The
Representation of the People (Scotland) Act 1868 (31 & 32 Vict. c. 48) was an
Act of Parliament in the
United Kingdom. It carried on from the
Representation of the People Act 1867, and created seven additional
Scottish seats in the
House of Commons at the expense of seven
English borough constituencies, which were disenfranchised.
Two
University constituencies were created;
Edinburgh and St Andrews Universities and
Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities. These each returned one member to Parliament. Two
burgh constituencies received an additional member; these were
Glasgow (raised to 3 members) and
Dundee (raised to 2). A third burgh constituency,
Hawick Burghs, was newly created, receiving one member. Three
county constituencies each received one additional member, and were split in half accordingly; these were
Lanarkshire,
Ayrshire and
Aberdeenshire.
This totaled eight new seats, and accordingly the county constituencies of
Selkirkshire and
Peeblesshire were merged to form
Peebles and Selkirk, returning one member, for a net increase of seven seats.
This was offset by the disenfranchisement of Arundel, Ashburton, Dartmouth, Honiton, Lyme Regis, Thetford and Wells, all English borough constituencies, leaving the overall number of seats in the House unchanged.
References
- Moore's Almanack improved: or Will's farmer's and countryman's calendar for the year 1869
External links
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