Baron Berkeley - Barons Berkeley, By Writ, Second Creation (1421)

Barons Berkeley, By Writ, Second Creation (1421)

The feudal barony continued until the Tenures Abolition Act 1660

  • James Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley (c. 1394–1463)
  • William Berkeley, 1st Marquess of Berkeley, 2nd Baron Berkeley (1426–1492)
  • Maurice Berkeley, de jure 3rd Baron Berkeley (1436–1506)
  • Maurice Berkeley, de jure 4th Baron Berkeley (1467–1523)
  • Thomas Berkeley, de jure 5th Baron Berkeley (1472–1533)
  • Thomas Berkeley, de jure 6th Baron Berkeley (1505–1534)
  • Henry Berkeley, 7th Baron Berkeley (1534–1613)
  • George Berkeley, 8th Baron Berkeley (1601–1658)
  • George Berkeley, 1st Earl of Berkeley, 9th Baron Berkeley (1627–1698)
  • Charles Berkeley, 2nd Earl of Berkeley, 10th Baron Berkeley (1649–1710)
  • James Berkeley, 3rd Earl of Berkeley, 11th Baron Berkeley (1680–1736)
  • Augustus Berkeley, 4th Earl of Berkeley, 12th Baron Berkeley (1716–1755)
  • Frederick Augustus Berkeley, 5th Earl of Berkeley, 13th Baron Berkeley (1745–1810)
  • Thomas Moreton Fitzhardinge Berkeley, 6th Earl of Berkeley, 14th Baron Berkeley (1796–1882)
  • Louisa Mary Milman, 15th Baroness Berkeley (by birth: Berkeley) (1840–1899)
  • Eva Mary Foley, 16th Baroness Berkeley (by birth: Milman) (1875–1964) (abeyant 1964)
  • Mary Lalle Foley-Berkeley, 17th Baroness Berkeley (1905–1992) (abeyance terminated 1967)
  • Anthony Fitzhardinge Gueterbock, 18th Baron Berkeley (b. 1939), her nephew

The heir apparent is his son the Hon. Thomas FitzHardinge Gueterbock (b. 1969)

Read more about this topic:  Baron Berkeley

Famous quotes containing the words barons and/or creation:

    We live by our imaginations, by our admirations, by our sentiments. The child walks amid heaps of illusions, which he does not like to have disturbed. The boy, how sweet to him his fancy! how dear the story of barons and battles! What a hero he is, whilst he feeds on his heroes! What a debt is his to imaginative books!
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Today, each artist must undertake to invent himself, a lifelong act of creation that constitutes the essential content of the artist’s work. The meaning of art in our time flows from this function of self-creation. Art is the laboratory for making new men.
    Harold Rosenberg (1906–1978)