British Parliamentary Lists, 1660-1880This register identifies all known lists - division lists, forecasts, management and propaganda lists - for the House of Commons between 1660 and 1761, for the House of Lords between 1660 and 1800, and for the Scottish Parliament between 1660 and 1707. The listing has been updated since the previous "Register of Parliamentary Lists" in 1979. It may also ba a useful adjunct to Donald E. Ginter's "Voting Records of the British House of Commons, 1761-1820". |
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الصفحة xiv
... B.I.H.R., LIII (1980) Committee of the whole House A. Browning, Thomas Osborne, Earl of Danby and Duke of Leeds, 1632–1712 (3 vols., Glasgow, 1944–51) J. Debrett, History, Debates and Proceedings of Both Houses of Parliament, ...
... B.I.H.R., LIII (1980) Committee of the whole House A. Browning, Thomas Osborne, Earl of Danby and Duke of Leeds, 1632–1712 (3 vols., Glasgow, 1944–51) J. Debrett, History, Debates and Proceedings of Both Houses of Parliament, ...
الصفحة 3
... to contemporaries; sometimes a division list might be employed as the basis for a forecast or for some other kind of working management list, as in the Earl of Ailesbury's forecast for the Duke of Norfolk's Divorce Bill in 1693 (no.
... to contemporaries; sometimes a division list might be employed as the basis for a forecast or for some other kind of working management list, as in the Earl of Ailesbury's forecast for the Duke of Norfolk's Divorce Bill in 1693 (no.
الصفحة 4
Among the parliamentary managers well represented by Lords' lists are Philip, Lord Wharton, a leading opponent of the Court under Charles II; the Earl of Danby, later Marquess of Carmarthen and Duke of Leeds, a minister of Charles II ...
Among the parliamentary managers well represented by Lords' lists are Philip, Lord Wharton, a leading opponent of the Court under Charles II; the Earl of Danby, later Marquess of Carmarthen and Duke of Leeds, a minister of Charles II ...
الصفحة 5
This is partly explained by the absence of anything to compare with the Newcastle papers after the death of the first duke in November 1768. From c. 1770, ministerial control of the House of Lords became somewhat easier and more ...
This is partly explained by the absence of anything to compare with the Newcastle papers after the death of the first duke in November 1768. From c. 1770, ministerial control of the House of Lords became somewhat easier and more ...
الصفحة 8
The question was put when all Cry'd reverse Except L[or]d Marchmont who Insisting for a Division the whole Lords got to their feet and moved towards the Bar, the Duke of Argyle at their head, Except his grace of Montrose who ...
The question was put when all Cry'd reverse Except L[or]d Marchmont who Insisting for a Division the whole Lords got to their feet and moved towards the Bar, the Duke of Argyle at their head, Except his grace of Montrose who ...
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absent annotated Appendix Bill bishops Blenheim Palace Bodl Cambridge Univ Carte 81 Cobbett committee compiled Court supporters Cruickshanks Danby Debates Debrett division lists Division-Lists Duke Earl election Exclusion Bill forecast formerly Loan G.M. Ditchfield Gallery gave no verdict George III Hastings not guilty Hist House of Commons House of Lords Ibid Jones July June list of lords London Evening Post lords including Lords list Lords Spiritual lords summoned lords who pronounced lords who voted management list McCahill ministry's pre-sessional meeting minority Morning Chronicle motion names Nicolson's London Diaries Occasional Conformity Oxford Parl PARLIAMENT OF GEORGE Parliament of Scotland Parliamentary History Party Pillar of Constitution placemen presence list printed list Proceedings North America pronounced Warren Hastings protest proxy voters question repeal representative peers Scotland Scots Scottish R.O. Sedgwick Stamp Act Stamp Act Crisis thesis Tories Trumbull vols Warren Hastings Whig