This was commissioned by an Anglo-Irish peeress, the dowager Countess of Sandwich, in circumstances to be explained. |
|
She remained a member of Parliament until the 1992 election and was subsequently elevated, as a peeress for life, to the House of Lords. |
|
He said the controversial Bill was a better one for the intervention of Shirley Williams, the Lib Dem peeress. |
|
Lady, in the British Isles, a general title for any peeress below the rank of duchess and also for the wife of a baronet or of a knight. |
|
One thing is clear: the list must have been compiled by a retired British military man now employed by a peer or peeress who has strong ties to the Church of England. |
|
Even the dear old peeress who rather elegantly – though accidentally, she later said – raised two fingers to her fellow peer Lord King as he droned on about her age has been taken to task. |
|
His wife Sarah Hogg, Baroness Hogg, a life peeress in her own right, is also a member of the House of Lords. |
|
Sir Michael Stoute's Peeress was the meat in the sandwich and was also hampered, having to give up third place to P ro clamation. |
|