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Lord Mayor of London

The Lord Mayor of London is the mayor of the City of London and the leader of the City of London Corporation. Within the City, the Lord Mayor is accorded precedence over all individuals except the sovereign[1] and retains various traditional powers, rights, and privileges, including the title and style The Right Honourable Lord Mayor of London.

Lord Mayor of London
Incumbent
Nicholas Lyons
since 11 November 2022
StyleMy Lord Mayor
The Right Honourable
ResidenceMansion House, EC4
AppointerElectors: Aldermen
Term lengthOne year
Inaugural holderSir Henry FitzAlan
Formation1189
SalaryNil (pro bono)
WebsiteOfficial website

One of the world's oldest continuously elected civic offices, it is entirely separate from the directly elected mayor of London, a political office controlling a budget which covers the much larger area of Greater London.

The Corporation of London changed its name to the City of London Corporation in 2006, and accordingly the title Lord Mayor of the City of London was introduced, so as to avoid confusion with the mayor of London. However, the legal and commonly used title remains Lord Mayor of London. The Lord Mayor is elected at Common Hall each year on Michaelmas, and takes office on the Friday before the second Saturday in November, at The Silent Ceremony. The Lord Mayor's Show is held on the day after taking office; the Lord Mayor, preceded by a procession, travels to the Royal Courts of Justice at the Strand to swear allegiance to the sovereign before the Justices of the High Court.

The Lord Mayor's main role nowadays is to represent, support and promote the businesses and residents in the City of London. Today these businesses are mostly in the financial sector, and the Lord Mayor is regarded as the champion of the entire UK-based financial sector regardless of ownership or location throughout the country. As leader of the Corporation of the City of London, the Lord Mayor serves as the key spokesman for the local authority and also has important ceremonial and social responsibilities. The Lord Mayor is non-affiliated politically, typically delivering many hundreds of speeches and addresses per year and attending many receptions and other events in London and beyond. Most incumbents make overseas visits under the auspices of the FCDO. The Lord Mayor, ex officio Rector of City, University of London and also Admiral of the Port of London, is assisted in day-to-day administration by the Mansion House 'Esquires' whose titles include the City Marshal, Sword Bearer and Common Crier.

Nicholas Lyons serves as the 694th Lord Mayor (for 2022–2023). The Lord Mayor is assisted as aide-de-camp by Lieutenant Tony Blaney RMR, Sea Cadet Corps, and as Lord Mayor's Chaplain by the Revd Monsignor James Curry.[2]

Titles and honours

 
Sir William McArthur, Lord Mayor of London, caricatured by Leslie Ward, 1881

Of the 69 cities in the United Kingdom, the City of London is among the 30 that have lord mayors (or, in Scotland, lords provost). The lord mayor is entitled to the prefix The Right Honourable; the same privilege extends only to the lord mayors of York, Cardiff, Bristol and Belfast, and to the lords provost of Edinburgh and Glasgow. The style, however, is used when referring to the office as opposed to the holder thereof; thus, "The Rt Hon Lord Mayor of London" would be correct, while "The Rt Hon William Russell" would be incorrect. The latter prefix applies only to privy counsellors and peers.

A woman who holds the office is also known as a lord mayor. The wife of a male lord mayor is styled as lady mayoress, but no equivalent title exists for the husband of a female lord mayor. A female lord mayor or an unmarried male lord mayor may appoint a female consort, usually a fellow member of the corporation, to the role of lady mayoress. In speech, a lord mayor is referred to as "My Lord Mayor", and a lady mayoress as "My Lady Mayoress".

It was once customary for lord mayors to be appointed knights upon taking office and baronets upon retirement, unless they already held such a title. This custom was followed with a few inconsistencies from the 16th until the 19th centuries; creations became more regular from 1889 onwards. However, from 1964 onwards, the regular creation of hereditary titles such as baronetcies was phased out, so subsequent lord mayors were offered knighthoods (and, until 1993, most often as Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE)). Since 1993, lord mayors have not automatically received any national honour upon appointment; instead, they have been made knights bachelor upon retirement, although Gordon Brown's Government broke with that tradition by making Ian Luder a CBE, after his term of office in 2009, and the following year Nick Anstee declined offers of an honour. Furthermore, foreign heads of state visiting the City of London on a UK state visit, diplomatically bestow upon the Lord Mayor one of their suitable national honours. For example, in 2001, Sir David Howard was created a grand cordon (first class) of the Order of Independence of Jordan by King Abdullah II. Recently lord mayors have been appointed at the beginning of their term of office knights or dames of St John, as a mark of respect, by Queen Elizabeth II, Sovereign Head of the Order of St John.

History

 
Stained glass in Guildhall, London, showing Henry fitz Ailwin
 
In 1747, the Lord Mayor proceeded to Westminster Hall via barge on the River Thames.
 
Copy of admission ticket as issued to the Chairman of P & O Navigation Company for Lord Mayor Sir Thomas Gabriel's reception of Sultan Abd-ul-Aziz Khan at Guildhall, 18 July 1867

The office of mayor was instituted in 1189, the first holder of the office being Henry Fitz-Ailwin de Londonestone. The mayor of the City of London has been elected by the City, rather than appointed by the sovereign, ever since a Royal Charter providing for a Mayor was issued by King John in 1215. The title "lord mayor" came to be used after 1354, when it was granted to Thomas Legge (then serving his second of two terms) by King Edward III.

Lord mayors are elected for one-year terms; by custom, they do not now serve more than one consecutive term. Numerous individuals have served multiple terms in office, including:
As Mayor

As Lord Mayor

Almost 700 people have served as lord mayor. Dame Mary Donaldson GBE, elected in 1983, as well as Dame Fiona Woolf DBE, elected in 2013, are the only women to have held the office.

Some lord mayors in the Middle Ages, such as Sir Edward Dalyngrigge (1392), did not reside in London. Since 1435, the lord mayor has been chosen from amongst the aldermen of the City of London.

Election

The lord mayor is elected at Common Hall, comprising liverymen belonging to all of the City's livery companies. Common Hall is summoned by the sitting lord mayor; it meets at Guildhall on Michaelmas Day (29 September) or on the closest weekday. Voting is by show of hands; if, however, any liveryman so demands, balloting is held a fortnight later.

The qualification to stand for election is that one must have served as a City sheriff and be a current alderman. Since 1385, prior service as sheriff has been mandatory for election to the lord mayoralty. Two sheriffs are selected annually by Common Hall, which meets on Midsummer's Day for this purpose. By an ordinance of 1435, the lord mayor must be chosen from amongst the aldermen of the City of London. Those on the electoral roll of each of the City's 25 wards select one alderman, who formerly held office for life or until resignation. Now each alderman must submit for re-election at least once in every six years.

The lord mayor is then sworn in November, on the day before the Lord Mayor's Show (see below). The ceremony is known as the "Silent Ceremony" because, aside from a short declaration by the incoming Lord Mayor, no speeches are made. At Guildhall, the outgoing lord mayor transfers the mayoral insignia – the seal, the purse, the sword and the mace — to the incoming lord mayor.

The lord mayor to be elected in November 2017 was known in April of that year.[4]

Lord Mayor's Show

 
The Doggett's Coat & Badgemen, State Coach and Company of Pikemen and Musketeers of the Honourable Artillery Company) awaiting the lord mayor outside the Royal Courts of Justice on 12 November 2011

The day after being sworn into office, the lord mayor leads a procession from the City of London to the Royal Courts of Justice in the City of Westminster, where the lord mayor swears allegiance to the Crown. This pageantry has evolved into one of London's longest-running and most popular annual events, known as the "Lord Mayor's Show". The lord mayor travels in the City's state coach that was built in 1757 at a cost of £1,065.0s.3d. Nowadays, this festival combines traditional British pageantry with the element of carnival,[5] and since 1959 it has been held on the second Saturday in November. Participants include the livery companies, bands and members of the military, charities and schools. In the evening, a fireworks display is held.

Role

 
Lord Mayor David Wootton and entourage emerging from the Royal Courts of Justice, at the end of half-time during the 2011 Lord Mayor's Show

The lord mayor is a member of the City of London's governing body, the City of London Corporation (incorporated as The Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London). The Corporation comprises the Court of Aldermen and the Court of Common Council; the former includes only the aldermen, while the latter includes both aldermen and common councilmen. The Lord mayor belongs to and presides over both bodies.

As noted earlier, the main role of the lord mayor is to represent, support and promote all aspects of UK-financial service industries, including maritime. They undertake this as head of the City of London Corporation and, during the year, host visiting foreign government ministers, businessmen and dignitaries; furthermore, they conduct several foreign visits of their own so as to promote British financial sectors.

Banquets hosted by the Lord Mayor serve as opportunities for senior government figures to deliver major speeches. At the Lord Mayor's Banquet (held on the Monday after the Lord Mayor's Show), the prime minister delivers the keynote address. At the Banker's Dinner in June, the chancellor of the exchequer delivers a speech known as the "Mansion House Speech", which takes its name from the lord mayor's residence. At the Easter Banquet, also hosted each year at the Mansion House, the foreign secretary addresses an audience of international dignitaries.

The lord mayor sometimes takes part in major state occasions, for example in 2013, the then-lord mayor, Sir Roger Gifford carried the Mourning Sword at Margaret Thatcher's funeral, processing ahead of the Queen and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, into St Paul's Cathedral.

The lord mayor performs numerous other functions, including serving as the chief magistrate of the City of London, admiral of the Port of London, rector of City, University of London, president of Gresham College, president of City of London Reserve Forces and Cadets Association, and trustee of St Paul's Cathedral. The lord mayor also heads the City's Commission of Lieutenancy, which represents the sovereign in the City of London (other counties usually have lord lieutenants, as opposed to Commissions), and annually attends the Treloar Trust (named after Sir William Treloar, lord mayor in 1906), in Hampshire. The Treloar Trust runs two educational sites for disabled children, a school and college.[6]

Rights and privileges

 
The Lord Mayor's Collar of Esses also used as the symbol of the office of Lord Chancellor by Sir Thomas More.

The residence of the lord mayor is known as Mansion House. The creation of the residence was considered after the Great Fire of London (1666), but construction did not commence until 1739. It was first occupied by a lord mayor in 1752, when Sir Crispin Gascoigne took up residence. The official car of the lord mayor is a Rolls-Royce Phantom VI with registration number LM0.

In each of the eighteen courtrooms of the Old Bailey, the centre of the judges' bench is reserved for the lord mayor, in his capacity of chief justice of the City of London. The presiding judge therefore sits to one side.[7]

It is sometimes asserted that the lord mayor may exclude the monarch from the City of London. The legend is based on the misinterpretation of the ceremony observed each time the sovereign enters the City: at Temple Bar the lord mayor presents the City's Pearl Sword to the sovereign as a symbol of the latter's overlordship. The monarch does not, as is often purported, wait for the lord mayor's permission to enter the City. When the sovereign enters the city, a short ceremony usually takes place where the lord mayor presents a sword to the monarch, symbolically surrendering their authority. If the sovereign is attending a service at St Paul's this ceremony would take place there rather than at the boundary of the City for matters of convenience.

The importance of the office is reflected by the composition of the Accession Council, a body which proclaims the accession of new sovereigns. The Council includes the lord mayor and aldermen of London, as well as members of the House of Lords and privy counsellors. At the coronation banquet which followed, the lord mayor of the City of London had the right to assist the royal butler. The same privilege is held by the lord mayor of Oxford; the mayor of Winchester may assist the royal cook. Such privileges have not been exercised since 1821, when the last coronation banquet (celebrating the coronation of George IV) was held.

Official dress

 
Lord Mayor Arthur wearing the state robe over court dress

On formal occasions the lord mayor wears traditional black velvet court dress (old style) consisting of a coat, waistcoat and knee breeches with steel cut buttons. This is worn with black silk stockings, patent court shoes with steel buckles, white shirt with lace cuffs and a large jabot stock. This form of court dress is worn by all lord mayors regardless of gender.

When outdoors, they wear a black beaver plush tricorne hat trimmed with black ostrich feathers and a steel 'loop' for the cockade. This has been traditionally made by Patey's commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Feltmakers for each incumbent lord mayor.

Since 1545 the lord mayor of London has worn a Royal Livery Collar of Esses. However, the collar's origins are not royal, Sir John Alleyn, twice lord mayor, having bequeathed it to the next lord mayor and his successors "to use and occupie yerely at and uppon principall and festivall dayes." It was enlarged in 1567, and in its present shape has 28 Esses (the Lancastrian ‘S’), Tudor roses and the tasselled knots of the Garter (alternating) and also the Portcullis, from which hangs the Mayoral Jewel.[8][9] The collar is worn over whatever the lord mayor may be wearing, secured onto their underdress or State Robes by means of black or white silk satin ribbons on the shoulders.

Robes

As an alderman of the City of London the lord mayor has a scarlet gown and a violet gown, which are identical to those worn by their fellow aldermen except that they are trained. The violet robe is worn at most formal meetings of the Corporation with the scarlet robe substituted on certain days or occasions as directed by the City Ceremonial Book.

For State occasions when the monarch is present, the lord mayor wears a crimson velvet robe of state trimmed with an ermine cape and facings, very similar to a royal earl's coronation robe. It is tied with gold cordons, and dates from the reign of George IV.[9]

On other ceremonial occasions is worn a black silk damask robe trimmed with gold lace of a design exactly the same as that of the lord Chancellor, known as the Entertaining Gown.[9]

At coronations, the lord mayor wears a special coronation robe: a mantle of scarlet superfine wool trimmed with bars of gold lace and ermine. It is lined with white silk satin; they also carry the Crystal Sceptre as a baton of office. After the coronation, the incumbent may personally keep their coronation robe as a token.

There is also a plain black gown, worn by the lord mayor in times of national mourning and/or grief.[9]

List of Lord Mayors of London

See also

References

  • Jenkins, S. (2004). "Royal Coronations and Oxford Mayors."
  • "London (England)." (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed. London: Cambridge University Press.
  • "Lord Mayor's Show." (2002).
  • "The Lord Mayor's Show Saturday 13th November 2004." (2004).
  • "Temple Bar." (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed. London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Stuttard, John (2008). Whittington to World Financial Centre – The City of London and its Lord Mayor. Phillimore & Co. ISBN 978-1-86077-586-4.

Notes

  1. ^ Allan C. Fisher Jr. (June 1961). ""The City" - London's Storied Square Mile". National Geographic. 119 (6): 735–778.
  2. ^ ""Bishop joins birthday celebrations for St Mary's Church, Harrow on the Hill"". 12 January 2017.; Pullman, Nigel (17 April 2020). "Guildhall last night confirmed that William Russell will now remain in office [as LM] until November 2021, subject to being formally re-elected later this year". liverycompanies.info. Retrieved 17 April 2020 – via Twitter.; "Calendar Event". 29 September 2020.
  3. ^ . City of London. Archived from the original on 20 October 2013.
  4. ^ "OBH invited to take part in the Lord Mayor's Show – Old Buckenham Hall". obh.co.uk.
  5. ^ "www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer Lord Mayor's Show 2014".
  6. ^ A more detailed account of the role of the lord mayor can be found in former Lord Mayor Sir John Stuttard's Whittington to World Financial Centre – The City of London and its Lord Mayor (2008 by Phillimore & Co) ISBN 978-1-86077-586-4.
  7. ^ Old Bailey History 13 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "The Lord Mayor of London's treasures go on show as the Mansion House opens its doors". The Daily Telegraph. 24 November 2008. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
  9. ^ a b c d Weinreb, Ben and Hibbert, Christopher (1992). The London Encyclopaedia (reprint ed.). Macmillan. p. 496.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)

External links

  • Official website
  • BBC – Lord Mayor's Show

lord, mayor, london, this, article, about, mayor, city, london, directly, elected, mayor, greater, london, mayor, london, mayor, city, london, leader, city, london, corporation, within, city, lord, mayor, accorded, precedence, over, individuals, except, sovere. This article is about the mayor of the City of London For the directly elected mayor of Greater London see Mayor of London The Lord Mayor of London is the mayor of the City of London and the leader of the City of London Corporation Within the City the Lord Mayor is accorded precedence over all individuals except the sovereign 1 and retains various traditional powers rights and privileges including the title and style The Right Honourable Lord Mayor of London Lord Mayor of LondonArms of the City of LondonIncumbentNicholas Lyonssince 11 November 2022StyleMy Lord MayorThe Right HonourableResidenceMansion House EC4AppointerElectors AldermenTerm lengthOne yearInaugural holderSir Henry FitzAlanFormation1189SalaryNil pro bono WebsiteOfficial websiteOne of the world s oldest continuously elected civic offices it is entirely separate from the directly elected mayor of London a political office controlling a budget which covers the much larger area of Greater London The Corporation of London changed its name to the City of London Corporation in 2006 and accordingly the title Lord Mayor of the City of London was introduced so as to avoid confusion with the mayor of London However the legal and commonly used title remains Lord Mayor of London The Lord Mayor is elected at Common Hall each year on Michaelmas and takes office on the Friday before the second Saturday in November at The Silent Ceremony The Lord Mayor s Show is held on the day after taking office the Lord Mayor preceded by a procession travels to the Royal Courts of Justice at the Strand to swear allegiance to the sovereign before the Justices of the High Court The Lord Mayor s main role nowadays is to represent support and promote the businesses and residents in the City of London Today these businesses are mostly in the financial sector and the Lord Mayor is regarded as the champion of the entire UK based financial sector regardless of ownership or location throughout the country As leader of the Corporation of the City of London the Lord Mayor serves as the key spokesman for the local authority and also has important ceremonial and social responsibilities The Lord Mayor is non affiliated politically typically delivering many hundreds of speeches and addresses per year and attending many receptions and other events in London and beyond Most incumbents make overseas visits under the auspices of the FCDO The Lord Mayor ex officio Rector of City University of London and also Admiral of the Port of London is assisted in day to day administration by the Mansion House Esquires whose titles include the City Marshal Sword Bearer and Common Crier Nicholas Lyons serves as the 694th Lord Mayor for 2022 2023 The Lord Mayor is assisted as aide de camp by Lieutenant Tony Blaney RMR Sea Cadet Corps and as Lord Mayor s Chaplain by the Revd Monsignor James Curry 2 Contents 1 Titles and honours 2 History 3 Election 4 Lord Mayor s Show 5 Role 6 Rights and privileges 7 Official dress 7 1 Robes 8 List of Lord Mayors of London 9 See also 10 References 11 Notes 12 External linksTitles and honours Edit Sir William McArthur Lord Mayor of London caricatured by Leslie Ward 1881 Of the 69 cities in the United Kingdom the City of London is among the 30 that have lord mayors or in Scotland lords provost The lord mayor is entitled to the prefix The Right Honourable the same privilege extends only to the lord mayors of York Cardiff Bristol and Belfast and to the lords provost of Edinburgh and Glasgow The style however is used when referring to the office as opposed to the holder thereof thus The Rt Hon Lord Mayor of London would be correct while The Rt Hon William Russell would be incorrect The latter prefix applies only to privy counsellors and peers A woman who holds the office is also known as a lord mayor The wife of a male lord mayor is styled as lady mayoress but no equivalent title exists for the husband of a female lord mayor A female lord mayor or an unmarried male lord mayor may appoint a female consort usually a fellow member of the corporation to the role of lady mayoress In speech a lord mayor is referred to as My Lord Mayor and a lady mayoress as My Lady Mayoress It was once customary for lord mayors to be appointed knights upon taking office and baronets upon retirement unless they already held such a title This custom was followed with a few inconsistencies from the 16th until the 19th centuries creations became more regular from 1889 onwards However from 1964 onwards the regular creation of hereditary titles such as baronetcies was phased out so subsequent lord mayors were offered knighthoods and until 1993 most often as Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire GBE Since 1993 lord mayors have not automatically received any national honour upon appointment instead they have been made knights bachelor upon retirement although Gordon Brown s Government broke with that tradition by making Ian Luder a CBE after his term of office in 2009 and the following year Nick Anstee declined offers of an honour Furthermore foreign heads of state visiting the City of London on a UK state visit diplomatically bestow upon the Lord Mayor one of their suitable national honours For example in 2001 Sir David Howard was created a grand cordon first class of the Order of Independence of Jordan by King Abdullah II Recently lord mayors have been appointed at the beginning of their term of office knights or dames of St John as a mark of respect by Queen Elizabeth II Sovereign Head of the Order of St John History Edit Stained glass in Guildhall London showing Henry fitz Ailwin In 1747 the Lord Mayor proceeded to Westminster Hall via barge on the River Thames Copy of admission ticket as issued to the Chairman of P amp O Navigation Company for Lord Mayor Sir Thomas Gabriel s reception of Sultan Abd ul Aziz Khan at Guildhall 18 July 1867 The office of mayor was instituted in 1189 the first holder of the office being Henry Fitz Ailwin de Londonestone The mayor of the City of London has been elected by the City rather than appointed by the sovereign ever since a Royal Charter providing for a Mayor was issued by King John in 1215 The title lord mayor came to be used after 1354 when it was granted to Thomas Legge then serving his second of two terms by King Edward III Lord mayors are elected for one year terms by custom they do not now serve more than one consecutive term Numerous individuals have served multiple terms in office including As Mayor 24 terms Sir Henry FitzAlan 1189 1212 9 terms Ralph de Sandwich 1285 1289 1289 1292 8 terms Gregory de Rokesley 1274 1280 1284 7 terms Andrew Buckerel 1231 1237 John le Breton 1289 1293 1298 John le Blund 1301 1307 6 terms Richard le Ranger 1222 1226 1238 Hamo de Chigwell 1319 1321 1322 1324 1325 1327 5 terms Serlo le Mercer 1214 1218 1221 As Lord Mayor Sir Nicholas Brembre 1377 1383 1385 4 terms Sir Richard Dick Whittington 1397 1398 1406 and 1419 4 terms William Sevenoke 1418 Sir Robert Fowler elected in 1883 and in 1885 3 William Russell 2019 2021 2 terms Almost 700 people have served as lord mayor Dame Mary Donaldson GBE elected in 1983 as well as Dame Fiona Woolf DBE elected in 2013 are the only women to have held the office Some lord mayors in the Middle Ages such as Sir Edward Dalyngrigge 1392 did not reside in London Since 1435 the lord mayor has been chosen from amongst the aldermen of the City of London Election EditThe lord mayor is elected at Common Hall comprising liverymen belonging to all of the City s livery companies Common Hall is summoned by the sitting lord mayor it meets at Guildhall on Michaelmas Day 29 September or on the closest weekday Voting is by show of hands if however any liveryman so demands balloting is held a fortnight later The qualification to stand for election is that one must have served as a City sheriff and be a current alderman Since 1385 prior service as sheriff has been mandatory for election to the lord mayoralty Two sheriffs are selected annually by Common Hall which meets on Midsummer s Day for this purpose By an ordinance of 1435 the lord mayor must be chosen from amongst the aldermen of the City of London Those on the electoral roll of each of the City s 25 wards select one alderman who formerly held office for life or until resignation Now each alderman must submit for re election at least once in every six years The lord mayor is then sworn in November on the day before the Lord Mayor s Show see below The ceremony is known as the Silent Ceremony because aside from a short declaration by the incoming Lord Mayor no speeches are made At Guildhall the outgoing lord mayor transfers the mayoral insignia the seal the purse the sword and the mace to the incoming lord mayor The lord mayor to be elected in November 2017 was known in April of that year 4 Lord Mayor s Show EditMain article Lord Mayor s Show The Doggett s Coat amp Badgemen State Coach and Company of Pikemen and Musketeers of the Honourable Artillery Company awaiting the lord mayor outside the Royal Courts of Justice on 12 November 2011 The day after being sworn into office the lord mayor leads a procession from the City of London to the Royal Courts of Justice in the City of Westminster where the lord mayor swears allegiance to the Crown This pageantry has evolved into one of London s longest running and most popular annual events known as the Lord Mayor s Show The lord mayor travels in the City s state coach that was built in 1757 at a cost of 1 065 0s 3d Nowadays this festival combines traditional British pageantry with the element of carnival 5 and since 1959 it has been held on the second Saturday in November Participants include the livery companies bands and members of the military charities and schools In the evening a fireworks display is held Role EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lord Mayor David Wootton and entourage emerging from the Royal Courts of Justice at the end of half time during the 2011 Lord Mayor s Show The lord mayor is a member of the City of London s governing body the City of London Corporation incorporated as The Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London The Corporation comprises the Court of Aldermen and the Court of Common Council the former includes only the aldermen while the latter includes both aldermen and common councilmen The Lord mayor belongs to and presides over both bodies As noted earlier the main role of the lord mayor is to represent support and promote all aspects of UK financial service industries including maritime They undertake this as head of the City of London Corporation and during the year host visiting foreign government ministers businessmen and dignitaries furthermore they conduct several foreign visits of their own so as to promote British financial sectors Banquets hosted by the Lord Mayor serve as opportunities for senior government figures to deliver major speeches At the Lord Mayor s Banquet held on the Monday after the Lord Mayor s Show the prime minister delivers the keynote address At the Banker s Dinner in June the chancellor of the exchequer delivers a speech known as the Mansion House Speech which takes its name from the lord mayor s residence At the Easter Banquet also hosted each year at the Mansion House the foreign secretary addresses an audience of international dignitaries The lord mayor sometimes takes part in major state occasions for example in 2013 the then lord mayor Sir Roger Gifford carried the Mourning Sword at Margaret Thatcher s funeral processing ahead of the Queen and Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh into St Paul s Cathedral The lord mayor performs numerous other functions including serving as the chief magistrate of the City of London admiral of the Port of London rector of City University of London president of Gresham College president of City of London Reserve Forces and Cadets Association and trustee of St Paul s Cathedral The lord mayor also heads the City s Commission of Lieutenancy which represents the sovereign in the City of London other counties usually have lord lieutenants as opposed to Commissions and annually attends the Treloar Trust named after Sir William Treloar lord mayor in 1906 in Hampshire The Treloar Trust runs two educational sites for disabled children a school and college 6 Rights and privileges Edit The Lord Mayor s Collar of Esses also used as the symbol of the office of Lord Chancellor by Sir Thomas More The residence of the lord mayor is known as Mansion House The creation of the residence was considered after the Great Fire of London 1666 but construction did not commence until 1739 It was first occupied by a lord mayor in 1752 when Sir Crispin Gascoigne took up residence The official car of the lord mayor is a Rolls Royce Phantom VI with registration number LM0 In each of the eighteen courtrooms of the Old Bailey the centre of the judges bench is reserved for the lord mayor in his capacity of chief justice of the City of London The presiding judge therefore sits to one side 7 It is sometimes asserted that the lord mayor may exclude the monarch from the City of London The legend is based on the misinterpretation of the ceremony observed each time the sovereign enters the City at Temple Bar the lord mayor presents the City s Pearl Sword to the sovereign as a symbol of the latter s overlordship The monarch does not as is often purported wait for the lord mayor s permission to enter the City When the sovereign enters the city a short ceremony usually takes place where the lord mayor presents a sword to the monarch symbolically surrendering their authority If the sovereign is attending a service at St Paul s this ceremony would take place there rather than at the boundary of the City for matters of convenience The importance of the office is reflected by the composition of the Accession Council a body which proclaims the accession of new sovereigns The Council includes the lord mayor and aldermen of London as well as members of the House of Lords and privy counsellors At the coronation banquet which followed the lord mayor of the City of London had the right to assist the royal butler The same privilege is held by the lord mayor of Oxford the mayor of Winchester may assist the royal cook Such privileges have not been exercised since 1821 when the last coronation banquet celebrating the coronation of George IV was held Official dress Edit Lord Mayor Arthur wearing the state robe over court dress On formal occasions the lord mayor wears traditional black velvet court dress old style consisting of a coat waistcoat and knee breeches with steel cut buttons This is worn with black silk stockings patent court shoes with steel buckles white shirt with lace cuffs and a large jabot stock This form of court dress is worn by all lord mayors regardless of gender When outdoors they wear a black beaver plush tricorne hat trimmed with black ostrich feathers and a steel loop for the cockade This has been traditionally made by Patey s commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Feltmakers for each incumbent lord mayor Since 1545 the lord mayor of London has worn a Royal Livery Collar of Esses However the collar s origins are not royal Sir John Alleyn twice lord mayor having bequeathed it to the next lord mayor and his successors to use and occupie yerely at and uppon principall and festivall dayes It was enlarged in 1567 and in its present shape has 28 Esses the Lancastrian S Tudor roses and the tasselled knots of the Garter alternating and also the Portcullis from which hangs the Mayoral Jewel 8 9 The collar is worn over whatever the lord mayor may be wearing secured onto their underdress or State Robes by means of black or white silk satin ribbons on the shoulders Robes Edit As an alderman of the City of London the lord mayor has a scarlet gown and a violet gown which are identical to those worn by their fellow aldermen except that they are trained The violet robe is worn at most formal meetings of the Corporation with the scarlet robe substituted on certain days or occasions as directed by the City Ceremonial Book For State occasions when the monarch is present the lord mayor wears a crimson velvet robe of state trimmed with an ermine cape and facings very similar to a royal earl s coronation robe It is tied with gold cordons and dates from the reign of George IV 9 On other ceremonial occasions is worn a black silk damask robe trimmed with gold lace of a design exactly the same as that of the lord Chancellor known as the Entertaining Gown 9 At coronations the lord mayor wears a special coronation robe a mantle of scarlet superfine wool trimmed with bars of gold lace and ermine It is lined with white silk satin they also carry the Crystal Sceptre as a baton of office After the coronation the incumbent may personally keep their coronation robe as a token There is also a plain black gown worn by the lord mayor in times of national mourning and or grief 9 The Lord Mayor wearing the coronation robe and carrying the Crystal Sceptre at George IV s coronation The scarlet robe with train The Entertaining Robe Lord Mayor Russell s personal armsList of Lord Mayors of London EditMain article List of lord mayors of LondonSee also EditMayor of London Town Clerk of London City status in the United Kingdom List of lord mayoralties and lord provostships in the United Kingdom Lord Mayor of DublinReferences EditCity of London Corporation home page Jenkins S 2004 Royal Coronations and Oxford Mayors London England 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed London Cambridge University Press Lord Mayor s Show 2002 The Lord Mayor s Show Saturday 13th November 2004 2004 Temple Bar 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed London Cambridge University Press Stuttard John 2008 Whittington to World Financial Centre The City of London and its Lord Mayor Phillimore amp Co ISBN 978 1 86077 586 4 Notes Edit Allan C Fisher Jr June 1961 The City London s Storied Square Mile National Geographic 119 6 735 778 Bishop joins birthday celebrations for St Mary s Church Harrow on the Hill 12 January 2017 Pullman Nigel 17 April 2020 Guildhall last night confirmed that William Russell will now remain in office as LM until November 2021 subject to being formally re elected later this year liverycompanies info Retrieved 17 April 2020 via Twitter Calendar Event 29 September 2020 History of the Mayoralty City of London Archived from the original on 20 October 2013 OBH invited to take part in the Lord Mayor s Show Old Buckenham Hall obh co uk www bbc co uk iplayer Lord Mayor s Show 2014 A more detailed account of the role of the lord mayor can be found in former Lord Mayor Sir John Stuttard s Whittington to World Financial Centre The City of London and its Lord Mayor 2008 by Phillimore amp Co ISBN 978 1 86077 586 4 Old Bailey History Archived 13 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Lord Mayor of London s treasures go on show as the Mansion House opens its doors The Daily Telegraph 24 November 2008 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 11 May 2010 a b c d Weinreb Ben and Hibbert Christopher 1992 The London Encyclopaedia reprint ed Macmillan p 496 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lord Mayors of London Official website BBC Lord Mayor s Show Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lord Mayor of London amp oldid 1132478619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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