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

data from the linked data cloud