
Councillor Patrick (Pat) John Stannard, Lord Mayor of Oxford (2004). Note the chain of office.
The 'Lord Mayor' is the title of the
Mayor of a major city, with special recognition.
★ In
England,
Wales and
Northern Ireland it is a purely ceremonial post, see
Mayors in the United Kingdom,
list of cities in the United Kingdom, especially
Lord Mayor of London (the ceremonial representative of the one square mile small financial district, but with the trappings of a
viceroy).
In various other Commonwealth and former Commonwealth nations:
★ In
Australia it is a political position. Australian cities with Lord Mayors:
Adelaide,
Brisbane,
Darwin,
Hobart,
Melbourne,
Newcastle,
Parramatta,
Perth,
Sydney, and
Wollongong. See
list of cities in Australia.
★ In
Canada, the only town with a Lord Mayor is
Niagara-on-the-Lake, as recognition of its role as the first Capital of
Upper Canada.
★ In the
Republic of Ireland, the posts of
Lord Mayor of Dublin and
Lord Mayor of Cork still exist and are symbolic titles as in the UK.
★ In the Malaysian federal capital
Kuala Lumpur (Federal territory separated from Selangor, since 1 February 1974) established on 1 February 1972
Rendering other languages:
★ In
Denmark, as the translation of
Danish ''Overborgmester'', it is the title of the highest Mayor of Denmark's capital city,
Copenhagen.
★ In
Germany, as the translation of
German ''Oberbürgermeister'', it is the title of the mayors of large, often county-free cities, whereas
Berlin has a ''Regierender Bürgermeister'' (
Governing Mayor) since that office is simultaneously equivalent to that of a
Ministerpräsident (head of government) of one of Germany's constitutive
Bundesländer.
★ In Finland, the head city manager of the capital,
Helsinki, is customarily given by the country's President the title ''ylipormestari'' [loosely translated: "high mayor"] (which then generally is much more used of the official than ''kaupunginjohtaja'', the title of the office itself), a tradition that resembles closely the Lord Mayoralties in other countries.
See also
★
Lord Provost, the similar post in
Scotland