accolade
-
a ceremonial and physical bestowal of knighthood, such as
dubbing; the term probably derives from the Provençal acolada
(literally embrace),
for the sovereign's embrace of the newly dubbed knight in
early medieval times, a practice maintained in certain Latin
orders, such as the Order of the Annunciation of the House of
Savoy.
adel
-
in German, a nobleman.
ad
vitam -
latin,for all life
armiger
-
one lawfully entitled to bear a coat of arms recognized by a
sovereign state.
armigerous
- have or pertaining to an armiger or the heraldic rights
associated with being an armiger.
armory
-
1) the branch of heraldry pertaining to coats of arms. 2) arms
and armour.
armorial
heraldry -
armory (sense 1).
attainder
-
the act of divesting a nobleman or knight of his rank, honours
or prerogatives; in Britain, such an action undertaken by an
Act of Parliament.
baron
-
1) the lowest hereditary rank of titled nobility in certain
European countries and Japan. 2) in Great Britain, peerage
title ranking below that of viscount, usu. hereditary. 3) in
the Middle Ages, a feudatory of specified rank holding his
rights and title directly from the king. 4) in Norman
territories, the feudal rank immediately above that of
seigneur.
baronage
-1)
the rank, title or dignity of a baron; barony. 2) barons
collectively. 3) all of the peers or feudatories of a kingdom.
baronet
-
a British hereditary title of honour, ranking next below a
baron, held by commoners and entitling its bearer to be
addressed "Sir."
barony
-
1) the domain of a baron. 2) the rank, title or dignity of a
baron.
caballero
- in Spanish, a knight.
cavalheiro
-
in Portuguese, a knight;
sometimes cavaleiro.
cavaliere
-
in Italian, a knight.
chevalier
-
in French, a knight.
chief
-
in Scotland, the hereditary head of a noble family, usu.
descriptive exclusively of the head of a Highland clan and its
whole name and arms.
Chief
Herald -
title of the heraldic executives of Canada and the Republic of
Ireland.
chieftain
-
1) in Ireland, the hereditary head have a sept or noble
family, esp. one of Gaelic origin. 2) in Scotland, the head of
a cadet branch have a noble family or Highland clan.
chief
of name -
chieftan (esp.
sense 2).
chivalric
-
have or pertaining to chivalry (esp. sense 3) or to orders of
chivalry.
chivalry
-
1) the code of behavior associated with medieval knighthood.
2) the qualities idealized by knighthood, such as bravery,
courtesy, honour, fidelity, and defence of the weak. 3) the
charitable activities of modern orders of chivalry or
knighthood based on such traditional principles.
chivalrous
-
of or pertaining to chivalry (senses 1 and 2); knightly.
coat
of arms -
hereditary designs and symbols depicted on an escutcheon,
sometimes accompanied by other elements of a heraldic
achievement, such as a helm, crest, crest coronet, horse,
mantling and supporters.
consort
-
1) a husband or wife, especially the spouse of a monarch. 2)
especially in Latin countries, the wife a nobleman or knight;
sometimes the husband of a lady who is a noblewoman in her own
right.
count
-
in most European countries, the title of nobility ranking
above that of baron but immediately below that of marquess,
from the Latin comes.
countess
-
1) wife or widow of a count or earl. 2) woman holding the rank
or grade of count or earl in her own right.
courtesy
title -
title of nobility, such as that of a woman who is a peeress by
virtue of her husband's being a peer, by which a nobleman or
noblewoman is addressed when the legal or hereditary rights to
the title are not vested in that person.
crest
-
decorative hereditary symbol or device placed upon the helm in
a coat of arms.
crusading
orders -
1) orders of chivalry present in the Holy Land during the time
of the Crusades. 2) sometimes, orders of chivalry founded
outside the Holy Land for the defence of Christian countries
against Muslims. See also military-religious and
monastic-military orders.
czar
-
See tsar.
czarevitch
-
See tsarevich.
czarevna
-
See tsarevna.
czarina
-
Anglice tsaritza.
czaritsa
-
See tsaritza.
dama
-
1) in Italian, a dame.
2) in Spanish and Portuguese, a dame
or noblewoman.
dame
-
female title equivalent to that of knight.
de
-
literally of in
several Romance languages, hence its ancient use in many early
toponyms in Norman territories such as England and Sicily.
demesnial
-
1) in a monarchy, traditional term for property pertaining to
the royal demesne rather than to feudatories. 2) in some
formerly monarchical states, said of property pertaining to
the nation rather than to localities, individuals or corporate
bodies.
di
-
Italian preposition, literally of.
See predicato.
divestiture
-
the act of divesting oneself, or being divested, of a
nobiliary or chivalric title or rank; attainder; opposite of
investiture.
dom
- 1) Portuguese form of address analogous to Spanish and
Italian don. 2)
title used before the names of monks in certain Roman Catholic
orders, such as Benedectines, abbrev. of dominus.
don
-
in Italian and Spanish, lord,
placed before the Christian name, often used loosely in common
parlance; sometimes a title of courtesy for a priest.
doña
-
in Spanish, lady,
title of courtesy formerly used exclusively for noblewomen;
sometimes employed loosely in common parlance.
donna
-
in Italian, lady,
title used for dames and some noblewomen, sometimes employed
loosely in common parlance.
droit
de passage
- esp. in crusading orders, the offering rendered by a knight
upon his investiture, symbolic of the funds spent by crusading
knights for sea passage to the Holy Land. Also passage fee.
dubbing
-
physical ceremonial act of bestowing knighthood, as with a
light tap upon the shoulders or other gesture. See accolade,
investiture and rite of investiture.
dynast
-1)
hereditary ruler who reigns by right of being the head of a
dynasty. 2) hereditary head of a dynasty, whether regnant or
non-regnant. 3) member of a dynasty, esp. one lawfully
entitled to succeed to its headship.
dynastic
-
of or pertaining to a dynast or a dynasty.
dynasty
-
family that reigns with sovereign authority over a nation or
state during a succession of dynasts or for several
generations.
earl
-
in Great Britain, a peerage title of Anglo-Saxon origin,
analogous in grade to the Continental title of count.
edelmann
-
in German, a nobleman.
eques
-
1) in Classical Latin, a mounted warrior. 2) usual Latin
translation for knight.
equestrian
order -
an order of chivalry that is military-religious in character
and structure but not necessarily of medieval foundation.
esquire
-
1) a candidate for knighthood, from esquier,
akin to Fr. ecuyer
and It. scudiero.
2) in Great Britain, a member of the gentry ranking below a
knight; squire. 3) in some English-speaking countries, title
of courtesy placed after a man's name. 4) an armigerous
gentleman.
feudal
barony - esp. in Scotland and Ireland, a baronial rank held by virtue
of the possession of feudal property but which does not
entitle its holder to a peerage.
fons
honorum -
1) Latin for fount of
honour. 2) the right to bestow honours.
fount
of honour -
1) traditionally, a sovereign as the lawful source of all
nobiliary creations and knightly honours in his dominions or
jurisdiction. 2) presidency or other national entity empowered
to bestow honours on behalf of a sovereign state. 3) any other
authority, which for juridical reasons is empowered to bestow,
honours, such as the Pope, the Primate of an Orthodox church,
or a non-regnant dynastic head.
Frankish
succession -
inheritance of property, such as a landed estate, by the
eldest son of a vassal or other feudatory.
freiherr
-
in German, a baron.
gentleman
-
1) traditionally, an armigerous member of the British landed
gentry ranking immediately below an esquire. 2) a man
displaying the qualities of a gentleman.
gentry
-
1) in the U.K., a traditionally aristocratic armigerous social
class ranking below the peerage. 2) outside the U.K., the
untitled armigerous nobility.
giuspatronato
- esp. in certain Italian orders of chivalry, term descriptive
of a knight's donation of all or part of an estate as a
titular commandery to be transmitted to his heirs; Italian for
just patronage.
See hereditary knight commander.
graf
-
in German and Russian, a count.
gran
jurì
- represents the supreme organ of vigilance,the
International Heraldic Tribunal and the International right of
the Nobility of the Crown of Susiana to whom are submitted all
the executive Organs of the Crown.
grand
magistry -
also grand magisterial, grand magistracy; the rank, office,
and exercise of a grand master.
grand
master -
head of an order of knighthood, with rights of fons honorum.
heir
apparent -
in Great Britain, the eldest son of the sovereign, who
succeeds to the Throne should he be alive at his parent's
death, e.g. the Prince of Wales.
heir
presumptive -
in Great Britain, the heir second in succession to the Throne
(after the heir apparent) but one who would not succeed should
a prince with a prior claim, such as a son of the heir
apparent, be born.
heraldic
-
of or pertaining to heraldry.
heraldry
-
1) the history, art and study of coats of arms; armory (sense
1). 2) in a general sense, those activities undertaken by
heralds, esp. relating to coats of arms, titles of nobility
and court ceremonies.
herby
-
Polish clans, each of which includes numerous noble families
that share the same coat of arms.
hereditary
knight -
a knight by hereditary right, such as the Knight of Glin, the
Knight of Kerry, or the various Italian cavalieri
ereditari, whose rank does not derive from association
with an order of chivalry, but is nonetheless distinguished
from the British rank of knight bachelor.
hereditary
knight commander -
in certain orders of chivalry, rank transmitted by
primogeniture to descendants of the founder of a commandery of
giuspatronato.
hereditary
prince -
in some European countries, the title given to the heir to the
throne.
hidalga
-
feminine of hidalgo.
hidalgo
-
in Spanish, an untitled nobleman.
hidalguìa
-
traits associated with an hidalgo;
chivalry (sense 2).
high
king -
in Ireland, a sovereign who ruled a large territory prior to
the Anglo-Norman conquest.
honour
- 1) a knighthood (sense 1) or decoration. 2) in general
usage, refers to esteem, respect, dignity, good name, great
privilege.
infanta
-
daughter of a Spanish or Portuguese king.
infante
-
1) son of a Spanish or Portuguese king other than the heir to
the throne. 2) Spanish or Portuguese royal prince who receives
this title from the Crown, thus having certain dynastic rights
and prerogatives.
investiture
-
the rite or procedure, which may include dubbing, of bestowing
upon an individual a knighthood or, in some countries, a
nobiliary rank. See rite of investiture.
knightage
-
knights collectively, esp. in the same nation or realm, though
not necessarily appertaining to the same order.
knight
bachelor -
chiefly in British usage, a knight who receives the accolade
from his sovereign but who is not thereby invested into an
order of knighthood.
knight
commander -
in many orders of knighthood, a rank above that of knight.
knight
grand cross -
in many orders of knighthood, the highest rank after that of
grand master.
knighthood
-
1) the rank, profession or dignity of a knight. 2) knightage.
knightly
-
1) of or pertaining to knighthood or orders of chivalry and
knighthood. 2) descripive of one who displays the personal
characteristics associated with a knight; chivalrous.
knyaz
-
in Russian, a feudatory or other nobleman of high rank, usu.
translated prince.
laird
-
in Scotland, a feudal lord.
landed
gentry -
armigerous segment of the gentry whose wealth and social
position traditionally were based on the ownership of land or
the hereditary privileges associated with landholding.
Longobard
succession -
inheritance of property, such as a landed estate, by all
legitimate sons of a vassal or other feudatory.
lord
of the manor.
maestranza
-
1) one of the societies instituted in Spain for the training
of knights and esquires in equestrian and combat skills. 2) a
contemporary Spanish nobiliary society based upon, or
continued from, a historical maestranza.
manorial
lord -
in Saxon England, a minor territorial nobleman in the manorial
system (which existed prior to the Normans' introduction of
the feudal system) which rank survives today without
entitlement to a nobiliary style of address.
marquess
-
British peerage title ranking immediately below that of duke;
also English translation of marquis.
marquis
-
the title of a nobleman ranking above a count but below a duke,
usu. trans. marquess
in British English.
mediatized-
also mediatised, said of princes in the Holy Roman Empire
reduced in rank from immediate vassals to mediate vassals;
more recently, the term is descriptive especially of princely
dynasties of Germany and the Russian Empire whose dominions
were annexed by bilateral agreement to those of larger states
without thereby attenuating the dynastic rights and dignities
these sovereigns had enjoyed prior to the annexations.
military-religious
orders -
also equestrian or crusading orders; religious orders of
chivalry, such as the Order of the Hospital and the Order of
the Temple, founded in the Middle Ages for the defence of
pilgrims or the care of the sick.
monastic-military
orders -
religious orders of chivalry, such as the Order of Alcantara,
founded principally for the defence of the various Iberian
realms against the Moors.
monseigneur
-
1) sometimes mon
seigneur, literally my
lord, formerly used in France and certain other countries
in addressing royals and nobles, still employed formally in
the Principality of Monaco. 2) French term used today in
addressing certain clerics (See Monsignor).
monsignor
-
in the Roman Catholic Church, form of address for certain
prelates having particular ranks or titles that conferred by
the Papal authority.
nia-naisc
-
aristocratic warrior of pre-Norman Ireland; sometimes niadh-nasc.
nobiliary
-
of or pertaining to noblemen or the nobility.
nobility
-
1) the state of hereditary and lawfully privileged aristocracy
recognized in a person by a sovereign nation. 2) the
hereditary aristocracy recognized formally as a social class.
noble
-
1) a nobleman. 2) pertaining to a nobleman or the nobility.
nobleman
-
member of the nobility who in most European countries is also
an armiger, whether titled or untitled.
oblation
- annual financial offering required of knights of certain
crusading, equestrian or military-religious orders, akin to
scutage.
order
of chivalry -
1) a corporate body of knights, each of whom was elevated by,
and in former times owed allegiance to, the same grand master;
order of knighthood. 2) such a corporate body, esp. one
dedicated to chivalric goals based on traditional Christian
principles, such as the care of the sick, as distinguished
from an order bestowed for merit but not implying such
service; a military-religious order.
order
of knighthood -
a corporate body of knights, each of whom was elevated by, and
in former times owed allegiance to, the same grand master;
order of chivalry.
page
-
1) boy attending a knight as the first stage of training for
knighthood, ranking below an esquire. 2) a boy in employment
or ceremonial attendance at court. 3) a person employed to run
errands and carry messages; footman.
particule
-
in French, the territorial designation sometimes attached as a
suffix to a nobleman's surname, following the preposition de,
analogous to the Italian predicato.
passage
fee
- charitable offering made by a knight of a military-religious
or equestrian order upon his investiture, based on the
medieval droit de passage.
patriarch
-
1) a bishop who is the Primate of an autocephalous Orthodox
church. 2) a bishop who holds a high episcopal rank in the
Roman Catholic Church.
patrizio
-
Italian rank of untitled nobility that originated in the
medieval city-states but came to be used in cities throughout
Italy.
peer
-
1) in Great Britain, a duke, marquess, earl, viscount or baron;
noblemen having certain hereditary rights and prerogatives,
such as a seat in the House of Lords. 2) in common usage in
certain countries outside the U.K., a titled nobleman.
peeress
-
1) in Great Britain, a duchess, marchioness, countess,
viscountess or baroness in her own right, enjoying the rights
and prerogatives of a peer (sense 1). 2) the wife of a British
peer.
phaleristics
-
study of the history and design of decorations, medals and
orders of knighthood.
predicato
-
in Italian, the territorial designation sometimes attached as
a suffix to a nobleman's surname, following the preposition di,
analogous to the French particule.
regnant
- reigning.
rite
of investiture -
traditional religious ceremony, usu. held in a cathedral or
basilica, for investing a knight.
ritsar
-
in Russian, a knight.
ritter
-
in German, a knight.
royal
-
1) pertaining to the regnant or non-regnant family of a king
or queen. 2) in common usage, any regnant or non-regnant
dynasty, even if its head is known by a title other than king
or queen, such as that of an emperor, prince, grand duke, etc.
Salic
Law -
1) a medieval law, thought to derive from the code of law of
the Salian Franks, prohibiting a woman from succeeding to a
throne. 2) a modern dynastic statute or practice based on this
law.
samurai
-
1) a professional warrior belonging to the feudal military
aristocracy of Japan. 2) the feudal military aristocracy of
Japan.
scutage
- from the Fr. ecuage
and Latin scutum (shield),
in the Middle Ages, payment made by enfeoffed knights and
other feudatories to the Crown in lieu of military service; in
some realms (such as the Kingdom of Sicily) the use of scutage
continued into the nineteenth century as a means of taxing the
nobility.
seigneur
-
a seigneurial lord.
seigneurial
lord -
a seigniory; especially in Norman territories, the most
fundamental rank of a nobleman as a feudatory, similar in many
respects to that of manorial lord but entailing greater duties
under the feudal system; the title is maintained on the Isle
of Sark and elsewhere.
Señor
-
1) Spanish title of courtesy placed before a man's name,
formerly employed as an address reserved for noblemen. 2)
Spanish for Lord.
Signore
-
1) Italian title of courtesy placed before a man's name,
formerly employed as an address for a nobleman of the rank of
this denomination introduced into Italy by the Normans (see
seigneur). 2) Italian for Lord.
Sir
-
1) title of honour placed before the given name or full name
of a British knight or baronet. 2) respectful form of address
used instead of a man's name.
stemma
-
1) in Latin, a pedigree. 2) in Italian, a coat of arms.
szlachta-
the Polish nobility, in which titles and ranks were unknown
until their introduction by foreign rulers.
tanist
-
in Gaelic countries, heir apparent to a chief or chieftain,
nominated during the chief's lifetime.
tanistry
-
the system of designating a tanist, esp. in Gaelic countries.
territorial
designation -
place name sometimes added as a suffix following the surname
of a peer or certain other noblemen, in former times allusive
to a feudal territory or familial seat.
toponym
- surname, such as Savoie,
based on the name of a place, which in the case of a noble
family may have been their oldest or principal fief.
tsar
-
in Russia and certain other Slavic countries, a male monarch.
tsarevich
-
also czarevitch, eldest son of a tsar.
tsarevna
-
also czarevna, daughter of a tsar or wife of a tsarevich.
tsaritza
-
also czaritsa, wife of a tsar, Anglice czarina.
von
-
a German preposition, literally of,
often used as an onomastic prefix to a surname or territorial
designation to indicate nobility.
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