107. ACT ABOLISHING THE HOUSE OF LORDS (1649) An act for the abolishing the house of peers. The commons of England assembled in parliament, finding by too long experience that the house of lords is useless and dangerous to the people of England to be continued, have thought fit to ordain and enact, and be it ordained and enacted by this present parliament and by the authority of the same, that from henceforth the house of lords in parliament shall be and is hereby wholly abolished and taken away; and that the lords shall not from henceforth meet or sit in the said house called the lords' house, or in any other house or place whatsoever, as a house of lords, nor shall sit, vote, advise, adjudge, or determine of any matter or thing whatsoever as a house of lords in parliament. Nevertheless it is hereby declared that neither such lords as have demeaned themselves with honour, courage, and fidelity to the commonwealth, nor their posterities who shall continue so, shall be excluded from the public councils of the nation; but shall be admitted thereunto and have their free vote in parliament, if they shall be thereunto elected, as other persons of interest elected and qualified thereunto ought to have. And be it further ordained and enacted by the authority aforesaid that no peer of this land, not being elected, qualified, and sitting in parliament as aforesaid, shall claim, have, or make use of any privilege of parliament, either in relation to his person, quality, or estate — any law, usage, or custom to the contrary notwithstanding. Ibid., II, 24.