Everything about The Titles Deprivation Act totally explained
The
Titles Deprivation Act 1917 is an
Act of Parliament of the
United Kingdom according to which enemies of the United Kingdom during the
First World War could be deprived of their
peerage and royal titles. Its long title was
An Act to deprive Enemy Peers and Princes of British Dignities and Titles. [8thNovember 1917.]
Background
The First World War broke out following the assassination of the heir-apparent to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire,
Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria by a Serbian nationalist in June of 1914. The United Kingdom entered the war against Germany and its allies in August.
The British Royal Family was closely related to its German enemies. Queen
Victoria married the German Prince
Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, whose German titles passed eventually to the descendants of their youngest son
Leopold, Duke of Albany. Victoria's eldest daughter, also named
Victoria, married
Frederick III, German Emperor. Thus
George V was a first cousin of
William II, German Emperor and of
Charles Edward, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. A more distant relative was
Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover, who was descended in the male line from
George III and thus was a Prince of Great Britain & Ireland.
Many members of the German royal families enjoyed British royal or noble titles leading to a call for the deprivation of their titles. In 1915, several Knights of the
Most Noble Order of the Garter were struck off the Rolls of the Order; but
peerage titles can't be withdrawn except by Act of Parliament. In 1917, therefore, the Parliament passed the Titles Deprivation Act authorising the deprivation of peerage titles, as well as princely dignities.
Deprivation of Titles
The Act allowed the King to establish a committee of the
Privy Council, which was to include at least two members of the
Judicial Committee. The committee was empowered to take evidence and report the names of British peers or princes who served in an enemy military force, or rendered assistance to or voluntarily resided in an enemy nation. The report would then be laid before both Houses of Parliament; if neither House passed a motion disapproving of the report within forty days, it was to be submitted to the King, whereupon the persons named therein would lose all British dignities.
Thereafter, a successor of a person thus deprived of a peerage is allowed to petition the Crown for restoration thereof; the petition is to be referred to a committee of the Privy Council, which may recommend whether the petitioner be reinstated or not.
Under the Act, the King appointed to the committee:
The committee reported their findings to the King in August 1918; on
March 28,
1919, the King issued an Order-in-Council depriving the following persons of their titles:
HRH The Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (Duke of Albany, Earl of Clarence, Baron Arklow and a Prince of the United Kingdom)
HRH The Crown Prince of Hanover (Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, Earl of Armagh and a Prince of the United Kingdom)
HRH The Duke of Brunswick (a Prince of the United Kingdom)
The Viscount Taaffe (Viscount Taaffe and Baron Ballymote)
To date, no descendant of the persons who were deprived of their titles has petitioned the Crown for the restoration of the said titles.
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