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Encyclopedia > Earl of Saint Germans

The title of Earl of St Germans was created in the Peerage of the United Kingdom in 1815.


Lord St Germans bears the subsidiary title of Baron Eliot, of St Germans in the County of Cornwall (1784) in the Peerage of Great Britain, which has been customarily used as a courtesy title by his eldest son.


The title takes its name from St Germans in Cornwall.


Earls of Saint Germans (1815)

Heir Apparent: Jago Nicholas Aldo Eliot, Lord Eliot


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For instance, the eldest son of the Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry is the Earl of Dalkeith, even though the Duke is also the Marquess of Dumfriesshire, a senior title to the Earldom of Dalkeith.
For instance, the eldest son of the Earl of Devon is Lord Courtenay, even though the Earl has no barony of that name, and similarly the eldest son of the Earl of Guilford is Lord North.
Thus a baron's wife is called "baroness", an earl's wife is called a "countess", a duke's wife a "duchess", etc. Despite being referred to as a "peeress", she does not, however, become a peer "in her own right": these are 'styles', not substantive titles.
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