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Imperial, royal and noble ranks

Traditional rank amongst European royalty, peers, and nobility is rooted in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Although they vary over time and among geographic regions (for example, one region's prince might be equal to another's grand duke), the following is a reasonably comprehensive list that provides information on both general ranks and specific differences.[vague] Distinction should be made between reigning (or formerly reigning) families and the nobility – the latter being a social class subject to and created by the former.

Ranks and titles

Sovereign

  • The word monarch is derived from the Greek μονάρχης, monárkhēs, "sole ruler" (from μόνος, mónos, "single" or "sole", and ἄρχων, árkhōn, archon, "leader", "ruler", "chief", the word being the present participle of the verb ἄρχειν, árkhein, "to rule", "to lead", this from the noun ὰρχή, arkhē, "beginning", "authority", "principle") through the Latinized form monarcha.
  • The word sovereign is derived from the Latin above.
  • Autocrat is derived from the Greek αὐτοκράτωρ: αὐτός ("self") and κρατείν ("to hold power"), and may be translated as "one who rules by themself".

Common titles for European, Latin American, and Asian monarchs

Note that many titles listed may also be used by lesser nobles – non-sovereigns – depending on the historical period and state. The sovereign titles listed below are grouped together into categories roughly according to their degree of dignity; these being: imperial (Emperor/Empress, etc.), royal (King/Queen, Grand Duke, etc.), others (sovereign Prince, sovereign Duke, etc.), and religious.

Imperial titles
  • "Emperor" (in English), Imperador (in Portuguese), Emperador (in Spanish) and Empereur (in French), from the Latin Imperator, was originally a military title.[1] Soldiers would salute the leader of a victorious army as 'imperator'. In English, the feminine form is Empress (the Latin is imperatrix). The realm of an emperor or empress is termed an Empire. Other words meaning Emperor include:
    • Caesar, the appellation of Roman emperors derived from the Roman dictator Julius Caesar, whose great-nephew and adopted son Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus became the first emperor of Rome. Augustus' four successors were each made the adoptive son of his predecessor, and were therefore legally entitled to use "Caesar" as a constituent of their names; after Nero, however, the familial link of the Julio-Claudian dynasty was disrupted and use of the word Caesar continued as a title only.
    • Kaiser, derived from Caesar, primarily used in Germanic countries. The feminine form in German is Kaiserin.
    • Augustus, a Roman honorific title which means 'Venerable' or 'Majestic', used by Roman Emperors from the beginning of the Empire onwards.
    • Basileus kai Autokrator, Medieval Greek title meaning "sovereign and autocrat", used by the Greek Byzantine Emperors from the 9th century onwards.
    • Tsar / Tzar / Csar / Czar, derived as shortened variant of the Slavic pronunciation of Caesar (tsyasar), the feminine form is Tsaritsa, primarily used in Bulgaria, and after that in Russia and other Slavic countries, although in English Tsarina was also sometimes used.
    • Huangdi (皇帝), the Imperial monarch during Imperial China.
    • Huēyi Tlahtloāni, the Classical Nahuatl term for the ruler of multiple āltepētl, a pre-Hispanic city-state in Mesoamerica, commonly referring to the head of the Aztec Triple Alliance, or Aztec Empire. It is variously translated in English as "Great Speaker" or the equivalent to the European "great king" or "high king", though more usually as "Emperor".[2]
    • Samrat, (Sanskrit: samrāt or सम्राट) is an ancient Indian title meaning 'A paramount sovereign, universal lord'.[3] The feminine form is Samrājñī or साम्राज्ञी.
    • Tennō (天皇), which means "heavenly sovereign" in Japanese. Is the symbol of the State and of the unity of the people. Historically, he is also the highest authority of the Shinto religion as he and his family are said to be the direct descendants of the sun-goddess Amaterasu.
    • Kōtei (皇帝), Japanese title primarily used for emperors of other nations (e.g. Rome, Russia, Germany). Tennō refers only to an emperor of Japan, and kōtei refers to an emperor of any countries.
    • Khagan, derived from khan of khans, used by the Central Asian nomads.
    • Padishah, Persian pād "master" and shāh "king". Used in the Ottoman Empire and the Mughal Empire.
    • Shahanshah, Persian title meaning "king of kings". Used by Persian (Iranian monarchs)
    • Basileus tōn Basileōn, Ancient Greek title meaning "king of kings", used by Alexander the Great after the similar title of the Achaemenid dynasty of Persia. A translation from Ancient Persian Shahanshah.
    • Nəgusä Nägäst, title of the rulers of Ethiopia, meaning "king of kings", used alongside Negus, a royal title in the Ethiopian Semitic languages.
    • Mepe-Mepeta, Georgian for "king of kings."
    • Omukama, commonly translated as "king of kings", is a title associated with the Bunyoro-Kitara in Uganda. It is also the title of the Omukama of Toro.
    • Alaafin, or "Man of the Palace" in the Yoruba language, was the title of the ruler of the medieval Oyo Empire in northwestern Yorubaland. He is considered the supreme overlord of the empire and expected to keep tributaries safe from attack as well as mediate disputes between various kings (Obas) and their people within the Empire.
Royal titles
  • King, from the Germanic *kuningaz, roughly meaning "son of the people." (See: Germanic kingship)[a] The realm of a King is termed a Kingdom (sovereign kings are ranked above vassal kings). The female equivalent of a King, or the consort of a King is a Queen, from the Germanic *kwoeniz, or *kwenon, "wife"; cognate of Greek γυνή, gynē, "woman"; from PIE *gʷḗn, "woman". . Regardless of a ruler's gender, their realm is known as a kingdom.
    • Rei (in Portuguese and Catalan), Rey (in Spanish), Re (in Italian), Roy (in French), Rege (in Romanian) - Derived from Latin Rex, meaning "ruler". Rex is cognate with Raja, , Reign, Regina, etc.
    • Basileus, from Mycenaean Greek meaning "chieftain", used by various Ancient Greek rulers.
    • Arka is a royal title (king) in Great Armenia. Another used name was Tagavor, which also appeared later in Cilician Armenia.
    • Melech, ancient Hebrew king. The word for queen is Malka.
    • Wang (王), the head of state of Ancient China.
    • Król (in Polish) Král (in Czech), Király (in Hungarian), Король (in Russian and Ukrainian), Краљ / Kralj (in Serbian), Крал (in Bulgarian), Crai (in Romanian), Korol – Derived from Old East Slavic Король king, used in Kazakh, Tatar, and Kyrgyz languages. The korol, krol, kral, крал and kiraly versions used in Central and Eastern Europe derive from the name of Charlemagne.
    • Tsenpo, also known as Ihase or "Divine Son", was the title of the monarchs of Tibet.
    • Chanyu, short for Chengli Gutu Chanyu (撐犁孤塗單于) was a title used by supreme nomadic rulers of Inner Asia. Meaning "Son of Heaven, Ruler of the North", it was later superseded by the title Khagan.
    • , Gaelic title meaning king, of which there were several grades, the highest being Ard Rí (high king). Cognate with Indian Raja, Latin Rex, and ancient Gaulish Rix.
    • Sapa Inca, The Sapa Inca (Hispanicized spelling) or Sapa Inka (Quechua for "the only Inca"), also known as Apu ("divinity"), Inka Qhapaq ("mighty Inca"), or simply Sapa ("the only one"), was the ruler of the Kingdom of Cusco and, later, the King of the Tawantinsuyu (called Inca Empire by historians) and the Neo-Inca State.
    • Raja, Sanskrit, later Hindustani, for "king". Cognate with Latin Rex, Irish , etc. The female equivalent is Rani. The Filipino feminine equivalent is Hara.
      • Maharaja, Sanskrit, later Hindustani, for "great king". It's the title of kings in the Indian subcontinent. The feminine equivalent is Maharani.
      • Devaraja, literally "god king". A title in the Khmer Empire and throughout Java
      • Rai, Sanskrit, meaning Raja, for "king" in the Indian Subcontinent.
      • Rana, was used to be a title for martial sovereignty of Rajput rulers in the Indian subcontinent.
    • Eze, the Igbo word for the King or Ruler of a kingdom or city-state. It is cognate with Obi and Igwe.
    • Oba, the Yoruba word for King or Ruler of a kingdom or city-state. It is used across all the traditional Yoruba lands, as well as by the Edo, throughout Nigeria, Benin, and Togo.
    • Kabaka, ruler of Buganda, a realm within Uganda in East Africa.
    • Shah, Persian word for king, from Indo-European for "he who rules". Used in Persia, alongside Shahanshah. The title of the sons of a Shah is Shahzade / Shahzadeh. The female title is Shahbanu
    • Boqor, Somali for King. However, in practice, it is the primus inter pares or "King of Kings". The title is etymologically derived from one of the Afro-Asiatic Somali language terms for "belt", in recognition of the official's unifying role within the greater society. Furthermore, Boqor is linguistically related to the style Paqar, which was employed by rulers in the early Nile Valley state of Meroe.
    • Ō (王), Japanese, meaning "king", or "sovereign". Also the title of the ruler of ancient Japan waō (倭王). The female title is Joō (女王).
    • Sultan, from Arabic and originally referring to one who had "power", more recently used as synonym for a king. The feminine equivalent is a Sultana.
    • Khan, from the Turco-Mongol word for "ruler" or “king”. A Khan's realm is called a Khanate.
    • Malik, Arabic for "king". The feminine equivalent is a Malika.
    • Mwami in Rwanda and neighbouring regions in the Congo. The female counterpart is Mwamikazi.
    • Almamy, King of Futa Toro, a pre-colonial kingdom of the Toucouleur people. From the old Pulaar title "Almamy" (king).
    • Maad a Sinig, King of Sine, a pre-colonial kingdom of the Serer people. From the old Serer title "Maad" (king).
    • Maad Saloum, ruler of Saloum, a pre-colonial kingdom of the Serer people.
    • Susuhunan, "he to whom homage is paid", title of the Javanese monarch of the Surakarta Sunanate.
    • Teigne, ruler of Baol, previously a pre-colonial Serer kingdom.
    • Tlahtloāni, the Classical Nahuatl term for the ruler of an āltepētl, a pre-Hispanic city-state in Mesoamerica variously translated in English as "king," "ruler," (or "speaker" in the political sense). A siwātlahtoāni is a female ruler, or queen regnant.[4]
    • Lugal, is the Sumerian term for "king, ruler". Literally, the term means "big man."[5]
    • Xi Chu Ba Wang (西楚霸王) meaning the Hegemon King of Western Chu.
    • Taewang, literally "greatest king", a Korean title for the rulers of the Goguryeo Empire.
    • Anax, from Mycenaean wanax for "high king". Outranked Basileus in Mycenaean usage.
    • Pharaoh, "Man of the Great House (Palace)" used in Ancient Egypt to denote the kings of the upper and lower kingdoms of the Nile river valley.
    • Mansa, title of the rulers of the Mali Empire, meaning (King).
    • Omanhene or Ohene, an Akan title meaning King of the Nation, with Ohene simply meaning King. Ohemaa, the maternal counterpart (his mother, sister, aunt (referred to as a 2nd mother), cousin (referred to as sister)), has equal power and selects which son she wants to lead the people. The Akan king rules on behalf of his mother who is the true power of the land. If the Ohemaa doesn't select any male relative to lead on her behalf, then she can take the role as King or Omanhene.
    • Mwenematapa, title of the rulers of the Mutapa Empire. It means "Prince of the Realm" in Shona. Also spelled Mwene Mutapa or in Portuguese transliteration Monomotapa.
    • Bretwalda, monarchs of Anglo-Saxon England.
    • Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the official title of the Malaysian head of state, and means "He who is Made Supreme Lord" and is generally glossed in English as "king". The officeholder is elected from among the heads of the nine royal states.
    • Lamane, "master of the land" or "chief owner of the soil" in old Serer language were the ancient hereditary kings and landed gentry of the Serer people found in Senegal, the Gambia and Mauritania. The Lamanes were guardians of Serer religion and many of them have been canonized as Holy Saints (Pangool).
    • Otumfuo, literally "the powerful one", an Akan title to mean a king. It is thought to originate with the Akan state of Akwamu. It is still used amongst the Akwamu and now the Asante people.
Princely, ducal, and other sovereign titles
  • Grand vizier was the title of the effective head of government (prime-minister) of many sovereign states in the Islamic world. The office of Grand Vizier was first held by officials in the later Abbasid Caliphate. It was then held in the Ottoman Empire, the Mughal Empire, the Sokoto Caliphate, the Safavid Empire and Morocco. In the Ottoman Empire, the Grand Vizier held the imperial seal and could convene all other viziers (ministers) to attend to affairs of the state; the viziers in conference were called "Kubbealtı viziers" in reference to their meeting place, the Kubbealtı ('under the dome') in Topkapı Palace. His offices were located at the Sublime Porte. Today, the Prime Minister of Pakistan is referred to in Urdu as Wazir-e-azam, which translates literally to Grand Vizier
  • Khedive (/kəˈdiːv/, Ottoman Turkish: خدیو, romanized: hıdiv; Arabic: خديوي, romanized: khudaywī) was an honorific title of Persian origin used for the sultans and grand viziers of the Ottoman Empire, but most famously for the viceroy of Egypt from 1805 to 1914.
  • Grand Duke is considered to be part of the reigning nobility ("Royalty", in German Hochadel; their correct form of address is "Royal Highness").[6]
    • Archduke, ruler of an archduchy; used exclusively by the Habsburg dynasty and its junior branch of Habsburg-Lorraine which ruled the Holy Roman Empire (until 1806), the Austrian Empire (1804–1867), the Second Mexican Empire (1863-1867) and the Austro-Hungarian Empire (1867–1918) for imperial family members of the dynasty, each retaining it as a subsidiary title when founding sovereign cadet branches by acquiring thrones under different titles (e.g., Tuscany, Modena); it was also used for those ruling some Habsburg territories such as those that became the modern so-called "Benelux" nations (Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg); The title was created in 1358 by the Habsburgs themselves to establish a precedence of their princes over the other titleholders of high nobility of the era; therefore the rank was not recognized by the other ruling dynasties until 1453[7]
  • Sovereign Prince, from the Latin princeps, meaning "first citizen". The feminine form is Princess. Variant forms include the German Fürst and Russian Knyaz (князь) and the feminine form Knyaginya (княгиня).[b]
  • Nizam, The word is derived from the Arabic language Nizām (نظام), meaning order, arrangement. Nizām-ul-mulk was a title first used in Urdu around 1600 to mean Governor of the realm or Deputy for the Whole Empire.
  • Despot, Greek for "lord, master", initially an appellation for the Byzantine emperor, later the senior court title, awarded to sons and close relatives of the emperor. In the 13th–15th centuries borne by autonomous and independent rulers in the Balkans.
  • Voievod şi domn, title held by the sovereign princes of Wallachia and Moldavia. Voievod (from Slavic) means in this context supreme military commander while Domn (from lat. dominus) means master, lord, autocrat. The "civilian" title of domn holds a kind of primacy. The office/authority is called "domnie" (roughly "lordship") rather than voievodship (as is the case of similar named but lesser Slavic titles). The prince is called upon as "doamne" ("mylord").
  • Sovereign Duke, from the Latin Dux, meaning "leader," a military rank in the late Roman Empire. Variant forms include Doge and Duce; it has also been modified into Archduke (meaning "chief" Duke), Grand Duke (literally "large", or "big" Duke; see above under royal titles), Vice Duke ("deputy" Duke), etc. The female equivalent is Duchess.
    • Doge, elected lord and head of state in several Italian city-states
    • Ealdorman, Old English for "elder man", rendered Dux in Latin.
  • Tuanku, literally "My Master" (Tuan Ku), the title of the rulers of the nine Royal states of Malaysia; all princes and princesses of the Royal Families also receive the appellation Tunku (literally "My Lord" (Tun Ku) or spelt Tengku) or Raja.
  • Sheikh is often used as a title for Arab royal families. Some Emirs of the Arabian Peninsula use the title Sheikh ("elder" or "lord"), as do other members of the extended family.
  • Emir, often rendered Amir in older English usage; from the Arabic "to command." The female form is Emira (Amirah). Emir is the root of the naval rank "Admiral". Is usually translated as Prince in English.
  • Mir: According to the book Persian Inscriptions on Indian Monuments, Mir is most probably an Arabized form of Pir. Pir in Old Persian and Sanskrit means the old, the wise man, the chief and the great leader. It was Arabized as Mir then, with Al(A) (Arabic definite article), it was pronounced as Amir.
  • Bey, or Beg/Baig, Turkish for "Chieftain."
  • Dey, title given to the rulers of the Regency of Algiers and Tripoli under the Ottoman Empire from 1671 onwards.
  • Sardar, also spelled as Sirdar, Sardaar or Serdar, is a title of nobility (sir-, sar/sair- means "head or authority" and -dār means "holder" in Sanskrit and Avestan)
Tribal titles
  • "Tribal chief"
  • Tadodaho, derived from the name of the first "keeper of the council fire" of the Iroquois Confederacy, Haudenosaunee, or Five Nations, refers to the individual with the highest authority in both their modern territory and their spiritual way of life.
  • Taoiseach (Irish pronunciation: [ˈt̪ˠiːʃəx]) means leader. An Irish clan chief. Since 1937, this has been the title for the elected prime ministers of Ireland, in both Irish and English.
  • Tánaiste (Irish pronunciation: [ˈt̪ˠaːn̪ˠəʃtʲə]) is the second in command of an Irish clan. Since 1937, this has been the title in both Irish and English for the deputy head of the Irish government, nominated by the serving Taoiseach to act in that role during the Taoiseach's temporary absence.
  • Tòiseach, the Scottish Gaelic for clan chief.
  • Tywysog (Welsh pronunciation: [təˈwəsɔɡ]), in modern Welsh, means "Prince" and is cognate with Taoiseach and Tòiseach. Derived from the proto-Celtic *towissākos "chieftain, leader".
  • Rí ruirech, "king of over-kings", or rí cóicid, a provincial King in Ireland.
  • Corono, leader of a large tribe in Celtic Gallaecia. In later Latin inscriptions, they would sometimes be referred to as Princeps.[11]
  • Fon, the regional and tribal leaders in Cameroon.
  • Odikro, an Akan chieftain. Obahemaa female maternal counterpart.
  • Cacique, derived from the Taíno word kasike, for pre-Columbian monarchs in the Bahamas, the Greater Antilles, and Lesser Antilles.
  • Lonko, chief of several Mapuche communities.
  • Ratu, A Fijian chiefly title that is also found in Javanese culture.
  • Aliʻi nui, was the supreme monarch of various Hawaiian islands. They are the supreme high chiefs (chief of chiefs). This title would later be used by rulers of the entire Hawaiian chain of islands.
  • Ajaw, In Maya meaning "lord", "ruler", "king" or "leader". Was the title of the ruler in the Classic Maya polity. A variant being the title of K'inich Ajaw or "Great Sun King" as it was used to refer to the founder of the Copán dynasty, K'inich Yax K'uk' Mo'. The female equivalent is a Ix-ajaw.
  • Halach Uinik, In Maya meaning "real man", "person of fact" or "person of command". Was the title of the ruler in the Post-Classic Maya polity (Kuchkabal).
Religious titles
  • Pope, also "Supreme Pontiff of the Universal Church and Vicar of Christ", is considered the apostolic successor of Saint Peter, one of the Twelve Apostles (primary disciples) of Jesus Christ. Once wielding substantial secular power as the ruler of the Papal States and leader of Christendom, the Pope is also the absolute ruler of the sovereign state Vatican City. Also the title of the leader of the Coptic Church, considered successor of the Apostle Saint Mark the Evangelist. The word pope is derived from Latin and Italian papa, a familiar form of "father".
  • Catholicos is the Chief Bishop, Patriarch of the Armenian Orthodox Church. The earliest ecclesiastical use of the title Catholicos was by the Bishop of Armenia, head of the Armenian Orthodox Apostolic Church, in the 4th century.
  • Patriarch is the highest ecclesial title used in the Eastern Christian tradition. Some patriarchs are also styled as popes.
  • Caliph means 'successor' (to Muhammad), both a religious and a secular leader. The ruler of the caliphate was the secular head of the international Muslim community, as a nation. To claim the Caliphate was, theoretically, to claim stewardship over Muslims on earth, under the sovereignty of Allah. (See Amir al-Mu'minin above). This did not necessarily mean that the Caliph was himself the supreme authority on Islamic law or theology; that still fell to the Ulema. The role of the Caliph was to oversee and take responsibility for the Muslim community's political and governmental needs (both within and beyond the borders of his territorial realm), rather than to himself determine matters of doctrine.
  • Imam, Imam (/ɪˈmɑːm/; Arabic: إمام imām; plural: أئمة aʼimmah) is an Islamic leadership position. For Sunni Muslims, Imam is most commonly used as the title of a worship leader of a mosque. In this context, imams may lead Islamic worship services, lead prayers, serve as community leaders, and provide religious guidance. Thus for Sunnis, anyone can study the basic Islamic sciences and become an Imam
  • Dalai Lama, the highest authority in Tibetan (or more specifically Gelug) Buddhism and a symbol of the unification of Tibet, said to belong to a line of reincarnations of the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara. Among other incarnate Tibetan lamas, the second highest Gelug prelate is the Panchen Lama. From the time of the Fifth Dalai Lama until 1950 the Dalai Lamas effectively ruled Tibet. The chief of the rival Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism is the Karmapa.
  • Saltigue, the high priests and priestesses of the Serer people. They are the diviners in Serer religion.

Other sovereigns, royalty, peers, and major nobility

Several ranks were widely used (for more than a thousand years in Europe alone) for both sovereign rulers and non-sovereigns. Additional knowledge about the territory and historic period is required to know whether the rank holder was a sovereign or non-sovereign. However, joint precedence among rank holders often greatly depended on whether a rank holder was sovereign, whether of the same rank or not. This situation was most widely exemplified by the Holy Roman Empire (HRE) in Europe. Several of the following ranks were commonly both sovereign and non-sovereign within the HRE. Outside of the HRE, the most common sovereign rank of these below was that of Prince. Within the HRE, those holding the following ranks who were also sovereigns had (enjoyed) what was known as an immediate relationship with the Emperor. Those holding non-sovereign ranks held only a mediate relationship (meaning that the civil hierarchy upwards was mediated by one or more intermediaries between the rank holder and the Emperor).

Titles

  • Prince (Prinz in German), junior members of a royal, grand ducal, ruling ducal or princely, or mediatised family. The title of Fürst was usually reserved, from the 19th century, for rulers of principalities—the smallest sovereign entities (e.g., Liechtenstein, Lippe, Schwarzburg, Waldeck-and-Pyrmont)—and for heads of high-ranking, noble but non-ruling families (Bismarck, Clary und Aldringen, Dietrichstein, Henckel von Donnersmarck, Kinsky, Paar, Pless, Thun und Hohenstein, etc.). Cadets of these latter families were generally not allowed to use Prinz, being accorded only the style of count (Graf) or, occasionally, that of Fürst (Wrede, Urach) even though it was also a ruling title. Exceptional use of Prinz was permitted for some morganatic families (e.g., Battenberg, Montenuovo) and a few others (Carolath-Beuthen, Biron von Kurland).
    • In particular, Crown prince (Kronprinz in German) was reserved for the heir apparent of an emperor or king.
    • Grand Prince (Velikiy Knyaz), ruler of a grand principality; a title primarily used in the medieval Kyivan Rus' principalities; It was also used by the Romanovs of the Russian Empire for members of the imperial family.
    • Elector Prince (Kurfürst in German), a rank for those who voted for the Holy Roman Emperor, usually sovereign of a state (e.g. the Margrave of Brandenburg, an elector, called the Elector of Brandenburg)
    • Ban, noble title used in several states in Central and Southeastern Europe between the 7th century and the 20th century.
    • Dauphin, title of the heir apparent of the royal family of France, as he was the de jure ruler of the Dauphiné region in southeastern France (under the authority of the King)
    • Infante, title of the cadet members of the royal families of Portugal and Spain
    • Mexican Prince was the title created on June 22, 1822 by the Mexican Constituent Congress during the First Mexican Empire, to be granted to legitimate children who were not the heir or firstborn of the Emperor Agustín de Iturbide. Later, his grandson were given the titles Prince of Iturbide by Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico.
    • Królewicz, title used by the children of the monarchs of Poland and later Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
    • Ōji (王子), Japanese, literally "sovereign-child", used only for the son of a monarch.
    • Yuvraj, is an Indian title for crown prince, the heir apparent to the throne of an Indian (notably Hindu) kingdom.
    • Buumi, first in line to the throne in Serer pre-colonial kingdoms. The second in line is called a Thilas, whereas the third in line is known as a Loul.
    • Bai, Filipino feminine equivalent of a prince.
    • Ampuan, Maranao royal title which literally means "The One to whom one asks for apology"
    • Ginoo, Ancient Filipino equivalent to noble man or prince (now used in the form "Ginoóng" as the analogue to "mister").
    • Pillai, Ancient South Indian title meaning "child", Prince for junior children of Emperors[12]
    • Morza, a Tatar title usually translated as "prince", it ranked below a Khan. The title was borrowed from Persian and Indian appellation Mirza added to the names of certain nobles, which itself derived from Emir.
    • Daakyehene, pronounced: Daa-chi-hi-ni, literally: future king. The feminine form is Daakyehemaa. An Akan prince.
    • Knyaz, a title found in most Slavic languages, denoting a ruling or noble rank. It is usually translated into English as "Prince", but the word is related to the English King and the German König.
  • Duke (Herzog in German), ruler[a] of a duchy;[c] also for junior members of ducal and some grand ducal families.
  • Marquess, Margrave, or Marquis (literally "Count of a March" (=Border territory)) was the ruler of a marquessate, margraviate, or march. The female equivalent is Marchioness.
  • Count, theoretically the ruler of a county; known as an Earl in modern Britain; known as a Graf in German, known as Conde in Spain and Mexico, known as a Serdar in Montenegro and Serbia. The female equivalent is Countess, which in Britain also refers to an earl's wife.
    • Landgrave (literally "Land Count"), a German title, ruler of a landgraviate (large / provincial territory).
    • Župan, noble and administrative title used in several states in Central and Southeastern Europe between the 7th century and the 21st century.
    • Ispán, leader of a castle district (a fortress and the royal lands attached to it) in the Kingdom of Hungary from the early 11th century.
  • Viscount (vice-count), theoretically the ruler of a viscounty, which did not develop into a hereditary title until much later.[13] The female equivalent is Viscountess. In the case of French viscounts and viscountesses, it is customary to leave the titles untranslated as vicomte [vikɔ̃t] and vicomtesse [vikɔ̃tɛs].
    • Sahib, name of Arabic origin meaning "holder, master or owner."
  • Baron, theoretically the ruler of a barony – some barons in some countries may have been "free barons" (liber baro) and as such, regarded (themselves) as higher barons. The female equivalent is Baroness.
    • Freiherr, a German word meaning literally "Free Master" or "Free Lord" (i.e. not subdued to feudal chores or drudgery), is the German equivalent of the English term "Baron", with the important difference that unlike the British Baron, he is not a "Peer of the Realm" (member of the high aristocracy).[14] The female equivalent is Freifrau.
    • Primor, a Hungarian noble title, originally the highest rank of Székely nobility, usually compared to baron (or less commonly, count).[15] Originally, primores could de jure not be evicted from his fiefdom, even by the King of Hungary (although such instances did occur).[16]
    • Zamindar were considered to be equivalent to lords and barons; in some cases they were independent sovereign princes.
    • Jagir, also spelled as Jageer (Devanagari: जागीर, Persian: جاگیر, ja- meaning "place", -gir meaning "keeping, holding") The feudal owner/lord of the Jagir were called Jagirdar or Jageerdar
    • Rais, is a used by the rulers of Arab states and South Asia.
    • Subahdar, is normally appointed from the Mughal princes or the officers holding the highest mansabs.
    • Deshmukh, Marathi for "ruler". It is an equivalent to a lord of the land.
    • Principal (m.)/Principala (f.), a person belonging to the aristocratic ruling class of Filipino nobles called Principalía, roughly equivalent to ancient Roman Patricians, through whom the Spanish Monarchs ruled the Philippines during the colonial period (c. 1600s to 1898).[17][18]
    • Regents: A regent (from Latin regens: ruling, governing) is a person appointed to govern a state pro tempore (Latin: 'for the time being') because the monarch is a minor, absent, incapacitated or unable to discharge the powers and duties of the monarchy, or the throne is vacant and the new monarch has not yet been determined. The rule of a regent or regents is called a regency. A regent or regency council may be formed ad hoc or in accordance with a constitutional rule. Regent is sometimes a formal title granted to a monarch's most trusted advisor or personal assistant. If the regent is holding their position due to their position in the line of succession, the compound term prince regent is often used; if the regent of a minor is their mother, she would be referred to as queen regent.

Minor nobility, landed gentry, and other aristocracy

The distinction between the ranks of the major nobility (listed above) and the minor nobility, listed here, was not always a sharp one in all nations. But the precedence of the ranks of a Baronet or a Knight is quite generally accepted for where this distinction exists for most nations. Here the rank of Baronet (ranking above a Knight) is taken as the highest rank among the ranks of the minor nobility or landed gentry that are listed below.

Titles

  • Baronet is a hereditary title ranking below Baron but above Knight; this title is granted only in the United Kingdom and is variously considered to be "the head of the nobiles minores" or "the lowest of the nobiles majores" of that country.
  • Dominus was the Latin title of the feudal, superior and mesne, lords, and also an ecclesiastical and academical title (equivalent of Lord)
  • Vidame, a minor French aristocrat
  • Vavasour, also a petty French feudal lord
  • Seigneur or Lord of the manor rules a smaller local fief
  • Captal, archaic Gascon title equivalent to seigneur
  • Knight is the central rank of the Medieval aristocratic system in Europe (and having its equivalents elsewhere), usually ranking at or near the top of the Minor Nobility
  • Patrician is a dignity of minor nobility or landed gentry (most often being hereditary) usually ranking below Knight but above Esquire
  • Fidalgo or Hidalgo is a minor Portuguese and Spanish aristocrat (respectively; from filho d'algo / hijo de algo, lit. "son of something")
  • Nobile is an Italian title of nobility for prestigious families that never received a title
  • Edler is a minor aristocrat in Germany and Austria during those countries' respective imperial periods.
  • Jonkheer is an honorific for members of noble Dutch families that never received a title. An untitled noblewoman is styled Jonkvrouw, though the wife of a Jonkheer is a Mevrouw or, sometimes, Freule, which could also be used by daughters of the same.
  • Junker is a German noble honorific, meaning "young nobleman" or otherwise "young lord".
  • Reis is an obscure aristocratic title from the coastlines of Lebanon and Syria that is roughly equivalent to a Baron. The word itself can be translated as "Commodore", and is found only among a few of the former "Merchant Aristocrat" houses of the former Mount Lebanon Emirate. The only legitimate holders of this title are those that trace their lineage back to vassals of Fakhr al-Din II that arrived from Italy via the alliance with the Medici.
  • Skartabel is a minor Polish aristocrat.
  • Scottish Baron is a hereditary feudal nobility dignity, outside the Scots peerage, recognised by Lord Lyon as a member of the Scots noblesse and ranking below a Lord of Parliament but above a Scottish Laird[19][d] in the British system. However, Scottish Barons on the European continent are considered and treated equal to European barons.
  • Laird is a Scottish hereditary feudal dignity ranking below a Scottish Baron but above an Esquire
  • Esquire is a rank of gentry originally derived from Squire and indicating the status of an attendant to a knight, an apprentice knight, or a manorial lord;[20] it ranks below Knight (or in Scotland below Laird) but above Gentleman[e][f]
  • Gentleman is the basic rank of landed gentry (ranking below Esquire), historically primarily associated with land; within British Commonwealth nations it is also roughly equivalent to some minor nobility of some continental European nations[21]
  • Bibi, means Miss in Urdu and is frequently used as a respectful title for women in South Asia when added to the given name
  • Lalla, is an Amazigh title of respect. The title is a prefix to her given name or personal name, and is used by females usually of noble or royal background.
  • Sidi, is a masculine title of respect, meaning "my master" in Maltese, Darija and Egyptian Arabic.
  • Dvoryanin, the word (Russian: Дворянин, romanizedMember of the court); a member of Russian nobility

In Germany, the constitution of the Weimar Republic in 1919 ceased to accord privileges to members of dynastic and noble families. Their titles henceforth became legal parts of the family name, and traditional forms of address (e.g., "Hoheit" or "Durchlaucht") ceased to be accorded to them by governmental entities. The last title was conferred on 12 November 1918 to Kurt von Klefeld. The actual rank of a title-holder in Germany depended not only on the nominal rank of the title, but also the degree of sovereignty exercised, the rank of the title-holder's suzerain, and the length of time the family possessed its status within the nobility (Uradel, Briefadel, altfürstliche, neufürstliche, see: German nobility). Thus, any reigning sovereign ranks higher than any deposed or mediatized sovereign (e.g., the Fürst of Waldeck, sovereign until 1918, was higher than the Duke of Arenberg, head of a mediatized family, although Herzog is nominally a higher title than Fürst). However, former holders of higher titles in extant monarchies retained their relative rank, i.e., a queen dowager of Belgium outranks the reigning Prince of Liechtenstein. Members of a formerly sovereign or mediatized house rank higher than the nobility. Among the nobility, those whose titles derive from the Holy Roman Empire rank higher than the holder of an equivalent title granted by one of the German monarchs after 1806.

In Austria, nobility titles may no longer be used since 1918.[22]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b 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.
  2. ^ "Prince"
  3. ^ A duke who is not actually or formerly sovereign, or a member of a reigning or formerly reigning dynasty, such as British, French, Portuguese, Spanish and most Italian dukes, is a non-dynastic noble ranking above a marquis.
  4. ^ There are actually three Scottish dignities that are types of a Scottish Baron; these are (in descending order of rank): Scottish feudal Earl, Scottish Feudal Lord, and Scottish feudal Baron (the general name for the dignity listed above among the ranks of aristocratic gentry).
  5. ^ The meaning of the title Esquire became (and remains) quite diffuse, and may indicate anything from no aristocratic status, to some official government civil appointment, or (more historically) the son of a knight or noble who had no other title above just Gentleman.
  6. ^ In the United States, where there is no nobility, the title esquire is sometimes arrogated (without any governmental authorization) by lawyers admitted to the state bar.

References

  1. ^ According to: https://www.infoplease.com/whos-who-monarchy 7 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Lockhart (2001, p.238); Schroeder (2007, p.3). See also the entry for "TLAHTOANI" 2007-06-14 at the Wayback Machine, in Wimmer (2006)
  3. ^ The Practical Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Vaman Shivaram Apte
  4. ^ Schroeder (2007, pp.3–4). See also the entry for "CIHUATLAHTOANI" 2007-06-08 at the Wayback Machine in Wimmer (2006).
  5. ^ Harriet Crawford (29 August 2013). The Sumerian World. Routledge. p. 283. ISBN 978-1-136-21912-2.
  6. ^ Meyers Taschenlexikon Geschichte 1982, vol 1, p21-22
  7. ^ Meyers Taschenlexikon Geschichte 1982, vol 2, p. 106.
  8. ^ Esta institucion (Cabecería de Barangay), mucho más antigua que la sujecion de las islas al Gobierno, ha merecido siempre las mayores atencion. En un principio eran las cabecerías hereditarias, y constituian la verdadera hidalguía del país; mas del dia, si bien en algunas provincias todavía se tramiten por sucesion hereditaria, las hay tambien eleccion, particularmente en las provincias más inmediatas á Manila, en donde han perdido su prestigio y son una verdadera carga. En las provincias distantes todavía se hacen respetar, y allí es precisamente en donde la autoridad tiene ménos que hacer, y el órden se conserva sin necesidad de medidas coercitivas; porque todavía existe en ellas el gobierno patriarcal, por el gran respeto que la plebe conserva aún á lo que llaman aquí principalía. (Translation: This institution (Cabecera de Barangay), much older than the fastening of the islands to the Government, has always deserved the most attention. In the beginning they were the hereditary heads, and they constituted the true chivalry of the country; but of the day, although in some provinces they are still transacted by hereditary succession, there are also elections, particularly in the provinces closest to Manila, where they have lost their prestige and are a real burden. In the distant provinces they are still enforced, and that is precisely where authority has less to do, and the order is preserved without the need for coercive measures; because the patriarchal government still exists in them, because of the great respect that the plebs still retain for what they call here principalía.FERRANDO.) FERRANDO, Fr Juan & FONSECA OSA, Fr Joaquin (1870–1872). Historia de los PP. Dominicos en las Islas Filipinas y en las Misiones del Japon, China, Tung-kin y Formosa (Vol. 1 of 6 vols) (in Spanish). Madrid: Imprenta y esteriotipia de M Rivadeneyra. OCLC 9362749.
  9. ^ L'institution des chefs de barangay a été empruntée aux Indiens chez qui on la trouvée établie lors de la conquête des Philippines; ils formaient, à cette époque une espèce de noblesse héréditaire. L'hérédité leur a été conservée aujourd hui: quand une de ces places devient vacante, la nomination du successeur est faite par le surintendant des finances dans les pueblos qui environment la capitale, et, dans les provinces éloignées, par l'alcalde, sur la proposition du gobernadorcillo et la présentation des autres membres du barangay; il en est de même pour les nouvelles créations que nécessite de temps à autre l'augmentation de la population. Le cabeza, sa femme et l'aîné de ses enfants sont exempts du tributo. MALLAT de BASSILAU, Jean (1846). Les Philippines: Histoire, géographie, moeurs. Agriculture, industrie et commerce des Colonies espagnoles dans l'Océanie (2 vols) (in French). Paris: Arthus Bertrand Éd. ISBN 978-1143901140. OCLC 23424678, p. 356.
  10. ^ Zetterstéen (1986), p. 446
  11. ^ Pena Granha, A. (2007): "Galicia, cuna de los celtas de la Europa Atlántica", in Anuario Brigantino, no. 30, pp. 57-88.
  12. ^ Indian Epigraphical Dictionary Page 166 Accessed at https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=pySCGvdyYLIC&pg=PA166&dq=indian+epigraphical+pillai+prince&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiHpO3DvuTQAhWpBcAKHRzwDSIQ6AEIHDAA#v=onepage&q=indian%20epigraphical%20pillai%20prince&f=false 17 January 2023 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Upshur, Jiu-Hwa; Terry, Janice; Holoka, Jim; Goff, Richard; Cassar, George H. (2011). Cengage Advantage Books: World History. Vol. I. California: Wadsworth Publishing Co. Inc. p. 329. ISBN 9781111345167.
  14. ^ Meyers Taschenlexikon Geschichte 1982, vol 1, p. 22 & vol 2, p. 198.
  15. ^ Szilágyi, László (1938). Székely Primor Családok. Budapest. p. 17.
  16. ^ Gerő, József (1938). A M. Kir. Belügyminiszter által igazolt nemesek 1867–1937. Budapest: Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Kingdom of Hungary. pp. 5–30.
  17. ^ "Esta institucion (Cabecería de Barangay), mucho más antigua que la sujecion de las islas al Gobierno, ha merecido siempre las mayores atencion. En un principio eran las cabecerías hereditarias, y constituian la verdadera hidalguía del país; mas del dia, si bien en algunas provincias todavía se tramiten por sucesion hereditaria, las hay tambien eleccion, particularmente en las provincias más inmediatas á Manila, en donde han perdido su prestigio y su una verdadera carga. En las provincias distantes todavía se hacen respetar, y allí es precisamente en donde la autoridad tiene ménos que hacer, y el órden se conserva sin necesidad de medidas coercitivas; porque todavía existe en ellas el gobierno patriarcal, por el gran respeto que la plebe conserva aún á lo que llaman aquí principalía." FERRANDO, Fr Juan & FONSECA OSA, Fr Joaquin (1870–1872). Historia de los PP. Dominicos en las Islas Filipinas y en las Misiones del Japon, China, Tung-kin y Formosa, (Vol. 1 of 6 vols, in Spanish). Madrid: Imprenta y esteriotipia de M Rivadeneyra, p. 61.
  18. ^ Durante la dominación española, el cacique, jefe de un barangay, ejercía funciones judiciales y administrativas. A los tres años tenía el tratamiento de don y se reconocía capacidad para ser gobernadorcillo, con facultades para nombrarse un auxiliar llamado primogenito, siendo hereditario el cargo de jefe. Enciclopedia Universal Ilustrada Europeo-Americana. VII. Madrid: Espasa-Calpe, S.A. 1921, p. 624.
  19. ^ Ruling of the Court of the Lord Lyon (26 February 1948, Vol. IV, page 26): "With regard to the words 'untitled nobility' employed in certain recent birthbrieves in relation to the (Minor) Baronage of Scotland, Finds and Declares that the (Minor) Barons of Scotland are, and have been both in this nobiliary Court and in the Court of Session recognised as a 'titled nobility' and that the estait of the Baronage (i.e. Barones Minores) are of the ancient Feudal Nobility of Scotland".
  20. ^ Dodd, Charles R. (1843) A manual of dignities, privilege, and precedence: including lists of the great public functionaries, from the revolution to the present time, London: Whittaker & Co., pp.248,251 [1]
  21. ^ Larence, Sir James Henry (1827) [first published 1824]. The nobility of the British Gentry or the political ranks and dignities of the British Empire compared with those on the continent (2nd ed.). London: T.Hookham – Simpkin and Marshall. from the original on 17 January 2023. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  22. ^ "RIS Dokument". bka.gv.at. from the original on 27 May 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2009.

External links

  • Unequal and Morganatic Marriages in German Law
  • Noble, Princely, Royal, and Imperial Titles
  • British noble titles
  • Fake titles

imperial, royal, noble, ranks, traditional, rank, amongst, european, royalty, peers, nobility, rooted, late, antiquity, middle, ages, although, they, vary, over, time, among, geographic, regions, example, region, prince, might, equal, another, grand, duke, fol. Traditional rank amongst European royalty peers and nobility is rooted in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages Although they vary over time and among geographic regions for example one region s prince might be equal to another s grand duke the following is a reasonably comprehensive list that provides information on both general ranks and specific differences vague Distinction should be made between reigning or formerly reigning families and the nobility the latter being a social class subject to and created by the former Contents 1 Ranks and titles 1 1 Sovereign 1 1 1 Common titles for European Latin American and Asian monarchs 1 1 1 1 Imperial titles 1 1 1 2 Royal titles 1 1 1 3 Princely ducal and other sovereign titles 1 1 1 4 Tribal titles 1 1 1 5 Religious titles 1 2 Other sovereigns royalty peers and major nobility 1 2 1 Titles 1 3 Minor nobility landed gentry and other aristocracy 1 3 1 Titles 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksRanks and titles EditThis article contains embedded lists that may be poorly defined unverified or indiscriminate Please help to clean it up to meet Wikipedia s quality standards Where appropriate incorporate items into the main body of the article November 2016 Sovereign Edit Main articles Monarch and Sovereign The word monarch is derived from the Greek monarxhs monarkhes sole ruler from monos monos single or sole and ἄrxwn arkhōn archon leader ruler chief the word being the present participle of the verb ἄrxein arkhein to rule to lead this from the noun ὰrxh arkhe beginning authority principle through the Latinized form monarcha The word sovereign is derived from the Latin above Autocrat is derived from the Greek aὐtokratwr aὐtos self and kratein to hold power and may be translated as one who rules by themself Common titles for European Latin American and Asian monarchs Edit Note that many titles listed may also be used by lesser nobles non sovereigns depending on the historical period and state The sovereign titles listed below are grouped together into categories roughly according to their degree of dignity these being imperial Emperor Empress etc royal King Queen Grand Duke etc others sovereign Prince sovereign Duke etc and religious Imperial titles Edit Emperor in English Imperador in Portuguese Emperador in Spanish and Empereur in French from the Latin Imperator was originally a military title 1 Soldiers would salute the leader of a victorious army as imperator In English the feminine form is Empress the Latin is imperatrix The realm of an emperor or empress is termed an Empire Other words meaning Emperor include Caesar the appellation of Roman emperors derived from the Roman dictator Julius Caesar whose great nephew and adopted son Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus became the first emperor of Rome Augustus four successors were each made the adoptive son of his predecessor and were therefore legally entitled to use Caesar as a constituent of their names after Nero however the familial link of the Julio Claudian dynasty was disrupted and use of the word Caesar continued as a title only Kaiser derived from Caesar primarily used in Germanic countries The feminine form in German is Kaiserin Augustus a Roman honorific title which means Venerable or Majestic used by Roman Emperors from the beginning of the Empire onwards Basileus kai Autokrator Medieval Greek title meaning sovereign and autocrat used by the Greek Byzantine Emperors from the 9th century onwards Tsar Tzar Csar Czar derived as shortened variant of the Slavic pronunciation of Caesar tsyasar the feminine form is Tsaritsa primarily used in Bulgaria and after that in Russia and other Slavic countries although in English Tsarina was also sometimes used Huangdi 皇帝 the Imperial monarch during Imperial China Hueyi Tlahtloani the Classical Nahuatl term for the ruler of multiple altepetl a pre Hispanic city state in Mesoamerica commonly referring to the head of the Aztec Triple Alliance or Aztec Empire It is variously translated in English as Great Speaker or the equivalent to the European great king or high king though more usually as Emperor 2 Samrat Sanskrit samrat or सम र ट is an ancient Indian title meaning A paramount sovereign universal lord 3 The feminine form is Samrajni or स म र ज ञ Tennō 天皇 which means heavenly sovereign in Japanese Is the symbol of the State and of the unity of the people Historically he is also the highest authority of the Shinto religion as he and his family are said to be the direct descendants of the sun goddess Amaterasu Kōtei 皇帝 Japanese title primarily used for emperors of other nations e g Rome Russia Germany Tennō refers only to an emperor of Japan and kōtei refers to an emperor of any countries Khagan derived from khan of khans used by the Central Asian nomads Tian Kehan 天可汗 meaning Heavenly Khagan Given to Tang Taizong and Tang Gaozong by Turkic nomads Padishah Persian pad master and shah king Used in the Ottoman Empire and the Mughal Empire Shahanshah Persian title meaning king of kings Used by Persian Iranian monarchs Basileus tōn Basileōn Ancient Greek title meaning king of kings used by Alexander the Great after the similar title of the Achaemenid dynasty of Persia A translation from Ancient Persian Shahanshah Negusa Nagast title of the rulers of Ethiopia meaning king of kings used alongside Negus a royal title in the Ethiopian Semitic languages Mepe Mepeta Georgian for king of kings Omukama commonly translated as king of kings is a title associated with the Bunyoro Kitara in Uganda It is also the title of the Omukama of Toro Alaafin or Man of the Palace in the Yoruba language was the title of the ruler of the medieval Oyo Empire in northwestern Yorubaland He is considered the supreme overlord of the empire and expected to keep tributaries safe from attack as well as mediate disputes between various kings Obas and their people within the Empire Royal titles Edit King from the Germanic kuningaz roughly meaning son of the people See Germanic kingship a The realm of a King is termed a Kingdom sovereign kings are ranked above vassal kings The female equivalent of a King or the consort of a King is a Queen from the Germanic kwoeniz or kwenon wife cognate of Greek gynh gyne woman from PIE gʷḗn woman Regardless of a ruler s gender their realm is known as a kingdom Rei in Portuguese and Catalan Rey in Spanish Re in Italian Roy in French Rege in Romanian Derived from Latin Rex meaning ruler Rex is cognate with Raja Ri Reign Regina etc Basileus from Mycenaean Greek meaning chieftain used by various Ancient Greek rulers Arka is a royal title king in Great Armenia Another used name was Tagavor which also appeared later in Cilician Armenia Melech ancient Hebrew king The word for queen is Malka Wang 王 the head of state of Ancient China Krol in Polish Kral in Czech Kiraly in Hungarian Korol in Russian and Ukrainian Kraљ Kralj in Serbian Kral in Bulgarian Crai in Romanian Korol Derived from Old East Slavic Korol king used in Kazakh Tatar and Kyrgyz languages The korol krol kral kral and kiraly versions used in Central and Eastern Europe derive from the name of Charlemagne Tsenpo also known as Ihase or Divine Son was the title of the monarchs of Tibet Chanyu short for Chengli Gutu Chanyu 撐犁孤塗單于 was a title used by supreme nomadic rulers of Inner Asia Meaning Son of Heaven Ruler of the North it was later superseded by the title Khagan Ri Gaelic title meaning king of which there were several grades the highest being Ard Ri high king Cognate with Indian Raja Latin Rex and ancient Gaulish Rix Sapa Inca The Sapa Inca Hispanicized spelling or Sapa Inka Quechua for the only Inca also known as Apu divinity Inka Qhapaq mighty Inca or simply Sapa the only one was the ruler of the Kingdom of Cusco and later the King of the Tawantinsuyu called Inca Empire by historians and the Neo Inca State Raja Sanskrit later Hindustani for king Cognate with Latin Rex Irish Ri etc The female equivalent is Rani The Filipino feminine equivalent is Hara Maharaja Sanskrit later Hindustani for great king It s the title of kings in the Indian subcontinent The feminine equivalent is Maharani Devaraja literally god king A title in the Khmer Empire and throughout Java Rai Sanskrit meaning Raja for king in the Indian Subcontinent Rana was used to be a title for martial sovereignty of Rajput rulers in the Indian subcontinent Eze the Igbo word for the King or Ruler of a kingdom or city state It is cognate with Obi and Igwe Oba the Yoruba word for King or Ruler of a kingdom or city state It is used across all the traditional Yoruba lands as well as by the Edo throughout Nigeria Benin and Togo Kabaka ruler of Buganda a realm within Uganda in East Africa Shah Persian word for king from Indo European for he who rules Used in Persia alongside Shahanshah The title of the sons of a Shah is Shahzade Shahzadeh The female title is Shahbanu Boqor Somali for King However in practice it is the primus inter pares or King of Kings The title is etymologically derived from one of the Afro Asiatic Somali language terms for belt in recognition of the official s unifying role within the greater society Furthermore Boqor is linguistically related to the style Paqar which was employed by rulers in the early Nile Valley state of Meroe Ō 王 Japanese meaning king or sovereign Also the title of the ruler of ancient Japan waō 倭王 The female title is Joō 女王 Sultan from Arabic and originally referring to one who had power more recently used as synonym for a king The feminine equivalent is a Sultana Khan from the Turco Mongol word for ruler or king A Khan s realm is called a Khanate Malik Arabic for king The feminine equivalent is a Malika Mwami in Rwanda and neighbouring regions in the Congo The female counterpart is Mwamikazi Almamy King of Futa Toro a pre colonial kingdom of the Toucouleur people From the old Pulaar title Almamy king Maad a Sinig King of Sine a pre colonial kingdom of the Serer people From the old Serer title Maad king Maad Saloum ruler of Saloum a pre colonial kingdom of the Serer people Susuhunan he to whom homage is paid title of the Javanese monarch of the Surakarta Sunanate Teigne ruler of Baol previously a pre colonial Serer kingdom Tlahtloani the Classical Nahuatl term for the ruler of an altepetl a pre Hispanic city state in Mesoamerica variously translated in English as king ruler or speaker in the political sense A siwatlahtoani is a female ruler or queen regnant 4 Lugal is the Sumerian term for king ruler Literally the term means big man 5 Xi Chu Ba Wang 西楚霸王 meaning the Hegemon King of Western Chu Taewang literally greatest king a Korean title for the rulers of the Goguryeo Empire Anax from Mycenaean wanax for high king Outranked Basileus in Mycenaean usage Pharaoh Man of the Great House Palace used in Ancient Egypt to denote the kings of the upper and lower kingdoms of the Nile river valley Mansa title of the rulers of the Mali Empire meaning King Omanhene or Ohene an Akan title meaning King of the Nation with Ohene simply meaning King Ohemaa the maternal counterpart his mother sister aunt referred to as a 2nd mother cousin referred to as sister has equal power and selects which son she wants to lead the people The Akan king rules on behalf of his mother who is the true power of the land If the Ohemaa doesn t select any male relative to lead on her behalf then she can take the role as King or Omanhene Mwenematapa title of the rulers of the Mutapa Empire It means Prince of the Realm in Shona Also spelled Mwene Mutapa or in Portuguese transliteration Monomotapa Bretwalda monarchs of Anglo Saxon England Yang di Pertuan Agong the official title of the Malaysian head of state and means He who is Made Supreme Lord and is generally glossed in English as king The officeholder is elected from among the heads of the nine royal states Lamane master of the land or chief owner of the soil in old Serer language were the ancient hereditary kings and landed gentry of the Serer people found in Senegal the Gambia and Mauritania The Lamanes were guardians of Serer religion and many of them have been canonized as Holy Saints Pangool Otumfuo literally the powerful one an Akan title to mean a king It is thought to originate with the Akan state of Akwamu It is still used amongst the Akwamu and now the Asante people Princely ducal and other sovereign titles Edit Grand vizier was the title of the effective head of government prime minister of many sovereign states in the Islamic world The office of Grand Vizier was first held by officials in the later Abbasid Caliphate It was then held in the Ottoman Empire the Mughal Empire the Sokoto Caliphate the Safavid Empire and Morocco In the Ottoman Empire the Grand Vizier held the imperial seal and could convene all other viziers ministers to attend to affairs of the state the viziers in conference were called Kubbealti viziers in reference to their meeting place the Kubbealti under the dome in Topkapi Palace His offices were located at the Sublime Porte Today the Prime Minister of Pakistan is referred to in Urdu as Wazir e azam which translates literally to Grand Vizier Khedive keˈdiːv Ottoman Turkish خدیو romanized hidiv Arabic خديوي romanized khudaywi was an honorific title of Persian origin used for the sultans and grand viziers of the Ottoman Empire but most famously for the viceroy of Egypt from 1805 to 1914 Grand Duke is considered to be part of the reigning nobility Royalty in German Hochadel their correct form of address is Royal Highness 6 Archduke ruler of an archduchy used exclusively by the Habsburg dynasty and its junior branch of Habsburg Lorraine which ruled the Holy Roman Empire until 1806 the Austrian Empire 1804 1867 the Second Mexican Empire 1863 1867 and the Austro Hungarian Empire 1867 1918 for imperial family members of the dynasty each retaining it as a subsidiary title when founding sovereign cadet branches by acquiring thrones under different titles e g Tuscany Modena it was also used for those ruling some Habsburg territories such as those that became the modern so called Benelux nations Belgium Netherlands Luxembourg The title was created in 1358 by the Habsburgs themselves to establish a precedence of their princes over the other titleholders of high nobility of the era therefore the rank was not recognized by the other ruling dynasties until 1453 7 Sovereign Prince from the Latin princeps meaning first citizen The feminine form is Princess Variant forms include the German Furst and Russian Knyaz knyaz and the feminine form Knyaginya knyaginya b Datu in the Visayas and Mindanao which together with the term Raja in the Rajahnate of Cebu and Kingdom of Maynila and Lakan title widely used on the island of Luzon are the Filipino equivalents of sovereign prince and thus glossed as ruler The female equivalent is a Dayang Cf also Principalia the hispanized and Christianized Datu class during the Spanish colonial period in the Philippines 8 9 Nizam The word is derived from the Arabic language Nizam نظام meaning order arrangement Nizam ul mulk was a title first used in Urdu around 1600 to mean Governor of the realm or Deputy for the Whole Empire Despot Greek for lord master initially an appellation for the Byzantine emperor later the senior court title awarded to sons and close relatives of the emperor In the 13th 15th centuries borne by autonomous and independent rulers in the Balkans Voievod si domn title held by the sovereign princes of Wallachia and Moldavia Voievod from Slavic means in this context supreme military commander while Domn from lat dominus means master lord autocrat The civilian title of domn holds a kind of primacy The office authority is called domnie roughly lordship rather than voievodship as is the case of similar named but lesser Slavic titles The prince is called upon as doamne mylord Sovereign Duke from the Latin Dux meaning leader a military rank in the late Roman Empire Variant forms include Doge and Duce it has also been modified into Archduke meaning chief Duke Grand Duke literally large or big Duke see above under royal titles Vice Duke deputy Duke etc The female equivalent is Duchess Doge elected lord and head of state in several Italian city states Ealdorman Old English for elder man rendered Dux in Latin Tuanku literally My Master Tuan Ku the title of the rulers of the nine Royal states of Malaysia all princes and princesses of the Royal Families also receive the appellation Tunku literally My Lord Tun Ku or spelt Tengku or Raja Sheikh is often used as a title for Arab royal families Some Emirs of the Arabian Peninsula use the title Sheikh elder or lord as do other members of the extended family Emir often rendered Amir in older English usage from the Arabic to command The female form is Emira Amirah Emir is the root of the naval rank Admiral Is usually translated as Prince in English Amir al umara Emir of Emirs Mir According to the book Persian Inscriptions on Indian Monuments Mir is most probably an Arabized form of Pir Pir in Old Persian and Sanskrit means the old the wise man the chief and the great leader It was Arabized as Mir then with Al A Arabic definite article it was pronounced as Amir In the Ottoman Empire Mir i Miran was used as the Persian equivalent to the Turkish title Beylerbey Bey of Beys alongside the Arabic equivalent Amir al Umara Emir of Emirs 10 Bey or Beg Baig Turkish for Chieftain Begum female royal and aristocratic title from Central and South Asia Beylerbey Bey of Beys Atabeg word is a compound of two Turkic words ata ancestor and beg or bey lord leader prince Beg Khan concatenation of Baig and Khan Khagan Bek title used by Khazars Derebey feudal lord in Anatolia and the Pontic areas of Lazistan and Acara in the 18th century Dey title given to the rulers of the Regency of Algiers and Tripoli under the Ottoman Empire from 1671 onwards Sardar also spelled as Sirdar Sardaar or Serdar is a title of nobility sir sar sair means head or authority and dar means holder in Sanskrit and Avestan Tribal titles Edit Tribal chief Tadodaho derived from the name of the first keeper of the council fire of the Iroquois Confederacy Haudenosaunee or Five Nations refers to the individual with the highest authority in both their modern territory and their spiritual way of life Taoiseach Irish pronunciation ˈt ˠiːʃex means leader An Irish clan chief Since 1937 this has been the title for the elected prime ministers of Ireland in both Irish and English Tanaiste Irish pronunciation ˈt ˠaːn ˠeʃtʲe is the second in command of an Irish clan Since 1937 this has been the title in both Irish and English for the deputy head of the Irish government nominated by the serving Taoiseach to act in that role during the Taoiseach s temporary absence Toiseach the Scottish Gaelic for clan chief Tywysog Welsh pronunciation teˈwesɔɡ in modern Welsh means Prince and is cognate with Taoiseach and Toiseach Derived from the proto Celtic towissakos chieftain leader Ri ruirech king of over kings or ri coicid a provincial King in Ireland Corono leader of a large tribe in Celtic Gallaecia In later Latin inscriptions they would sometimes be referred to as Princeps 11 Fon the regional and tribal leaders in Cameroon Odikro an Akan chieftain Obahemaa female maternal counterpart Cacique derived from the Taino word kasike for pre Columbian monarchs in the Bahamas the Greater Antilles and Lesser Antilles Lonko chief of several Mapuche communities Ratu A Fijian chiefly title that is also found in Javanese culture Aliʻi nui was the supreme monarch of various Hawaiian islands They are the supreme high chiefs chief of chiefs This title would later be used by rulers of the entire Hawaiian chain of islands Ajaw In Maya meaning lord ruler king or leader Was the title of the ruler in the Classic Maya polity A variant being the title of K inich Ajaw or Great Sun King as it was used to refer to the founder of the Copan dynasty K inich Yax K uk Mo The female equivalent is a Ix ajaw Halach Uinik In Maya meaning real man person of fact or person of command Was the title of the ruler in the Post Classic Maya polity Kuchkabal Religious titles Edit Pope also Supreme Pontiff of the Universal Church and Vicar of Christ is considered the apostolic successor of Saint Peter one of the Twelve Apostles primary disciples of Jesus Christ Once wielding substantial secular power as the ruler of the Papal States and leader of Christendom the Pope is also the absolute ruler of the sovereign state Vatican City Also the title of the leader of the Coptic Church considered successor of the Apostle Saint Mark the Evangelist The word pope is derived from Latin and Italian papa a familiar form of father Catholicos is the Chief Bishop Patriarch of the Armenian Orthodox Church The earliest ecclesiastical use of the title Catholicos was by the Bishop of Armenia head of the Armenian Orthodox Apostolic Church in the 4th century Patriarch is the highest ecclesial title used in the Eastern Christian tradition Some patriarchs are also styled as popes Caliph means successor to Muhammad both a religious and a secular leader The ruler of the caliphate was the secular head of the international Muslim community as a nation To claim the Caliphate was theoretically to claim stewardship over Muslims on earth under the sovereignty of Allah See Amir al Mu minin above This did not necessarily mean that the Caliph was himself the supreme authority on Islamic law or theology that still fell to the Ulema The role of the Caliph was to oversee and take responsibility for the Muslim community s political and governmental needs both within and beyond the borders of his territorial realm rather than to himself determine matters of doctrine Amir al Mu minin or Commander Emir of the Faithful a title traditionally held by the Caliphs of Islam to denote their suzerainty over all Muslims even theoretically those beyond their territorial borders Currently the King of Morocco and the Sultan of Sokoto hold this title although neither officially claims the Caliphate Imam Imam ɪˈmɑːm Arabic إمام imam plural أئمة aʼimmah is an Islamic leadership position For Sunni Muslims Imam is most commonly used as the title of a worship leader of a mosque In this context imams may lead Islamic worship services lead prayers serve as community leaders and provide religious guidance Thus for Sunnis anyone can study the basic Islamic sciences and become an Imam Dalai Lama the highest authority in Tibetan or more specifically Gelug Buddhism and a symbol of the unification of Tibet said to belong to a line of reincarnations of the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara Among other incarnate Tibetan lamas the second highest Gelug prelate is the Panchen Lama From the time of the Fifth Dalai Lama until 1950 the Dalai Lamas effectively ruled Tibet The chief of the rival Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism is the Karmapa Saltigue the high priests and priestesses of the Serer people They are the diviners in Serer religion Other sovereigns royalty peers and major nobility Edit Main articles Royal family Peerage Nobility and Imperial immediacy Several ranks were widely used for more than a thousand years in Europe alone for both sovereign rulers and non sovereigns Additional knowledge about the territory and historic period is required to know whether the rank holder was a sovereign or non sovereign However joint precedence among rank holders often greatly depended on whether a rank holder was sovereign whether of the same rank or not This situation was most widely exemplified by the Holy Roman Empire HRE in Europe Several of the following ranks were commonly both sovereign and non sovereign within the HRE Outside of the HRE the most common sovereign rank of these below was that of Prince Within the HRE those holding the following ranks who were also sovereigns had enjoyed what was known as an immediate relationship with the Emperor Those holding non sovereign ranks held only a mediate relationship meaning that the civil hierarchy upwards was mediated by one or more intermediaries between the rank holder and the Emperor Titles Edit Prince Prinz in German junior members of a royal grand ducal ruling ducal or princely or mediatised family The title of Furst was usually reserved from the 19th century for rulers of principalities the smallest sovereign entities e g Liechtenstein Lippe Schwarzburg Waldeck and Pyrmont and for heads of high ranking noble but non ruling families Bismarck Clary und Aldringen Dietrichstein Henckel von Donnersmarck Kinsky Paar Pless Thun und Hohenstein etc Cadets of these latter families were generally not allowed to use Prinz being accorded only the style of count Graf or occasionally that of Furst Wrede Urach even though it was also a ruling title Exceptional use of Prinz was permitted for some morganatic families e g Battenberg Montenuovo and a few others Carolath Beuthen Biron von Kurland In particular Crown prince Kronprinz in German was reserved for the heir apparent of an emperor or king Grand Prince Velikiy Knyaz ruler of a grand principality a title primarily used in the medieval Kyivan Rus principalities It was also used by the Romanovs of the Russian Empire for members of the imperial family Elector Prince Kurfurst in German a rank for those who voted for the Holy Roman Emperor usually sovereign of a state e g the Margrave of Brandenburg an elector called the Elector of Brandenburg Ban noble title used in several states in Central and Southeastern Europe between the 7th century and the 20th century Dauphin title of the heir apparent of the royal family of France as he was the de jure ruler of the Dauphine region in southeastern France under the authority of the King Infante title of the cadet members of the royal families of Portugal and Spain Mexican Prince was the title created on June 22 1822 by the Mexican Constituent Congress during the First Mexican Empire to be granted to legitimate children who were not the heir or firstborn of the Emperor Agustin de Iturbide Later his grandson were given the titles Prince of Iturbide by Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico Krolewicz title used by the children of the monarchs of Poland and later Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Ōji 王子 Japanese literally sovereign child used only for the son of a monarch Yuvraj is an Indian title for crown prince the heir apparent to the throne of an Indian notably Hindu kingdom Buumi first in line to the throne in Serer pre colonial kingdoms The second in line is called a Thilas whereas the third in line is known as a Loul Bai Filipino feminine equivalent of a prince Ampuan Maranao royal title which literally means The One to whom one asks for apology Ginoo Ancient Filipino equivalent to noble man or prince now used in the form Ginoong as the analogue to mister Pillai Ancient South Indian title meaning child Prince for junior children of Emperors 12 Morza a Tatar title usually translated as prince it ranked below a Khan The title was borrowed from Persian and Indian appellation Mirza added to the names of certain nobles which itself derived from Emir Daakyehene pronounced Daa chi hi ni literally future king The feminine form is Daakyehemaa An Akan prince Knyaz a title found in most Slavic languages denoting a ruling or noble rank It is usually translated into English as Prince but the word is related to the English King and the German Konig Duke Herzog in German ruler a of a duchy c also for junior members of ducal and some grand ducal families Marquess Margrave or Marquis literally Count of a March Border territory was the ruler of a marquessate margraviate or march The female equivalent is Marchioness Grand Zupan a more influential Zupan Count theoretically the ruler of a county known as an Earl in modern Britain known as a Graf in German known as Conde in Spain and Mexico known as a Serdar in Montenegro and Serbia The female equivalent is Countess which in Britain also refers to an earl s wife Landgrave literally Land Count a German title ruler of a landgraviate large provincial territory Zupan noble and administrative title used in several states in Central and Southeastern Europe between the 7th century and the 21st century Ispan leader of a castle district a fortress and the royal lands attached to it in the Kingdom of Hungary from the early 11th century Viscount vice count theoretically the ruler of a viscounty which did not develop into a hereditary title until much later 13 The female equivalent is Viscountess In the case of French viscounts and viscountesses it is customary to leave the titles untranslated as vicomte vikɔ t and vicomtesse vikɔ tɛs Sahib name of Arabic origin meaning holder master or owner Baron theoretically the ruler of a barony some barons in some countries may have been free barons liber baro and as such regarded themselves as higher barons The female equivalent is Baroness Freiherr a German word meaning literally Free Master or Free Lord i e not subdued to feudal chores or drudgery is the German equivalent of the English term Baron with the important difference that unlike the British Baron he is not a Peer of the Realm member of the high aristocracy 14 The female equivalent is Freifrau Primor a Hungarian noble title originally the highest rank of Szekely nobility usually compared to baron or less commonly count 15 Originally primores could de jure not be evicted from his fiefdom even by the King of Hungary although such instances did occur 16 Zamindar were considered to be equivalent to lords and barons in some cases they were independent sovereign princes Jagir also spelled as Jageer Devanagari ज ग र Persian جاگیر ja meaning place gir meaning keeping holding The feudal owner lord of the Jagir were called Jagirdar or Jageerdar Rais is a used by the rulers of Arab states and South Asia Subahdar is normally appointed from the Mughal princes or the officers holding the highest mansabs Deshmukh Marathi for ruler It is an equivalent to a lord of the land Principal m Principala f a person belonging to the aristocratic ruling class of Filipino nobles called Principalia roughly equivalent to ancient Roman Patricians through whom the Spanish Monarchs ruled the Philippines during the colonial period c 1600s to 1898 17 18 Regents A regent from Latin regens ruling governing is a person appointed to govern a state pro tempore Latin for the time being because the monarch is a minor absent incapacitated or unable to discharge the powers and duties of the monarchy or the throne is vacant and the new monarch has not yet been determined The rule of a regent or regents is called a regency A regent or regency council may be formed ad hoc or in accordance with a constitutional rule Regent is sometimes a formal title granted to a monarch s most trusted advisor or personal assistant If the regent is holding their position due to their position in the line of succession the compound term prince regent is often used if the regent of a minor is their mother she would be referred to as queen regent Minor nobility landed gentry and other aristocracy Edit Main articles Aristocracy class and Landed gentry The distinction between the ranks of the major nobility listed above and the minor nobility listed here was not always a sharp one in all nations But the precedence of the ranks of a Baronet or a Knight is quite generally accepted for where this distinction exists for most nations Here the rank of Baronet ranking above a Knight is taken as the highest rank among the ranks of the minor nobility or landed gentry that are listed below Titles Edit Baronet is a hereditary title ranking below Baron but above Knight this title is granted only in the United Kingdom and is variously considered to be the head of the nobiles minores or the lowest of the nobiles majores of that country Dominus was the Latin title of the feudal superior and mesne lords and also an ecclesiastical and academical title equivalent of Lord Vidame a minor French aristocrat Vavasour also a petty French feudal lord Seigneur or Lord of the manor rules a smaller local fief Captal archaic Gascon title equivalent to seigneur Knight is the central rank of the Medieval aristocratic system in Europe and having its equivalents elsewhere usually ranking at or near the top of the Minor Nobility Patrician is a dignity of minor nobility or landed gentry most often being hereditary usually ranking below Knight but above Esquire Fidalgo or Hidalgo is a minor Portuguese and Spanish aristocrat respectively from filho d algo hijo de algo lit son of something Nobile is an Italian title of nobility for prestigious families that never received a title Edler is a minor aristocrat in Germany and Austria during those countries respective imperial periods Jonkheer is an honorific for members of noble Dutch families that never received a title An untitled noblewoman is styled Jonkvrouw though the wife of a Jonkheer is a Mevrouw or sometimes Freule which could also be used by daughters of the same Junker is a German noble honorific meaning young nobleman or otherwise young lord Reis is an obscure aristocratic title from the coastlines of Lebanon and Syria that is roughly equivalent to a Baron The word itself can be translated as Commodore and is found only among a few of the former Merchant Aristocrat houses of the former Mount Lebanon Emirate The only legitimate holders of this title are those that trace their lineage back to vassals of Fakhr al Din II that arrived from Italy via the alliance with the Medici Skartabel is a minor Polish aristocrat Scottish Baron is a hereditary feudal nobility dignity outside the Scots peerage recognised by Lord Lyon as a member of the Scots noblesse and ranking below a Lord of Parliament but above a Scottish Laird 19 d in the British system However Scottish Barons on the European continent are considered and treated equal to European barons Laird is a Scottish hereditary feudal dignity ranking below a Scottish Baron but above an Esquire Esquire is a rank of gentry originally derived from Squire and indicating the status of an attendant to a knight an apprentice knight or a manorial lord 20 it ranks below Knight or in Scotland below Laird but above Gentleman e f Gentleman is the basic rank of landed gentry ranking below Esquire historically primarily associated with land within British Commonwealth nations it is also roughly equivalent to some minor nobility of some continental European nations 21 Bibi means Miss in Urdu and is frequently used as a respectful title for women in South Asia when added to the given name Lalla is an Amazigh title of respect The title is a prefix to her given name or personal name and is used by females usually of noble or royal background Sidi is a masculine title of respect meaning my master in Maltese Darija and Egyptian Arabic Dvoryanin the word Russian Dvoryanin romanized Member of the court a member of Russian nobilityIn Germany the constitution of the Weimar Republic in 1919 ceased to accord privileges to members of dynastic and noble families Their titles henceforth became legal parts of the family name and traditional forms of address e g Hoheit or Durchlaucht ceased to be accorded to them by governmental entities The last title was conferred on 12 November 1918 to Kurt von Klefeld The actual rank of a title holder in Germany depended not only on the nominal rank of the title but also the degree of sovereignty exercised the rank of the title holder s suzerain and the length of time the family possessed its status within the nobility Uradel Briefadel altfurstliche neufurstliche see German nobility Thus any reigning sovereign ranks higher than any deposed or mediatized sovereign e g the Furst of Waldeck sovereign until 1918 was higher than the Duke of Arenberg head of a mediatized family although Herzog is nominally a higher title than Furst However former holders of higher titles in extant monarchies retained their relative rank i e a queen dowager of Belgium outranks the reigning Prince of Liechtenstein Members of a formerly sovereign or mediatized house rank higher than the nobility Among the nobility those whose titles derive from the Holy Roman Empire rank higher than the holder of an equivalent title granted by one of the German monarchs after 1806 In Austria nobility titles may no longer be used since 1918 22 See also EditClergy Ecclesiastical Addresses Prince of the church Courtesy title False titles of nobility Forms of address in the United Kingdom Nobiliary particle Petty kingdom Royal and noble styles Subsidiary title Substantive titleNotes Edit a b 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 Prince A duke who is not actually or formerly sovereign or a member of a reigning or formerly reigning dynasty such as British French Portuguese Spanish and most Italian dukes is a non dynastic noble ranking above a marquis There are actually three Scottish dignities that are types of a Scottish Baron these are in descending order of rank Scottish feudal Earl Scottish Feudal Lord and Scottish feudal Baron the general name for the dignity listed above among the ranks of aristocratic gentry The meaning of the title Esquire became and remains quite diffuse and may indicate anything from no aristocratic status to some official government civil appointment or more historically the son of a knight or noble who had no other title above just Gentleman In the United States where there is no nobility the title esquire is sometimes arrogated without any governmental authorization by lawyers admitted to the state bar References Edit According to https www infoplease com whos who monarchy Archived 7 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine Lockhart 2001 p 238 Schroeder 2007 p 3 See also the entry for TLAHTOANI Archived 2007 06 14 at the Wayback Machine in Wimmer 2006 The Practical Sanskrit English Dictionary Vaman Shivaram Apte Schroeder 2007 pp 3 4 See also the entry for CIHUATLAHTOANI Archived 2007 06 08 at the Wayback Machine in Wimmer 2006 Harriet Crawford 29 August 2013 The Sumerian World Routledge p 283 ISBN 978 1 136 21912 2 Meyers Taschenlexikon Geschichte 1982 vol 1 p21 22 Meyers Taschenlexikon Geschichte 1982 vol 2 p 106 Esta institucion Cabeceria de Barangay mucho mas antigua que la sujecion de las islas al Gobierno ha merecido siempre las mayores atencion En un principio eran las cabecerias hereditarias y constituian la verdadera hidalguia del pais mas del dia si bien en algunas provincias todavia se tramiten por sucesion hereditaria las hay tambien eleccion particularmente en las provincias mas inmediatas a Manila en donde han perdido su prestigio y son una verdadera carga En las provincias distantes todavia se hacen respetar y alli es precisamente en donde la autoridad tiene menos que hacer y el orden se conserva sin necesidad de medidas coercitivas porque todavia existe en ellas el gobierno patriarcal por el gran respeto que la plebe conserva aun a lo que llaman aqui principalia Translation This institution Cabecera de Barangay much older than the fastening of the islands to the Government has always deserved the most attention In the beginning they were the hereditary heads and they constituted the true chivalry of the country but of the day although in some provinces they are still transacted by hereditary succession there are also elections particularly in the provinces closest to Manila where they have lost their prestige and are a real burden In the distant provinces they are still enforced and that is precisely where authority has less to do and the order is preserved without the need for coercive measures because the patriarchal government still exists in them because of the great respect that the plebs still retain for what they call here principalia FERRANDO FERRANDO Fr Juan amp FONSECA OSA Fr Joaquin 1870 1872 Historia de los PP Dominicos en las Islas Filipinas y en las Misiones del Japon China Tung kin y Formosa Vol 1 of 6 vols in Spanish Madrid Imprenta y esteriotipia de M Rivadeneyra OCLC 9362749 L institution des chefs de barangay a ete empruntee aux Indiens chez qui on la trouvee etablie lors de la conquete des Philippines ils formaient a cette epoque une espece de noblesse hereditaire L heredite leur a ete conservee aujourd hui quand une de ces places devient vacante la nomination du successeur est faite par le surintendant des finances dans les pueblos qui environment la capitale et dans les provinces eloignees par l alcalde sur la proposition du gobernadorcillo et la presentation des autres membres du barangay il en est de meme pour les nouvelles creations que necessite de temps a autre l augmentation de la population Le cabeza sa femme et l aine de ses enfants sont exempts du tributo MALLAT de BASSILAU Jean 1846 Les Philippines Histoire geographie moeurs Agriculture industrie et commerce des Colonies espagnoles dans l Oceanie 2 vols in French Paris Arthus Bertrand Ed ISBN 978 1143901140 OCLC 23424678 p 356 Zettersteen 1986 p 446 Pena Granha A 2007 Galicia cuna de los celtas de la Europa Atlantica in Anuario Brigantino no 30 pp 57 88 Indian Epigraphical Dictionary Page 166 Accessed at https books google co uk books id pySCGvdyYLIC amp pg PA166 amp dq indian epigraphical pillai prince amp hl en amp sa X amp ved 0ahUKEwiHpO3DvuTQAhWpBcAKHRzwDSIQ6AEIHDAA v onepage amp q indian 20epigraphical 20pillai 20prince amp f false Archived 17 January 2023 at the Wayback Machine Upshur Jiu Hwa Terry Janice Holoka Jim Goff Richard Cassar George H 2011 Cengage Advantage Books World History Vol I California Wadsworth Publishing Co Inc p 329 ISBN 9781111345167 Meyers Taschenlexikon Geschichte 1982 vol 1 p 22 amp vol 2 p 198 Szilagyi Laszlo 1938 Szekely Primor Csaladok Budapest p 17 Gero Jozsef 1938 A M Kir Belugyminiszter altal igazolt nemesek 1867 1937 Budapest Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Kingdom of Hungary pp 5 30 Esta institucion Cabeceria de Barangay mucho mas antigua que la sujecion de las islas al Gobierno ha merecido siempre las mayores atencion En un principio eran las cabecerias hereditarias y constituian la verdadera hidalguia del pais mas del dia si bien en algunas provincias todavia se tramiten por sucesion hereditaria las hay tambien eleccion particularmente en las provincias mas inmediatas a Manila en donde han perdido su prestigio y su una verdadera carga En las provincias distantes todavia se hacen respetar y alli es precisamente en donde la autoridad tiene menos que hacer y el orden se conserva sin necesidad de medidas coercitivas porque todavia existe en ellas el gobierno patriarcal por el gran respeto que la plebe conserva aun a lo que llaman aqui principalia FERRANDO Fr Juan amp FONSECA OSA Fr Joaquin 1870 1872 Historia de los PP Dominicos en las Islas Filipinas y en las Misiones del Japon China Tung kin y Formosa Vol 1 of 6 vols in Spanish Madrid Imprenta y esteriotipia de M Rivadeneyra p 61 Durante la dominacion espanola el cacique jefe de un barangay ejercia funciones judiciales y administrativas A los tres anos tenia el tratamiento de don y se reconocia capacidad para ser gobernadorcillo con facultades para nombrarse un auxiliar llamado primogenito siendo hereditario el cargo de jefe Enciclopedia Universal Ilustrada Europeo Americana VII Madrid Espasa Calpe S A 1921 p 624 Ruling of the Court of the Lord Lyon 26 February 1948 Vol IV page 26 With regard to the words untitled nobility employed in certain recent birthbrieves in relation to the Minor Baronage of Scotland Finds and Declares that the Minor Barons of Scotland are and have been both in this nobiliary Court and in the Court of Session recognised as a titled nobility and that the estait of the Baronage i e Barones Minores are of the ancient Feudal Nobility of Scotland Dodd Charles R 1843 A manual of dignities privilege and precedence including lists of the great public functionaries from the revolution to the present time London Whittaker amp Co pp 248 251 1 Larence Sir James Henry 1827 first published 1824 The nobility of the British Gentry or the political ranks and dignities of the British Empire compared with those on the continent 2nd ed London T Hookham Simpkin and Marshall Archived from the original on 17 January 2023 Retrieved 6 January 2013 RIS Dokument bka gv at Archived from the original on 27 May 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2009 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Noble titles Hereditary titles Unequal and Morganatic Marriages in German Law Noble Princely Royal and Imperial Titles British noble titles Fake titles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Imperial royal and noble ranks amp oldid 1134176354, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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