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Some Related Sentences

peer's and heir
In some cases ( at least regarding the peerage ) the Crown would eventually re-grant the convicted peer's lands and titles to his heir.
A peer's eldest living son and heir, or eldest male-line grandson and heir eventual are, however, allowed to bear a subsidiary title of the peer's ( if he ranks as an earl or higher ) as a courtesy title.

peer's and will
Consequently, when a peer's upload bandwidth is saturated, it will use a tit-for-tat strategy.
The case before the Lyon Court involves a dispute as to who may lawfully succeed to a deceased peer's ( i. e., aristocrat's ) arms " undifferenced " — the lawful successor to the arms will normally also be the successor to the peerage.

peer's and be
Over time, it was established that once summoned, a peer would have to be summoned for the remainder of his life, and later, that the peer's heirs and successors would also be summoned, thereby firmly entrenching the hereditary principle.
It is to be distinguished from: a title shared among cadets ; or borne as a courtesy title by a peer's direct heirs ; or acquired by a consort as a consequence of marriage or grant.

peer's and if
In the following table of the Peerage of Ireland as it currently stands, each peer's highest titles in each of the other Peerages ( if any ) are also listed.
The great dream of all the men about town in Charles's time, as Wycherley's plays all show, was to marry a widow, young and handsome, a peer's daughter if possible — but in any event rich, and spend her money upon wine and women.
To disclaim an hereditary peerage, the peer must deliver an instrument of disclaimer to the Lord Chancellor within twelve months of succeeding to the peerage, or, if under the age of twenty-one at the time of succession, before the peer's 22nd birthday.
In the following table of the Peerage of Scotland as it currently stands, each peer's highest titles in each of the other Peerages ( if any ) are also listed.

peer's and senior
# The new peer's senior supporter

peer's and title
Titles with the same name as a peer's main title are also not used as courtesy titles.
If she marries a peer, she gains the courtesy title as that peer's wife.
Therefore, any member of the Royal Family who is not a peer, such as Prince Harry of Wales or Anne, Princess Royal, is ( technically ) a commoner, as is any member of a peer's family, including someone who holds only a courtesy title, such as the Earl of Arundel and Surrey ( eldest son of the Duke of Norfolk ) or Lady Victoria Hervey ( a daughter of the 6th Marquess of Bristol ).

peer's and by
King Charles showed his gratitude to the city of Hereford on 16 September 1645 by augmenting the city's coat of arms with the three lions of Richard I of England, ten Scottish Saltires signifying the ten defeated Scottish regiments, a very rare lion crest on top of the coat of arms signifying " defender of the faith " and the even rarer gold-barred peer's helm, found only on the arms of one other municipal authority: those of the City of London.
Courtesy peerages are only used by the peer's eldest living son, and the eldest son's eldest living son, and so forth.
* " Interview: Lord Williams "-Guardian Unlimited Politics interview with Lord Williams by Julian Glover, dated Friday, 28 June 2002, giving the peer's views on reform of the House of Lords
The procession would proceed towards the Lord Chancellor, and the Garter Principal King of Arms would present the peer's letters patent, which are issued by the sovereign to create a new peerage, and the new peer would kneel before the Lord Chancellor and present his writ of summons, which is issued by the sovereign to command the peer's attendance in Parliament.
Thereafter, the Garter Principal King of Arms would " place " the new peer and his supporters by leading them to the Lords bench traditionally occupied by those of the new peer's rank.
Until 1770, a peer's domestic servants were also covered by the privilege of freedom from arrest in civil matters.
The Australian press was very much more excited at the news, and three camera crews appeared outside the new peer's block of flats at Elanora Villas, Bunbury, before more reporters arrived by helicopter.

peer's and family
Because Guest's children are adopted, they cannot inherit the family barony under the terms of the letters patent that created it, though a 2004 Royal Warrant addressing the style of a peer's adopted children states that they can use courtesy titles.
All members of a peer's family are commoners too ; the British system thus differs fundamentally from continental European ones, where entire families, rather than individuals, were ennobled.
Often, however, the felonious peer's descendants successfully petitioned the Sovereign to restore the dignity to the family.
In popular usage, a commoner is a person who does not belong to royalty or aristocracy: in other words, someone who is not a member of a peer's family.

peer's and is
Rather than a single, central repository on which clients synchronize, each peer's working copy of the codebase is a bona-fide repository.
The helmet of the arms was not specified in the Charter, but the engraver sketched out a peer's helmet on the final design, which is used.
This is contrary to the heraldic rules, as a society or corporation normally has an esquire's helmet ; it is thought that either the engraver was ignorant of this rule, which was not strictly adhered to until around 1615, or that he used the peer's helmet as a compliment to Lord Brouncker, a peer and the first President of the Royal Society.
By contrast, her younger sister outranked her husband from August 1946 to August 1979 because when a peer's daughter marries a commoner rather than a peer, she is allowed to retain the rank derived from her parent.
If a line is looped, the node receives an LCP message with its own magic number, instead of getting a message with the peer's magic number.
Mr Lewis, the American Congressman who calls Lord Darlington an amateur, is seen as the owner of Darlington Hall in the movie after the peer's demise.
Rather than a single, central repository on which clients synchronize, each peer's working copy of the codebase is a bona fide repository.

peer's and .
Unlike the commoner status of a British peer's wife and descendants ( yet typical of the nobility of every continental European country ), the legitimate children and male-line descendants of any French nobleman ( whether titled or not, whether possessing a French peerage or not ) were also legally noble ad infinitum.
Other descendants are not permitted to use the peer's subsidiary titles.
He was first sent to a mission school in Yokohama, where he was taught English, after which he entered preparatory school of the prestigious Gakushuin peer's school, when he was 10 years old.
Rows of sealskin spots on the cape designate the peer's rank ; dukes use four rows, marquesses three and a half, earls three, viscounts two and a half, and barons and lords of Parliament two.

heir and apparent
Alexander became heir apparent ( as Tsarevich ) with Nicholas's sudden death in 1865.
Alexander was the heir apparent to his cousin, the eighteen-year-old Emperor who had been murdered along with his mother by his own guards, who, as a mark of contempt, had their remains cast into the Tiber river.
* Willem-Alexander, Prince of Orange ( born 1967 ), the eldest child of Queen Beatrix and Prince Claus and heir apparent to the throne of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
* Afonso VII of Portugal-future regnal name of the heir apparent to the current pretender
The heir apparent is the present holder's son the Hon.
However, when Henry died of suspected typhoid ( or possibly porphyria ) at the age of 18 in 1612, two weeks before Charles's 12th birthday, Charles became heir apparent.
Media attention was renewed by the January 2005 suicide of David Berg's adopted and abused son / heir apparent Ricky Rodriguez ( who had also left the group several years earlier ) after he murdered a former member.
: Lord Blandford's heir apparent: George John Godolphin Spencer-Churchill, Earl of Sunderland ( b. 1992 ), his elder son
Huayna Capac's sudden death and followed days later by the Incan heir apparent from a strange disease, described by one smallpox precipitated a bitter power struggle between Huáscar, whose mother was Coya ( meaning Empress ) Mama Rahua Occillo and legetimate heir, and Atahualpa, a son who, borne to a Quitu princess, and reputedly his father's " favorite.
The heir apparent is the present holder's eldest son George Ian Alastair Gordon, Earl of Haddo ( b. 1983 ).
Following the Isshi Incident, Iruka's adherents dispersed largely without a fight, and Naka no Ōe was named heir apparent.
Fujiwara no Yorinaga sided with the retired emperor in a violent battle in 1158 against the heir apparent, who was supported by the Taira and Minamoto.
This changed the existing line of succession by displacing the heir presumptive, his daughter Mary, a Protestant and the wife of William of Orange, with young James as heir apparent.
As the first-born son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba, a descendant of Dardanus, who lived under Mount Ida, and of Tros, the founder of Troy, he was a prince of the royal house and the heir apparent to his father's throne.
Henry was also known as " Henry Beauclerc " ( because of his education — as his older brother William was the heir apparent and thus given the practical training to be king, Henry received the alternate, formal education ), worked hard to reform and stabilise the country and smooth the differences between the Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman societies.
When Stephen's son and heir apparent Eustace died in 1153, the king reached an accommodation with Henry of Anjou ( who became Henry II ) to succeed Stephen and in which peace between them was guaranteed.
In 1956 he was elected Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party and became Leader of the House, and from this point on he was generally acknowledged as Menzies ' heir apparent.
Tiberius, like Augustus before him, was adopted into the Julii upon becoming the emperor's heir apparent.
Macduff tells the young heir apparent that he has a mistaken understanding of masculinity.
Princess Dagmar and her ill-fated fiance Tsarevich Nicholas. The marriage of Princess Dagmar of Denmark to Grand Duke Alexander Alexandrovitch. The Anichkov Palace in 1862. The rise of Slavophile ideology in the Russian Empire led Alexander II of Russia to search for a bride for the heir apparent, Tsesarevich Nicholas Alexandrovich of Russia, in countries other than the German states that had traditionally provided consorts for the tsars.
By the time Mary was nine years old, it was apparent that Henry and Catherine would have no more children, leaving Henry without a legitimate male heir.
Philip had a son from a previous marriage, and was heir apparent to vast territories in Continental Europe and the New World.
But instead of handing power over to Khalifa ibn Hamad, who had been named heir apparent in 1948, he made his son, Ahmad ibn Ali, ruler.

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