility currently defaults to autocollapse, meaning that if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar, or table with the collapsible attribute ), it is hidden apart from its title bar; if not, it is fully visible.

  3. The United Kingdom never experienced the sudden dispossession of the estates of the nobility, which occurred in much of Europe after the French Revolution or in the early 20th century, and the British nobility, in so far as it existed as a distinct social class, integrated itself with those with new wealth derived from commercial and industrial sources more comfortably than in most of Europe.

  4. Peerage. The British nobility in the narrow sense consists of members of the immediate families of peers who bear courtesy titles or honorifics. [1] Members of the peerage carry the titles of duke, marquess, earl, viscount or baron. British peers are sometimes referred to generically as lords, although individual dukes are not so styled when ...

  5. Die Peerage of Great Britain umfasst alle Peer -Würden, die im Königreich Großbritannien nach dem Act of Union 1707 bis zum Act of Union 1800 geschaffen wurden. Die Peerage of Great-Britain ersetzte somit die Peerage of England und die Peerage of Scotland, bis sie selbst 1801 durch die Peerage of the United Kingdom ersetzt wurde.

  6. Life Peerages Act 1958. List of life peerages. Category: Peerages in the United Kingdom. Hidden category: Commons category link from Wikidata.

  7. Peerages created for prime ministers by reign. King George I, 1714–1727. King George II, 1727–1760. King George III, 1760–1820. King George IV, 1820–1830. King William IV, 1830–1837. Queen Victoria, 1837–1901. King Edward VII, 1901–1910. King George V, 1910–1936.