lunes, 29 de febrero de 2016

List of the Knights of the Garter I a

Príncipe de Gales.

Knights of the Garter, 1348-present

The dates are those of appointment or nomination (app), or investiture or installation (inv).



1 (inv 1348) Edward, Prince of Wales (Founder). Known since 1569 as the "Black Prince." The hero of the battles of Crécy and Poitiers. He died in his father's lifetime.
2 (inv 1348) Henry (Plantagenet), styled "of Lancaster" (Founder). Earl of Derby. Afterwards Duke of Lancaster. Served in the wars against the Scots, the Dutch, and French. Admiral of the Fleet and Steward of England.
3 (inv 1348) Thomas (Beauchamp), 3rd Earl of Warwick (Founder). Marshal of England. Fought at the battles of Crécy and Poitiers.
4 (inv 1348) Sir John de Grailly, Vicomte de Benanges et Castillon. Captal (i.e. Governor) de Buch. One of the Founders of the Order. Fought under the Black Prince at Poitiers.
5 (inv 1348) Ralph, 1st Earl of Stafford (Founder). Served in the Scotch and French wars and in important diplomatic missions in European countries.
6 (inv 1348) William (de Montacute), 2nd Earl of Salisbury. One of the Founders of the Order. In the wars of his time he was chiefly distinguished in naval actions. He was the last survivor of the Founders.
7 (inv 1348) Roger (Mortimer), 2rd Earl of March (Founder). Attended the King into France while yet under age and served later in expeditions under John of Gaunt.
8 (inv 1348) Sir John de Lisle, afterwards 1st Lord Lisle de Rougemont. One of the Founders of the Order. Granted a manor at the age of 17 to enable him to serve in the wars, in which he won great fame.
9 (inv 1348) Sir Bartholomew Burghersh (Founder). Served with distinction in the French wars.
10 (inv 1348) Sir John Beauchamp (Founder). Afterwards Lord Beauchamp de Warwick. He carried the Standard Royal at the battle of Crécy Present at the surrender of Calais and the battle of Sluys.
11 (inv 1348) John, 2nd Lord Mohun. One of the Founders of the Order. Served in the wars under the Black Prince.
12 (inv 1348) Sir Hugh Courtenay. One of the Founders of the Order. Served with the King in France.
13 (inv 1348) Sir Thomas Holland (Founder). Afterwards 1st Earl of Kent. Married the "Fair Maid of Kent", widow of the Black Prince. In chief command of the van at the battle of Crécy.
14 (inv 1348) Sir John Grey (Founder). Distinguished in the French wars.
15 (inv 1348) Sir Richard Fitz-Simon (Founder). One of the three who stood over the Black Prince when struck down at the battle of Crécy
16 (inv 1348) Sir Miles Stapleton. One of the Founders of the Order. Fought at the siege of Calais and at the Battle of Crécy.
17 (inv 1348) Sir Thomas Wale (Founder). Attended Edward III into Flanders in 1339 and served in the expedition to Brittany in 1342.
18 (inv 1348) Sir Hugh Wrottesley (Founder). On service in Flanders in 1338.
19 (inv 1348) Sir Male Loryng. One of the Founders of the Order. Distinguished at the battle of Blurs. Attended the Black Prince into Gascony. Fought at the battle of Poitiers.
20 (inv 1348) Sir John Chandos. One of the Founders of the Order. Fought at Crécy and Poitiers.
21 (inv 1348) Sir James Audley (Founder). Fought at the battle of Sluys, and with great distinction at Poitiers, where he was severely wounded.
22 (inv 1348) Sir Otho Holland (Founder). Brother of Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent, also a Founder; whom he accompanied into Brittany, where he was taken prisoner. Later he was Governor of the Channel Islands.
23 (inv 1348) Sir Henry Earn (Founder). Entrusted by the Black Prince with a mission to Brabant.
24 (inv 1348) Sir Sanchet D'Abrichecourt. One of the Founders of the Order.
25 (inv 1348) Sir Walter Paveley. One of the Founders of the Order.
26 (app c.1359) Sir William FitzWaryne.
27 (inv c.1348) Robert (Ufford), 1st Earl of Suffolk. Employed in various missions in France, Flanders, Scotland, and Italy. Fought at the battle of Poitiers.
28 (inv 1349) William (de Bohun), 1st Earl of Northampton. Present at the naval victory of Sluys and also at the battle of Crécy
29 (app c.1352) Reginald, 1st Lord Cobham of Sterborough. One of the three knights in charge of Edward, Prince of Wales, at Crécy Fought also at Poitiers, and conducted the French king as prisoner to the English camp.
30 (app c.1356) Sir Richard de la Vache. One of the Knights specially summoned by Edward III in 1347 to support him in arms.
31 (inv 1358) Thomas, Lord Ughtred. Admiral of the Fleet northwards. Served in the wars in Scotland and France.
32 (inv 1359) Sir Walter Manny. In the suite of Philippa of Hainault, coming to England as bride of Edward III. Served as Admiral of the King's fleet at the battle of Sluys.
33 (app c.1359) Sir Frank van Hale. With Sir W. Manny in the suite of the Earl of Derby. Present at the attack on Bergerac.
34 (inv 1360) Sir Thomas Ufford. Served with the Black Prince in Navarre and Spain, and commanded a ship at the battle of Sluys.
35 (inv 1360) Lionel (Plantagenet), styled "of Antwerp," Duke of Clarence, 3rd son of Edward III.
36 (inv 1360) John (Plantagenet), styled "of Gaunt. " Afterwards Duke of Lancaster, and King of Castile and Leon. 4th son of Edward III.
37 (app c.1360) Edmund (Plantagenet). Styled "of Langley," Earl of Cambridge. Afterwards Duke of York. Youngest son of Edward III, and great-grandfather of Edward IV. Saw active service in France and Spain.
38 (inv 1361) Edward, 5th Lord le Despencer. Present at the battle of Poitiers.
39 (app c.1361) Sir John Sully. Fought at Crécy
40 (app c.1361) William 4th Lord Latimer. Distinguished in the wars in France.
41 (app c.1365) Humphrey (de Bohun), 7th Earl of Hereford.
42 (inv 1365) Sir Ingelram de Couci (Enguerrand de Coucy). Afterwards created Earl of Bedford. Married Isabella, daughter of Edward III.
43 (inv 1366) Henry (Percy), 1st Earl of Northumberland. Possibly degraded 1407.
44 (app c.1368) Ralph, 4th Lord Bassett of Drayton. Served in the French wars under the Black Prince and Richard II.
45 (inv 1368) Sir Richard Pembrugge. Present at the battle of Crécy and the siege of Calais.
46 (inv 1369) John, 3rd Lord Nevill of Raby. Admiral of the King's fleet. Served in the wars against the Scots and French.
47 (inv 1369) Sir Robert de Namur. Commanded a ship at the battle of Sluys. Married Elizabeth of Hainault, sister of Queen Philippa.
48 (inv 1369) John (Hastings), 2nd Earl of Pembroke. Captain of the English forces in Gascony. Prisoner at Santander after the battle of Rochelle.
49 (inv c.1369) Sir Thomas Grandison. Served in the French wars.
50 (app c.1370) Guy, Lord Bryan. Bore the King's banner at the defence of Calais.
51 (inv 1372) Sir Guichard d'Angle, afterwards Earl of Huntingdon. Fighting on the French side at Poitiers, he was captured wounded. Brought to England, he supported the English cause.
52 (inv 1372) Sir Alan Buxhull. Served in Brittany. Constable of the Tower of London.
53 (app c.1373) Thomas (Beauchamp), 4th Earl of Warwick. Fought in the French campaign under John of Gaunt. Possibly degraded 1397, restored 1400.
54 (inv 1375) John (de Montfort), Duke of Brittany. Married Mary, 4th daughter of Edward III.
55 (app c.1376) Sir Thomas Banastre. Attended the Black Prince into Spain and fought at the battle of Najara. Perished in a wreck in the Irish Sea on an expedition to Brittany.
56 (inv 1375) William (Ufford), 2nd Earl of Pembroke. Admiral of the North. Served in the French wars.
57 (inv 1375) Hugh, 2nd Earl of Stafford. Served in the wars in France and elsewhere.
58 (inv 1376) Thomas (Holland), 2nd Earl of Kent. Marshal of England. Served in the French wars under his stepfather, the Black Prince.
59 (inv 1376) Sir Thomas Percy. Afterwards created Earl of Worcester. Served with Sir John Chandos in France. Joined his nephew Percy (Hotspur) and was taken prisoner at the battle of Shrewsbury and beheaded.
60 (inv 1376) Sir William Beauchamp; afterwards 1st Lord Bergavenny. Served with distinction in the French wars. Afterwards Captain of Calais.
61 (inv 1376) Richard (Plantagenet), styled "of Bordeaux." Prince of Wales. Subsequently Richard II, King of England.
62 (inv 1377) Henry (Plantagenet),styled "of Bolingbroke, " Earl of Derby. Afterwards Duke of Lancaster. Subsequently Henry IV, King of England.
63 (inv 1377) Sir John Barley. Served in Brittany under Thomas of Woodstock.
64 (inv 1377) Sir Lewis Clifford. Served in France. Incurred disfavour as a Lollard.
65 (app c.1380) Sir Bermond Arnaud de Preissac. Soudan de la Trau.
66 (inv 1380) Thomas (Plantagenet), styled "of Woodstock." Duke of Gloucester. 6th son of Edward III. Murdered at Calais 1397.
67 (app c.1381) Sir Thomas Felton. Fought at the battles of Crécy and Poitiers.
68 (inv 1381) John (Holland), Earl of Huntingdon; afterwards 1st Duke of Exeter. Half-brother of Richard II.
69 (inv 1381) Sir Simon de Burley. Served in the wars in France. Entrusted by the Black Prince with the tutorship of Richard II. Stow ascribes to him the origin of Wat Tyler's rebellion. Beheaded in 1388.
70 (inv 1381) Sir Bryan Stapleton. Served in the French wars.
71 (inv 1382) Sir Richard Burley. Fought in Gascony under John of Gaunt.
72 (inv 1383) Thomas (de Mowbray), Earl of Nottingham. Afterwards 1st Duke of Norfolk and created Earl Marshal. Present at the naval victory over the Spanish and French in 1387.
73 (inv 1384) Robert (Vere), 9th Earl of Oxford and Duke of Ireland. Once the favourite of Richard II, he died in exile and poverty at Louvain. He was attainted in 1387, possibly degraded 1388.
74 (inv 1386) Richard (Fitzalan), 4th Earl of Arundel. Admiral of the West and South. Served in the French wars. Sided with the Duke of Gloucester against the King. Beheaded 1397.
75 (inv 1386) Sir Nicholas Samesfield. in the retinue of the Black Prince and witness to his will. The King's Standard-bearer.
76 (inv 1387) Edward (Plantagenet), 2nd Duke of York; eldest son of Edmund of Langley.
77 (inv 1388) Sir Henry Percy, called Hotspur; eldest son of Henry, 1st Earl of Northumberland. Present at the capture of Berwick-on-Tweed in 1378. Served later in further wars against the Scots and taken prisoner at the battle of Otterburn. Employed for a time in the war in France. Engaged in the suppression of the Welsh under Owen Glendower. Killed at the battle of Shrewsbury.
78 (app c.1388) John, 1st Lord Devereux. Governor of Calais, and served in the French wars in Aquitaine.
79 (app c.1388) Sir Peter Courtenay. Knighted by the Prince of Wales at Vittoria before the battle of Najara. Standard-bearer to Edward III, Captain of Calais. Governor of Windsor Castle.
80 (inv c.1388) Thomas le Despencer, 6th Lord le Despencer; afterwards Earl of Gloucester. Engaged in a plot to surprise Windsor Castle with 500 horse, seize Henry IV, and proclaim King Richard. Captured at Bristol and beheaded.
81 (inv 1390) William, Duke of Gueldres and Juliers.
82 (inv 1390) William VI, Count of Holland, Duke of Bavaria.
83 (app c.1392) John, 2nd Lord Bourchier. Fought at Poitiers and served with the Black Prince in Gascony; also with Thomas of Woodstock in France. Governor of Flanders.
84 (app c.1393) John, 4th Lord Beaumont. Warden of the West Marshes, and Admiral of the North. Served in the French wars.
85 (inv 1394) William (le Scrope), 1st Earl of Wiltshire. Lord Treasurer of England. Beheaded after the surrender of Bristol to Henry IV in 1399.
86 (inv c.1395) Sir William Arundel. Served with Richard II in Ireland. Constable of Rochester Castle.
87 (app c.1396) Sir John Beaufort. Afterwards 1st Earl of Somerset and Marquess of Dorset. Eldest son of John of Gaunt and Katharine Swynford. Admiral of the North.
88 (inv 1397) Thomas (Holland), 3rd Earl of Kent. Afterwards Duke of Surrey. Marshal of England. Conspired against Henry IV and was beheaded.
89 (app c.1397) John (de Montacute), 3rd Earl of Salisbury. Joined in a conspiracy for the restoration of Richard II in 1399, but was captured and beheaded.
90 (inv 1397) Albert (or Robert) Count Palatine, Duke of Bavaria, nephew of Edward III.
91 (app c.1397) Sir Simon Felbrigg. In the retinue of John of Gaunt at the relief of Brest. Fought at the battle of Agincourt.
92 (inv c.1399) Sir Philip de la Vache. Served in the French wars.
93 (inv 1399) Henry (Plantagenet), Prince of Wales. Afterwards Henry V, King of England.
94 (inv 1399) Thomas (Plantagenet), styled "of Lancaster." Duke of Clarence. 2nd son of Henry IV.
95 (app c.1400) John (Plantagenet). Styled "of Lancaster." Third son of Henry IV. Afterwards Duke of Bedford. Protector of England in the absence of Henry V in France. Regent of France during the minority of Henry VI.
96 (inv 1399) Humphrey (Plantagenet), styled "of Lancaster." Duke of Gloucester. 4th son of Henry IV. Protector of England during the minority of Henry VI.
97 (inv 1400) Thomas (Fitzalan), 5th Earl of Arundel.
98 (app c.1400) Sir Thomas Beaufort. Youngest son of John of Gaunt and Katharine Swynford. Afterwards Earl of Dorset and Duke of Exeter. Captain of Calais. Lord Chancellor.
99 (app 1403) Richard (Beauchamp), 5th Earl of Warwick. Captured the banner of Owen Glendower, and fought at the battle of Shrewsbury. Tutor and Governor of the young King Henry VI.
100 (app c.1400) William, 5th Lord Willoughby de Eresby.
101 (inv 1400) Sir Thomas Rempston. Fought at the battle of Agincourt.
102 (inv 1400) John I, King of Portugal. Married Philippa, sister of Henry IV, King of England.
103 (app c.1401) Sir Thomas Erpyngham. Fought at Agincourt.
104 (inv 1402) Edmund, 5th Earl of Stafford. Lord High Constable. Killed at the battle of Shrewsbury.
105 (inv 1402) Ralph (Nevill), 1st Earl of Westmorland.
106 (inv 1403) Edmund (Holland), 4th Earl of Kent. Admiral of the West and North.
107 (app c.1403) Richard, 4th Lord Grey of Codnor.
108 (inv 1403) William, 7th Lord Ros of Hamlake.
109 (inv 1404) Sir John Stanley.
110 (inv 1404) Eric VII, King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. Married Philippa, daughter of Henry IV.
111 (inv 1405) John, 5th Lord Lovell of Tichmarsh.
112 (app c.1406) Hugh, 2nd Lord Burnell.
113 (inv 1408) Edward, 3rd Lord Cherleton of Powys.
114 (app c.1408) Gilbert, 5th Lord Talbot. Afterwards Lord Strange of Blackmere. Defeated the insurgent Welsh in 1407. Served in the French wars. Captain General of the Marches in Normandy.
115 (app c.1408) Henry 3rd Lord FitzHugh. Served in the French wars with Henry V.
116 (inv 1408) Sir Robert Umfraville. Mainly occupied in Scottish affairs. Present at the burning of Peebles.
117 (app c.1410) Sir John Cornwall. Afterwards Lord Fanhope. Fought at the battle of Agincourt. Married Elizabeth, daughter of John of Gaunt, widow of John, Earl of Exeter, and sister of Henry IV.
118 (inv 1409) Henry, 3rd Lord Scrope of Masham. Conspired with the French in a plot against the King. Beheaded 1415.
119 (inv 1411) Thomas, 4th Lord Morley. Captain-General of all the forces in France.
120 (inv 1413) Sir John D'Abrichecourt.
121 (app c.1414) Thomas (de Montacute), 4th Earl of Salisbury. Mortally wounded at the siege of Orleans.
122 (inv 1414) Thomas, 1st Lord Camoys. Commanded the left wing at the battle of Agincourt.
123 (inv 1415) Sir William Harington.
124 (inv 1415) William, 4th Lord Zouche of Hatingworth.
125 (inv 1415) John (Holland), Earl of Huntingdon; afterwards 3rd Duke of Exeter. He married Elizabeth daughter of John of Gaunt and sister of Henry IV.
126 (inv 1415) Richard (de Vere), 11th Earl of Oxford. Held a command at the battle of Agincourt.
127 (inv 1415) Sigismund, Emperor.
128 (inv 1416) Robert, 6th Lord Willoughby de Eresby. Fought at Agincourt.
129 (inv 1417) Sir John Blount.
130 (inv 1417) Sir John Robessart.
131 (app c.1418) Hugh (Stafford), 4th Lord Bourchier. Served with Henry V in Normandy.
132 (app c.1415) Sir William Phelipp. Afterwards 6th Lord Bardolf Fought at Agincourt.
133 (inv 1419) John (Grey) Earl of Tankerville. Distinguished in the French wars.
134 (inv 1420) Sir Walter Hungerford. Afterwards 1st Lord Hungerford. Served in the wars in France.
135 (app 1421) Sir Lewis Robessart. Afterwards Lord Robessart or Lord Bourchier. Standard-bearer to Henry V.
136 (app 1421) Sir Hertong von Clux.
137 (inv 1421) John, 7th Lord Clifford; killed at the siege of Meaux.
138 (app 1421) John (de Mowbray), Earl Marshal; afterwards 3rd Duke of Norfolk. He served in the French wars, but was absent from Agincourt through sickness.
139 (app 1421) William (de la Pole), 3rd Earl of Suffolk, afterwards 1st Duke of Suffolk. Served for 24 years in the wars. In command at the victory of Verneuil, and at the siege of Orleans. Taken prisoner by Joan of Arc. Assassinated 1450.
140 (inv 1422) Philip II, Duke of Burgundy. Elected but then declined the honour.
141 (app 1424) John, 7th Lord Talbot. Afterwards 1st Earl of Shrewsbury. Marshal of France, Fought in the French wars under Henry V. Taken prisoner by Joan of Arc. Killed in battle at Chastillon, near Bordeaux in 1453.
142 (inv 1425) Thomas, 7th Lord Scales. Distinguished in the French wars, and in the suppression of Jack Cade's rebellion.
143 (inv 1426) Sir John Fastolf. Served in the wars in France. Possibly degraded 1429, restored 1429.
144 (inv 1427) Peter, Duke of Coimbra, 3rd son of John I, King of Portugal, by Philippa his wife. sister of Henry IV, King of England.
145 (app 1429) Humphrey, 6th Earl of Stafford. Afterwards 1st Duke of Buckingham. Served in the wars in France. Captain of Calais. Killed at the battle of Northampton, fighting as a Lancastrian.
146 (inv 1429) Sir John Radcliffe. Constable of Bordeaux, 1419-23.
147 (inv 1432) John (Fitzalan), 7th Earl of Arundel. Governor of Rouen and served in the French wars. Created Duke of Touraine in France by the Duke of Bedford, the Regent.
148 (inv 1433) Richard (Plantagenet), 3rd Duke of York. Grandson of Edmund of Langley. Protector of England. Killed at the battle of Wakefield.
149 (app 1435) Edward, King of Portugal, Son of Philippa, sister of Henry IV, King of England.
150 (inv 1436) Edmund. (Beaufort), Count Morteign; afterwards 2nd Duke of Somerset. Constable of England. Regent of France. Killed at the first battle of St. Albans.
151 (app c.1436) Sir John Grey, afterwards 4th Lord Grey de Ruthyn. Served in.the French wars.
152 (app c.1438) Richard (Nevill), 5th Earl of Salisbury. Lord Chancellor. Taken prisoner at the battle of Wakefield and beheaded, 1460.
153 (inv 1438) Albert, Duke of Austria. Afterwards Emperor (not installed).
154 (app c.1438) Sir Gaston de Foix, Comte de Longueville et Benanges, Captal de Buch. Distinguished in the French wars.
155 (app c.1439) William (Nevill), Lord Fauconberge. Afterwards Earl of Kent. Served with distinction in the French wars.
156 (app c.1439) John (Beaufort), 3rd Earl of Somerset. Afterwards 1st Duke of Somerset. Father of Margaret, Countess of Richmond, mother of Henry VII.
157 (inv 1439) Sir Ralph Boteler. Afterwards 6th Lord Sudeley. Distinguished in the wars in France.
158 (inv 1440) John, 1st Viscount Beaumont. Distinguished both in war and at Court. He was the first to be advanced to the dignity of a Viscount in England.
159 (inv 1445) Sir John Beauchamp. Afterwards 1st Lord Beauchamp of Powyk. Lord Treasurer.
160 (inv 1442) Henry, Duke of Viseu, 4th son of John I, King of Portugal, and nephew of Henry IV. "Henry the Navigator."
161 (inv 1445) Sir Thomas Hoo. Afterwards Lord Hoo and Hastings. Fought with distinction in France. Keeper of the Seals in France and Chancellor of France.
162 (inv 1445) Alvaro Vasquez d'Almada, Count d'Avranches.
163 (inv 1446) Sir John de Foix, Captal de Buch.
164 (inv 1447) Alphonso V, King of Portugal.
165 (inv 1447) Sir Francis Surrienne, Sire de Lunée.
166 (inv 1450) Alphonso V, King of Aragon, Naples, and Sicily.
167 (inv 1450) William, Duke of Brunswick. (Not installed.)
168 (inv 1450) Casimir IV, King of Poland. (Not installed, but placed here in 1467. See Beltz, page 400.)
169 (app 1450) Richard (Wydville), 1st Lord Rivers. Afterwards 1st Earl Rivers. In command of the forces during the French wars. Lord High Constable. Treasurer of the Exchequer. Beheaded 1469. Father of Elizabeth, Queen of Edward IV.
170 (inv 1451) John (de Mowbray), 4th Duke of Norfolk.
171 (app c.1450) Henry, Viscount Bourchier, Count of Eu. Afterwards 1st Earl of Essex.
172 (inv 1453) Sir Edward Hull, slain in 1453 before being installed.
173 (inv 1457) John, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury. Served in France with his father.
174 (inv 1457) Thomas, 1st Lord Stanley. Chief Governor of Ireland.
175 (inv 1457) Lionel, 6th Lord Welles. Captain of the forces at Calais. Chief Governor of Ireland. Killed at the battle of Towton, fighting as a Lancastrian.
176 (inv 1457) Frederick III, Emperor. (Not installed.)
177 (inv 1459) James (Butler), 2nd Earl of Wiltshire and 5th Earl of Ormonde.
178 (inv 1459) John (Sutton), 5th Lord Dudley.
179 (inv c.1450) John (Bourchier), 1st Lord Berners. Grandson of Thomas of Woodstock, 6th son of Edward III. Fought for Henry VI at the first battle of St. Albans. Afterwards changed sides.
180 (inv 1459) Jasper (Tudor), Earl of Pembroke and Duke of Bedford. Uncle of Henry VII. Degraded in 1461, reinstalled c. 1485.
181 (inv c.1461) Richard (Nevill), 1st Earl of Warwick. Famous in the Wars of the Roses as the "Kingmaker." Killed at the battle of Barnet. Probably degraded 1468.
182 (inv c.1461) William, 1st Lord Bonville. Knighted while with the army in France. Executed after the second battle of St. Albans.
183 (inv 1461) Sir Thomas Kiriell.
184 (inv 1461) Sir John Wenlock. Afterwards 1st Lord Wenlock. Killed at the battle of Tewkesbury. fighting as a Lancastrian.
185 (app c.1461) George (Plantagenet), Duke of Clarence. Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Rebelled against his brother Edward IV, with his father-in-law, Richard, Earl of Warwick, the "King-maker." Returned to his allegiance. Convicted of treason on the accusation of his brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester,afterwards Richard III, he is said to have been drowned in a butt of Malmsey.
186 (app c.1461) Sir William Chamberlaine. Distinguished in the French wars under the Duke of Bedford.
187 (inv c.1461) John (Tiptoft), Earl of Worcester. Constable of England. Supporter of Edward IV. On the restoration to power of Henry VI he was beheaded for high treason.
188 (inv 1462) William, 1st Lord Hastings. In command at the battle of Barnet. Beheaded in 1483.
189 (inv c.1461) John (Nevill), Lord Montagu. Afterwards Marquess of Montagu.
190 (inv c.1461) William, Lord Herbert; afterwards 1st Earl of Pembroke. A staunch Yorkist. Captured Harlech Castle. Taken prisoner at Edgcote and beheaded.
191 (inv 1461) Sir John Astley.
192 (inv c.1463) Ferdinand I, King of Sicily and Naples.
193 (inv c.1463) Gaillard (de Durfort), seigneur de Duras and Blanquefort, died 1481. Married Anne de La Pole. Possibly degraded 1476, or resigned.
194 (app 1462) John, 5th Lord Scrope of Bolton. Fought as a Yorkist. Also in expeditions to France and Scotland.
195 (inv c.1463) Francesco Sforza, Duke of Milan.
196 (app c.1462) James, 9th Earl of Douglas. Acted with the Duke of York in rebellion against Henry VI. Joined the Duke of Albany in an invasion of Scotland and was taken prisoner.
197 (app c.1462) Sir Robert Harcourt. Killed fighting for the Lancastrian cause in 1470.
198 (app c.1465) Richard (Plantagenet) Duke of Gloucester. Afterwards RICHARD III, King of England. Killed at the battle of Bosworth.
199 (app c.1466) Anthony (Wydville), 2nd Lord Scales. Afterwards 2nd Earl Rivers, Beheaded at Pomfret Castle by Richard III. Brother of Elizabeth, Queen of Edward IV.
200 (inv c.1467) Inigo (d'Avalos), Conte di Monteoderisio.(Not installed.)
201 (inv c.1468) Charles, Duke of Burgundy. Surnamed "The Bold." Killed in action against the Duke of Lorraine at Nancy. He married the Princess Margaret, daughter of Richard, Duke of York, sister of Edward IV, King of England.
202 (inv c.1471) William (Fitzalan), 9th Earl of Arundel. Fought as a Yorkist at the second battle of St. Albans.
203 (app 1472) John (de Mowbray), 5th Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal. One of the leaders in the invasion of France in 1475.
204 (inv 1472) John (Stafford), created Earl of Wiltshire. Son of Humphrey, 1st Duke of Buckingham.
205 (app 1472) Walter (Devereux), 7th Lord Ferrets of Chartley. Killed at the battle of Bosworth, fighting for Richard III.
206 (app 1472) Walter (Blount), 1st Lord Mountjoy. Lord High Treasurer. Fought for Edward IV at the battle of Towton.
207 (inv 1472) John (Howard), 1st Duke of Norfolk. Warned in the following distich: "Jockey of Norfolk be not too bold,/ For Dickon thy master is bought and sold" he was killed at Bosworth at Richard's side.
208 (app c.1472) John (de la Pole), 2nd Duke of Suffolk. Married Elizabeth, sister of Edward IV. A staunch Yorkist.
209 (inv 1474) Thomas (Arundel), Lord Maltravers. Afterwards 10th Earl of Arundel.
210 (inv 1474) Sir William Parr. Fought as a Yorkist on the side of the Nevills at Banbury.
211 (app c.1474) Henry (Stafford), 2nd Duke of Buckingham. Beheaded in 1483 for plotting for Richmond against Richard III, whom he formerly supported.
212 (app 1474) Federigo (da Montefeltro), 1st Duke of Urbino. Took active part in the war for the Angevin succession to Naples.
213 (app 1474) Henry (Percy), 4th Earl of Northumberland. In command at the capture of Berwick-on-Tweed. Taken prisoner at the battle of Bosworth. Assassinated in 1489 by the mob for levying an unpopular tax.
214 (app 1475) Edward (Plantagenet) PRINCE OF WALES. Afterwards EDWARD V, King of England. Murdered with his brother Richard, Duke of York, in the Tower of London.
215 (app 1475) Richard (Plantagenet), 5th Duke of York. 2nd son of Edward IV. Murdered in the Tower of London with his brother Edward V.
216 (inv 1476) Thomas (Grey), 1st Marquess of Dorset. Commanded the forces assisting the Emperor Maximilian against the French. Degraded 1483, restored 1485.
217 (inv 1476) Sir Thomas Montgomery.
218 (inv 1480) Ferdinand V, King of Castile. (Stall voided through non-installation.)
219 (inv 1480) Hercules (d'Este), Duke of Modena and Ferrara.
220 (inv 1482) John II, King of Portugal, not installed, and election void. Re-elected 1488.
221 (app 1483) Francis, 9th Lord Lovell of Tichmarsh. Afterwards Viscount Lovell. Fought at the battle of Bosworth for Richard III. Degraded 1485."Lovell, the dogge," See note s.v. Sir Richard Radcliffe.
222 (inv 1483) Thomas (Howard), 3rd Earl of Surrey. Degraded 1485; restored in 1491.
223 (inv 1483) Sir Richard Radcliffe. Confidential adviser of Richard III. Associated with Catesby and Lovell, he was satirised in the famous couplet: "The catte. the ratte and Lovell our dogge Rulyth all Englande under a hogge." The "hogge" refers to Richard III, whose badge was a white boar. Radcliffe was killed at Bosworth.
224 (inv 1483) Thomas, 2nd Lord Stanley. Afterwards 1st Earl of Derby. At the battle of Bosworth he deserted the cause of Richard III, and is said to have placed the crown on Richmond's head on the field of battle.
225 (app c.1483) Sir Thomas Borough (or Burgh). Afterwards 1st Lord Borough of Gainsborough.
226 (app c.1484) Sir Richard Tunstall.
227 (inv c.1483) Sir John Conyers.
228 (inv 1486) John (de Vere), 13th Earl of Oxford. In command at the battle of Bosworth in support of Henry VII, and later against Simnel's rebellion.
229 (app c.1486) John, Lord Cheyney. Struck down at the battle of Bosworth by Richard III, but not killed.
230 (app c.1487) John, 1st Lord Dynham.
231 (app c.1487) Giles, 1st Lord Daubeny. Governor of Calais.
232 (inv 1487) Sir William Stanley, 2nd son of Thomas, 1st Lord Stanley. Beheaded for alleged share in the Perkin Warbeck conspiracy.
233 (app c.1487) George (Stanley) 9th Lord Strange of Knockyrt. Eldest son of Thomas, 1st Earl of Derby, and died in his father's lifetime.
234 (inv 1488) George (Talbot), 4th Earl of Shrewsbury. Fought with distinction against Lambert Simnel at the battle of Stoke.
235 (inv 1488) Sir Edward Wydville, afterwards Lord Wydville.
236 (inv 1488) John, 1st Viscount Welles, Captain in the forces of his nephew, the Earl of Richmond, afterwards Henry VII.
237 (inv 1489) Sir John Savage. Acted with Sir Rhys ap Thomas in support of Henry Tudor, afterwards Henry VII.
238 (app c.1488) Sir Robert Willoughby. Afterwards 1st Lord Willoughby de Broke. Fought at the battle of Bosworth for Henry VII.
239 (app c.1490) Maximilian, King of the Romans. Afterwards the Emperor Maximilian I. In alliance with Henry VIII, he defeated the French at the battle of the Spurs, 1513.
240 (inv c.1491) Arthur (Tudor) Prince of Wales. Son of Henry VII. Died before his father.
241 (app c.1494) Edward (Courtenay), 1st Earl of Devon. Fought at Bosworth, and defended Exeter against Perkin Warbeck in 1497.
242 (inv 1493) Alphonso, Duke of Calabria. Afterwards Alphonso II, King of Sicily and Naples.
243 (inv 1493) John, King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. (Not installed.)
244 (inv 1493) Sir Edward Poynings. Supporter of the Earl of Richmond. Commanded a force sent to aid Maximilian against rebels in the Netherlands. Famous Lord Deputy of Ireland, responsible for the measures known as Poynings' Law.
245 (app c.1495) Sir Gilbert Talbot, 3rd son of John 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury. Captain of Calais. Sent by Henry VII on a mission to Rome.
246 (inv c.1495) Henry (Tudor), Duke of York. Created PRINCE OF WALES in 1502 on the death of his brother Arthur. Afterwards HENRY VIII, King of England.
247 (app c.1495) Henry Algernon (Percy), 5th Earl of Northumberland. Fought at the battle of the Spurs.
248 (inv 1495) Edward (Stafford), 3rd Duke of Buckingham. Degraded 1521.
249 (inv c.1496) Charles (Somerset), 1st Earl of Worcester.
250 (inv 1496) Edmund (de la Pole), 8th Earl of Suffolk. On accepting the accession of Henry VII he surrendered his claim to the Dukedom of Suffolk. Degraded 1500. Beheaded 1513.
251 (c.1496d) Henry (Bourchier), 2nd Earl of Essex. Bore the Sword of State at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
252 (inv 1498) Sir Thomas Lovell. Supporter of Henry VII, and fought at the battle of Bosworth. Speaker of the House of Commons. He built the gate-house at Lincoln's Inn.
253 (app 1499) Sir Richard Pole.
254 (app c.1500) Sir Richard Guildford. A trusty councillor of Henry VII. Died on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
255 (inv 1500) Sir Reginald Bray. A close friend of Henry VII.
256 (inv 1501) Thomas (Grey), 2nd Marquess of Dorset. one of the eight "Challengers" at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
257 (inv 1503) Philip, Archduke of Austria. Afterwards Philip I, King of Castile.
258 (inv 1505) Gerald (FitzGerald), 8th Earl of Kildare. Surnamed "Gerald the Great." Supporter of Lambert Simnel. Defeated Perkin Warbeck near Galway,
259 (app c.1504) Guidobaldo (da Montefeltro), 2nd Duke of Urbino.
260 (app 1505) Richard (Grey), 3rd Earl of Kent. Present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
261 (inv c.1505) Lord Henry Stafford. Afterwards 3rd Earl of Wiltshire. 2nd son of Henry, 2nd Duke of Buckingham.
262 (app c.1505) Sir Rhys ap Thomas Fitz-Urian. An ardent supporter of Henry VII.
263 (inv 1507) Sir Thomas Brandon.
264 (app 1508) Charles, Archduke of Austria. Afterwards the Emperor Charles V.
265 (inv 1509) Thomas, 1st Lord Darcy. Warden of the Scots Marshes. Joined in the Pilgrimage of Grace. Convicted of high treason and beheaded. Degraded 1537.
266 (inv 1509) Edward (Sutton), 6th Lord Dudley.
267 (app 1510) Emanuel, King of Portugal. (Not installed.)
268 (inv 1510) Sir Thomas Howard. Afterwards 3rd Duke of Norfolk. Fought at Flodden. Degraded 1547, restored 1553.
269 (inv 1510) Sir Henry Marny. Afterwards Lord Marny. Lord Privy Seal. Fought at the battles of Stoke and Blackheath.
270 (inv 1510) Thomas (West), 8th Lord de la Warr. Favoured Henry VIII's divorce and had large grants of monastic lands.
271 (inv 1513) George (Nevill), 5th Lord Bergavenny.Served in the wars in France.
272 (app 1513) Sir Edward Howard. (Died before installation.)
273 (inv 1513) Sir Charles Brandon. Afterwards Duke of Suffolk. He married Mary, the younger daughter of Henry VII and widow of Louis XII, King of France.
274 (app 1514) Giuliano de Medici, Duc de Nemours, brother of Pope Leo X. (Not installed.)
275 (inv 1514) Sir Edward Stanley. Afterwards 1st Lord Monteagle. Commanded the English army at Flodden. Younger son of Thomas, 1st Earl of Derby.
276 (inv 1518) Thomas, 3rd Lord Dacre of Gillesland. Fought at the Battle of Flodden.
277 (inv 1518) Sir William Sandys. Afterwards Lord Sandys of the Vyne.
278 (inv 1521) Henry (Courtenay), created Marquess of Exeter. Assisted in the suppression of the Pilgrimage of Grace. Later he was accused of conspiracy, found guilty and beheaded. Degraded 1539.
279 (inv 1524) Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria. Afterwards the Emperor Ferdinand I. Brother of the Emperor Charles V.
280 (inv 1522) Sir Richard Wingfield. Soldier and diplomatist; in high favour with Henry VIII.
281 (inv 1523) Sir Thomas Boleyn. Afterwards Earl of Wiltshire and Ormonde. Father of Anne Boleyn and grandfather of Queen Elizabeth.
282 (inv 1523) Walter (Devereux), 9th Lord Ferrers. Present at the capture of Boulogne. Afterwards 1st Viscount Hereford.
283 (inv 1525) Arthur (Plantagenet), Viscount Lisle. Natural son of Edward IV.
284 (inv 1524) Robert (Radclyffe), 10th Lord FitzWalter. Afterwards 1st Earl of Sussex. Present at the sieges of Tournay and Therouenne.
285 (inv 1525) William (Fitzalan), 11th Earl of Arundel.
286 (inv 1525) Thomas (Manners), 1st Earl of Rutland. Present with Henry VIII at the Field of the Cloth of Gold. Son and heir of George, 12th Lord Ros.
287 (inv 1525) Sir Henry Fitzroy. Afterwards Duke of Richmond and Somerset. Son of Henry VIII and Elizabeth Blount.
288 (inv 1525) Ralph (Nevill), 4th Earl of Westmorland. Present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
289 (inst 1526) William (Blunt), Lord Mountjoy.
290 (inv 1526) Sir William Fitzwilliam. Afterwards 1st Earl of Southampton. Served with distinction against the Scots and French, and on important diplomatic missions.
291 (inv 1526) Sir Henry Guildford. A favourite courtier of Henry VIII.
292 (inv 1527) Francis I, King of France.
293 (inv 1527) John (de Vere), 15th Earl of Oxford. Knighted at the battle of the Spurs.
294 (inst 1531) Henry (Percy), earl of Northumberland.
295 (inv 1533) Anne (de Montmorency), Comte de Beaumont, later duc de Montmorency. Afterwards Duc de Montmorency. Constable of France. Mortally wounded at the battle of St. Denis in 1567.
296 (inv 1532) Philippe (de Chabot), Comte de Charny and Buzançais , d. 1543 (Neublanche in English rolls).
297 (inv 1535) James V, King of Scotland. Father of Mary, Queen of Scots and nephew of Henry VIII.
298 (inv 1536) Sir Nicholas Carew. A favourite courtier of Henry VIII. Entrusted with various diplomatic missions. Attainted and beheaded. Degraded 1539.
299 (inv 1537) Henry (Clifford), 1st Earl of Cumberland.
300 (inv 1537) Thomas, Lord Cromwell. Afterwards Earl of Essex. Began life as a cloth-dresser. Rose under Wolsey's influence. Notorious in connection with the suppression of the monasteries. Lost favour with Henry VIII after introducing Anne of Cleves. Condemned as a traitor and beheaded. Degraded 1540.
301 (inv 1539) Sir John Russell. Afterwards 1st Earl of Bedford. Lord High Admiral, Lord Privy Seal. Appointed to conduct Philip II of Spain to England.
302 (inv 1539) Sir Thomas Cheyney.
303 (inv 1539) Sir William Kingston. Fought at the battle of Flodden. Took part in the tilting at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
304 (inv 1540) Thomas, Lord Audley of Walden. Lord Chancellor.
305 (inv 1540) Sir Anthony Browne. An executor of the will of Henry VIII.
306 (inv 1541) Edward (Seymour), Earl of Hertford. Afterwards Duke of Somerset. Brother of Queen Jane Seymour and Uncle of Edward VI, and Protector of England during his minority. Took part in many military operations in Scotland and France. Found guilty of conspiracy and beheaded.
307 (inv 1541) Henry (Howard), Earl of Surrey. Son and heir of Thomas, 3rd Duke of Norfolk. Field-Marshal of the army in France, but more famous as a poet. Executed for high treason, aged 30. Degraded 1547.
308 (inv 1541) Sir John Gage. Statesman and military commander.
309 (inv 1541) Sir Anthony Wingfield. Served in the French wars. Present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
310 (inv 1543) John (Dudley), 7th Viscount Lisle. Afterwards Earl of Warwick and Duke of Northumberland. Beheaded 1553.
311 (inv 1543) William (Paulet), Lord St. John of Basing. Afterwards 1st Marquess of Winchester. High Treasurer of England. Joined in the overthrow of the Protector Somerset.
312 (inv 1543) William (Parr) Marquess of Northampton. Brother of Katharine Parr, Queen of Henry VIII. Originally appointed in 1543, he was degraded from the Order in 1552 as a supporter of Lady Jane Grey's cause, but re-elected in 1559.
313 (inv 1544) Sir John Wallop. Soldier and diplomatist.
314 (inv 1544) Henry (Fitzalan), 12th Earl of Arundel. Present at the capture of Boulogne. Married, firstly, Catherine daughter of Thomas, 1st Marquess of Dorset, K.G., aunt of Lady Jane Grey.
315 (inv 1544) Sir Anthony St. Leger. Lord Deputy of Ireland.
316 (inv 1545) Francis (Talbot), 5th Earl of Shrewsbury. Took part in the Scottish invasion. Lord President of the Council of the North.
317 (inv 1545) Thomas, Lord Wriothesley. Afterwards 1st Earl of Southampton. Lord Chancellor.
318 (inv 1547) Henry (Grey), 3rd Marquess of Dorset. Afterwards Duke of Suffolk. Father of Lady Jane Grey; and having proclaimed her Queen after the death of Edward VI, was attainted. Degraded 1554.
319 (inv 1547) Edward (Stanley), 3rd Earl of Derby. "With his death the glory of hospitality seemed to fall asleep." -Camden.
320 (inv 1547) Thomas, Lord Seymour of Sudeley. Brother of Somerset, the Protector against whom he conspired. Executed at the Tower. Degraded 1549.
321 (inv 1547) Sir William Paget. Afterwards 1st Lord Paget de Beaudesert. Degraded 1552, restored 1553.
322 (inv 1549) Francis (Hastings), 2nd Earl of Huntingdon.
323 (inv 1549) George (Brooke), 9th Lord Cobham. Knighted in the French wars.
324 (inv 1549) Thomas (West), 9th Lord De la Warr. Served in the wars in France.
325 (inv 1549) Sir William Herbert. Afterwards 1st Earl of Pembroke. Took part against the Protector Somerset. Supporter of Queen Mary I.
326 (inv 1551) Henry II, King of France.
327 (inv 1551) Edward, 9th Lord Clinton. Afterwards 1st Earl of Lincoln. Lord High Admiral of England.
328 (inv 1551) Thomas, 1st Lord Darcy of Chiche. Supporter of Lady Jane Grey.
329 (inv 1553) Henry (Nevill), 5th Earl of Westmorland.
330 (inv 1552) Sir Andrew Dudley. Degraded 1553.
331 (inv 1554) Philip, Prince of Spain. Afterwards Philip II, King of Spain. Married Mary I, Queen of England. Duly elected a Knight of the Garter, but installed as joint Sovereign and had no stall-plate.
332 (inv 1554) Henry (Radclyffe), 2nd Earl of Sussex. In command against the Scots, 1547.
333 (inv 1555) Emanuel Philibert, 10th Duke of Saxony.
334 (inv 1554) William, 1st Lord Howard of Effingham. Lord High Admiral.
335 (inv 1555) Sir Edward Hastings. Afterwards Lord Hastings of Loughborough. Brother of Francis, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon. Founded a hospital at Stoke Poges where he died without issue in 1572.
336 (inv 1555) Anthony (Browne), 1st Viscount Montagu. Served with the army in Picardy. Ambassador to the Holy See.
337 (inv 1558) Thomas (Radclyffe), 3rd Earl of Sussex. Chief Governor of Ireland.
338 (inv 1557) William 13th Lord Grey of Wilton. Distinguished in the wars in France, and wounded at the battle of Pinkie.
339 (inv 1557) Sir Robert Rochester. Loyal adherent of Mary I. (Died before installation.)
340 (inv 1559) Thomas (Howard), 4th Duke of Norfolk. Degraded 1572.
Aspired unsuccessfully to marriage with Mary, Queen of Scots. Condemned for high treason and beheaded.
341 (inv 1559) Henry (Manners), 2nd Earl of Rutland.
342 (inv 1559) Sir Robert Dudley, Afterwards Earl of Leicester. A favourite courtier of Queen Elizabeth, and husband of Amy Robsart.
343 (inv 1560) Adolphus, Duke of Holstein.
344 (inv 1561) George (Talbot), 6th Earl of Shrewsbury. Supporter of the claim of Lady Jane Grey. Had the custody of Mary Queen of Scots for 17 years.
345 (inv 1561) Henry (Carey), 1st Lord Hunsdon. Son of William Carey and Mary Boleyn.
346 (inv 1563) Thomas (Percy), 1st Earl of Northumberland. Degraded 1569.
Shared in the rebellion of the four northern Earls in 1568. Driven into Scotland he was betrayed by the Regent, the Earl of Mar, and beheaded.
347 (inv 1563) Ambrose (Dudley), 2nd Earl of Warwick. Brother of the Earl of Leicester and Lord Guilford Dudley. Convicted of high treason as a supporter of Lady Jane Grey, but pardoned.
348 (inv 1566) Charles IX, King of France.
349 (inv 1564) Francis (Russell), 2nd Earl of Bedford.
350 (inv 1564) Sir Henry Sidney. Father of Sir Philip Sidney. Fought at the battle of Flodden. Present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
351 (inv 1568) Maximilian II, Emperor.
352 (inv 1570) Henry (Hastings), 3rd Earl of Huntingdon. joint custodian of Mary Queen of Scots.
353 (inv 1570) William (Somerset), 3rd Earl of Worcester. Supporter of Lady Jane Grey.
354 (inv 1572) Francis, Duke of Montmorency.
355 (inv 1549) Walter (Devereux), 1st Earl of Essex and Eu. Said to have been poisoned by Lord Leicester, who married his widow. Robert, 2nd Earl of Essex, a favourite courtier of Queen Elizabeth, was his son.
356 (inv 1572) William (Cecil), 1st Lord Burghley (d. 1598). For 40 years leading Minister of Queen Elizabeth.
357 (inv 1572) Arthur, 14th Lord Grey of Wilton. Chief Governor of Ireland.
358 (inv 1572) Edmund (Brydges), 2nd Lord Chandos of Sudeley. Served in the wars in Scotland and France.
359 (inv 1574) Henry (Stanley), 4th Earl of Derby.
360 (inv 1574) Henry (Herbert), 2nd Earl of Pembroke. Married Mary, sister of Sir Philip Sidney: "Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother."
361 (inv 1575) Henry III, King of France.
362 (inv 1575) Charles, 2nd Lord Howard of Effingham. Afterwards Earl of Nottingham. Lord High Admiral. In command of the fleet at the capture of Cadiz and the defeat of the Spanish Armada.
363 (inv 1578) Rudolph II, Emperor.
364 (inv 1582) Frederick II, King of Denmark and Norway.
365 (inv 1582) John Casimir, Count Palatine of the Rhine, Duke of Bavaria.
366 (inv 1585) Edward (Manners), 3rd Earl of Rutland.
367 (inv 1584) William (Brooke), 7th Lord Cobham.
368 (inv 1585) Henry, 9th Lord Scrope of Bolton. Marshal of the army at the siege of Leith.
369 (inv 1588) Robert (Devereux), 2nd Earl of Essex. Degraded 1601.
A favourite courtier of Queen Elizabeth. Fought at the battle of Zutphen when Sir Philip Sidney was killed. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and Earl Marshal of England. Condemned and beheaded for high treason. The story of the Queen's ring is apocryphal.
370 (inv 1588) Thomas (Butler), 10th Earl of Ormonde and Ossory. Suppressed various rebellions in Ireland.
371 (inv 1588) Sir Christopher Hatton. Lord Chancellor of England. A favourite courtier of Queen Elizabeth.
372 (inv 1589) Henry (Radclyffe), 4th Earl of Sussex.
373 (inv 1589) Thomas (Sackville), 1st Lord Buckhurst. Afterwards 1st Earl of Dorset.
374 (inv 1590) Henry IV, King of France.
375 (inv 1590) James VI, King of Scotland. Afterwards James I, King of England.
376 (inv 1592) Gilbert (Talbot), 7th Earl of Shrewsbury.
377 (inv 1592) George (Clifford), 3rd Earl of Cumberland. Navigator and mathematician,
378 (inv 1593) Henry (Percy), 3rd Earl of Northumberland. Served at the siege of Ostend under Sir Francis Vere. Heavily fined and imprisoned in the Tower of London for suspected complicity in the "Gunpowder" Plot.
379 (inv 1593) Edward (Somerset), 4th Earl of Worcester.
380 (inv 1593) Thomas, 5th Lord Borough (or Burgh) of Gainsborough. Lord Deputy of Ireland.
381 (inv 1593) Edmund. 3rd Lord Sheffield. Afterwards 1st Earl of Mulgrave. Served in the fleet against the Spanish Armada.
382 (inv 1593) Sir Francis Knollys. First cousin of Queen Elizabeth and prominent in her reign. A consistent champion of the Puritans.
383 (inv 1597) Frederick, Duke of Württemberg.
384 (inv 1597) Thomas, 1st Lord Howard de Walden. Afterwards 1st Earl of Suffolk. Served in the Fleet against the Spanish Armada.
385 (inv 1597) George Carey, 2nd Lord Hunsdon (1546/7-1603). First cousin to Queen Elizabeth.
386 (inv 1597) Charles (Blount), 8th Lord Mountjoy, afterwards Earl of Devonshire (1563-1606). Quelled the Irish Rebellion under the Earl of Tyrone.
387 (inv 1597) Sir Henry Lee (1533-1611). "Personal Champion" to Queen Elizabeth.
388 (inv 1599) Robert (Radclyffe), 5th Earl of Sussex.
389 (inv 1599) Henry (Brooke), 8th Lord Cobham. Degraded 1604.
Joined in the plot in support of Lady Arabella Stuart's claim to the throne, known as "the Treason of Maine." Condemned to death, his achievements as K.G. were taken down and kicked out of the west doors of St. George's Chapel, 16 Feb. 1604.
390 (inv 1599) Thomas, 10th Lord Scrope of Bolton.
391 (inv 1601) William (Stanley), 6th Earl of Derby.
392 (inv 1601) Thomas (Cecil), 2nd Lord Burghley (d. 1622). Afterwards 1st Earl of Exeter. Lord President of the Council of the North. Present at the storming of Edinburgh in 1573. Suppressed the rebellion of the Earl of Essex.
393 (inv 1603) Henry Frederick (Stuart), Duke of Rothesay. Afterwards PRINCE OF WALES. Eldest son of James I. Died in his father's lifetime.
394 (inv 1605) Christian IV, King of Denmark and Norway. Brother of Anne, Queen of James I of England.
395 (inv 1603) Ludovick (Stuart), 2nd Duke of Lennox. Afterwards also 1st Duke of Richmond.
396 (inv 1603) Henry (Wriothesley), 3rd Earl of Southampton. Served under Essex in the attack upon Cadiz.
397 (inv 1603) John (Erskine), 2nd Earl of Mar. Companion, from boyhood, of James I. Accompanied him to England in 1603. High Treasurer of England.
398 (inv 1603) William (Herbert), 3rd Earl of Pembroke. He and his brother Philip are "the incomparable pair" to whom the First Folio of Shakespeare's Works is dedicated.
399 (inv 1605) Ulric, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein, son fo the king of Denmark and Norway.
400 (inv 1605) Henry (Howard), Earl of Northampton. Lord Privy Seal.
401 (inv 1608) Robert (Cecil), 1st Earl of Salisbury (d. 1612). 2nd son of Lord Burghley. Chief Minister of James I. He built Hatfield House.
402 (inv 1606) Thomas, 3rd Viscount Howard of Bindon.
403 (inv 1608) George (Home), 1st Earl of Dunbar. Attended James VI to England. Chancellor of the Exchequer.
404 (inv 1605) Philip (Herbert), 1st Earl of Montgomery. Afterwards 4th Earl of Pembroke.
405 (inv 1611) Charles (Stuart), Duke of York. Afterwards Prince of Wales and subsequently CHARLES I, King of England.
406 (inv 1611) Thomas, 14th Earl of Arundel and Surrey. Afterwards 1st Earl of Norfolk. Famous as an art collector.
407 (inv 1611) Robert (Kerr), Viscount Rochester. Afterwards 1st Earl of Somerset. Accused of complicity in the Overbury Plot.
408 (inv 1612) Frederick Casimir, Duke of Bavaria, Count Palatine of the Rhine. Afterwards King of Bohemia. Married Elizabeth, daughter of James I.
409 (inv 1613) Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange.
410 (inv 1615) Thomas (Erskine), Viscount Fentun. Afterwards 1st Earl of Kellie. Rescued James VI of Scotland (James I of England) from Lord Gowrie's Plot.
411 (inv 1615) William Lord Knollys of Grays. Afterwards 1st Earl of Banbury.
412 (inv 160) Francis, (Manners), 6th Earl of Rutland. Concerned in the rebellion of the Earl of Essex, but escaped with a heavy fine. As Admiral of the Fleet, he conducted Charles, Prince of Wales, from Spain in 1623.
413 (inv 1616) Sir George Villiers. Afterwards 1st Duke of Buckingham. The favourite courtier of James I and Charles I. Assassinated at Portsmouth 1628.
414 (inv 1616) Robert (Sidney), Viscount Lisle. Afterwards 1st Earl of Leicester. Served in the wars in the Netherlands.
415 (inv 1623) James 2nd Marquess of Hamilton.
416 (inv 1624) Esmé (Stuart), 3rd Duke of Lennox.
417 (inv 1625) Christian, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.
418 (inv 1625) William, (Cecil), 2nd Earl of Salisbury (d. 1668).
419 (inv 1625) James (Hay), 1st Earl of Carlisle. A favourite courtier of James I.
420 (inv 1625) Edward (Sackville), 4th Earl of Dorset.
421 (inv 1625) Henry (Rich) Earl of Holland. Supporter of Charles I. Taken prisoner at Nonsuch and beheaded in Palace Yard, Westminster, in 1649.
422 (inv 1625) Thomas (Howard), Viscount Andover. Afterwards 1st Earl of Berkshire.
423 (inv 1625) Claude de Lorraine, Duc de Chevreuse.
424 (inv 1628) Gustavus Adolphus II, King of Sweden. Surnamed "the Great." Killed at the battle of Lützen.
425 (inv 1628) Henry Frederick de Nassau, Prince of Orange. Grandfather of William III, King of England.
426 (inv 1628) Theophilus (Howard), 2nd Earl of Suffolk,
427 (inv 1629) William (Compton), 1st Earl of Northampton.
428 (inv 1630) Richard, 1st Lord Weston of Neyland. Afterwards 1st Earl of Portland. Lord High Treasurer.
429 (inv 1630) Robert (Bertie), 1st Earl of Lindsey. Died of wounds received at the battle of Edgehill.
430 (inv 1630) William (Cecil), 2nd Earl of Exeter (d. 1640).
431 (app 1630) James, 3rd Marquess of Hamilton. Afterwards 1st Duke of Hamilton. In command of the Scotch forces he was defeated by Cromwell in 1648 and beheaded in Palace Yard.
432 (inv 1633) Prince Charles Ludovic, Count Palatine of the Rhine, Duke of Bavaria. Son of Frederick, King of Bohemia and the Princess Elizabeth, daughter of James I.
433 (inv 1633) James (Stuart), 4th Duke of Lennox. Afterwards also 1st Duke of Richmond.
434 (inv 1633) Henry (Danvers), Earl of Danby.
435 (inv 1633) William (Douglas), 8th Earl of Morton. Loyal supporter of Charles I in the Civil War.
436 (inv 1635) Algernon (Percy), 10th Earl of Northumberland. Lord High Admiral.
437 (inv 1638) Charles (Stuart), Duke of Cornwall. Shortly afterwards styled PRINCE OF WALES. Subsequently CHARLES II, King of England.
438 (inv 1640) Thomas (Wentworth), 1st Earl of Strafford. Opposed the King's forced loan. Later supported him. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Impeached for high treason and beheaded.
439 (inv 1661) James (Stuart), Duke of York. Afterwards JAMES II, King of England.
440 (inv 1645) Prince Rupert, Count Palatine of the Rhine. Duke of Bavaria. Supporter of Charles I in the Civil War. Brother of 432. Elected 1642; installation dispensed with at Oxford 1645.
441 (inv 1645) William of Nassau, Prince of Orange. Married Mary, daughter of Charles I, King of England, by whom he had William III, joint sovereign of England.
442 (inv 1645) Sir Bernard de Foix, Captal de Buch,
443 (app 1649) Maurice, Count Palatine of the Rhine. (Not installed.)
444 (inv 1661) James (Butler), 1st Marquess of Ormonde. Afterwards 1st Duke of Ormonde.
445 (inv 1661) Edward, Count Palatine of the Rhine, Duke of Bavaria. Son of Frederick, King of Bohemia, and the Princess Elizabeth. daughter of James I.
446 (inv 1661) George (Villiers), 2nd Duke of Buckingham. One of the five Ministers who formed the "Cabal."
447 (app 1650) William (Seymour), 1st Marquess of Hertford. Afterwards 2nd Duke of Somerset, the attainder of his ancestor Edward, 1st Duke, being reversed in 1660. Conspicuous for his bravery in the defence of Sherborne Castle and at the battle of Lansdowne. One of the four who offered their lives to the Commons in lieu of King Charles I. (Not installed.)
448 (inv 1661) Thomas (Wriothesley), 4th Earl of Southampton. Lord High Treasurer.
449 (app 1650) William, 2nd Duke of Hamilton. In command of the royal forces in Scotland. Mortally wounded at the battle of Worcester. (Not installed.)
450 (inv 1661) William (Cavendish), created Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Companion of Charles II during his long exile.
451 (app 1650) James (Graham), 1st Marquess of Montrose (1612-50). Fought in Scotland as a royalist. (Not installed.)
452 (app 1650) James (Stanley). 7th Earl of Derby. Powerful supporter of the royalist cause, and known as "the Loyal Earl." His wife, Charlotte de la Trémouille, is famous for her heroic defence of Lathom House. The Earl was taken prisoner at the battle of Worcester and beheaded. (Not installed.)
453 (inv 1661) George (Digby), 2nd Earl of Bristol.
454 (app 1653) Henry (Stuart), Duke of Gloucester. Brother of Charles II. (Not installed.)
455 (inv 1661) Henry Charles (de la Trémouille) Prince of Tarento.
456 (inv 1661) William Henry of Nassau, Prince of Orange. Afterwards William III, King of England.
457 (inv 1661) Frederick William, Margrave of Brandenburg, Duke of Prussia.
458 (inv 1661) John Gaspar Ferdinand de Marchin, Comte de Graville.
459 (inv 1661) Sir George Monck. Afterwards 1st Duke of Albemarle. The chief instrument in the Restoration of King Charles II.
460 (inv 1661) Edward (Montagu), 1st Earl of Sandwich. The patron and friend of Samuel Pepys. As joint General of the Fleet he was with Monck in escorting Charles II back to England from France in 1660.
461 (inv 1661) Aubrey (de Vere), 20th (and last) Earl of Oxford. Imprisoned in the Tower of London as party to a plot against the Protector Cromwell.
462 (inv 1661) Charles (Stuart), 4th Duke of Richmond and Lennox, and last of this creation.
463 (inv 1661) Montagu (Bertie), 2nd Earl of Lindsey. Fought as a Royalist; taken prisoner at Edgehill, and wounded at Naseby.
464 (inv 1661) Edward (Montagu), 2nd Earl of Manchester. Fought as a zealous Parliamentarian in the Civil War. Speaker of the House of Commons and House of Lords.
465 (inv 1661) William (Wentworth), 2nd Earl of Strafford.
466 (inv 1663) Christian V, King of Denmark and Norway.
467 (inv 1663) James (Scott), Duke of Monmouth and Duke of Buccleuch. Son of Charles II and Lucy Walters. Served in the French Army. Rebelled against James II, and assumed the title of King. Defeated at Sedgemoor and beheaded. Degraded 1685.
468 (app 1666) James (Stuart), Duke of Cambridge, 2nd son of James II. Died aged 3. (Not installed.)
469 (inv 1671) Charles XI, King of Sweden.
470 (inv 1671) John George II, Duke of Saxony.
471 (inv 1671) Christopher (Monck) 2nd Duke of Albemarle.
472 (inv 1672) John (Maitland) Duke of Lauderdale. One of the five Ministers who formed the "Cabal."
473 (inv 1672) Henry (Somerset), 3rd Marquess of Worcester. Afterwards 1st Duke of Beaufort. Lord-President of Wales. Instrumental in the return of Charles II to England in 1660.
474 (inv 1672) Henry (Jermyn), Earl of St. Albans.
475 (inv 1672) William (Russell), 5th Earl of Bedford. Afterwards 1st Duke of Bedford. Fought as a Royalist at the first battle of Newbury.
476 (inv 1672) Henry (Bennet), Earl of Arlington. One of the five Ministers who formed the "Cabal."
477 (inv 1672) Thomas (Butler) Earl of Ossory. Son of James 1st Duke of Ormonde, but died in his father's lifetime. Served in various actions against the Dutch Fleet.
478 (inv 1673) Charles (Palmer, afterwards Fitzroy) Earl of Southampton. Afterwards Duke of Southampton. Son of Charles II and Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland.
479 (inv 1674) John (Sheffield), 3rd Earl of Mulgrave. Afterwards Duke of Buckingham and of Normanby. Served with the Fleet at the battle of Solebay, and with the Forces at Tangier, Lord Privy Seal.
480 (inv 1677) Henry (Cavendish), 2nd Duke of Newcastle-on-Tyne.
481 (inv 1677) Thomas (Osborne), 2nd Earl of Danby. Afterwards 1st Duke of Leeds. Lord President of the Council. Took an active part in the Revolution that brought William III to the throne.
482 (inv 1680) Henry (Fitzroy), 1st Duke of Grafton. Son of Charles II and Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland.
483 (inv 1680) James (Cecil), 3rd Earl of Salisbury (d. 1683).
484 (inv 1680) Charles II, Count Palatine of the Rhine, Duke of Bavaria.
485 (inv 1681) Charles (Lennox), 1st Duke of Richmond. Son of Charles II and Louise, Duchess of Portsmouth.
486 (inv 1682) William, 3rd Duke of Hamilton.
487 (inv 1684) Prince George of Denmark and Norway. Consort of the Princess ANNE, afterwards Queen of England.
488 (inv 1684) Charles (Seymour) 6th Duke of Somerset. Supporter of the Prince of Orange, and contributed largely to the undisputed succession of the House of Hanover.
489 (inv 1684) George (Palmer, afterwards Fitzroy), Duke of Northumberland. 3rd son of Charles II and Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland.
490 (inv 1685) Henry (Howard), 7th Duke of Norfolk (1654-1701). Constable of Windsor Castle.
491 (inv 1685) Henry (Mordaunt), 2nd Earl of Peterborough. Served in the action off Solebay.
492 (inv 1685) Laurence (Hyde), Earl of Rochester, 2nd son of Edward, 1st Earl of Clarendon and uncle of Queen Anne. First Lord of the Treasury.
493 (inv 1685) Louis (de Duras), 2nd Earl of Feversham. Marquis de Blanquefort in France. Nephew of Turenne. Naturalized in England in 1665. Friend of Charles II and James II. Commanded at the battle of Sedgemoor.
494 (inv 1687) Robert (Spencer), 2nd Earl of Sunderland. Diplomatist. Lord President of the Council.
495 (app 1688) James (Fitzjames), Duke of Berwick. Son of James II and Arabella Churchill. Served with distinction in the French army. (Not installed.)
496 (inv 1689) James (Butler), 2nd Duke of Ormonde. Viceroy of Ireland. Degraded 12 July 1716 (last formal degradation).
497 (inv 1689) Frederick Armand, 1st Duke of Schomberg. Killed at the battle of the Boyne.
498 (inv 1689) William (Cavendish), 4th Earl of Devonshire. Afterwards 1st Duke of Devonshire.
499 (inv 1694) Frederick III, Margrave of Brandenburg (1657-1713). Became in 1701 Frederick I, King of Prussia. Married the Princess Sophia, sister of George I.
500 (inv 1694) George William, Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg. Afterwards Duke of Zelle. Father of Sophia, Queen of George 1.
501 (inv 1693) John George IV, Duke of Saxony.
502 (inv 1692) Charles (Sackville), 6th Earl of Dorset and 1 st Earl of Middlesex. Supported the cause of William of Orange.
503 (inv 1694) Charles (Talbot), 12th Earl of Shrewsbury. Afterwards 1st Duke of Shrewsbury. Supporter of William III. Viceroy of Ireland. Lord High Treasurer.
504 (inv 1696) William, Duke of Gloucester. Eldest son of George, Prince of Denmark and the Princess Anne, afterwards Queen Anne of England.
505 (inv 1697) William (Bentinck), 1st Earl of Portland (1649-1709). Favourite courtier of William III.
506 (inv 1698) John (Holles), created Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Married Margaret, daughter and coheiress of Henry (Cavendish), 2nd Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
507 (inv 1700) Thomas (Herbert), 8th Earl of Pembroke and 5th Earl of Montgomery. Lord High Admiral of England. Viceroy of Ireland.
508 (inv 1700) Arnold Joost (van Keppel), 1st Earl of Albemarle. Attended the Prince of Orange, afterwards William III, to England in 1688.
509 (inv 1703) George Lewis, Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg, Elector of Hanover (1660-1727). Afterwards GEORGE I, King of Great Britain.
510 (inv 1701) James (Douglas), 2nd Duke of Queensberry. Lord Privy Seal and a Lord of the Treasury. Largely instrumental in carrying the Act of Union with Scotland.
511 (inv 1702) Wriothesley (Russell), 2nd Duke of Bedford.
512 (inv 1703) John (Churchill), 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650-1722). The hero of the battles of Blenheim, Ramillies, Oudenarde and Malplaquet.
513 (inv 1703) Meinhardt (de Schomberg), 3rd Duke of Schomberg and Duke of Leinster. Present at the battle of the Boyne, at which his father was killed.
514 (inv 1704) Sidney, Lord Godolphin of Rialton. Afterwards 1st Earl of Godolphin. Lord High Treasurer.
515 (inv 1710) George Augustus, Electoral Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg. Afterwards PRINCE OF WALES. Subsequently GEORGE II, King of Great Britain.
516 (inv 1710) William (Cavendish), 2nd Duke of Devonshire. Lord President of the Council.
517 (inv 1710) John (Campbell), 2nd Duke of Argyll. Fought under Marlborough at Ramillies and Malplaquet. Played an important part in bringing about the Act of Union.
518 (inv 1713) Henry (Somerset), 2nd Duke of Beaufort.
519 (inv 1712) James 4th Duke of Hamilton and 1st Duke of Brandon. Engaged the notorious duel with Lord Mohun in Hyde Park which ended fatally for both.
520 (inv 1713) Henry (Grey). 1st Duke of Kent.
521 (inv 1713) John, 1st Earl Poulett. First Lord of the Treasury.
522 (inv 1713) Robert (Harley), 1st Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer. Lord High Treasurer. He and his son founded the famous Harleian Collection of manuscripts now in the British Museum.
523 (inv 1713) Thomas (Wentworth), 3rd Earl of Strafford.
524 (inv 1713) Charles (Mordaunt), 3rd Earl of Peterborough. In command of the forces in Spain during the War of the Spanish Succession.
525 (inv 1714) Charles (Paulet), 2nd Duke of Bolton. A supporter of the Prince of Orange (William III), bringing him from Holland in 1688.
526 (inv 1714) John (Manners), 2nd Duke of Rutland.
527 (inv 1714) Lionel Cranfield (Sackville), 7th Earl of Dorset. Afterwards 1st Duke of Dorset. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
528 (inv 1714) Charles (Montague), 1st Earl of Halifax. Chancellor of the Exchequer. First Lord of the Treasury.
529 (inv 1718) Frederick Lewis, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1707-51). Eldest son of George II. Afterwards PRINCE OF WALES. Father of George III.
530 (inv 1718) Ernest Augustus, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg. Afterwards Duke of York and Albany, Bishop of Osnaburg. Youngest brother of George I.
531 (inv 1718) Charles (Beauclerk), 1st Duke of St. Albans. Son of Charles II and Eleanor Gwynne.
532 (inv 1718) John, 2nd Duke of Montagu.
533 (inv 1718) Thomas (Pelham-Holles, formerly Pelham), 1st Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyme. First Lord of the Treasury.
534 (inv 1718) James, 3rd Earl of Berkeley. Vice-Admiral of the Red. Commanded a ship in Rooke's engagement off Malaga.
535 (inv 1719) Evelyn (Pierrepont), 1st Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull. Lord Privy Seal. Lord President of the Council.
536 (inv 1720) Charles (Spencer), 3rd Earl of Sunderland. First Lord of the Treasury. Lord President of the Council.
537 (inv 1721) Charles (Fitzroy), 2nd Duke of Grafton. Viceroy of Ireland.
538 (inv 1721) Henry Fiennes (Clinton), 7th Earl of Lincoln.
539 (inv 1722) Charles (Paulet), 3rd Duke of Bolton.
540 (inv 1722) John (Manners), 3rd Duke of Rutland (1696-1779).
541 (inv 1722) John (Ker), 1st Duke of Roxburghe. Prominent in promoting the Union with Scotland.
542 (inv 1724) Richard (Lumley), 2nd Earl of Scarborough (1708-39).
543 (inv 1724) Charles, 2nd Viscount Townshend. Lord President of the Council.
544 (inv 1726) Charles (Lennox), 2nd Duke of Richmond and Duke of Lennox. Served at the battle of Dettingen.
545 (inv 1726) Sir Robert Walpole. Afterwards 1st Earl of Orford. The famous Minister of George I and George II. He was in fact though not in name the first Prime Minister.
546 (inv 1730) William Augustus, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1721-65), 2nd son of George II. Afterwards Duke of Cumberland. Commander-in-Chief of the Forces.
547 (inv 1730) Philip Dormer (Stanhope), 4th Earl of Chesterfield. Ambassador to the Hague. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Author of the "Letters to his Son."
548 (inv 1730) Richard (Boyle), 3rd Earl of Burlington and 2nd Earl of Cork.
549 (inv 1733) William Charles Henry, Prince of Orange (1711-51). afterwards William IV de Nassau. Married the Princess Anne, eldest daughter of George II.
550 (inv 1733) William (Cavendish), 3rd Duke of Devonshire. Lord Privy Seal. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
551 (inv 1733) Spencer (Compton), Earl of Wilmington. Speaker of the House of Commons.
552 (inv 1738) William (Capel), 3rd Earl of Essex.
553 (inv 1738) James, 1st Earl Waldegrave.
554 (inv 1750) Frederick, Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel (1720-85). Married the Princess Mary, 4th daughter of George II.
555 (inv 1741) Charles (Beauclerk), 2nd Duke of St. Albans. Constable of Windsor Castle.
556 (inv 1741) Charles (Spencer), 3rd Duke of Marlborough (1706-58). Fought at the battle of Dettingen.
557 (inv 1741) Evelyn (Pierrepont), 2nd Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull.
558 (inv 1741) William (Bentinck), 2nd Duke of Portland (1709-62).
559 (inv 1750) Frederick III, Duke of Saxe-Gotha. Brother of Augusta, Princess of Wales, the mother of George III.
560 (app 1746) John Adolphus, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels. (Not installed.)
561 (inv 1750) George William Frederick, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1738-1820). Afterwards GEORGE III, King of Great Britain.
562 (inv 1750) Charles William Frederick, 8th Margrave of Brandenburg-Anspach.
563 (inv 1750) Thomas (Osborne), 4th Duke of Leeds.
564 (inv 1750) John (Russell), 4th Duke of Bedford (1710-71). Lord Privy Seal. Lord President of the Council.
565 (inv 1750) Wilham Anne (van Keppel), 2nd Earl of Albemarle. Served at the battles of Dettingen, Fontenoy, and Culloden.
566 (inv 1750) John (Carteret), 2nd Earl Granville. Chief Governor of Ireland.
567 (inv 1752) Edward Augustus, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1739-67). Afterwards Duke of York and Albany. 2nd son of Frederick, Prince of Wales.
568 (inv 1752) William V. de Nassau, Prince of Orange. Son of William IV, Prince of Orange, and the Princess Anne, his wife, eldest daughter of George II.
569 (inv 1752) Henry (Fiennes-Clinton, afterwards Pelham-Clinton), 9th Earl of Lincoln. Afterwards 2nd Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyme.
570 (inv 1752) Daniel (Finch), 8th Earl of Winchilsea and 3d Earl of Nottingham (d. 1769)
571 (inv 1752) George (Brudenell, afterwards Montagu), 4th Earl of Cardigan. Afterwards Duke of Montagu. Constable of Windsor Castle.
572 (inv 1757) William (Cavendish), 4th Duke of Devonshire. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
573 (inv 1757) Henry (Howard), 4th Earl of Carlisle.
574 (inv 1757) Hugh (Smithson, afterwards Percy), 2nd Earl of Northumberland. Afterwards 1st Duke of Northumberland. Viceroy of Ireland.
575 (inv 1757) Francis (Seymour-Conway), 1st Earl of Hertford. Afterwards 1st Marquess of Hertford. Viceroy of Ireland.
576 (inv 1757) James 2nd Earl Waldegrave.
577 (inv 1760) Ferdinand, Prince of Brunswick-Beyern.
578 (inv 1760) Charles (Watson-Wentworth), 2nd Marquess of Rockingham. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
579 (inv 1760) Richard (Grenville-Temple), 2nd Earl Temple. Lord Privy Seal.
580 (inv 1762) William Henry, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg. Afterwards Duke of Gloucester (1743-1805). 3rd son of Frederick Prince of Wales, and brother of George III.
581 (inv 1762) John (Stuart), 3rd Earl of Bute. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
582 (inv 1771) Adolf Friedrich IV, Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1738-94). Brother of Charlotte, Queen of George
583 (app 1764) George (Montague-Dunk), Earl of Halifax. Viceroy of Ireland. Lord Privy Seal. (Not installed.)
584 (inv 1771) George Augustus Frederick, PRINCE OF WALES (1762-1830). Afterwards GEORGE IV, King of Great Britain.
585 (inv 1771) Charles William Ferdinand, Hereditary Prince, afterwards Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Married the Princess Augusta, eldest daughter of Frederick, Prince of Wales. Killed at the battle of Jena.
586 (inv 1771) George (Keppel), 3rd Earl of Albemarle.
587 (inv 1771) Henry Frederick, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1745-90). Afterwards Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn. 4th son of Frederick, Prince of Wales, and brother of George III.
588 (inv 1771) George (Spencer), 4th Duke of Marlborough (1739-1817).
589 (inv 1771) Augustus Henry (Fitzroy), 3rd Duke of Grafton (1735-1811).
590 (inv 1771) Granville (Leveson-Gower) Viscount Trentham. Afterwards 1st Marquess of Stafford. Lord President of the Council.
591 (inv 1771) Frederick, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg, Bishop of Osnaburg (1763-1827). 2nd son of George III. Afterwards Duke of York and Albany.
592 (app 1772) Sir Frederick North. Afterwards 4th Earl of Guilford. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister. (Not installed.)
593 (app 1778) Henry (Howard), 12th Earl of Suffolk, 5th Earl of Berkshire. Lord Privy Seal. (Not installed.)
594 (app 1778) William Henry (Nassau de Zulenstein), 4th Earl of Rochford. (Not installed.)
595 (app 1778) Thomas (Thynne), 3rd Viscount Weymouth. Afterwards 1st Marquess of Bath. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. (Not installed.)
596 (inv 1801) William Henry, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1765-1837). 3rd son of George III. Afterwards Duke of Clarence, and subsequently WILLIAM IV, King of Great Britain.
597 (inv 1801) Charles (Lennox), 3rd Duke of Richmond and Lennox.
598 (inv 1801) William (Cavendish), 5th Duke of Devonshire (1748-1811).
599 (inv 1801) William (Petty), 3rd Earl of Shelburne. Afterwards 1st Marquess of Lansdowne. First Lord of the Treasury.
600 (app 1782) Charles (Manners), 4th Duke of Rutland (1754-87). Viceroy of Ireland. (Not installed.)
601 (inv 1801) Edward, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg, afterwards Duke of Kent (1767-1820). 4th son of George III and father of Queen Victoria.
602 (inv 1801) Ernest Augustus, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg, 5th son of George III (1771-1851). Afterwards Duke of Cumberland. Succ. 1837 as King of Hanover.
603 (inv 1801) Augustus Frederick, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1773-1843). Afterwards Duke of Sussex. 6th son of George III.
604 (inv 1801) Adolphus Frederick, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1774-1850). Afterwards Duke of Cambridge. 7th son of George III.
605 (inv 1801) William Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel. Son of the Princess Mary, daughter of George II.
606 (inv 1801) Henry (Somerset), 5th Duke of Beaufort (1744-1803).
607 (inv 1801) George (Nugent-Temple-Grenville), 1st Marquess of Buckingham.
608 (inv 1801) Charles, 2nd Earl, afterwards 1st Marquess Cornwallis. Served in the American War. Governor-General of India. Compelled the surrender of Tippoo Sahib.
609 (app 1788) John Frederick (Sackville), 3rd Duke of Dorset. Ambassador to Paris. (Not installed.)
610 (inv 1801) Hugh (Percy), 2nd Duke of Northumberland.
611 (inv 1801) Ernest Lewis, 5th Duke of Saxe-Gotha and Altenburg. Cousin of George III.
612 (app 1790) Francis Godolphin (Osborne), 5th Duke of Leeds. Ambassador to Paris. (Not installed.)
613 (inv 1801) John (Pitt), 2nd Earl of Chatham. Lord Privy Seal. Lord President of the Council.
614 (inv 1801) James (Cecil), 1st Marquess of Salisbury (d. 1823).
615 (inv 1801) John (Fane), 10th Earl of Westmorland. Viceroy of Ireland.
616 (inv 1801) Frederick (Howard), 5th Earl of Carlisle. Lord Privy Seal. Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland.
617 (inv 1801) Henry (Scott), 3rd Duke of Buccleuch. Afterwards also 5th Duke of Queensberry.
618 (inv 1801) William Frederick, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg. Afterwards 2nd Duke of Gloucester (1776-1834). Nephew of George III.
619 (inv 1801) William Henry (Bentinck, afterwards Cavendish Bentinck), 3rd Duke of Portland (1738-1809). Lord President of the Council and First Lord of the Treasury.
620 (app 1797) Richard 1st Earl Howe. Admiral. Defeated the French fleet in the English Channel. (Not installed.)
621 (inv 1801) George John, 2nd Earl Spencer. Lord Privy Seal.
622 (inv 1801) John Jeffreys (Pratt), 2nd Earl Camden. Afterwards 1st Marquess Camden. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
623 (inv 1801) John (Ker), 3rd Duke of Roxburghe.
624 (inv 1805) John Henry (Manners), 5th Duke of Rutland (1778-1857).
625 (inv 1805) Philip (Yorke), 3rd Earl of Hardwick. Viceroy of Ireland.
626 (inv 1805) Henry Charles (Somerset), 6th Duke of Beaufort (1766-1835).
627 (inv 1805) John James (Hamilton), 1st Marquess of Abercorn.
628 (inv 1805) George Augustus (Herbert), 11th Earl of Pembroke and 8th Earl of Montgomery.
629 (inv 1805) George (Finch), 9th Earl of Winchilsea and 4th Earl of Nottingham (1752-1826, nephew of 570)
630 (inv 1805) Philip (Stanhope), 5th Earl of Chesterfield. Ambassador to Spain.
631 (inv 1805) George (Legge), Earl of Dartmouth.
632 (inv 1812) George Granville (Leveson-Gower), 2nd Marquess of Stafford. Afterwards 1st Duke of Sutherland.
633 (inv 1812) Francis Conway (Ingram-Seymour-Conway), 2nd Marquess of Hertford.
634 (inv 1812) William (Lowther), 1st Earl of Lonsdale (d. 1844).
635 (inv 1812) Richard Colley, Marquess Wellesley. Elder brother of Arthur, Duke of Wellington. Governor-General of India, with distinguished war services.
636 (inv 1812) Charles (Lennox), 4th Duke of Richmond and Lennox (1764-1819).
637 (inv 1812) James (Graham), 3d Duke of Montrose (1755-1836).
638 (inv 1812) Francis (Rawdon-Hastings), 2nd Earl of Moira. Afterwards Marquess of Hastings. Served the American War. Commander of the Forces in India.
639 (inv 1812) Henry (Pelham-Chnton), 4th Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyme.
640 (inv 1814) Arthur (Wellesley), 1st Duke of Wellington (1769-1852). The hero of the Peninsular War and the battle of Waterloo. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
641 (inv 1814) Alexander I, Emperor of all the Russias (1777-1825).
642 (inv 1814) Louis XVIII, King of France (1757-1824).
643 (inv 1814) Francis I, Emperor of Austria (1768-1835).
644 (inv 1814) Frederick William III, King of Prussia (1770-1840). Father of William I, Emperor of Germany.
645 (inv 1814) Robert Banks (Jenkinson), 2nd Earl of Liverpool. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
646 (inv 1814) Robert (Stewart), Viscount Castlereagh. Afterwards 2nd Marquess of Londonderry. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Fought a duel with Canning in 1808.
647 (inv 1815) Ferdinand VII, King of Spain (1784-1833).
648 (inv 1814) William Frederick de Nassau, Prince of Orange (1772-1843). Afterwards William I, King of the Netherlands.
649 (inv 1816) Leopold George Frederick, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (1790-1865). Afterwards Leopold I, King of the Belgians. He married the Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales, only child of the Regent, afterwards George IV, in the direct line of the British Throne.
650 (inv 1817) Henry, 3rd Earl Bathurst. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Lord President of the Council.
651 (inv 1818) Henry William (Paget), 1st Marquess of Anglesey. Served in the Peninsular War, and at the battle of Waterloo where he lost a leg.
652 (inv 1819) Hugh (Percy), 3rd Duke of Northumberland. Viceroy of Ireland.
653 (inv 1820) Richard (Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville), 2nd Marquess of Buckingham. Afterwards 1st Duke of Buckingham and Chandos.
654 (inv 1822) Frederick VI, King of Denmark (1768-1839).
655 (inv 1823) João VI, King of Portugal (1767-1826).
656 (inv 1822) George James, 1st Marquess of Cholmondeley.
657 (inv 1822) Francis Charles (Seymour-Conway), 3rd Marquess of Hertford.
658 (inv 1823) Thomas (Thynne), 2nd Marquess of Bath.
659 (inv 1825) Charles X, King of France (1757-1836).
660 (inv 1826) Charles (Sackville-Germaine), 5th Duke of Dorset.
661 (inv 1827) Nicholas I, Emperor of all the Russias (1796-1855).
662 (inv 1827) George William Frederick (Osborne), 6th Duke of Leeds.
663 (inv 1827) William George Spencer (Cavendish), 6th Duke of Devonshire (1790-1858).
664 (inv 1827) Brownlow (Cecil), 2nd Marquess of Exeter (1795-1867).
665 (inv 1829) Charles (Lennox, afterwards Gordon-Lennox), 5th Duke of Richmond and Lennox (1791-1860). Fought at the battle of Waterloo.
666 (inv 1829) George, 3rd Earl of Ashburnham.
667 (inv 1831) Bernard Eric Freund, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen. Brother of Adelaide, Queen of William IV.
668 (inv 1830) Wilhelm I, King of Württemberg (1781-1864).
669 (inv 1830) John (Russell), 6th Duke of Bedford (1766-1839). Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
670 (inv 1831) Charles, 2nd Earl Grey. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister of Reform Bill fame.
671 (inv 1831) Augustus William Maximilian Frederick Lewis, reigning Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.
672 (inv 1834) Bernard Edward (Howard), 12th Duke of Norfolk (1765-1842). Earl Marshal.
673 (inv 1834) George Henry (Fitzroy), 4th Duke of Grafton (1760-1844).
674 (inv 1835) Walter Francis (Montagu-Douglas-Scott), 5th Duke of Buccleuch and 7th Duke of Queensberry (1806-84). Lord Privy Seal. Lord President of the Council.
675 (inv 1835) George Frederick Alexander Charles Ernest Augustus, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (1819-78). Succ. 1851 as George V of Hanover. Nephew of King George IV of England.
676 (inv 1835) George Frederick William Charles, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg. Afterwards 2nd Duke of Cambridge. Commander-in-Chief of the British Army. Served in the Crimean War.
677 (inv 1836) Alexander, 10th Duke of Hamilton and 7th Duke of Brandon (1767-1852). Ambassador to St. Petersburg.
678 (inv 1836) Henry (Petty), 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne. Lord President of the Council.
679 (inv 1837) George (Howard), 6th Earl of Carlisle. Lord Privy Seal.
680 (inv 1837) Edward Adolphus (Seymour), 11th Duke of Somerset (1775-1855).
681 (inv 1837) Charles William Frederick Emicon, Prince of Leiningen. Half-brother of Queen Victoria.
682 (inv 1838) Ernst Anton Karl Ludwig, Reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1784-1844). Uncle of Queen Victoria.
683 (inv 1839) Edward (Smith-Stanley), 13th Earl of Derby.
684 (inv 1839) William Harry (Vane), 1st Duke of Cleveland.
685 (inv 1839) Francis Albert Augustus Charles Emanuel, Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1819-61). Afterwards Consort of Queen VICTORIA.
686 (inv 1841) George Granville (Leveson-Gower), 2nd Duke of Sutherland.
687 (inv 1841) Robert (Grosvenor), 1st Marquess of Westminster.
688 (inv 1842) Frederick William IV, King of Prussia (1795-1861).
689 (inv 1842) Frederick Augustus II, King of Saxony.
690 (inv 1842) Henry (Somerset), 7th Duke of Beaufort (1792-1853).
691 (inv 1842) Richard Plantagenet (Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville), 2nd Duke of Buckingham. Lord Privy Seal.
692 (inv 1842) James Brownlow William (Gascoigne-Cecil, formerly Cecil), 2nd Marquess of Salisbury (1791-1868). Lord Privy Seal. Lord President of the Council.
693 (inv 1842) Henry (Vane), 2nd Duke of Cleveland.
694 (inv 1844) Louis Philippe, King of the French.
695 (inv 1844) Ernst (II) August Karl Johannes Leopold Alexander Eduard, reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1818-93). Brother of Prince Albert, the consort of Queen Victoria.
696 (inv 1844) Thomas Philip (Robinson, afterwards Weddell, afterwards de Grey), 2nd Earl de Grey. Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland.
697 (inv 1844) James (Hamilton), 2nd Marquess of Abercorn (1811-85). Cr. 1868 1st Duke of Abercorn. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
698 (inv 1844) Charles Chetwynd, 2nd Earl Talbot. Viceroy of Ireland.
699 (inv 1844) Edward (Herbert, formerly Clive), 2nd Earl of Powis.
700 (inv 1846) George Charles (Pratt), 2nd Marquess Camden.
701 (inv 1846) Richard (Seymour-Conway), 4th Marquess of Hertford.
702 (inv 1847) Francis (Russell), 7th Duke of Bedford (1788-1861).
703 (inv 1848) Henry Charles (Howard), 13th Duke of Norfolk (1791-1856). Earl Marshal.
704 (inv 1849) George William Frederick (Villiers) 4th Earl of Clarendon (1800-70). Lord Privy Seal. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
705 (inv 1849) Frederick, 4th. Earl Spencer. Commanded a ship at the battle of Navarino.
706 (inv 1851) Constantine Henry (Phipps), 1st Marquess of Normanby. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Secretary of State for the Colonies.
707 (inv 1851) Charles William (Wentworth-Fitzwilham), 5th Earl Fitzwilliam.
708 (inv 1853) Algernon (Percy), 4th Duke of Northumberland. Admiral R.N., First Lord of the Admiralty
709 (inv 1853) Charles William (Vane, formerly Stewart), 3rd Marquess of Londonderry. Served as a General in the Peninsular War.
710 (inv 1855) George William Frederick (Howard), 7th Earl of Carlisle. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
711 (inv 1855) Francis (Leveson-Gower), 1st Earl of Ellesmere.
712 (inv 1855) George (Gordon, afterwards Hamilton-Gordon). 4th Earl of Aberdeen. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
713 (inv 1855) Napoleon III, Emperor of the French.
714 (inv 1855) Victor Emmanuel II, King of Sardinia (1820-78). Became in 1860 King of Italy.
715 (inv 1856) Hugh, 2nd Earl Fortescue. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
716 (inv 1856) Henry John (Temple), 3rd Viscount Palmerston. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
717 (inv 1856) Abdul Medjid, Sultan of Turkey.
718 (inv 1857) Granville George (Leveson-Gower), 2nd Earl Granville. Lord President of the Council.
719 (inv 1857) Richard (Grosvenor), 2nd Marquess of Westminster.
720 (inv 1858) Friedrich Wilhelm Nikolaus Karl, Crown Prince of Prussia (1831-88). Succ. 1888 as Friedrich III, Emperor of Germany. Married Victoria, Princess Royal, eldest daughter of Queen Victoria.
721 (inv 1858) Arthur Richard (Wellesley), 2nd Duke of Wellington (1807-84).
722 (inv 1858) William (Cavendish), 7th Duke of Devonshire (1808-91). Chancellor of the University of Cambridge.
723 (inv 1858) Pedro V, King of Portugal (1837-61).
724 (inv 1858) Albert Edward, PRINCE OF WALES. Afterwards EDWARD VII, King of Great Britain.
725 (inv 1859) Dudley (Ryder), 2nd Earl of Harrowby. Lord Privy Seal.
726 (inv 1859) Edward Geoffrey (Smith-Stanley), 14th Earl of Derby. Chief Secretary for Ireland and afterwards Prime Minister.
727 (inv 1860) Henry Pelham (Pelham-Clinton), 5th Duke of Newcastle.
728 (inv 1861) Wilhelm I, King of Prussia (1797-1888). Became in 1871 Wilhelm I, Emperor of Germany.
729 (inv 1862) Charles, Earl Canning. Governor-General of India in the time of the Mutiny.
730 (inv 1862) Edward Adolphus (Seymour), 12th Duke of Somerset (1804-85).
731 (inv 1862) John, 1st Earl Russell, 3rd son of John, 6th Duke of Bedford (1792-1878), and better known as Lord John Russell. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister (1846-52, 1865-66).
732 (inv 1862) Anthony (Ashley-Cooper), 7th Earl of Shaftesbury. A great philanthropist.
733 (inv 1862) William Thomas Spencer (Wentworth-Fitzwilliam), 6th Earl Fitzwilliam.
734 (inv 1862) Frederick William Lewis Charles, Prince of Hesse. Afterwards Grand Duke Louis IV, of Hesse. Married the Princess Alice, 2nd daughter of Queen Victoria.
735 (inv 1862) Friedrich Wilhelm, reigning Grand-Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1819-1904).
736 (inv 1863) Prince Alfred Ernest Albert, Duke of Saxony and Prince of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1844-1900). Afterwards Duke of Edinburgh, reigning duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha 1893. 2nd son of Queen Victoria.
737 (inv 1863) Henry George, 3rd Earl Grey. Secretary of State for the Colonies.
738 (inv 1864) George Granville William (Leveson-Gower), 3rd Duke of Sutherland.
739 (inv 1864) George William Frederick (Brudenell-Bruce) 2nd Marquess of Ailesbury.
740 (inv 1864) Henry (Petty-Fitzmaurice), 4th Marquess of Lansdowne.
741 (inv 1865) John Poyntz, 5th Earl Spencer. Viceroy of Ireland. Lord President of the Council.
742 (inv 1865) Harry George (Vane, afterwards Poulett). 4th Duke of Cleveland.
743 (inv 1865) Luís I, King of Portugal (1838-89).
744 (inv 1865) Christian IX, King of Denmark (1818-1906).
745 (inv 1865) Louis III, Grand-Duke of Hesse and the Rhine.
746 (inv 1865) Francis Thomas (de Grey), 7th Earl Cowper.
747 (inv 1866) Henry Richard Charles (Wellesley), 1st Earl Cowley. Diplomatist. Ambassador to France.
748 (inv 1866) Leopold II, King of the Belgians (1835-1909).
749 (inv 1866) Frederick Christian Charles Augustus, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein (1831-1917). Known in England as Prince Christian. Married the Princess Helena, 3rd daughter of Queen Victoria.
750 (inv 1867) Charles Henry (Gordon-Lennox), 6th Duke of Richmond and 1st Duke of Gordon (1818-1903).
751 (inv 1867) Charles Cecil John (Manners), 6th Duke of Rutland (1815-88).
752 (inv 1867) Henry Charles Fitzroy (Somerset), 8th Duke of Beaufort (1824-99).
753 (inv 1867) Arthur William Patrick Albert, Duke of Saxony, Prince of Coburg-Gotha (1850-1942). Afterwards Duke of Connaught and Strathearn. Governor-General of Canada. 3rd son of Queen Victoria. No other Knight of the Garter throughout the history of the Order has held the honour for so long a period.
754 (inv 1867) Francis Joseph, Emperor of Austria (1830-1916). Removed 13 May 1915.
755 (inv 1867) Alexander II, Emperor of all the Russias (1818-81). Assassinated.
756 (inv 1867) Abdul Aziz, Sultan of Turkey.
757 (inv 1868) John Winston (Spencer-Churchill), 7th Duke of Marlborough (1822-83).
758 (inv 1869) Prince Leopold George Duncan Albert, Duke of Saxony and Prince of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1853-84). Afterwards Duke of Albany. 4th son of Queen Victoria.
759 (inv 1869) Stratford (Canning), Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe. Diplomatist.
760 (inv 1869) George Frederick Samuel (Robinson), 2nd Earl of Ripon and 3rd Earl de Grey of Wrest. Afterwards 1st Marquess of Ripon. Lord President of the Council. Viceroy of India.
761 (inv 1870) Hugh Lupus (Grosvenor), 3rd Marquess of Westminster. Afterwards 1st Duke of Westminster.
762 (inv 1871) Pedro II, Emperor of Brazil.
763 (inv 1872) Thomas (Dundas), 2nd Earl of Zetland (d. 1873).
764 (inv 1873) Nasr ed Din, Shah of Persia.
765 (inv 1873) Thomas William (Coke), 2nd Earl of Leicester.
766 (inv 1876) George I, King of the Hellenes (1845-1913).
767 (inv 1877) Prince Friedrich Wilhelm Viktor Albert of Prussia (1859-1941). Succ. 1888 as Wilhelm II, Emperor of Germany. Removed 13 May 1915.
768 (inv 1878) Umberto I, King of Italy (1844-1900).
769 (inv 1878) Prince Ernest Augustus William Adolphus George Frederick of Hanover (1845-1923). 3rd Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale. Son of George V, King of Hanover. Removed 13 May 1915.
770 (inv 1878) Benjamin (D'Israeli), Earl of Beaconsfield. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
771 (inv 1878) Robert Arthur Talbot (Gascoigne-Cecil), 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830-1903). Lord Privy Seal. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
772 (inv 1880) Francis Charles Hastings (Russell), 9th Duke of Bedford (1819-91).
773 (inv 1881) Alexander III, Emperor of all the Russias (1845-1894).
774 (inv 1881) Oscar II, King of Sweden and Norway (1829-1907).
775 (inv 1881) Alfonso XII, King of Spain (1857-85).
776 (inv 1882) Albert, King of Saxony.
777 (inv 1882) William III, King of the Netherlands (1817-90).
778 (inv 1883) Augustus Charles Lennox (Fitzroy), 7th Duke of Grafton (1821-1918). Served in the Crimean War.
779 (inv 1883) Prince Albert Victor Christian Edward, of Wales. Afterwards Duke of Clarence and Avondale. Eldest son of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales.
780 (inv 1884) George Douglas (Campbell), 8th Duke of Argyll. Lord Privy Seal. President of the Council for India.
781 (inv 1884) Edward Henry (Stanley), 15th Earl of Derby. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, and for the Colonies.
782 (inv 1884) Prince George Frederick Ernest Albert of Wales. Afterwards PRINCE OF WALES, and subsequently GEORGE V, King of Great Britain.
783 (inv 1885) John (Wodehouse), 1st Earl of Kimberley. Viceroy of Ireland, Lord Privy Seal.
784 (inv 1885) William (Compton), 4th Marquess of Northampton.
785 (inv 1885) William Philip (Molyneux), 4th Earl of Sefton.
786 (inv 1885) Prince Henry Maurice of Battenberg. Married the Princess Beatrice, youngest daughter of Queen Victoria.
787 (inv 1886) Algernon George (Percy), 6th Duke of Northumberland (1810-99).
788 (inv 1886) William (Nevill), 1st Marquess of Abergavenny.
789 (inv 1886) Henry (Fitzalan-Howard), 15th Duke of Norfolk (1847-1917). Earl Marshal.
790 (inv 1887) Rudolph Francis Charles Joseph, Prince Imperial of Austria (1858-89).
791 (inv 1888) Charles Stewart (Vane-Tempest-Stewart), 6th Marquess of Londonderry. Viceroy of Ireland.
792 (inv 1889) Prince Albert Wilhelm Heinrich of Prussia (1862-1929). Brother of Wilhelm II, Emperor of Germany (the Kaiser), and grandson of Queen Victoria. Removed 13 May 1915.
793 (inv 1890) Karl, King of Württemberg (1823-91).
794 (inv 1891) Vittorio Emanuele Ferdinando, Prince of Naples (1869-1947). Succ. 1900 as Vittorio Emanuele III, King of Italy. His banner was removed in 1940.
795 (inv 1891) John James Robert (Manners), 7th Duke of Rutland (1818-1906).
796 (inv 1891) George Henry, 5th Earl of Cadogan. Lord Privy Seal.
797 (inv 1892) Ernst Ludwig Karl Albrecht Wilhelm, Grand Duke of Hesse and the Rhine [Hesse-Darmstadt] (1868-1937). Removed 13 May 1915.
798 (inv 1892) Carol I, King of Romania (1839-1914).
799 (inv 1892) Spencer Compton (Cavendish), 8th Duke of Devonshire (1833-1908). Secretary of State for War. Chief Secretary for Ireland. Lord President of the Council.
800 (inv 1892) James (Hamilton), 2nd Duke of Abercorn (1838-1913).
801 (inv 1892) Archibald Philip (Primrose), 5th Earl of Rosebery. Lord President of the Council and Prime Minister.
802 (inv 1893) Nicholas Alexandrovitch, Grand Duke of Russia (1868-1918). Became in 1894 Nicholas II, Emperor of all the Russias. Assassinated.
803 (inv 1894) Gavin (Campbell), 1st Marquess of Breadalbane. Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland.
804 (inv 1894) Alfred Alexander William Ernest Albert, Hereditary Prince of Saxe-Coburg (1874-99). Only son of Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, 2nd son of Queen Victoria.
805 (inv 1895) Henry Charles Keith (Petty-Fitzmaurice), 5th Marquess of Lansdowne. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Governor-General of Canada.
806 (inv 1895) Carlos I, King of Portugal (1863-1908). Assassinated.
807 (inv 1896) Christian Frederick William Charles, Crown Prince of Denmark (1843-1912). Succ. 1906 as Frederick VIII, King of Denmark.
808 (inv 1897) Frederick Arthur (Stanley), 16th Earl of Derby. Secretary of State for the Colonies. Governor-General of Canada.
809 (inv 1897) William Henry Walter (Montagu-Douglas-Scott), 6th Duke of Buccleuch, and 8th Duke of Queensberry (1831-1914).
810 (inv 1899) Victor Alexander (Bruce), 9th Earl of Elgin and 15th Earl of Kincardine.
811 (inv 1899) Henry George (Percy), 7th Duke of Northumberland (1846-1918).
812 (inv 1900) William John Arthur Charles James (Cavendish-Bentinck), 6th Duke of Portland (1857-1943).
812bis(app 12.2.1901) Alexandra, Queen Consort (1844-1925), daughter of Christian IX, King of Denmark, K.G. Married Edward VII.
813 (inv 1901) Frederick Sleigh, 1st Earl Roberts. Field Marshal; saw active service in India, Afghanistan, and South Africa.
814 (inv 1901) Friedrich Wilhelm Viktor August Ernst, Crown Prince Imperial of Germany (1882-1951). Removed 13 May 1915.
815 (inv 1902) Alfonso XIII, King of Spain (1886-1941).
816 (inv 1902) Herbrand Arthur (Russell), 11th Duke of Bedford (1858-1940).
817 (inv 1902) Charles Richard John (Spencer-Churchill), 9th Duke of Marlborough (1871-1934).
818 (inv 1902) Prince Michael Alexandrovitch, hereditary Grand-Duke of Russia (1878-1918). Brother of Nicholas II. Assassinated.
819 (inv 1902) Francis Ferdinand Charles Louis Joseph, Marie, Archduke of Austria (1863-1914). Assassinated.
820 (inv 1902) Prince Emmanuel Philibert Victor Eugene Genes Joseph Marie, Duke of Aosta (1869-1931).
821 (inv 1902) Prince Luís Filipe Maria Carlos, Duke of Braganza, Crown Prince of Portugal (1887-1908). Assassinated.
822 (inv 1902) Prince Leopold Charles Edward George Albert, Duke of Albany (1884-1954). Became in 1900 reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. Removed 13 May 1915.
823 (inv 1902) Prince Arthur Frederick Patrick Albert of Connaught, only son of Arthur, Duke of Connaught, and grandson of Queen Victoria. Governor-General of the Union of South Africa.
824 (inv 1902) Arthur Charles (Wellesley), 4th Duke of Wellington (1849-1934).
825 (inv 1902) Cromartie (Sutherland Leveson-Gower), 4th Duke of Sutherland.
826 (inv 1903) Muzaffer-ed-Din, Shah of Persia.
827 (inv 1904) Wilhelm II, King of Württemberg (1848-1921). Removed 13 May 1915.
828 (app 14.6.1905) Oscar Gustaf Adolf, Prince of Sweden and Norway (1858-1950). Succ. 1907 as Gustaf V, King of Sweden.
829 (app 6.8.1905) Charles Henry (Gordon-Lennox), 7th Duke of Richmond and 2nd Duke of Gordon (1845-1928).
830 (app 4.11.1905, inv 1906) Mutsuhito, Emperor of Japan.
831 (app 7.9.1906) Prince Frederick, Grand-Duke of Baden.
832 (27.9.1906) Charles Robert (Wynn-Carrington), 1st Earl Carrington. Afterwards Marquess of Lincolnshire. Lord Privy Seal.
833 (app 9.11.1906) Haakon VII, King of Norway (1872-1957). Married the Princess Maud, youngest daughter of Edward VII.
834 (app 1.5.1908) Robert Offley Ashburton (Crewe-Milnes), 1st Earl of Crewe. Secretary of State for the Colonies. Lord Privy Seal. Lord President of the Council.
835 (app 27.6.1908) William George Spencer Scott (Compton), 5th Marquess of Northampton.
836 (app 24.2.1909) John George (Lambton), 3rd Earl of Durham.
837 (app 21.7.1909) William Waldegrave, 2nd Earl of Selborne. First Lord of the Admiralty. High Commissioner of South Africa.
838 (app 19.11.1909) Manoel II, King of Portugal (1889-1932).
838bis (app 3.6.1910) Mary, Queen Consort. Daughter of Francis, Duke of Teck. Married George V.
839 (app 15.12.1910, inv 1911) Gilbert John (Elliot), 4th Earl of Minto. Governor-General of Canada. Viceroy of India.
840 (app 10.3.1911) Luitpold, Prince Regent of Bavaria (1821-1912). His banner and crest were never placed in the Chapel.
841 (app 23.6.1910, inv 1911) Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David, PRINCE OF WALES. Afterwards EDWARD VIII, King of Great Britain. Created Duke of Windsor after his abdication.
842 (app 19.6.1911) Adolf Friedrich V, Grand-Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1848-1914).
843 (app 19.6.1911, inv 1912) John Douglas Sutherland (Campbell). 9th Duke of Argyll. Governor General of Canada. Married the Princess Louise, 4th daughter of Queen Victoria.
844 (app 19.6.1911) Alexander William George (Duff), 1st Duke of Fife. Governor-General of Canada. Married the Princess Louise, afterwards Princess Royal, eldest daughter of Edward VII.
845 (app 18.9.1912) Yoshihito, Emperor of Japan.
846 (app 12.2.1912, inv 1913) Sir Edward Grey. Afterwards Viscount Grey of Falloden. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.
847 (app 19.7.1913) Charles Robert, 6th Earl Spencer.
848 (app 9.5.1914) Christian X, King of Denmark (1870-1947).
849 (app 22.6.1914) William (Lygon), 7th Earl Beauchamp. Lord President of the Council.
850 (app 4.12.1914) Albert I, King of the Belgians (1875-1934).
851 (app 1.1.1915) Edward George Villiers (Stanley), 17th Earl of Derby. Secretary of State for War.
852 (app 1.1.1914, inv 1915) Edwyn Francis (Scudamore-Stanhope), 10th Earl of Chesterfield.
853 (app 3.6.1915) Horatio Herbert, Earl Kitchener of Khartoum. Field Marshal. Served in the Soudan, South Africa, and World War I. Secretary of State for War.
854 (app 1.1.1916) George Nathaniel, Earl Curzon of Kedleston. Afterwards Marquess. Viceroy of India. Chancellor of the University of Oxford.
855 (app 1.1.1916) Victor Christian William (Cavendish), 9th Duke of Devonshire (1868-1938). Governor General of Canada.
856 (app 1.1.1916) Charles, Lord Hardinge of Penshurst. Viceroy of India.
857 (app 14.12.1916) Prince Albert Frederick George. Afterwards Duke of York, and subsequently GEORGE VI, King of Great Britain.
858 (app 14.3.1917) James Edward Hubert (Gascoyne-Cecil), 4th Marquess of Salisbury (1861-1947). President of the Board of Trade. Lord Privy Seal.
859 (app 14.3.1917) Thomas Henry (Thynne), 5th Marquess of Bath.
860 (app 3.6.1918) Henry John Brinsley (Manners), 8th Duke of Rutland (1852-1925).
861 (app 9.12.1919) Charles Stewart Henry (Vane-Tempest-Stewart), 7th Marquess of Londonderry.
862 (app 16.2.1921) Alfred, Viscount Milner. Secretary of State for War, and for the Colonies. High Commissioner of South Africa.
863 (app 31.3.1921) Prince Henry William Frederick Albert (1900-74). Cr. 1928 Duke of Gloucester. 3rd son of George V.
864 (app 27.2.1922) Henry George Charles, Viscount Lascelles (1882-1947). Afterwards 6th Earl of Harewood. Married the Princess Victoria. Alexandra Alice Mary, only daughter of King George V, afterwards Princess Royal of England.
865 (app 3.3.1922) Arthur James, Earl Balfour. First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.
866 (app 20.12.1923, inv 1924) Prince George Edward Alexander Edmund. Cr. 1934 Duke of Kent (1902-42). 4th son of George V.
867 (app 4.5.1924) Ferdinand, King of Romania (1865-1927).
868 (app 30.4.1925) Edmund Bernard (Fitzalan-Howard), Viscount Fitzalan of Derwent. Viceroy of Ireland.
869 (app 25.5.1925) Alan Ian (Percy), 8th Duke of Northumberland (1880-1930).
870 (app 9.2.1925) Herbert Henry (Asquith), 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith. Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury.
871 (app 1.12.1925) Sir Joseph Austen Chamberlain. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Commons.
872 (app 17.4.1928) Alexander Augustus Frederick William Alfred George Cambridge, Earl of Athlone (1874-1957). Formerly known as Prince Alexander of Teck. Married the Princess Alice, daughter of Prince Leopold, 4th son of Queen Victoria. Governor-General of the Union of South Africa. Governor of Windsor Castle.
873 (app 17.4.1928) James Albert Edward (Hamilton), 3rd Duke of Abercorn (1869-1953).
874 (app 17.4.1928) William Henry (Grenfell), 1st Lord Desborough (1855-1945).
875 (app 11.10.1928) Hugh Cecil (Lowther), 5th Earl of Lonsdale (1857-1944).
876 (app 3.5. 1929) Hirohito, Emperor of Japan. Removed in 1941, reinstated by warrant 22 May 1971.
877 (app 7.6.1929) Aldred Frederick George Beresford (Lumley), 10th Earl of Scarborough (1857-1960).
878 (app 3.5.1931) Edward Frederick Lindley (Wood), Lord Irwin (1881-1959). Afterwards 3rd Viscount and 1st Earl Halifax. Viceroy of India. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Chancellor of the University of Oxford.
879 (app 3.6.1933) Victor Alexander George Robert, 2nd Earl of Lytton (1871-1947).
880 (app 1.1.1934) James Richard, 7th Earl Stanhope and 13th Earl of Chesterfield (1880-1967).
881 (app 1.1.1935) Charles Alfred Worsley (Pelham), 4th Earl of Yarborough (1859-1936).
882 (app 2.12.1935) Leopold III, King of the Belgians (1901-83).
882bis (app 14.12.1936) Elizabeth, Queen Consort (1900-2002). Daughter of Claude (Bowes-Lyon), 14th Earl of Strathmore, K.G. Married King George VI.
883 (app 11.5.1937) George Herbert Hyde (Villiers), 6th Earl of Clarendon (1877-1955).
884 (app 11.5.1937) Bernard Marmaduke (Howard), 16th Duke of Norfolk (1908-75). Earl Marshal.
885 (app 11.5.1937) William Thomas (Cecil), 5th Marquess of Exeter (1876-1956).
886 (app 11.5.1937) Claude George (Bowes-Lyon), 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne (1855-1944). Father of Elizabeth, Queen Consort of George VI, King of Great Britain.
887 (app 11.5.1937) Henry Hugh Arthur Fitzroy (Somerset), 10th Duke of Beaufort (1900-84).
888 (app 28.5.1937) Stanley, Earl Baldwin of Bewdley (1867-1947). Prime Minister. First Lord of the Treasury. Lord Privy Seal. Chancellor of the University of Cambridge.
889 (app 7.11.1938) George II, King of the Hellenes (1890-1947).
890 (app 15.11.1938) Carol II, King of Romania (1893-1953).
891 (app 19.7.1939) Paul, Prince Regent of Yugoslavia (1883-1976).
892 (app 1.1.1941) Edward William Spencer (Cavendish), 10th Duke of Devonshire (1895-1950).
893 (app 11.6.1942) Lawrence John Lumley (Dundas), 2nd Marquess of Zetland (1876-1961).
894 (app 29.10.1943) Victor Alexander John (Hope), 2nd Marquess of Linlithgow (1887-1952).
894bis (app 24.9.1944) Wilhelmina, Queen of the Netherlands (1880-1962).
895 (app 3.12.1946) Christopher (Addison), 1st Viscount Addison (1869-1951).
896 (app 3.12.1946) Robert Arthur (Gascoyne-Cecil), 5th Marquess of Salisbury (1893-1972).
897 (app 3.12.1946) Louis (Mountbatten), 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma (1900-79).
898 (app 3.12.1946) Alan Francis (Brooke), 1st Viscount Alanbrooke (1883-1963).
899 (app 3.12.1946) Charles Frederick Algernon (Portal), 1st Viscount Portal of Hungerford (1893-1971).
900 (app 3.12.1946) Harold Rupert Leofric George (Alexander), 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis (1891-1969).
901 (app 3.12.1946) Bernard Law (Montgomery), 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein (1887-1976).
901bis (app 1947) Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh (b. 1926). Subsequently Queen ELIZABETH II.
902 (app 19.11.1947) Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921).
903 (app 12.3.1948) William Arthur Henry (Cavendish-Bentinck), 7th Duke of Portland (1893-1977).
904 (app 12.3.1948) William George Arthur (Ormsby-Gore), 4th Baron Harlech (1885-1964).
905 (app 12.3.1948) Lawrence Roger (Lumley), 11th Earl of Scarborough (1896-1969).
906 (app 12.3.1948) Betram Francis (Gurdon), 2nd Baron Cranworth (1877-1964).
907 (app 9.4.1951) Gerald (Wellesley), 7th Duke of Wellington (1885-1972).
908 (app 9.4.1951) Hugh William (Fortescue), 5th Earl Fortescue (1888-1958).
909 (app 9.4.1951) Wentworth Henry Canning (Beaumont), 2nd Viscount Allendale (1890-1956).
910 (app 8.5.1951) Frederik IX, King of Denmark (1899-1972).
911 (app 5.12.1952) William Spencer (Leverson-Gower), 4th Earl Granville (1880-1953).
912 (app 24.4.1953) Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (1874-1965).
913 (app 28.6.1954) Gustaf VI Adolf, King of Sweden (1882-1973).
914 (app 14.10.1954) Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia (d. 1975).
915 (app 20.10.1954) Robert Anthony (Eden), 1st Earl of Avon (1897-1977).
916 (app 23.4.1955) Rupert Edward Lee (Guinness), 2nd Earl of Iveagh (1874-1967).
917 (app 7.4.1956) Clement Richard (Attlee), 1st Earl Attlee (1883-1967).
918 (app 23.4.1957) Hastings Lionel (Ismay), 1st Baron Ismay (1887-1965).
919 (app 23.4.1957) Michael Guy Percival (Willoughby), 11th Baron Middleton (1887-1970).
919bis (app 25.3.1958) Juliana, Queen of the Netherlands (1909-2004).
920 (app 26.7.1958) Charles Philip Arthur George, Prince of Wales (b. 1948).
921 (app 23.4.1959) William Joseph (Slim), 1st Viscount Slim of Yarralumla (1891-1970).
922 (app 23.4.1959) Hugh Algernon (Percy), 10th Duke of Northumberland (1914-88).
923 (app 29.5.1959) Olav V, King of Norway (1903-91).
924 (app 23.4.1960) William (Pleydell-Bouverie), 7th Earl of Radnor (1895-1968).
925 (app 23.4.1960) Edward Kenelm (Digby), 11th Baron Digby (1894-1964).
926 (app 2.5.1962) John de Vere (Loder), 2nd Baron Wakehurst (1895-1970).
927 (app 14.5.1963) Baudouin I, King of the Belgians (1930-93).
928 (app 9.7.1963) Paul I, King of the Hellenes (1901-64).
929 (app 16.9.1963) Gerald Walter Robert Templer (1898-1979).
930 (app 10.4.1964) Albert Victor (Alexander), 1st Earl Alexander of Hillsborough (1885-1965).
931 (app 10.4.1964) Charles John (Lyttelton), 10th Viscount Cobham (1909-77).
932 (app 23.4.1965) Basil Stanlake (Brooke), 1st Viscount Brookeborough (1888-1973).
933 (app 23.4.1965) Edward Ettindene (Bridges), 1st Baron Bridges (1892-1969).
934 (app 23.4.1968) Derek (Heathcoat Amory), 1st Viscount Amory (1899-1981).
935 (app 23.4.1968) William Philip (Sidney), 1st Viscount De L'Isle (1909-91).
936 (app 10.2.1969) Richard Gardiner (Casey), Baron Casey of Berwick (1890-1976).
937 (app 23.4.1969) Alexander Francis St Vincent (Baring), 6th Baron Ashburton (1898-1991).
938 (app 23.4.1970) Francis Oliver (Lyttelton), 1st Viscount Chandos (1893-1972).
939 (app 23.4.1970) Cameron Fromanteel (Cobbold), 1st Baron Cobbold (1904-87).
940 (app 23.4.1970) Edmund Castell Bacon, 13th Bart (1903-1982).
941 (app 23.4.1970) Sir Cennyedd George Traherne (1910-95).
942 (app 23.4.1971) Geoffrey Noel (Waldegrave), 12th Earl Waldegrave (1905-95).
943 (app 23.4.1971) Francis Aunger (Pakenham), 7th Earl of Longford (1905-2001)
944 (app 23.4.1971) Richard Austen (Butler), Baron Butler of Saffron Walden (1902-82).
945 (app 24.4.1972) Hervey (Rhodes), Baron Rhodes (1895-1987).
946 (app 24.4.1972) Evelyn (Baring), 1st Baron Howick of Glendale (1903-73).
947 (app 24.4.1972) Charles Garrett Ponsonby (Moore), 11th Earl of Drogheda (1910-89).
948 (app 13.6.1972) Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg (b. 1921).
949 (app 23.4.1974) Edward Arthur Alexander (Shackleton), Baron Shackleton (1911-94).
950 (app 23.4.1974) Humphrey (Trevelyan), Baron Trevelyan (1905-85).
951 (app 23.4.1974) John Henry Guy (Nevill), 5th Marquess of Abergavenny (1914-2000)
952 (app 23.4.1976) James Harold (Wilson), Baron Wilson of Rievaux (1916-95). Prime Minister.
953 (app 23.4.1976) Hugh Denis Charles (FitzRoy), 11th Duke of Grafton (b. 1919).
954 (app 23.4.1977) George Rowland Stanley (Baring), 3rd Earl of Cromer (1918-91).
955 (app 23.4.1977) Samuel Charles (Elworthy), Baron Elworthy (1911-93).
956 (app 23.4.1979) Henry Cecil John (Hunt), Baron Hunt (1910-98). Mountaineer.
957 (app 23.4.1979) Paul Meerna Caedwalla Hasluck (1905-93). Governor General of Australia 1969-74.
957bis (app 15.5.1979) Margarethe II, Queen of Denmark (b. 1940).
958 (app 21.4.1980) Sir Keith Jacka Holyoake (1904-83). Prime Minister of New Zealand 1960-72, Governor-General 1977-80.
959 (app 21.4.1980) Sir Richard Amyatt Hull (1907-89). Chief of the Imperial General Staff 1961-65.
960 (app 22.4.1983) Miles Francis Stapleton (FitzAlan Howard), 17th Duke of Norfolk (1915-2002).
961 (app 22.4.1983) Adm. Terence Thornton (Lewin), Baron Lewin (1920-99).
962 (app 22.4.1983) Gordon William Humphreys (Richardson), Baron Richardson of Duntisbourne (b. 1915). Governor of the Bank of England 1973-83.
963 (app 25.5.1983) Carl XVI Gustaf, King of Sweden (b. 1946).
964 (app 23.4.1985) Oswald Constantine John (Phipps), 4th Marquess of Normanby (1912-94).
965 (app 23.4.1985) Peter Alexander Rupert (Carrington), 6th Baron Carrington (b. 1919).
966 (app 9.10.1985) Edward, Duke of Kent (b. 1935).
967 (app 23.4.1987) Leonard James (Callaghan), Baron Callaghan of Cardiff (1912-2005). Prime Minister 1976-79.
968 (app 21.4.1988) Philip William Bryce (Lever), 3rd Viscount Leverhulme (1915-2000).
969 (app 21.4.1988) Quinton McGarel (Hogg), Baron Hailsham of St Marylebone (1907-2001).
970 (app 17.10.1988) Juan Carlos I, King of Spain (b. 1938).
970bis (app 28.6.1989) Beatrix, Queen of the Netherlands (b. 1938).
971 (app 23.4.1990) Lavinia Mary, Duchess of Norfolk (1916-95).
972 (app 23.4.1990) Arthur Valerian (Wellesley), 8th Duke of Wellington (b. 1915).
973 (app 23.4.1990) Edwin Noel Westby (Bramall), Baron Bramall (b. 1923). Chief of the General Staff 1979-82.
974 (app 24.4.1992) Edward Richard George Heath (1916-2005). Prime Minister 1970-74.
975 (app 24.4.1992) Matthew White (Ridley), 4th Viscount Ridley (b. 1925). Lord Stewart of the Household.
976 (app 24.4.1992) John Davan (Sainsbury), Baron Sainsbury of Preston Candover (b. 1927).
976bis (app 23.4.1994) Princess Anne, The Princess Royal (b. 1950).
977 (app 23.4.1994) Sir Ninian Martin Stephen (b. 1923). Governor-General of Australia 1982-89.
978 (app 23.4.1994) Robert (Leigh-Pemberton), Baron Kingsdown (b. 1927).
979 (app 23.4.1994) John Francis Harcourt (Baring), 7th Baron Ashburton (b. 1928).
980 (app 22.4.1995) Margaret Hilda (Thatcher), Baroness Thatcher, OM (b. 1925). Prime Minister of the UK 1979-90.
981 (app 22.4.1995) Edmund Percival Hillary, KBE ONZ (b. 1919).
982 (app 23.4.1996) Andrew Robert Buxton (Cavendish), 11th Duke of Devonshire (1920-2004).
983 (app 23.4.1996) Timothy James Alan Colman (b. 1929).
984 (app 23.4.1996) Richard Alexander Walter George, Duke of Gloucester (b. 1944).
985 (app 26.5.1998) Akihito, Emperor of Japan (b. 1933).
986 (app 23.4.1999) James (Hamilton), 5th Duke of Abercorn (b. 1934).
987 (app 23.4.1999) Erskine William Gladstone of Fasque and and Balfour, 7th Bart (b. 1925).
988 (app 23.4.2001) Peter Anthony, Baron Inge (b. 1935). Chief of the General Staff 1992-94.
989 (app 23.4.2001) Sir Anthony Arthur Acland (b. 1930).
990 (app 31.5.2001) King Harald V of Norway (b. 1937).
990bis (app 23.4.2003) Princess Alexandra, the Hon Lady Ogilvy (b. 1936)
991 (app 23.4.2003) Gerald Cavendish, 6th Duke of Westminster, OBE (b. 1951)
992 (app 23.4.2003) Frederick Edward Robin Butler, Baron Butler of Brockwell, GCB, CVO (b. 1938)
993 (app 23.4.2003) John Morris, Baron Morris of Aberavon, PC, QC (b. 1931).
994 (app 23.4.2005) Thomas Henry Bingham, The Lord Bingham of Cornhill, PC (b. 1933). Former Lord Chief Justice of England.
995 (app 23.4.2005) John Major, CH, PC (b. 1943). Former Prime Minister.
996 (app 23.4.2005) Lady Mary Soames (b. 1922, daughter of Sir Winston Churchill, n. 912).
997 (app 23.4.2006) HRH The Duke of York (b. 1960).
998 (app 23.4.2006) HRH The Earl of Wessex (b. 1964).

príncipe de gales


999 (2008)  Richard Luce, Baron Luce (b. 1936); Former Lord Chamberlain and Governor of Gibraltar.
1000 (2008)   Prince William of Wales (b. 1982);  Duke of Cambridge.
1001 (2008) Sir Thomas Dunne (b. 1933); Former Lord Lieutenant of Herefordshire and of Worcestershire.
1002 (2011) Nicholas Phillips, Baron Phillips of Worth Matravers (b. 1938); Former Lord Chief Justice and President of the Supreme Court.
1003 (2011) Michael Boyce, Baron Boyce (b. 1943); Former Chief of Defence Staff
1004 (2013) Marshal of the Royal Air Force Jock Stirrup, Baron Stirrup (b. 1949);  Former Chief of Defence Staff
1005 (2014) Eliza Manningham-Buller, Baroness Manningham-Buller (b. 1948);  Former Director-General of MI5
1006 (2014) Mervyn King, Baron King of Lothbury (b. 1948) Former Governor of the Bank of England
1007 (2016) Charles Kay-Shuttleworth, 5th Baron Shuttleworth(b. 1948)Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire
1008     (2016) Sir David Brewer (b. 1940)Lord Lieutenant of Greater London and former Lord Mayor of London
1009 (2017) Felipe VI, King of Spain (b. 1968)
1010 (2018)Lady Mary Fagan (b. 1939) Former Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire
1011 (2018)Alan Brooke, 3rd Viscount Brookeborough( b. 1952)Personal Lord in Waiting to The Queen and Lord Lieutenant of Fermanagh
1012 (2018) Willem-Alexander, King of the Netherlands( b. 1967)
1013 (2019)Lady Mary Peters (b. 1939)Former Lord Lieutenant of Belfast
1014 (2019) Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury (b. 1946) Former Leader of the House of Lords
L.11          (2022) Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall (b. 1947)
1015 (2022) Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos (b. 1954); Former Leader of the House of Lords
1016 (2022) Sir Tony Blair (b. 1953); Prime Minister 1997–2007





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