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{{short description|Extinct baronetcy in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia}}
The '''Wishart Baronetcy''', of Clifton Hall in the County of Edinburgh, was a title in the [[Baronetage of Nova Scotia]]. It was created on 17 June 1706 for George Wishart. Emilia Stuart Belches was heir general of the original grantee and was apparently allowed to succeed to the baronetcy. Assuming she did succeed, she was one of only five female baronets - see also [[Bolles Baronets|Bolles]] (created 1635), [[Dalyell Baronets|Dalyell]] (created 1685), [[Dunbar Baronets|Dunbar]] (created 1706) and [[Maxwell Macdonald Baronets|Maxwell]] (created 1682). The fourth Baronet sat as [[Member of Parliament]] for [[Kincardineshire (UK Parliament constituency)|Kincardineshire]]. The title became dormant on his death in 1821.


{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
==Wishart Baronets, of Clifton Hall (1706)==
The '''Wishart Baronetcy''', of Clifton Hall in the County of Edinburgh, was a title in the [[Baronetage of Nova Scotia]]. It was created on 17 June 1706 for George Wishart. Emilia Stuart Belches was heir general of the original grantee and was apparently allowed to succeed to the baronetcy. Assuming she did succeed, she was one of only five female baronets - see also [[Bolles baronets|Bolles]] (created 1635), [[Dalyell baronets|Dalyell]] (created 1685), [[Dunbar baronets|Dunbar]] (created 1706) and [[Maxwell Macdonald baronets|Maxwell]] (created 1682). The fourth Baronet sat as [[Member of Parliament]] for [[Kincardineshire (UK Parliament constituency)|Kincardineshire]]. The title became dormant on his death in 1821.
*Sir George Wishart, 1st Baronet (d. by 1722)

*Sir William Stuart, 2nd Baronet (d. 1777)
==Wishart baronets, of Clifton Hall (1706)==
*Dame Emilia Stuart Belches (d. 1807)
*[[Sir John Stuart, 4th Baronet]] (Wishart-Belches until Oct 1797) (c. 1752–1821)
*Sir George Wishart, 1st Baronet (died by 1722)
*Sir William Stuart, 2nd Baronet (died 1777)
*Dame Emilia Stuart Belches, 3rd Baronetess (died 1807)
*[[Sir John Stuart, 4th Baronet]] (Wishart-Belches until Oct 1797) ({{circa|1752}}–1821)


<gallery class="center" heights="250" widths="210">
Portrait of Sir William Stuart, 2nd Bt. (d. 1777) (Attributed to Alessandro Longhi).jpg|Sir William Stuart,<br>2nd Baronet
Portrait of Emilia Belsches.jpg|Dame Emilia Stuart Belches,<br>3rd Baronetess
John Belsches Wishart, by David Martin.jpg|Sir John Stuart,<br>4th Baronet
</gallery>


==References==
==References==
*{{rayment-bt}}
*{{Rayment-bt|date=May 2012}}


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[[Category:Extinct baronetcies in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia]]
[[Category:Baronetcies]]
[[Category:Extinct baronetcies]]
[[Category:Baronetcies created with special remainders]]

Latest revision as of 20:59, 27 January 2024

The Wishart Baronetcy, of Clifton Hall in the County of Edinburgh, was a title in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia. It was created on 17 June 1706 for George Wishart. Emilia Stuart Belches was heir general of the original grantee and was apparently allowed to succeed to the baronetcy. Assuming she did succeed, she was one of only five female baronets - see also Bolles (created 1635), Dalyell (created 1685), Dunbar (created 1706) and Maxwell (created 1682). The fourth Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Kincardineshire. The title became dormant on his death in 1821.

Wishart baronets, of Clifton Hall (1706)

[edit]
  • Sir George Wishart, 1st Baronet (died by 1722)
  • Sir William Stuart, 2nd Baronet (died 1777)
  • Dame Emilia Stuart Belches, 3rd Baronetess (died 1807)
  • Sir John Stuart, 4th Baronet (Wishart-Belches until Oct 1797) (c. 1752–1821)


References

[edit]