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Baronetcy Robert
Baden-Powell, Bart.
Baronet. British hereditary dignity, first created by
King James I in May 1611. The baronetage is not part
of the peerage, nor is it an order of knighthood. A
baronet ranks below barons but above all knights
except a knight of the garter. The baronetcy is
inherited by the male heirs of a baronet.
James I, desperate for funds like all the Stuarts,
decided to institute by letter patent "a new
dignitie between Barons and Knights." Because
the money was ostensibly for support of the troops in
Ulster, candidates for the baronetage were required
to pay the king <Picture: {poundsterling}>1,095
(the sum required to maintain 30 soldiers for three
years), but such requirements were soon abandoned. In
1619 a baronetage of Ireland was also established,
and in 1624 James planned another creation in
connection with the plantation of Nova Scotia. This
was carried out after his death by Charles I in 1625.
The baronets of Scotland (or of Nova Scotia) were
required to pay a total of <Picture:
{poundsterling}>2,000 (the amount required to
support six colonists) and to pay a fee of
<Picture: {poundsterling}>1,000 to Sir William
Alexander (afterward earl of Stirling), to whom the
province had been granted in 1621. In return they
received, as well as their title, 16,000 acres of
land in Nova Scotia. The creation of baronets of
Scotland ceased with that country's union with
England in 1707; thereafter, until 1800, the new
baronetcies were those of Great Britain. No more
Irish baronets were created after the Irish Act of
Union in 1801. From 1801 all creations were of
baronets of the United Kingdom.
Baronetcies are conferred only on men, though women
may succeed to certain Scottish baronetcies. A
baronet is styled Sir A.B., Bart. (or Bt.), to
distinguish him from a knight; his wife is Lady B. A
Scottish baronetess is styled Dame A.B., Bart., or
Lady A.B., Bart.
From
Britannica Online
"Baronet."
Britannica Online.
Available http://www.eb.com:180/cgi-bin/g?DocF=micro/52/98.html
[May 18, 1997]

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Please write to: Lewis P. Orans
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© Lewis P. Orans, 1997
Last Modified: 10:10 AM on May 18, 1997


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