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Hidalgo (nobility)

An hidalgo (/ɪˈdælɡ/, Spanish: [iˈðalɣo]) or a fidalgo (Portuguese: [fiˈðalɣu], Galician: [fiˈðalɣʊ]) is a member of the Spanish or Portuguese nobility; the feminine forms of the terms are hidalga, in Spanish, and fidalga, in Portuguese and Galician. In popular usage, the term hidalgo identifies a nobleman without a hereditary title. In practice, hidalgos were exempted from paying taxes, yet owned little real property.

A sixteenth-century French depiction of an hidalgo in the Spanish colonies
Heraldic crown of Spanish hidalgos

Etymology edit

From the twelfth century, the phrase fijo d'algo (lit. son of something[1]) and its contraction, fidalgo,[2] were used in the Kingdom of Castile and in the Kingdom of Portugal to identify a type of nobility. In Portugal, the cognate remained fidalgo, which identified nobles of a similar status to an hidalgo in Spain. In the Kingdom of Aragón, the infanzón was the noble counterpart of the Castilian hidalgo. The pronunciation changes in Spanish occurred during the late Middle Ages, the f- sound in the word-initial position developed into a h-sound, leading to the spelling of hidalgo[3] (see History of the Spanish language).

In time, the term included the lower-ranking gentry, the untitled, lower stratum of the nobility who were exempted from taxation. The Siete Partidas (Leyes de Partidas), suggests that the word hidalgo derives from itálico ("italic"), a man with full Roman citizenship.[citation needed]

In the previous Visigoth monarchies, the condition of the hidalgo was that of a freeman without land wealth, but with the nobleman's rights to bear arms and to be exempt from taxation, in compensation for military service; the military obligation and the social condition remained in force by the Fuero Juzgo law.[citation needed]

Origins edit

The hidalguía has its origins in fighting men of the Reconquista. By the tenth century the term infanzón appears in Asturian-Leonese documents as a synonym for the Spanish and Medieval Latin terms caballero and miles (both, "knight"). These infanzones were vassals of the great magnates and prelates and ran their estates for them as petty nobility. In these first centuries it was still possible to become a miles simply by being able to provide, and afford the costs of, mounted military service.[4]

Only by the mid-twelfth century did the ranks of the knights begin to be—in theory—closed by lineage. In the frontier towns that were created as the Christian kingdoms pushed into Muslim land, the caballeros, and not the magnates who often were far away, came to dominate politics, society and cultural patronage. From their ranks were also drawn the representatives of the towns and cities when the cortes were convened by kings. It was in the twelfth century that this class, along with the upper nobility, began to be referred to as hidalgos.[4]

Types edit

Hidalgos de sangre (by virtue of lineage) are "those for whom there is no memory of its origin and there is no knowledge of any document mentioning a royal grant, which obscurity is universally praised even more than those noblemen who know otherwise their origin", or in other words, an immemorial noble.[5] When challenged, an hidalgo de sangre may obtain a judicial sentence validating his nobility from the Royal Chancillería of Valladolid or Granada, if he can prove that it has been accepted local society and custom. In this case, the resulting legal document that verifies his nobility is called a carta ejecutoria de hidalguia (letters patent of nobility).[6][7]

To qualify as an hidalgo solariego ("ancestral hidalgo"), one had to prove that all four of one's grandparents were hidalgos. Hidalgos solariegos were regarded as the most noble and treated with the most respect.

Hidalgos de privilegio (by virtue of royal privilege) and hidalgos de Real Provision (by virtue of meritorious acts) entail a grant of nobility from His Majesty the King of Spain in his position as monarch, or from his position as protector of a military confraternity or hermandad.

Hidalgo de bragueta[8] ("fly-of-the-trousers hidalgo") obtained tax exemption for having seven sons in lawful wedlock.

In Asturias, Cantabria and other regions of Spain every seven years the King ordered the creation of padrones ("registers") where the population was classified either as hidalgos nobles, and therefore, exempt from taxation due to their military status or pecheros (from an archaic verb, pechar, "to pay")[9] who comprised the estado llano ("lower ranks") and were excluded from military service and had to pay taxes. These padrones constitute nowadays a source of information about population genealogy and distribution as well as proof of nobility in certain cases.

Over the years the title lost its significance, especially in Spain. Kings routinely awarded the title in exchange for personal favors. By the time of the reign of the House of Bourbon, over half a million people enjoyed tax exemptions, putting tremendous strain on the royal state which wasn't calling their services to arms but relied more on professional armies and costly mercenaries.

Attempts were made to reform the title and by the early nineteenth century with the forced levies to military service of all citizens by conscription without any minimum requirements of nobility or pay or loyalty by honour but by coercion on desertion, it had entirely disappeared, along with the social class it had originally signified and most of its centuries-old developed code of honour in the nation's social culture.

Influenced by policies in France, hidalgos all became 'pecheros' (taxpayers), without the privileges of the former title, and along with all citizens were also subject to conscription. Both estates of the realm (social classes) became combined, compulsorily contributing to the nation in service and taxes without exemption, while the titled nobility and royalty kept their former privileges and exemptions.[10][11]

Literature edit

In literature the hidalgo is usually portrayed as a noble who has lost nearly all of his family's wealth but still held on to the privileges and honours of the nobility. The prototypical fictional hidalgo is Don Quixote, who was given the sobriquet 'the Ingenious Hidalgo' by his creator, Miguel de Cervantes. In the novel Cervantes has Don Quixote satirically present himself as an hidalgo de sangre and aspire to live the life of a knight-errant despite the fact that his economic position does not allow him to truly do so.[12] Don Quixote's possessions allowed to him a meager life devoted to his reading obsession, yet his concept of honour led him to emulate the knights-errant.

The picaresque novel Lazarillo features an hidalgo so poor that he spreads breadcrumbs on his clothes, to simulate having eaten a meal. His hidalgo honour forbids him manual work but does not provide him with subsistence.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Tales of a Wayside Inn includes "The Theologian's Tale" which recounts the tragedy of Hidalgo who betrays his two daughters to the Grand Inquisitor. Hidalgo himself lights the fires, then from a tower casts himself into the depths of despair.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "hidalgo, ga". Diccionario de la lengua española - Edición del Tricentenario (in Spanish). Real Academia Española. 2019. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  2. ^ Walter W. Skeat (1993). The Concise Dictionary of English Etymology. Wordsworth Editions. p. 202. ISBN 978-1-85326-311-8.
  3. ^ Corominas, Joan and José A Pascual (1981). "Hijo" in Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico, Vol. G-Ma (3). Madrid: Editorial Gredos, 359-360. ISBN 84-249-1362-0
  4. ^ a b Sánchez-Albornoz, "España y el feudalismo carolingio", 778-787; Suárez Fernández, Historia de España, 141-142; MacKay, Spain in the Middle Ages, 47-50, 56-57, 103-104, 155; and Menéndez Pidal, La España del Cid, 86-88, 544-545.
  5. ^ Huarte de San Juan, Juan (1989) [1575], Serés, Guillermo (ed.), Examen de ingenios para las ciencias (in Spanish), Madrid: Cátedra, ISBN 978-84-376-0872-3 Also quoted in Sánchez Cantón, Francisco Javier, ed. (1948), Floreto de anécdotas y noticias diversas que recopiló un fraile dominico residente en Sevilla a mediados del siglo XVI, Memorial Histórico Español (in Spanish), vol. 48, Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid: Maestre, p. 355, OCLC 5723566
  6. ^ Ruiz García, Elisa (2006), "La carta ejecutoria de hidalguía: Un espacio gráfico privilegiado", En la España medieval, 1 (in Spanish), Extra: 251–276, ISSN 0214-3038, retrieved 2009-05-30
  7. ^ Basanta de la Riva, Alfredo (1955), Sala de los Hijosdalgo: Catálogo de todos sus pleitos, expedientes y probanzas (in Spanish), Archivo de la Real Chancillería de Valladolid, Madrid: Ediciones Hidalguía, Instituto Internacional de Genealogía y Heráldica, OCLC 2831583
  8. ^ hidalgo at the Diccionario de la Real Academia Española.
  9. ^ Suárez Fernández, 144
  10. ^ VV, AA (2007). Historia de Cantabria. Editorial Cantabria S.A. ISBN 978-84-86420-50-5.
  11. ^ Lenero Ferrari, Juan Jose. "La Hidalguia en el pueblo Cantabro". Valle de Anievas.
  12. ^ Rey Hazas, Antonio, "El 'Quijote' y la picaresca: la figura del hidalgo en el nacimiento de la novela moderna", Edad de Oro (in Spanish), 15: 141–160, retrieved 2009-06-02

Bibliography edit

  • Claude, Dietrich (1980), "Freedmen in the Visigothic Kingdom", in Edward James (ed.), Visigothic Spain: New Approaches, Oxford University Press, pp. 159–188, ISBN 0-19-822543-1
  • MacKay, Angus (1977), Spain in the Middle Ages: From Frontier to Empire, 1000–1500, New York: St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0-312-74978-3
  • Menéndez Pidal, Ramón (1967), La España del Cid (in Spanish) (6th ed.), Madrid: Espasa-Calpe
  • Pérez de Tudela y Velasco, M. I. (1979), Infanzones y caballeros: su proyeccion en la esfera nobiliaria castellano-leonesa, Madrid{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Sánchez-Albornoz, Claudio (1965), "España y el feudalismo carolingio", Estudios sobre las instituciones medievales españolas, Serie de Historia General (in Spanish), Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas, OCLC 951198
  • Suárez Fernández, Luis (1970), Historia de España: Edad media (in Spanish), Madrid: Editorial Gredos, OCLC 270090
  • Thompson, E. A (2000) [1969], The Goths in Spain, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 978-0-19-814271-3

External links edit

  • In Spanish: Hidalgos de España (Association of Spanish nobles)

lang, hidalgo, nobility, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, june, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, mess. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why December 2019 An hidalgo ɪ ˈ d ae l ɡ oʊ Spanish iˈdalɣo or a fidalgo Portuguese fiˈdalɣu Galician fiˈdalɣʊ is a member of the Spanish or Portuguese nobility the feminine forms of the terms are hidalga in Spanish and fidalga in Portuguese and Galician In popular usage the term hidalgo identifies a nobleman without a hereditary title In practice hidalgos were exempted from paying taxes yet owned little real property A sixteenth century French depiction of an hidalgo in the Spanish coloniesHeraldic crown of Spanish hidalgos Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 3 Types 4 Literature 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEtymology editFrom the twelfth century the phrase fijo d algo lit son of something 1 and its contraction fidalgo 2 were used in the Kingdom of Castile and in the Kingdom of Portugal to identify a type of nobility In Portugal the cognate remained fidalgo which identified nobles of a similar status to an hidalgo in Spain In the Kingdom of Aragon the infanzon was the noble counterpart of the Castilian hidalgo The pronunciation changes in Spanish occurred during the late Middle Ages the f sound in the word initial position developed into a h sound leading to the spelling of hidalgo 3 see History of the Spanish language In time the term included the lower ranking gentry the untitled lower stratum of the nobility who were exempted from taxation The Siete Partidas Leyes de Partidas suggests that the word hidalgo derives from italico italic a man with full Roman citizenship citation needed In the previous Visigoth monarchies the condition of the hidalgo was that of a freeman without land wealth but with the nobleman s rights to bear arms and to be exempt from taxation in compensation for military service the military obligation and the social condition remained in force by the Fuero Juzgo law citation needed Origins editThe hidalguia has its origins in fighting men of the Reconquista By the tenth century the term infanzon appears in Asturian Leonese documents as a synonym for the Spanish and Medieval Latin terms caballero and miles both knight These infanzones were vassals of the great magnates and prelates and ran their estates for them as petty nobility In these first centuries it was still possible to become a miles simply by being able to provide and afford the costs of mounted military service 4 Only by the mid twelfth century did the ranks of the knights begin to be in theory closed by lineage In the frontier towns that were created as the Christian kingdoms pushed into Muslim land the caballeros and not the magnates who often were far away came to dominate politics society and cultural patronage From their ranks were also drawn the representatives of the towns and cities when the cortes were convened by kings It was in the twelfth century that this class along with the upper nobility began to be referred to as hidalgos 4 Types editHidalgos de sangre by virtue of lineage are those for whom there is no memory of its origin and there is no knowledge of any document mentioning a royal grant which obscurity is universally praised even more than those noblemen who know otherwise their origin or in other words an immemorial noble 5 When challenged an hidalgo de sangre may obtain a judicial sentence validating his nobility from the Royal Chancilleria of Valladolid or Granada if he can prove that it has been accepted local society and custom In this case the resulting legal document that verifies his nobility is called a carta ejecutoria de hidalguia letters patent of nobility 6 7 To qualify as an hidalgo solariego ancestral hidalgo one had to prove that all four of one s grandparents were hidalgos Hidalgos solariegos were regarded as the most noble and treated with the most respect Hidalgos de privilegio by virtue of royal privilege and hidalgos de Real Provision by virtue of meritorious acts entail a grant of nobility from His Majesty the King of Spain in his position as monarch or from his position as protector of a military confraternity or hermandad Hidalgo de bragueta 8 fly of the trousers hidalgo obtained tax exemption for having seven sons in lawful wedlock In Asturias Cantabria and other regions of Spain every seven years the King ordered the creation of padrones registers where the population was classified either as hidalgos nobles and therefore exempt from taxation due to their military status or pecheros from an archaic verb pechar to pay 9 who comprised the estado llano lower ranks and were excluded from military service and had to pay taxes These padrones constitute nowadays a source of information about population genealogy and distribution as well as proof of nobility in certain cases Over the years the title lost its significance especially in Spain Kings routinely awarded the title in exchange for personal favors By the time of the reign of the House of Bourbon over half a million people enjoyed tax exemptions putting tremendous strain on the royal state which wasn t calling their services to arms but relied more on professional armies and costly mercenaries Attempts were made to reform the title and by the early nineteenth century with the forced levies to military service of all citizens by conscription without any minimum requirements of nobility or pay or loyalty by honour but by coercion on desertion it had entirely disappeared along with the social class it had originally signified and most of its centuries old developed code of honour in the nation s social culture Influenced by policies in France hidalgos all became pecheros taxpayers without the privileges of the former title and along with all citizens were also subject to conscription Both estates of the realm social classes became combined compulsorily contributing to the nation in service and taxes without exemption while the titled nobility and royalty kept their former privileges and exemptions 10 11 Literature editIn literature the hidalgo is usually portrayed as a noble who has lost nearly all of his family s wealth but still held on to the privileges and honours of the nobility The prototypical fictional hidalgo is Don Quixote who was given the sobriquet the Ingenious Hidalgo by his creator Miguel de Cervantes In the novel Cervantes has Don Quixote satirically present himself as an hidalgo de sangre and aspire to live the life of a knight errant despite the fact that his economic position does not allow him to truly do so 12 Don Quixote s possessions allowed to him a meager life devoted to his reading obsession yet his concept of honour led him to emulate the knights errant The picaresque novel Lazarillo features an hidalgo so poor that he spreads breadcrumbs on his clothes to simulate having eaten a meal His hidalgo honour forbids him manual work but does not provide him with subsistence Henry Wadsworth Longfellow s Tales of a Wayside Inn includes The Theologian s Tale which recounts the tragedy of Hidalgo who betrays his two daughters to the Grand Inquisitor Hidalgo himself lights the fires then from a tower casts himself into the depths of despair See also editCuban nobility Hidalgo disambiguation PrincipaliaReferences edit hidalgo ga Diccionario de la lengua espanola Edicion del Tricentenario in Spanish Real Academia Espanola 2019 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Walter W Skeat 1993 The Concise Dictionary of English Etymology Wordsworth Editions p 202 ISBN 978 1 85326 311 8 Corominas Joan and Jose A Pascual 1981 Hijo in Diccionario critico etimologico castellano e hispanico Vol G Ma 3 Madrid Editorial Gredos 359 360 ISBN 84 249 1362 0 a b Sanchez Albornoz Espana y el feudalismo carolingio 778 787 Suarez Fernandez Historia de Espana 141 142 MacKay Spain in the Middle Ages 47 50 56 57 103 104 155 and Menendez Pidal La Espana del Cid 86 88 544 545 Huarte de San Juan Juan 1989 1575 Seres Guillermo ed Examen de ingenios para las ciencias in Spanish Madrid Catedra ISBN 978 84 376 0872 3 Also quoted in Sanchez Canton Francisco Javier ed 1948 Floreto de anecdotas y noticias diversas que recopilo un fraile dominico residente en Sevilla a mediados del siglo XVI Memorial Historico Espanol in Spanish vol 48 Real Academia de la Historia Madrid Maestre p 355 OCLC 5723566 Ruiz Garcia Elisa 2006 La carta ejecutoria de hidalguia Un espacio grafico privilegiado En la Espana medieval 1 in Spanish Extra 251 276 ISSN 0214 3038 retrieved 2009 05 30 Basanta de la Riva Alfredo 1955 Sala de los Hijosdalgo Catalogo de todos sus pleitos expedientes y probanzas in Spanish Archivo de la Real Chancilleria de Valladolid Madrid Ediciones Hidalguia Instituto Internacional de Genealogia y Heraldica OCLC 2831583 hidalgo at the Diccionario de la Real Academia Espanola Suarez Fernandez 144 VV AA 2007 Historia de Cantabria Editorial Cantabria S A ISBN 978 84 86420 50 5 Lenero Ferrari Juan Jose La Hidalguia en el pueblo Cantabro Valle de Anievas Rey Hazas Antonio El Quijote y la picaresca la figura del hidalgo en el nacimiento de la novela moderna Edad de Oro in Spanish 15 141 160 retrieved 2009 06 02Bibliography editClaude Dietrich 1980 Freedmen in the Visigothic Kingdom in Edward James ed Visigothic Spain New Approaches Oxford University Press pp 159 188 ISBN 0 19 822543 1 MacKay Angus 1977 Spain in the Middle Ages From Frontier to Empire 1000 1500 New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 74978 3 Menendez Pidal Ramon 1967 La Espana del Cid in Spanish 6th ed Madrid Espasa Calpe Perez de Tudela y Velasco M I 1979 Infanzones y caballeros su proyeccion en la esfera nobiliaria castellano leonesa Madrid a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sanchez Albornoz Claudio 1965 Espana y el feudalismo carolingio Estudios sobre las instituciones medievales espanolas Serie de Historia General in Spanish Mexico Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Instituto de Investigaciones Historicas OCLC 951198 Suarez Fernandez Luis 1970 Historia de Espana Edad media in Spanish Madrid Editorial Gredos OCLC 270090 Thompson E A 2000 1969 The Goths in Spain Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 814271 3External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Hidalgo In Spanish Hidalgos de Espana Association of Spanish nobles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hidalgo nobility amp oldid 1193969624, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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