Honiton (UK Parliament constituency)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Honiton_(UK_Parliament_constituency) an entity of type: WikicatUnitedKingdomParliamentaryConstituenciesDisestablishedIn1868
Honiton was a parliamentary constituency centred on the town of Honiton in east Devon, formerly represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It sent members intermittently from 1300, consistently from 1640. It elected two Members of Parliament (MPs) until it was abolished in 1868. It was recreated in 1885 as a single-member constituency. For the 1997 general election, the town of Honiton was added to the neighbouring constituency of Tiverton to form the Tiverton & Honiton constituency. The remainder continued as the East Devon constituency.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Honiton (UK Parliament constituency)
rdf:langString
Honiton
xsd:integer
4020376
xsd:integer
1081835550
xsd:integer
1868
1997
rdf:langString
Bridget Trethewey
rdf:langString
Marjorie Clark
rdf:langString
R Davison
rdf:langString
Alan Tootill
rdf:langString
Raymond Hicks
rdf:langString
John Thomas Mayne
rdf:langString
John George Hawkins Halse
rdf:langString
William Hickman Smith Aubrey
rdf:langString
A Sampson
rdf:langString
DA Owen
rdf:langString
Frederick W Morgan
rdf:langString
Frederick W Thornton
rdf:langString
GR Sargeant
rdf:langString
Gerald Halliwell
rdf:langString
Gerald Tatton-Brown
rdf:langString
Guy Barrington
rdf:langString
Harry Geen
rdf:langString
Henry Thomas Langdon
rdf:langString
J R Morris
rdf:langString
JM Sharratt
rdf:langString
James Peel Cockburn
rdf:langString
John B Halse
rdf:langString
MH Bacon
rdf:langString
Malyn DD Newitt
rdf:langString
Norman L Stevens
rdf:langString
R Ruffle
rdf:langString
RAC Sharpe
rdf:langString
RL Spiller
rdf:langString
Simon Pollentine
rdf:langString
Stuart Basil Fawlty Hughes
rdf:langString
T Luesby
rdf:langString
V Howell
rdf:langString
Warwick Deal
rdf:langString
William Balkwill Luke
rdf:langString
Honiton in Devon, showing boundaries used from 1983 to 1997.
xsd:double
-6.8
xsd:double
-6.5
xsd:double
-6.3
xsd:double
-6.1
xsd:integer
-2
xsd:double
-1.4
xsd:double
-0.6
rdf:langString
−10.7
rdf:langString
N/A
rdf:langString
−0.9
rdf:langString
+2.6
rdf:langString
New
rdf:langString
−1.9
rdf:langString
−4.2
rdf:langString
+0.9
rdf:langString
+2.2
rdf:langString
+2.8
rdf:langString
+3.3
rdf:langString
+3.7
rdf:langString
+4.2
rdf:langString
+4.6
rdf:langString
+4.9
rdf:langString
+7.4
rdf:langString
+9.1
rdf:langString
+9.3
rdf:langString
−8.5
rdf:langString
+1.7
rdf:langString
+10.0
rdf:langString
+11.9
rdf:langString
+6.1
rdf:langString
−6.8
rdf:langString
+14.8
rdf:langString
−4.0
rdf:langString
−3.3
rdf:langString
−1.5
rdf:langString
−4.9
rdf:langString
+28.3
rdf:langString
−4.5
rdf:langString
−4.3
rdf:langString
−4.6
rdf:langString
Conservative Party
rdf:langString
Green Party of England and Wales
rdf:langString
Labour Party
rdf:langString
Liberal Democrats
rdf:langString
Liberal Party
rdf:langString
Official Monster Raving Loony Party
rdf:langString
Radicals
rdf:langString
Social Democratic Party
rdf:langString
Whigs
rdf:langString
Tories
rdf:langString
Independent Conservative
rdf:langString
Unionist Party
rdf:langString
Ecology Party
rdf:langString
Non Partisan
xsd:double
0.9
xsd:integer
1
xsd:double
1.3
xsd:double
1.6
xsd:double
2.3
xsd:double
2.35
xsd:double
2.6
xsd:double
3.4
xsd:double
6.28
xsd:double
8.5
xsd:double
12.7
xsd:double
14.2
xsd:double
14.45
xsd:double
14.77
xsd:double
15.13
xsd:double
16.37
xsd:double
17.66
xsd:double
18.87
xsd:double
18.9
xsd:double
19.28
xsd:double
20.03
xsd:double
20.26
xsd:double
20.4
xsd:double
20.49
xsd:double
20.79
xsd:double
21.32
xsd:double
22.1
xsd:double
22.6
xsd:double
23.35
xsd:double
24.71
xsd:double
25.68
xsd:integer
26
xsd:double
26.4
xsd:double
26.6
xsd:double
26.7
xsd:double
27.9
xsd:double
28.1
xsd:double
28.18
xsd:double
28.4
xsd:integer
29
xsd:double
29.8
xsd:double
29.85
xsd:double
30.75
xsd:double
31.1
xsd:double
31.2
xsd:double
32.6
xsd:double
33.14
xsd:double
34.2
xsd:double
34.5
xsd:double
35.1
xsd:double
35.8
xsd:double
36.7
xsd:double
37.6
xsd:double
39.1
xsd:double
39.4
xsd:integer
40
xsd:double
40.7
xsd:double
42.6
xsd:double
42.9
xsd:double
43.3
xsd:double
44.5
xsd:double
44.8
xsd:double
46.5
xsd:double
46.6
xsd:double
47.6
xsd:double
49.4
xsd:double
50.6
xsd:double
50.9
xsd:double
52.4
xsd:double
53.77
xsd:double
54.4
xsd:double
54.48
xsd:double
55.04
xsd:double
55.2
xsd:double
55.5
xsd:double
56.69
xsd:double
56.7
xsd:integer
57
xsd:double
57.63
xsd:double
57.78
xsd:double
58.42
xsd:double
59.2
xsd:double
59.48
xsd:integer
60
xsd:double
60.58
xsd:double
60.6
xsd:double
60.9
xsd:double
62.42
xsd:double
64.2
xsd:double
65.8
xsd:double
71.90000000000001
rdf:langString
England
rdf:langString
County
xsd:integer
8
88
110
117
119
123
140
152
166
171
203
214
221
225
226
259
283
294
302
319
332
360
650
747
915
1005
1423
1442
2175
2565
2957
3377
3439
3711
3733
4540
4591
4854
4988
5348
5604
6928
7907
8142
8742
8756
8791
8916
9048
9273
9342
9369
9501
9858
10404
10509
10816
11067
11072
11330
12025
12177
12354
12470
12601
12739
12906
12972
13257
14563
14804
16353
16500
17022
17833
17911
18306
18369
21854
22805
24499
25808
25959
26475
26501
26767
26966
27015
29720
32429
32602
32885
33533
34931
37832
rdf:langString
Conservative Party
xsd:integer
1640
1885
rdf:langString
Honiton was a parliamentary constituency centred on the town of Honiton in east Devon, formerly represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It sent members intermittently from 1300, consistently from 1640. It elected two Members of Parliament (MPs) until it was abolished in 1868. It was recreated in 1885 as a single-member constituency. For the 1997 general election, the town of Honiton was added to the neighbouring constituency of Tiverton to form the Tiverton & Honiton constituency. The remainder continued as the East Devon constituency. Honiton was regarded as a potwalloper borough by the time of Thomas Cochrane. It was notorious for the bribes demanded by its electors, and was therefore a very expensive seat for a candidate to seek election in. The Yonge family of Colyton, patrons of the borough, were almost ruined by representing Honiton on several occasions. Sir William Pole, 4th Baronet (1678–1741) who had twice represented Honiton at great personal financial expense, made an "earnest request and recommendation" in his will that his son would "never stand as a candidate or if chosen will never be prevailed upon to represent or serve in Parliament for the borough of Honiton".
rdf:langString
One
rdf:langString
Two
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
59788