6th Parliament of William III

Parliaments of England
1604–1705
Coat of arms of England
ParliamentDate
Blessed Parliament 1604
Addled Parliament 1614
3rd Parliament of King James I 1621
4th Parliament of King James I 1624
Useless Parliament 1625
2nd Parliament of King Charles I 1626
3rd Parliament of King Charles I 1628
Short Parliament Apr. 1640
Long Parliament (1) Nov. 1640
Oxford Parliament 1644
Long Parliament (2) 1645
Rump Parliament (1) 1648
Barebone's Parliament 1653
First Protectorate Parliament 1654
Second Protectorate Parliament 1656
Third Protectorate Parliament 1659
Rump Parliament (2) 1659
Long Parliament (3) 1660
Convention Parliament 1660
Cavalier Parliament 1661
Habeas Corpus Parliament 1679
Exclusion Bill Parliament 1680
Oxford Parliament 1681
Loyal Parliament 1685
Convention Parliament 1689
2nd Parliament of King William III and Queen Mary II 1690
3rd Parliament of King William III 1695
4th Parliament of King William III 1698
5th Parliament of King William III 1701
6th Parliament of William III Dec. 1701
1st Parliament of Queen Anne 1702
2nd Parliament of Queen Anne 1705
List of parliaments of England
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Robert Harley, Speaker

The 6th Parliament of William III was summoned by William III of England on 3 November 1701 and assembled on 30 December 1701. Its composition was 248 Whigs, 240 Tories and 24 others; Robert Harley, the member for Radnor, was re-elected Speaker of the House of Commons.

The French king had made plain his expansionist aims in Europe with the threat that posed to English interests and public opinion was now in favour of war. The new Parliament busied itself with the necessary preparations. On 9 January 1702 the House of Commons received the text of the Grand Alliance between the King, the Emperor and the United Provinces. Both parties co-operated to fulfil the king's requests and by the end of February the ways and means arrangements were almost complete.

But on 7 March 1702 the news broke that the king was dying and hurried arrangements were made to complete the war preparations. The following day the king was dead and had been succeeded by his sister-in-law, Queen Anne. Under the Parliament Act 1695 (7 & 8 Will. 3. c. 15) Parliament continued to meet for the next two months to enable the new queen and her ministers to finalise the essential war measures. On 2 May 1702 the queen communicated to the Commons the declaration of war by England and her allies on France and Spain.

The parliament was dissolved on 2 July 1702.

Notable acts passed by the parliament

See also

References

  • "The 5th Parliament of William III". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 5 November 2017. - Note:6th Parliament considered the 5th by History of Parliament
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