The Whichcote Baronetcy, of the Inner Temple in the City of London, was a title in the Baronetage of England.
It was created on 2 April 1660 to reward Sir Jeremy Whichcote for his services to the exiled King Charles II.
[2] Whichcote, previously Solicitor-General to Prince Rupert of the Rhine, bought the post of Warden of Fleet Prison and, during the Commonwealth, was able to shelter the king's friends and agents in this way.
[3] The third Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Cambridgeshire.
The title became extinct on the death of the tenth Baronet in 1949.