- List of Constituencies in the Parliament of Scotland at the time of the Union
List of Constituencies in the Parliament of Scotland at the time of the Union is a list of the
constituencies of theParliament of Scotland (the Estates of Scotland) during the period shortly before the Union between theKingdom of Scotland and theKingdom of England . Theunicameral Estates of Scotland existed frommediæval times until1707 .The
Commissioner s for theburghs (the "Third Estate") andshires and stewartries (sometimes called the "Fourth Estate", or classified as a subgroup within the "Second Estate") wereelect ed, but on a very restrictive franchise. "Commissioner" was the title for ordinary, representative members of theparliament (juniorpeers were calledLords of Parliament ; and senior peers,representatives of the monarch , and certain members of theclergy also sat in parliament).The Scottish ministers (the
Privy Council of Scotland ), were not answerable to the Estates of Scotland but to theScots monarch (which, after theUnion of Crowns in 1603, usually meant "de facto " to thePrivy Council of England , which had the opportunity to advise a king or queen resident inLondon ). The Parliament of Scotland was abolished when it merged with theParliament of England to create the newParliament of Great Britain , in1707 under the Acts of Union.Constituencies
The representation of the burghs and those of the shires and stewartries, by the time of the Union, consisted of 154 Commissioners elected from 99 constituencies.
An election was not held immediately after the Union because the establishment feared a possible
landslide victory for the anti-Union Commissioners. Instead 45 Commissioners were hand-picked to represent the whole country (seeScotland (UK Parliament constituency) ) as the firstMPs fromScotland . 43 of these hand-picked representatives were pro-Union.From
1708 , there were 45 single member constituencies of theParliament of Great Britain . These constituencies remained unchanged until1832 . All the burghs were grouped into 4- or 5-member districts, apart fromEdinburgh . Three pairs of shires were represented in alternate Parliaments.The names given in the 'Shire or Stewartry' column in the list below were those for the shires and stewartries used in the
Parliamentary returns for the Estates of Scotland which met on6 May ,1703 , "as reported in 1878" (this reporting date is important to note, as the names used are theAnglified ones introduced by theVictorians , and not the names given to thesubdivisions of Scotland extant in 1703). In some cases the form of the name is unusual and not consistent with the version commonly accepted. In others the name changed after the Union.The names used for UK constituencies are those used in "The History of Parliament 1754-1790". These may not be exactly the same as those applied in the first half of the 18th century.
cottish Burghs, Shires and Stewartries
References
*"Return of the name of every member of the lower house of Parliament of England, Scotland and Ireland, with names of constituency represented, and dates of return from 1213 to 1874" H.C. 1878
*"History of Parliament: House of Commons 1754-1790", by SirLewis Namier andJohn Brooke (Sidgwick & Jackson 1964)ee also
*
List of UK Parliament constituencies in Scotland from 1707
*Parliament of Scotland
*1st Parliament of Great Britain
*2nd Parliament of Great Britain
*District of burghs (UK Parliament)
*Lord High Commissioner to the Parliament of Scotland
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