fbpx
Wikipedia

Knight banneret

A knight banneret, sometimes known simply as banneret, was a medieval knight ("a commoner of rank")[1] who led a company of troops during time of war under his own banner (which was square-shaped, in contrast to the tapering standard or the pennon flown by the lower-ranking knights) and was eligible to bear supporters in English heraldry. The military rank of a knight banneret was higher than a knight bachelor (who fought under another's banner), but lower than an earl or duke.

Sir Rhys ap Thomas (1449–1525), knight banneret and Knight of the Garter.

Under English custom the rank of knight banneret could only be conferred by the sovereign on the field of battle. There were some technical exceptions to this; when his standard was on the field of battle he could be regarded as physically present though he was not. His proxy could be regarded as a sufficient substitution for his presence.

The wife of a banneret was styled as banneress.[2]

Origins Edit

There were no standing armies in the middle ages (except the military orders). Though modern scholarship has had a lot to say about the varied means by which medieval princes raised their forces, the obligation of a vassal to serve on horseback either in person and (for some) with a contingent raised by his own means is still seen as providing the core of any army of the time.[3] The 'feudal' nature of even this part of the medieval army has been qualified by some, in that many 11th and 12th-century lords gathered under their banners extra knights available for hire for a campaign, men who were disparaged at the time as 'mercenaries'.[4] Even so the 'mesnie' (retained military household) was the elite core of any great lord's following in war and in tournament, and a sign also of his power and dignity. By the early 12th century lords in the field distinguished their personal retinue by a square banner which came to feature the heraldic device associated with their noble lineage.[5] The Old French word for it is 'baniere', derived from the lord's power of command, called in French his 'ban'. It literally meant 'token of authority'.[6]

The idea of the banneret as a distinct and superior category of knight is seen as a consequence of the fact that the great lord who did not possess a hereditary title (like count or duke) found himself on the same social level as the subordinate and dependent knights of his retinue. This became a particular issue in the 12th century, with the growth of the aristocratic tournament culture in north east France and the western Empire. One uncomfortable consequence of this for the untitled lord was the rise in standing of the common knight towards noble status. A solution was to exalt magnate knighthood to a level above that of common knights, and identify it with the banner that a lord could carry, but not a common knight.[7] The first indication of the rank was in the tournament roll compiled after the great royal festival at Lagny-sur-Marne in 1179 where the knights 'carrying a banner' were distinguished from the rest.[8] The title 'banneret' (Latin banneretus, vexillifer; Middle French: banerez) was fully established as a military and social rank by the mid 13th century. Initially the term could be applied collectively to all noblemen qualified to raise a banner (including counts and dukes), but before the end of the 13th century it came to be used exclusively as a senior rank of knight or lesser magnate.[9] The term originated in Francophone aristocratic culture in the later 12th century, but was adopted into other cultures. It was adopted into Flemish by 1300 as 'baenrots', a word explained as from baan (command) and rot (troop).[10] The word was taken into Middle High German as baenritz or bannerheer and was current in the principalities of the Western Empire in the 14th century.[11]

There was in the 14th century a tension between the evolving title of 'baron' as a hereditary dignity and 'banneret' which could be applied to the same lord. It was resolved in part by employing 'baron' for him in a civil context and 'banneret' in a military context, where bannerets could claim a higher rate of pay on campaign than common knights.[12] In the work of the great English antiquaries of the 17th century the banneret is understood as a medieval curiosity though they gave rise to the idea that bannerets were the origin of King James I's order of the baronet. John Selden, however, points out that the "old stories" often have baronetti as synonyms for bannereti and is careful to say that "banneret hath no relation to this later title [of baronet]". The last authentic instance of the creation of knights banneret was by King Charles I to several men at the Battle of Edgehill (1642) including Thomas Strickland of Sizergh for gallantry, and John Smith for rescuing the royal standard from the enemy.[13]

Later history Edit

Whether any further bannerets were granted is debated by historians. George Cokayne notes in The Complete Peerage (1913) that King George II revived the order when he created sixteen knights bannerets on the field of the Battle of Dettingen in 1743,[a] and although his source for this, a diary entry by Gertrude Savile, states "This honour had been laid aside since James I, when Baronets were instituted", which contradicts other sources,[13] a news magazine published in the same year as the battle recorded the honours.[15] Several sources, including Edward Brenton (1828) and William James (1827),[16][17] record that captains Trollope and Fairfax and were honoured with bannerets by King George III for their actions during the Battle of Camperdown (1797). However, these awards were never recorded in The London Gazette and is much more likely that these knighthoods, which first appear in formal records in December 1797 without their nature being specified,[18] were as knights bachelor.[b]

Though the title had long fallen into disuse, bannerets and their sons continued to be listed in the table of precedence until at least as late as 1870; those created by the sovereign under the Royal Standard in wartime rank above baronets, whereas those knights banneret not so created by the sovereign in person rank directly below baronets.[20]

On page 364 of the 1990 edition of Dod's Parliamentary Companion, its table of precedence, which includes various long-vacant dignities, has in position 99 "Knights Banneret, created under the royal standard in open war, the Sovereign or the Prince of Wales being present" and in position 104 "Knights Banneret, provided they be not made in the manner described at No. 99. This position was allotted to such as were created by the commanders of armies in the king's name on the open field of battle." The former class of Knights Banneret thus rank below Judges of the High Court of Justice and above younger sons of viscounts and the latter class below baronets and above "Knights of the Thistle, when below the degree of a baron".

Royal Air Force Edit

Following the creation of the Royal Air Force (RAF) in 1918, unique names were devised for most of its commissioned officer ranks. This was reputedly a result of an objection by the Royal Navy to other services adopting any name for a commissioned rank that was already used by the RN. In addition, the RAF ranks also served to distinguish the new service from the British Army and Royal Navy, and to identify individual officers as belonging to the RAF.

"Banneret" was among the names proposed for the RAF equivalent to a naval captain or an army colonel.[21] However, this proposal was rejected and the name Group Captain was instead adopted.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ King George II's 16 bannerets were: the Dukes of Cumberland and Marlborough; the Earls of Stair, Dunmore, Crawford, Rothes and Albemarle; and Generals Honywood, Hawley, Cope, Ligonier, Campbell, Bland, Onslow, Pulteney and Huske.[14]
  2. ^ "When the fleet returned to the Nore [George III] signified his intention of visiting it there, and Trollope, as the senior captain, was appointed to the Royal Charlotte yacht to bring him from Greenwich. The king accordingly embarked on 30 Oct.; but the wind came dead foul, and after two days the yacht had got no further than Gravesend. He therefore gave up the idea and returned to Greenwich, knighting Trollope on the quarterdeck of the Royal Charlotte before he landed. The accolade conferred 'under the royal standard' was spoken of as making Trollope a knight banneret, and was apparently so intended by the king; but it is said to have been afterwards decided [by the Privy Council], as a question of precedence, that a knight banneret could only be made on the field where a battle had actually been fought; or presumably, in the case of a naval officer, on the quarterdeck of one of the ships actually engaged".[19]
  1. ^ Neave & Turner 1930, p. 182
  2. ^ "History | ISKB". www.iskb.co.uk. Retrieved 21 January 2021. The wife of a Banneret was called a Banneress
  3. ^ Crouch, David (2020). "Europe, 1000–1300". In Curry, Anne; Graff, David A. (eds.). War and the Medieval World. The Cambridge History of War. Vol. ii. Cambridge: CUP. pp. 243–65. ISBN 9781108901192.
  4. ^ France, John (2008). "Introduction". Mercenaries and Paid Men: the Mercenary Identity in the Middle Ages. Leiden: Brill. pp. 1–13. ISBN 9789047432616.
  5. ^ J-F. Nieus, ‘L’invention des armoiries en contexte. Haute aristocratie, identités familiales et culture chevaleresque entre France et Angleterre, 1100-1160, Journal des Savants (2017/1), 124-5.
  6. ^ Dictionnaire de l'ancien français: le moyen âge (Paris: Larousse, 1997), sub 'ban'.
  7. ^ David Crouch, The Image of Aristocracy in Britain before 1300 (London: Routledge, 1992), pp. 114-16.
  8. ^ History of William Marshal ed. A.J. Holden, 3 vols, Anglo-Norman Text Society, Occasional Publications Series, 4-6 (London: 2002-6), iii, pp. 33-4.
  9. ^ Crouch, Image of Aristocracy, 116-17.
  10. ^ Mario Damen, 'Heren met banieren. De baanroten van Brabant in de vijftiende eeuw' in, Boorgondië voorbij. De Nederlanden 1250-1650, ed. Mario Damen and Louis Sicking (Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren, 2010), 139-58.
  11. ^ H. Denessen, "De Gelderese bannerheren in de vijftiende eeuw", Virtus, 20 (2013), 13–16.
  12. ^ Chris Given-Wilson, The English Nobility in the Late Middle Ages : The Fourteenth-Century Political Community (London: Routledge, 1987), pp. 60-62.
  13. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, pp. 353–354.
  14. ^ Cokayne 1913, pp. 572–573.
  15. ^ Shaw 1743, p. 356.
  16. ^ Brenton 1823, p. 356.
  17. ^ James 1827, p. 78.
  18. ^ "No. 14075". The London Gazette. 19 December 1797. p. 1210.
  19. ^ Laughton 1899, p. 248, Marshall 1823, p. 153
  20. ^ The Royal Kalendar ... for the year 1870, p. 10
  21. ^ Woodward, p. 364.

References Edit

  • Brenton, Edward Pelham (1823), The Naval History of Great Britain, vol. I, London: Henry Colburn, pp. 356
  • Cokayne, George Edward (1913), Gibbs, Gibbs; Doubleday, H. Arthur (eds.), The Complete Peerage, vol. III, London, pp. 572–573{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • James, William (1827), , archived from the original on 27 May 2013, retrieved 26 March 2013
  • Laughton, John Knox (1899). "Trollope, Henry" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 246–248.
  • Marshall, John (1823), Royal Naval Biography, vol. 1, p. 153
  • Neave, F.G.; Turner, Grange (1930), Mozley and Whiteley's Law Dictionary, London: Butterworth & Co, p. 182
  • Selden, John (1672), Titles of honor, London: Printed by E. Tyler, and R. Holt, for Thomas Dring
  • Shaw, Edward, ed. (1743), "July 1743", The London Magazine, and Monthly Chronologer, p. 356
  • Woodward, Sir Llewellyn, Great Britain and War of 1914–1918, Taylor & Francis, p. 364
Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Banneret". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 353–354. Endnotes:
    • John Selden, Titles of Honor (3rd ed., London, 1672), p. 656
    • Du Cange, Glossarium (Niort, 1883), s.v. Bannereti.

Further reading Edit

  •   Chambers, Ephraim, ed. (1728), "Banneret", Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences, vol. 1 (1st ed.), James and John Knapton, et al, p. 80
  • Metcalfe, Walter Charles (1885), A Book of Knights Banneret, Knights of the Bath, and Knights Bachelor made between the fourth year of King Henry VI and the restoration of King Charles II ..., London: Mitchell and Hughes
  • Shaw, William Arthur (1906), The Knights of England: A complete record from the earliest time to the present day of the knights of all the orders of chivalry in England, Scotland, and Ireland, and of knights bachelors, incorporating a complete list of knights bachelors dubbed in Ireland, vol. 2, London: Sherratt and Hughes

knight, banneret, banneret, redirects, here, other, uses, banneret, disambiguation, knight, banneret, sometimes, known, simply, banneret, medieval, knight, commoner, rank, company, troops, during, time, under, banner, which, square, shaped, contrast, tapering,. Banneret redirects here For other uses see Banneret disambiguation A knight banneret sometimes known simply as banneret was a medieval knight a commoner of rank 1 who led a company of troops during time of war under his own banner which was square shaped in contrast to the tapering standard or the pennon flown by the lower ranking knights and was eligible to bear supporters in English heraldry The military rank of a knight banneret was higher than a knight bachelor who fought under another s banner but lower than an earl or duke Sir Rhys ap Thomas 1449 1525 knight banneret and Knight of the Garter Under English custom the rank of knight banneret could only be conferred by the sovereign on the field of battle There were some technical exceptions to this when his standard was on the field of battle he could be regarded as physically present though he was not His proxy could be regarded as a sufficient substitution for his presence The wife of a banneret was styled as banneress 2 Contents 1 Origins 2 Later history 3 Royal Air Force 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further readingOrigins EditThere were no standing armies in the middle ages except the military orders Though modern scholarship has had a lot to say about the varied means by which medieval princes raised their forces the obligation of a vassal to serve on horseback either in person and for some with a contingent raised by his own means is still seen as providing the core of any army of the time 3 The feudal nature of even this part of the medieval army has been qualified by some in that many 11th and 12th century lords gathered under their banners extra knights available for hire for a campaign men who were disparaged at the time as mercenaries 4 Even so the mesnie retained military household was the elite core of any great lord s following in war and in tournament and a sign also of his power and dignity By the early 12th century lords in the field distinguished their personal retinue by a square banner which came to feature the heraldic device associated with their noble lineage 5 The Old French word for it is baniere derived from the lord s power of command called in French his ban It literally meant token of authority 6 The idea of the banneret as a distinct and superior category of knight is seen as a consequence of the fact that the great lord who did not possess a hereditary title like count or duke found himself on the same social level as the subordinate and dependent knights of his retinue This became a particular issue in the 12th century with the growth of the aristocratic tournament culture in north east France and the western Empire One uncomfortable consequence of this for the untitled lord was the rise in standing of the common knight towards noble status A solution was to exalt magnate knighthood to a level above that of common knights and identify it with the banner that a lord could carry but not a common knight 7 The first indication of the rank was in the tournament roll compiled after the great royal festival at Lagny sur Marne in 1179 where the knights carrying a banner were distinguished from the rest 8 The title banneret Latin banneretus vexillifer Middle French banerez was fully established as a military and social rank by the mid 13th century Initially the term could be applied collectively to all noblemen qualified to raise a banner including counts and dukes but before the end of the 13th century it came to be used exclusively as a senior rank of knight or lesser magnate 9 The term originated in Francophone aristocratic culture in the later 12th century but was adopted into other cultures It was adopted into Flemish by 1300 as baenrots a word explained as from baan command and rot troop 10 The word was taken into Middle High German as baenritz or bannerheer and was current in the principalities of the Western Empire in the 14th century 11 There was in the 14th century a tension between the evolving title of baron as a hereditary dignity and banneret which could be applied to the same lord It was resolved in part by employing baron for him in a civil context and banneret in a military context where bannerets could claim a higher rate of pay on campaign than common knights 12 In the work of the great English antiquaries of the 17th century the banneret is understood as a medieval curiosity though they gave rise to the idea that bannerets were the origin of King James I s order of the baronet John Selden however points out that the old stories often have baronetti as synonyms for bannereti and is careful to say that banneret hath no relation to this later title of baronet The last authentic instance of the creation of knights banneret was by King Charles I to several men at the Battle of Edgehill 1642 including Thomas Strickland of Sizergh for gallantry and John Smith for rescuing the royal standard from the enemy 13 Later history EditWhether any further bannerets were granted is debated by historians George Cokayne notes in The Complete Peerage 1913 that King George II revived the order when he created sixteen knights bannerets on the field of the Battle of Dettingen in 1743 a and although his source for this a diary entry by Gertrude Savile states This honour had been laid aside since James I when Baronets were instituted which contradicts other sources 13 a news magazine published in the same year as the battle recorded the honours 15 Several sources including Edward Brenton 1828 and William James 1827 16 17 record that captains Trollope and Fairfax and were honoured with bannerets by King George III for their actions during the Battle of Camperdown 1797 However these awards were never recorded in The London Gazette and is much more likely that these knighthoods which first appear in formal records in December 1797 without their nature being specified 18 were as knights bachelor b Though the title had long fallen into disuse bannerets and their sons continued to be listed in the table of precedence until at least as late as 1870 those created by the sovereign under the Royal Standard in wartime rank above baronets whereas those knights banneret not so created by the sovereign in person rank directly below baronets 20 On page 364 of the 1990 edition of Dod s Parliamentary Companion its table of precedence which includes various long vacant dignities has in position 99 Knights Banneret created under the royal standard in open war the Sovereign or the Prince of Wales being present and in position 104 Knights Banneret provided they be not made in the manner described at No 99 This position was allotted to such as were created by the commanders of armies in the king s name on the open field of battle The former class of Knights Banneret thus rank below Judges of the High Court of Justice and above younger sons of viscounts and the latter class below baronets and above Knights of the Thistle when below the degree of a baron Royal Air Force EditFollowing the creation of the Royal Air Force RAF in 1918 unique names were devised for most of its commissioned officer ranks This was reputedly a result of an objection by the Royal Navy to other services adopting any name for a commissioned rank that was already used by the RN In addition the RAF ranks also served to distinguish the new service from the British Army and Royal Navy and to identify individual officers as belonging to the RAF Banneret was among the names proposed for the RAF equivalent to a naval captain or an army colonel 21 However this proposal was rejected and the name Group Captain was instead adopted See also EditList of knights banneret of EnglandNotes Edit King George II s 16 bannerets were the Dukes of Cumberland and Marlborough the Earls of Stair Dunmore Crawford Rothes and Albemarle and Generals Honywood Hawley Cope Ligonier Campbell Bland Onslow Pulteney and Huske 14 When the fleet returned to the Nore George III signified his intention of visiting it there and Trollope as the senior captain was appointed to the Royal Charlotte yacht to bring him from Greenwich The king accordingly embarked on 30 Oct but the wind came dead foul and after two days the yacht had got no further than Gravesend He therefore gave up the idea and returned to Greenwich knighting Trollope on the quarterdeck of the Royal Charlotte before he landed The accolade conferred under the royal standard was spoken of as making Trollope a knight banneret and was apparently so intended by the king but it is said to have been afterwards decided by the Privy Council as a question of precedence that a knight banneret could only be made on the field where a battle had actually been fought or presumably in the case of a naval officer on the quarterdeck of one of the ships actually engaged 19 Neave amp Turner 1930 p 182 History ISKB www iskb co uk Retrieved 21 January 2021 The wife of a Banneret was called a Banneress Crouch David 2020 Europe 1000 1300 In Curry Anne Graff David A eds War and the Medieval World The Cambridge History of War Vol ii Cambridge CUP pp 243 65 ISBN 9781108901192 France John 2008 Introduction Mercenaries and Paid Men the Mercenary Identity in the Middle Ages Leiden Brill pp 1 13 ISBN 9789047432616 J F Nieus L invention des armoiries en contexte Haute aristocratie identites familiales et culture chevaleresque entre France et Angleterre 1100 1160 Journal des Savants 2017 1 124 5 Dictionnaire de l ancien francais le moyen age Paris Larousse 1997 sub ban David Crouch The Image of Aristocracy in Britain before 1300 London Routledge 1992 pp 114 16 History of William Marshal ed A J Holden 3 vols Anglo Norman Text Society Occasional Publications Series 4 6 London 2002 6 iii pp 33 4 Crouch Image of Aristocracy 116 17 Mario Damen Heren met banieren De baanroten van Brabant in de vijftiende eeuw in Boorgondie voorbij De Nederlanden 1250 1650 ed Mario Damen and Louis Sicking Hilversum Uitgeverij Verloren 2010 139 58 H Denessen De Gelderese bannerheren in de vijftiende eeuw Virtus 20 2013 13 16 Chris Given Wilson The English Nobility in the Late Middle Ages The Fourteenth Century Political Community London Routledge 1987 pp 60 62 a b Chisholm 1911 pp 353 354 Cokayne 1913 pp 572 573 Shaw 1743 p 356 Brenton 1823 p 356 James 1827 p 78 No 14075 The London Gazette 19 December 1797 p 1210 Laughton 1899 p 248 Marshall 1823 p 153 The Royal Kalendar for the year 1870 p 10 Woodward p 364 References EditBrenton Edward Pelham 1823 The Naval History of Great Britain vol I London Henry Colburn pp 356 Cokayne George Edward 1913 Gibbs Gibbs Doubleday H Arthur eds The Complete Peerage vol III London pp 572 573 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link James William 1827 The Naval History of Great Britain Volume 2 1797 1799 archived from the original on 27 May 2013 retrieved 26 March 2013 Laughton John Knox 1899 Trollope Henry In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 57 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 246 248 Marshall John 1823 Royal Naval Biography vol 1 p 153 Neave F G Turner Grange 1930 Mozley and Whiteley s Law Dictionary London Butterworth amp Co p 182 Selden John 1672 Titles of honor London Printed by E Tyler and R Holt for Thomas Dring Shaw Edward ed 1743 July 1743 The London Magazine and Monthly Chronologer p 356 Woodward Sir Llewellyn Great Britain and War of 1914 1918 Taylor amp Francis p 364Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Banneret Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 353 354 Endnotes John Selden Titles of Honor 3rd ed London 1672 p 656 Du Cange Glossarium Niort 1883 s v Bannereti Further reading Edit nbsp Chambers Ephraim ed 1728 Banneret Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences vol 1 1st ed James and John Knapton et al p 80 Metcalfe Walter Charles 1885 A Book of Knights Banneret Knights of the Bath and Knights Bachelor made between the fourth year of King Henry VI and the restoration of King Charles II London Mitchell and Hughes Shaw William Arthur 1906 The Knights of England A complete record from the earliest time to the present day of the knights of all the orders of chivalry in England Scotland and Ireland and of knights bachelors incorporating a complete list of knights bachelors dubbed in Ireland vol 2 London Sherratt and Hughes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Knight banneret amp oldid 1177237991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.