Lords of Parliament and Ladies in The Peerage of Scotland
| Title | Creation | Other titles |
|---|---|---|
| The Lord Forbes | 1442 | |
| The Lord Gray | 1445 | |
| The Lady Saltoun | 1445 | |
| The Lord Sinclair | 1449 | |
| The Lord Borthwick | 1452 | |
| The Lord Cathcart | 1452 | Earl Cathcart in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Lovat | 1464 | Lord Lovat in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Sempill | 1488 | |
| The Lady Herries | 1490 | |
| The Lord Elphinstone | 1510 | Lord Elphinstone in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Torphichen | 1564 | |
| The Lady Kinloss | 1602 | |
| The Lord Colville of Culross | 1604 | Viscount Colville of Culross in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Balfour of Burleigh | 1607 | |
| The Lord Dingwall | 1609 | Lord Lucas in the Peerage of England |
| The Lord Napier | 1627 | Lord Ettrick in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Fairfax of Cameron | 1627 | |
| The Lord Reay | 1628 | |
| The Lord Forrester | 1633 | Lord Verulam in the Peerage of Great Britain Viscount Grimston in the Peerage of Ireland Earl of Verulam in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Elibank | 1643 | |
| The Lord Belhaven and Stenton | 1647 | |
| The Lord Rollo | 1651 | Lord Dunning in the Peerage of the UK |
| The Lord Ruthven of Freeland | 1651 | Earl of Carlisle in the Peerage of England |
| The Lord Nairne | 1681 | Viscount Mersey in the Peerage of the United Kingdom |
| The Lord Polwarth | 1690 |
Read more about this topic: Peers Of Scotland
Famous quotes containing the words lords, parliament, ladies and/or scotland:
“O dark dark dark. They all go into the dark,
The vacant interstellar spaces, the vacant into the vacant,
The captains, merchant bankers, eminent men of letters,
The generous patrons of art, the statesmen and the rulers,
Distinguished civil servants, chairmen of many committees,
Industrial lords and petty contractors, all go into the dark....”
—T.S. (Thomas Stearns)
“A Parliament is that to the Commonwealth which the soul is to the body.... It behoves us therefore to keep the facility of that soul from distemper.”
—John Pym (15841643)
“The intent of matrimony, is not for man and wife to be always taken up with each other, but jointly to discharge the duties of civil society, to govern their family with prudence, and educate their children with discretion.”
—Anonymous, U.S. womens magazine contributor. Weekly Visitor or Ladies Miscellany (June 1807)
“Four and twenty at her back
And they were a clad out in green;
Tho the King of Scotland had been there
The warst o them might hae been his Queen.
On we lap and awa we rade
Till we cam to yon bonny ha
Whare the roof was o the beaten gold
And the floor was o the cristal a.”
—Unknown. The Wee Wee Man (l. 2128)