The first women in the House of Lords took their seats in 1958, forty years after women were granted the right to stand as MPs in the House of Commons. These were life peeresses appointed by the Prime Minister, although countesses had appeared in medieval times.
Female hereditary peers were able to sit in the Lords from 1963. Female Church of England bishops have been sitting as Lords Spiritual since 2015, although abbesses had appeared in mediaeval times.
As of December 2022[update], women make up about 29 per cent of the members of the Lords, which compares with about 35 per cent of the members of the Commons.
History
The exclusion of women from Parliament is relatively modern. Gurdon, in his "Antiquities of Parliament," says that "ladies of birth and quality sat in council with the Saxon Witas". In Wighfred's great council at Becconfeld in A.D. 694, abbesses sat and deliberated. Five of them signed decrees of that council along with the king, bishops, and nobles.
During the reigns of Henry III and Edward I, four abbesses, were summoned to Parliament. These were the abbesses of Shaftesbury, Barking, Winchester, and Wilton.
In a ceremony borrowed from Marguerite of Angouleme's creation as Duke of Berry in 1517, King Henry VIII made Anne Boleyn Marquis of Pembroke in her own right. This entitled her to sit in the House of Lords.[1]
Countesses
When a peer had no sons, but only daughters they were co-heiresses and could be countesses in their own right. In the 35th year of Edward III's reign countesses were summoned to Parliament by writ: Mary, Countess of Norfolk; Eleanor, Countess of Ormonde; Anne, Lady de Spenser; Phillippe, Countess of March; Joanna, Lady Fitzwalter; Agneta and Mary, Countesses of Pembroke; Margaret, Lady de Roos; Matilda, Countess of Oxford,; and Catherine, Countess of Athol. [2] Although peerages had long been created for and inherited by women, peeresses were later excluded from the House of Lords.
The Life Peerages Act 1958 made possible the creation of peerages for life, in order to address the declining number of active members.[5] Women were immediately eligible and four were among the first life peers appointed, including Baroness Wootton of Abinger, who was the first woman to be appointed,[6] and Baroness Swanborough, who was the first to take her seat.[7] However, hereditary peeresses continued to be excluded until the passage of the Peerage Act 1963;[8] the first to take her seat was Baroness Strange of Knokin.[6]
Since the passage of the House of Lords Act 1999,[9] hereditary peeresses remain eligible for election to the Upper House. Five were elected in 1999 among the 92 hereditary peers who continued to sit. Of these, three have since died, and the other two retired in 2014 and 2020. (Margaret of Mar, 31st Countess of Mar was the last remaining female hereditary peer in the Lords when she retired). All of these were replaced by male hereditary peers in by-elections.[10][11]
Following a change to the law in 2014 to allow women to be ordained bishops, the Lords Spiritual (Women) Act 2015 was passed, which provides that whenever a vacancy arises among the Lords Spiritual during the ten years following the Act coming into force, the vacancy has to be filled by a woman, if one is eligible. This does not apply to the five bishops who sit by right (one of whom is female, as of 2020[update]).
Compared with the House of Commons, women make up slightly fewer of the total members of the Lords: 220 out of 650 (34 per cent) members of the Commons were women as of October 2020,[17] up from 32 per cent after the 2017 General Election.[18]
Uberoi, Elise; Burton, Matthew; Tunnicliffe, Richard; Danechi, Shadi; Bolton, Paul (6 October 2022). Women in Politics and Public Life (Report). House of Commons Library.