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  2. Imperial, royal and noble ranks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Imperial,_royal_and_noble_ranks

    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. [47]

  3. List of titles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_titles

    Tribal titles give the title-holder authority over a bloodline rather than a physical geography. Institutional titles are mostly confined to a specific campus, corporation, temple, or other private or semi-public institution. Divisional is applied to most military & police ranks, with the number of people under that rank's command listed when ...

  4. Category:Noble titles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Noble_titles

    This category works on a broad definition of nobility, including ruling houses of true monarchies, peerage or equivalents and lower aristocracy or gentry.Please note that this page is unlikely ever to list all 'noble' titles discussed in Wikipedia, since quite some derived/related titles (especially for descendants, as discussed in Prince) and translations (some more may be found via the ...

  5. From Duchess to Viscount (Vis-what?): A Complete Guide to ...

    www.aol.com/duchess-viscount-vis-complete-guide...

    Aaron Chown/WPA Pool/Getty Images. Examples: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex . The highest degree of the British peerage system, a duke or duchess title is traditionally granted to a prince and his ...

  6. British nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_nobility

    The name adopted by the grantee of a title of nobility originally was the name of his seat or principal manor, which often had also been adopted as his surname, for example the Berkeley family seated at Berkeley Castle had the surname "de Berkeley" ("from Berkeley") and gained the title Baron Berkeley, amongst many others.

  7. Nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobility

    Apart from the hierarchy of noble titles, in England rising through baron, viscount, earl, and marquess to duke, many countries had categories at the top or bottom of the nobility. The gentry, relatively small landowners with perhaps one or two villages, were mostly noble in most countries, for example the Polish landed gentry.

  8. German nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nobility

    German nobility was not simply distinguished by noble ranks and titles, but was also seen as a distinctive ethos. Title 9, §1 of the General State Laws for the Prussian States declared that the nobility's responsibility "as the first social class in the state" was "the defence of the country, as well as the supporting of the exterior dignity ...

  9. Order of precedence in England and Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_precedence_in...

    A peer derives his precedence from his highest-ranking title; peeresses derive their precedence in the same way, whether they hold their highest-ranking title in their own right or by marriage. The ranks in the tables refer to peers rather than titles: if exceptions are named for a rank, these do not include peers of a higher rank (or any peers ...