United States House of Representatives | White House | Irish | House of Lords | House of Representatives | House | Irish people | House of Commons of the United Kingdom | Irish language | Royal Opera House | Massachusetts House of Representatives | Florida House of Representatives | Speaker of the United States House of Representatives | Sydney Opera House | Creative Commons | Australian House of Representatives | Random House | House (TV series) | Provisional Irish Republican Army | House of Habsburg | Minnesota House of Representatives | House of Hohenzollern | House of Bourbon | Pennsylvania House of Representatives | Irish Republican Army | British and Irish Lions | The Irish Times | Notre Dame Fighting Irish football | Little House on the Prairie | House of Wettin |
He was the eldest son of Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester, and made a career as a soldier before being elected to the Irish House of Commons as Member of Parliament for Armagh in 1634 and again in 1640.
He had previously represented Jamestown and County Longford in the Irish House of Commons and served as Solicitor-General for Ireland from 1760 to 1764.
He served four times as a Member of the Irish House of Commons, representing Naas between 1642 and 1648, the combined counties of Kildare and Wicklow in the Third Protectorate Parliament of 1659 at Westminster, Bannow between 1661 and 1666 and Fethard between 1692 and 1693.
It was created in 1797 for Francis Mathew, 1st Viscount Landaff, who had previously represented County Tipperary in the Irish House of Commons.
It was created on 26 October 1724 for William Fownes, Lord Mayor of Dublin (1708) and member of the Irish House of Commons for Wicklow Borough (1704–1713).
Between 1798 and 1800, Lyttelton represented Granard in the Irish House of Commons He succeeded his father as Member of Parliament for Bewdley in 1790 and to his title and his estates in Hagley, Halesowen, and Frankley in 1808.
Agar was returned to the Irish House of Commons for both Gowran and County Kilkenny in 1783, but chose to sit for the latter, a seat he held until 1789, when he succeeded his father in the Irish viscountcy and entered the Irish House of Lords.
He represented Ardee and County Louth in the Irish House of Commons and was created a Baronet, of Beaulieu in the County of Louth, in the Baronetage of England on 12 July 1697.
It was created on 19 February 1777 for Sir Hercules Langrishe, who represented Knocktopher in the Irish House of Commons.
It was created on 26 October 1704 for Richard Levinge, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons and Lord Chief Justice of the Irish Court of Common Pleas.
Two generations later this pattern was repeated when Francis Taylor, who was Mayor of Dublin 1595–1596, was condemned to the dungeons after exposing fraud in the parliamentary elections to the Irish House of Commons.
Sir Henry Hartstonge, 3rd Baronet (c. 1725 – 1797 ) was an Irish politician and landowner who sat in the Irish House of Commons for Limerick; he was a close associate of his powerful brother-in-law Edmund Pery, 1st Viscount Pery.
Westenra was returned to the Irish House of Commons for County Monaghan in August 1800, a seat he held until December of that year, when the Irish Parliament was abolished.
There, when William Conolly, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons and the richest man in Ireland was just beginning to build Castletown House, near Dublin in County Kildare, he met Galilei.
Brother of John Foster, of Collon, county Louth, Baron Oriel, and last Speaker of the Irish House of Commons.
Sir Ralph Gore, 4th Baronet (died 1733), Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, MP for Donegal Borough, Donegal County 1713–1727 and Clogher
John Foster served as Chancellor of the Irish Exchequer and as Speaker of the Irish House of Commons and also represented County Louth in the British House of Commons.