Katana VentraIP

Lord-lieutenant

A lord-lieutenant (UK: /lɛfˈtɛnənt/ lef-TEN-ənt)[1] is the British monarch's personal representative in each lieutenancy area of the United Kingdom. Historically, each lieutenant was responsible for organising the county's militia. In 1871, the lieutenant's responsibility over the local militia was removed. However, it was not until 1921 that they formally lost the right to call upon able-bodied men to fight when needed.[2]

Lord-lieutenant is now an honorary titular position usually awarded to a retired notable person in the county.

Arranging visits of members of the and escorting royal visitors;

royal family

Presenting medals and awards on behalf of the sovereign, and advising on nominations;

honours

Participating in civic, voluntary and social activities within the lieutenancy;

Acting as liaison with local units of the , Royal Marines, Army, Royal Air Force and their associated cadet forces;

Royal Navy

Leading the local as chairman of the Advisory Committee on Justices of the Peace; and

magistracy

Chairing the local Advisory Committee for the Appointment of the General Commissioners of , a tribunal which hears appeals against decisions made by the HM Revenue and Customs on a variety of different tax-related matters.

Income Tax

Lord Lieutenant of Ireland[edit]

The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland was the head of the British administration in Ireland until the foundation of the Irish Free State in 1922.

Written: '(Title and name), His Majesty's Lord-Lieutenant'

Salutation: 'Dear Lord-Lieutenant'

In a speech: 'My Lord-Lieutenant'

In conversation: '(Title and name)' or 'Lord-Lieutenant'.

Plural: 'Lord-lieutenants', although the form of 'Lords-Lieutenant' frequently appears.

[32]

Colonial equivalents[edit]

In the English colonies, and subsequently the British Empire, the duties of a Lord-Lieutenant were generally performed by the Commander-in-Chief or the Governor. Both offices may have been occupied by the same person.


By way of an example, this is still the case in Britain's second, and oldest remaining, colony, Bermuda, where the Royal Navy's headquarters, main base, and dockyard for the North America and West Indies Station was established following independence of the United States of America. The colony had raised militia and volunteer forces since official settlement in 1612 (with a troop-of-horse added later), and a small force of regular infantry from 1701 to 1783. Bermuda became an Imperial fortress (along with Halifax in Nova Scotia, Gibraltar, and Malta), a large regular army garrison was built up after 1794, and the reserve forces faded away following the conclusion of the American War of 1812 as the local government lost interest in paying for their upkeep. From this point until the 1960s, governors were almost exclusively senior British Army officers (particularly from the Royal Artillery or Royal Engineers) who were also military Commanders-in-Chief (and initially also Vice-Admirals) of the regular military forces stationed in the colony and not simply the reserves. Attempts to rekindle the militia without a Militia Act or funds from the colonial government were made throughout the century under the authorisation of the Governor and Commander-in-Chief, but none proved lasting. The colonial government was finally compelled to raise militia and volunteer forces (the Bermuda Militia Artillery and the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps) by Act in the 1890s (the Bermuda Cadet Corps, Bermuda Volunteer Engineers, and Bermuda Militia Infantry were added at later dates), and these fell under the Governor and Commander-in-Chief, as well as under operational control of his junior, the brigadier in charge of the Bermuda Command (or Bermuda Garrison), which included the regular as well as the part-time military (as opposed to naval) forces in the colony. Although the Royal Naval and the regular army establishments have been withdrawn from Bermuda, the Governor of Bermuda remains the Commander-in-Chief (though most recent office holders have not been career army officers) of the Royal Bermuda Regiment (a 1965 amalgam of the BMA and BVRC, which had both been reorganised in line with the Territorial Army after the First World War).[33][34]

Approximate equivalents in other countries[edit]

In France and Italy, the role of Prefect (préfet in French, prefetto in Italian) is different from that of lord-lieutenant, as the regional and departmental prefects of France are responsible for delivering as well as controlling functions of public services. Similarly to a lord-lieutenant, in Portugal, a representative of the Republic (representante da República in Portuguese) is the personal representative of the Head of State in each of the two autonomous regions of the country, having a limited political role, besides the ceremonial one. In Sweden (as landshövding) and Norway (as fylkesmann), the regional governor is responsible for administrative control functions of services delivered and decisions made by local and county municipalities, as well as representing the king in the region. In the Netherlands, King's commissioners (Commissaris van de Koning in Dutch) are appointed by the monarch, but unlike a lord-lieutenant, belong to a political party.

Ceremonial counties of England

Deputy lieutenant

High sheriff

(Netherlands)

King's commissioner

Lieutenancy areas of Scotland

List of lord-lieutenants in the United Kingdom

(posts created in the 1530s to oversee defence of the coast)

List of vice-admirals of the coast

Preserved counties of Wales

at gov.uk

Process for the appointment of Lord-Lieutenants

Royal.gov.uk: Official Royal Lord-Lieutenants website

Parliamentary Archives, Papers of the Association of Lord-Lieutenants of Counties