The presiding officer in the House of Lords (historically the Lord Chancellor, since 2006 the Lord Speaker).
Previously this was the Lord Chancellor. Strangely, the Lord Chancellor now sits as a commoner in the House of Commons and his place on the Woolsack has been taken by the Lord Speaker.
The woolsack is located at the head of the House of Lords chamber.
Château Woolsack was created in 1911.
Langton Lockhart has written: 'Raised to the woolsack'
it is stuffed with Wool and more commonly known as the Woolsack!
When the Lord Chancellor presided over the House of Lords, he or she would occupy the woolsack. Now that the functions of the Lord Chancellor as presiding officer have been removed to the Lord Speaker, it is the Lord Speaker who takes up the woolsack during meetings of the House of Lords. The current woolsack (the original was damaged during the Second World War) is a seat with no arms or back, apholstered with red cloth, and stuffed with wool collected from several Commonwealth countries (to demonstrate the unity of the Commonwealth of Nations).
Sits swirly on its stand
Well if you mean when NOT why Then it is WHEN HE SITS ON THE THRONE Hope it Helped (:
Lone Ranger
It usually sits on a mouse pad or just on a table
The reveran sits with them up top
The lithosphere sits on top of the asthenosphere.