The nobility represents, or has represented, the highest stratum of a society that is ordered by class. Most societies in history have recognized an elite or noble class. Nobles typically command resources, such as food, money, or labor, from common members of their societies, and may exercise religious or political power over them.
A nobleman was bound to his liege by a sworn oath of allegiance. The liege could be the monarch or another noble, forming a hierarchy, usually with a king at the top. Some of the other strata of feudal society were priests, burghers (i.e. city inhabitant) and peasants (i.e. farmer).
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2 Titles of nobility 3 External links |
Traditional ranks among royalty, peers, and nobles are rooted in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Although they vary over time and between geographic regions (for example, one region's prince might be equal to another's grand duke), the following is a fairly comprehensive list that provides information on both general ranks and specific differences.
Ranks
1) Loss of sovereignty or fief does not necessarily lead to loss of title. The position in the ranking table is however accordingly adjusted. The occurrence of fiefs has changed from time to time, and from country to country. For instance, dukes in England rarely had a duchy to rule.
Thus, any sovereign ruler would be higher than any formerly sovereign, i.e. mediatized, family of any rank (thus, the Fürst of Waldeck, sovereign until 1918, was higher than the Duke of Arenberg, mediatized). Members of a formerly sovereign house ranked higher than the regular nobility. Among the regular nobility, those whose titles derived from the Holy Roman Empire ranked higher than those whose titles were granted by one of the German princes after 1806, no matter what title was held.
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Duke | Duc | Duca | Duque | Herzog | Hertog | Hertug | Hertig | Herttua3 | князь | Kniaz4
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Prince¹ | Prince¹ | Principe¹ | Príncipe¹ | Fürst | Prins | Furst3 | Furste3 | Ruhtinas3
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Marquess | Marquis | Marchese | Marques | Markgraf² | Markgraaf | Marki | Markis3 | Markiisi3 | Boyar4
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Earl / Count | Comte | Conte | Conde | Graf | Graaf | Greve | Greve | Kreivi
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Viscount | Vicomte | Visconte | Vizconde | Burggraaf | Visegreve |
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Baron | Baron | Freiherr | Baron | Baron | Friherre | Paroni |
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Baronet5 | Baronnet |
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Knight5 | Chevalier | Cavaliere | Caballero | Ritter | Ridder | Ridder | Riddare3 | Ritari
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See also: Peerage, British honours system, Royal and noble styles, aristocracy, Chinese nobility, Korean nobility, Byzantine aristocracy and bureaucracy