Burke's Landed Gentry

Burke's Landed Gentry (original title "Burke's Commoners") is the result of nearly two centuries of intense work by the Burke family, and others since, in building a collection of books of genealogical and heraldic interest, which has evolved with ''. The Burke's Landed Gentry, as a detailed listing of key families or other influential figures in the, was first published in 1826, as developed by. Burke's Landed Gentry is a valuable historical record for those people appearing within it, their wider families, and genealogical researchers worldwide.

However, the historical record tends to be a blend of fact and mythology interwoven, both wittingly or unwittingly, over centuries by word of mouth. "Burke's Peerage", once said, "it is the best thing the English have done in fiction." Nevertheless, Burke's Landed Gentry has been valuable for research among notable families.

Part of "Burke's" early success lay in the literary writing style adopted by, the title's founder. As a er, despite his name and origins, John Burke made the material he wrote about the 's great families, which had been based on work by many earlier authorities, more readable than ever before.

John's son,, creator of the "Landed Gentry" (book series), was also a talented writer. Bernard had a flair for flowery phraseology which appealed to some on the "Gothick phantasy" side of the Victorian character. Bernard Burke was a prodigiously hard worker whose volume of output allowed little time for the meticulous checking of modern genealogy. Bernard's typical account of the antiquity of any family was that an ancestor "came in with the Conqueror".

In, were the smaller landowners, and generally had no titles apart from Knighthoods and Baronetcies. s are something of an exception, since they had hereditary titles but, not being members of the, were also considered of the gentry or lesser nobility. The landed gentry played an important role in the of the. The term is still occasionally employed by the publishers of Burke's Landed Gentry, though they explain that their continued use of that term is elastic and stems, in part, from the adoption of that short title for a series first entitled "Burke's Commoners" (as opposed to ).