Knights, baronets and peers of the Protectorate


During the Protectorate period of the Commonwealth of England, the Lord Protector reserved the power previously held by the monarch to confer knighthoods, baronetcies and peerages.

Knights

Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell

Knights made by Oliver Cromwell.
Knights made by Lord Protector Richard Cromwell:
Knights made in Ireland by Henry Cromwell, lord deputy of Ireland.
The following baronetcies were conferred by the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell :
The Protectorate baronetcies, being rare, seem to have been much prized; and that of Henry Ingoldsby raised jealousies.

Peers

Peerages conferred by Cromwell were not likely, any more than his Knighthoods and Baronetcies, to be paraded by their possessors after the Restoration.
Permanent life members were created for Cromwell's Other House and were addressed as "Lord". However with the exception of Lord Eure none of those who already had peerages granted under the ancient regime took up their seats in the Other House. When Oliver Cromwell died, those in the funeral procession who had noble titles under the ancient regime were so called, those who had sat in Cromwell's Other House were called lord, but those such as "George Monck, General in Scotland", who had not taken up their seats in the Other House, were not referred to as lord.
Aside from the Other House members who were known as lords, two peers are known to have been granted by the Lord Protector and a third may have been: