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  2. Seneschal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneschal

    The word seneschal (/ ˈ s ɛ n ə ʃ əl /) can have several different meanings, all of which reflect certain types of supervising or administering in a historic context.Most commonly, a seneschal was a senior position filled by a court appointment within a royal, ducal, or noble household during the Middle Ages and early Modern period – historically a steward or majordomo of a medieval ...

  3. Steward (office) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steward_(office)

    A steward is an official who is appointed by the legal ruling monarch to represent them in a country and who may have a mandate to govern it in their name; in the latter case, it is synonymous with the position of regent, vicegerent, viceroy, king's lieutenant (for Romance languages), governor, or deputy (the Roman rector, praefectus, or vicarius).

  4. Dish-bearers and butlers in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dish-bearers_and_butlers...

    [2] The Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources (DMLBS) defines discifer as dish-bearer or sewer, [a] [4] and dapifer as an attendant at meals, a sewer or a steward. [5] Historians often translate discifer as seneschal, [6] but Gautier objects that the word seneschal is not recorded in England before the Norman Conquest. [2]

  5. Lord Steward - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_Steward

    William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, holding his white staff of office (portrait dated AD 1567, the year he was appointed Lord Steward).. Within the Curia Regis, the office of Steward of the King's Household was indistinguishable from that of Lord (High) Steward of England, which had first been introduced to the realm under William the Conqueror (and which was by the end of the 12th century ...

  6. Stadtholder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stadtholder

    In the Low Countries, a stadtholder (Dutch: stadhouder [ˈstɑtˌɦʌudər] ⓘ) was a steward, first appointed as a medieval official and ultimately functioning as a national leader. The stadtholder was the replacement of the duke or count of a province during the Burgundian and Habsburg period (1384 – 1581/1795).

  7. Royal Court of Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Court_of_Scotland

    The seal of Walter Fitzalan (1106–77), the first hereditary Royal Stewart. For most of the medieval era, the king was itinerant and had no "capital" as such. The Pictish centre of Forteviot was the chief royal seat of the early Gaelic Kingdom of Alba that became the Kingdom of Scotland.

  8. Yeoman (household servant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeoman_(Household_Servant)

    The Steward oversaw the Offices concerned with household management. Procurement, storage, and preparation of food, waiting at table, and tending to the kitchen gardens, were some of the duties for which the Steward was responsible. The Treasurer was responsible for the security of the King's treasury. This included tableware made of gold ...

  9. Dictionary of the Middle Ages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_the_Middle_Ages

    The Dictionary of the Middle Ages is a 13-volume encyclopedia of the Middle Ages published by the American Council of Learned Societies between 1982 and 1989. It was first conceived and started in 1975 with American medieval historian Joseph Strayer of Princeton University as editor-in-chief.