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potwalloper : ウィキペディア英語版
potwalloper

A potwalloper (sometimes potwalloner or potwaller) or householder borough was a parliamentary borough in which the franchise was extended to the male head of any household with a hearth large enough to boil a cauldron (or "wallop a pot").〔Edward Porritt, A. M. Kelley, ''The Unreformed House of Commons: Scotland and Ireland'' (1963), pp. 348, 354〕 Potwallopers existed in the Unreformed House of Commons prior to the Reform Act 1832, and in its predecessors the Irish House of Commons and House of Commons of Great Britain (until 1800) and the House of Commons of England (to 1707).〔
The potwalloper was one of the widest variants of the borough franchise and the tendency over the centuries was for the franchise to be limited, reducing the number of electors.
==English potwalloper boroughs==
From the time of the Restoration, the only English boroughs to elect on a potwalloper or inhabitant franchise were:
* Abingdon (1690-1708, and only if electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Amersham (until 1705; electors in receipt of alms were disfranchised in 1690)
* Ashburton (until 1708)
* Aylesbury (only if electors were not in receipt of alms; after 1804 freeholders living near the town were enfranchised also)
* Bedford (providing electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Callington (required one years' continuous residence. The franchise in this borough was in dispute but both definitions amounted to the same people in practice)
* Cirencester
* Hertford (providing electors were not in receipt of alms; freemen〔broken link?〕 voted as well)
* Hindon (providing electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Honiton (1690-1711 and from 1724, but only if electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Ilchester (from 1702, but only if electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Ludgershall (until 1698)
* Milborne Port (until 1702)
* Minehead
* Mitchell (until 1715, and only if electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Northampton (from 1715)
* Pontefract (from 1783)
* Portsmouth (until 1695)
* Preston (from 1768)
* Reading (until 1708)
* St Germans (one year residency)
* Southwark (until 1702, and only if electors were not in receipt of alms)
* Taunton
* Tregony
* Wendover (providing electors were not in receipt of alms)
==Irish potwalloper boroughs==
There were eleven such boroughs in Ireland until the Union with Great Britain in 1801. Ireland also had seven "manor boroughs", in which only freeholders voted.〔 The potwallopers included Baltimore, Lisburn, Antrim, Swords and Downpatrick, and before Emancipation only non-Roman Catholics could vote.〔Hugh Shearman, ''Modern Ireland'' (1952), p. 30〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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