• Source: 5th Parliament of Great Britain
    • The 5th Parliament of Great Britain was summoned by George I of Great Britain on 17 January 1715 and assembled on the 17 March 1715. When it was dissolved on 10 March 1722 it had been the first Parliament to be held under the Septennial Act of 1716.
      The composition of the new House of Commons represented a massive Whig landslide victory at the election, reversing the pro-Tory landslide of the previous election, with 341 Whigs and 217 Tories. Spencer Compton, 1st Earl of Wilmington, the Whig member for Sussex, was installed as Speaker of the House of Commons.
      George I's administration was largely composed of Whigs, being the party which had wholeheartedly supported his accession, and which now enjoyed the full support of the Commons. Viscount Townshend, Secretary of State for the Northern Department and chief ministerial spokesman in the Lords, emerged as the King’s chief minister. The leader of the Whig ministry in the House of Commons was James Stanhope, Secretary of State for the Southern Department. However, during the first session Stanhope was eclipsed by Robert Walpole, the Paymaster-general and brother-in-law of Viscount Townshend. In October 1715 Walpole was promoted to the post of First Lord of the Treasury.
      The dominance of Townsend and Walpole caused discontent within the party and by early 1717 both had been forced out of their positions. Townsend was replaced by Lord Sunderland, who was also Lord President of the Council and who in March 1718 became First Lord of the Treasury, effectively consolidating his position to that of a Prime Minister. For the next three years George I's ministry would be led jointly by Lord Sunderland and James Stanhope, with Townshend and Walpole in opposition.
      However by 1721, with Sunderland now in the House of Lords, Stanhope dead and the crisis caused by the South Sea Bubble, both Townshend and Walpole had been able to get back into power, Townshend as Secretary of State and Walpole as First Lord of the Treasury in place of Sunderland.
      Before the first session closed, the Septennial Act was passed, lengthening the life of Parliaments to seven years. An attempt to restrict the royal prerogative to create peers was defeated in 1719.


      Notable acts of the Parliament


      Riot Act 1714
      Queen Anne's Bounty Act 1714
      Schism Act 1714
      Security of the Sovereign Act 1714
      Attainder of Duke of Ormonde Act 1714
      Building of Churches, London and Westminster Act 1714
      Septennial Act 1715
      Papists Act 1715
      Bank of England Act 1716
      Queen Anne's Bounty Act 1716
      Papists Act 1716
      Transportation Act 1717
      Indemnity Act 1717
      Religious Worship Act 1718
      Corporations Act 1718
      Adulteration of Coffee Act 1718
      Dependency of Ireland on Great Britain Act 1719
      Royal Exchange and London Assurance Corporation Act 1719 (aka Bubble Act)


      See also


      1715 British general election
      Townshend ministry 1714–1718
      First Stanhope–Sunderland ministry 1717–1718
      Second Stanhope–Sunderland ministry 1718-1721
      Walpole–Townshend ministry 1721–1730
      List of acts of the 1st session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 2nd session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 3rd session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 4th session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 5th session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 6th session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 7th session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of acts of the 8th session of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain
      List of parliaments of Great Britain


      Sources




      External links


      "First Parliament of George I: First session (part 1 of 3) - begins 17/3/1715". British History Online. Retrieved 12 November 2017.

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