Lords may refer to:
John Nash may refer to:
Montpelier or Montpellier may refer to:
Kingston may refer to:
Peerages in the United Kingdom form a legal system comprising both hereditary and lifetime titles, composed of various ranks, and within the framework of the Constitution of the United Kingdom form a constituent part of the legislative process and the British honours system. The British monarch is considered the fount of honour and is notionally the only person who can grant peerages, though there are many conventions about how this power is used, especially at the request of the British government. The term peerage can be used both collectively to refer to the entire body of titled nobility, and individually to refer to a specific title. British peerage title holders are termed peers of the Realm.
Enfield may refer to:
Eastern or Easterns may refer to:
Lord High Admiral can refer to:
Nelson may refer to:
Albion is an archaic and poetic name for the island of Great Britain.
Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) is a cricket club founded in 1787 and based since 1814 at Lord's Cricket Ground, which it owns, in St John's Wood, London. The club, formerly the governing body of cricket, retains considerable global influence.
Ian Charter MacLaurin, Baron MacLaurin of Knebworth is a British businessman, who has been chairman of Vodafone and chairman and chief executive of Tesco. He is a former chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, a former president of the Marylebone Cricket Club and a former Chancellor of the University of Hertfordshire.
Peter may refer to:
RVR may refer to:
The Chamber of Peers or House of Peers refers to the legislative upper house in several countries with a peerage:
Lord is a general title denoting deference applied to a male person of authority, religious or political, or a deity.
The House of Lords is the upper house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
Lancaster may refer to:
Mowbray may refer to:

George Philip Cecil Arthur Stanhope, 7th Earl of Chesterfield, styled Lord Stanhope until 1866, was a British soldier, and Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1860 until 1866 when he inherited his peerage and sat in the House of Lords. He was a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Nottinghamshire and was the first president of Derbyshire County Cricket Club.
The Lord House is located in Lords Valley, Pennsylvania.