In the early history of the
Parliament of England, the Lords Spiritual—including the
abbots—outnumbered the Lords Temporal. Between 1536 and 1540, however, King Henry VIII
dissolved the monasteries, thereby removing the seats of the abbots. For the first time, and from then on, the Lords Spiritual formed a minority in the House of Lords. In addition to the 21 older dioceses (including four in Wales), Henry VIII created six new ones, of which five survived (see
Historical development of Church of England dioceses); the Bishops of the Church of England were excluded in 1642 but regained their seats following the
Stuart Restoration; from then until the early 19th century no new sees were created, and the number of Lords Spiritual remained at 26. Bishops, abbots, and priors of the
Church of Scotland historically sat in the
Parliament of Scotland. Laymen acquired the monasteries in 1560, following the
Scottish Reformation, and therefore those sitting as "abbots" and "priors" were all laymen after that time. Bishops of the Church of Scotland continued to sit, regardless of their religious conformity. Roman Catholic clergy were excluded in 1567, but
Episcopal bishops continued to sit until they too were excluded in 1638. The bishops regained their seats following the
Restoration, but were again excluded in 1689, following the final abolition of diocesan bishops and the permanent establishment of the Church of Scotland as Presbyterian. There are no longer
bishops in the Church of Scotland, and that church has never sent any clergy to sit in the House of Lords at Westminster. Bishops and archbishops of the
Catholic Church sat in the
Irish House of Lords as Lords Spiritual from the 13th to 16th centuries; they typically numbered 22, four archbishops and eighteen bishops. After the
Reformation (1530s–40s) their place was taken by
Church of Ireland clerics. They obtained representation in the Westminster House of Lords after the union of Ireland and Great Britain in 1801. Of the Church of Ireland's ecclesiastics, four (one archbishop and three bishops) were to sit at any one time, with the members rotating at the end of every
parliamentary session (which normally lasted about one year). The Church of Ireland, however, was
disestablished in 1871, and thereafter ceased to be represented by Lords Spiritual. The
Bishop of Sodor and Man, although a Bishop of the Church of England, has never been included among the Lords Spiritual, as the
Isle of Man has never been part of the Kingdom of England or of the United Kingdom. The bishop is the holder of the oldest office in
Tynwald (the oldest continuous parliament in the world) and remains an
ex officio member of
Tynwald Court and of the island's
Legislative Council, although this has recently (2020s) been the subject of some controversy. In the early 19th century, as the population of industrial cities grew, the Church of England proposed two new bishoprics for Leeds and Manchester, but the government refused to increase the number of Lords Spiritual. The Church was reluctant to have two classes of diocesan bishops, and decided to combine other dioceses to allow for the new dioceses. In 1836, the first new bishopric was founded,
that of Ripon; but it was balanced out by the merger of the bishoprics of
Bristol and
Gloucester. (They were later separated again.) The creation of the
bishopric of Manchester was also planned but delayed until the dioceses of St Asaph and Bangor could be merged. They never were, but the
Bishopric of Manchester Act 1847 went ahead anyway with an alternative way to maintain the 26-bishop limit in the House of Lords: the seniority-based proviso which has been maintained to this day. ==Politics==