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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FAT-FLA |
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FEUDALISM .) Side by side with these purely official dukedoms, however, there had continued to exist, or had sprung up, either independently or in more or less of subjection to the Frank rulers, national dukedoms, such as those of the Alemanni, the Aquitanians, and, later, of the Bavarians and Thuringians. These were developed from the early Teutonic custom by which the herizog was elected by the nation as leader for a particular campaign, as in the case of the heretogas who had led the first Saxon invaders into Britain. Tacitus says of the ancient Germans reges ex nobilitate, duces ex virtute sumunt; i.e. they elected their dukes for their warlike prowess only, and as purely military chiefs, whereas their kings were chosen from a royal family of divine descent. Sometimes the dukes so chosen succeeded in making their po' 'er permanent without taking the style of king. To this national category belong, besides the great German dukedoms, the dukes of Normandy, and the Lombard dukes of Spoleto and Benevento, who traced their origin, not to an administrative office, but to the leadership of Teutonic war bands. With the development of the feudal system the distinction between the official and the national dukedoms was more and more obliterated. By the 13th and 14th centuries the title had become purely territorial, and implied no necessary over-lordship over counts and other nobles, who existed side by side with the dukes as tenants-in- chief
The abolition of the Holy Empire in 1806 removed even the shadow of vassalage from the German reigning dukes, who retain their sovereign status under the new empire. Only one, however, the grand duke of Luxemburg, is now both sovereign and independent. Besides the sovereign dukes in Germany there are certain " mediatized " ducal houses, e.g. that of Ratibor, which share with the dispossessed families of the Italian sovereign duchies certain royal privileges, notably that of equality of blood (Ebenburtigkeit). In Italy, where titles of nobility
In France the title duke at one time implied vast territorial power, as with the dukes of Burgundy, Normandy, Aquitaine and Brittany, who asserted a practical independence against the crown, though it was not till the 12th century that the title duke was definitely regarded as superior to others. At first (in the loth and 11th centuries) it had no defined significance, and even a baron of the higher nobility
There were, under the ancien regime, three classes of dukes in France: (1) dukes who were peers (see PEERAGE) and had a seat in the parlement of Paris; (2) hereditary dukes who were not peers; (3) " brevet " dukes, created for life only. The French duke ranks in Spain with the " grandee " (q.v.), and vice versa. In republican France the already existing titles are officially recognized, but they are now no more than the badges of distinguished ancestry. Besides the descendants of the feudal aristocracy there are in France certain ducal families dating from Napoleon I.'s creation of 18o6 (e.g. dues d'Albufera, de Montebello, de Feltre), from Louis Philippe (duc d'Isly, and duc d'Audiff ret-Pasquier),andfromNapoleon III. (Malakoff,Magenta, Morny). In England the title of duke was unknown till the 14th century, though in Saxon times the title ealdorman, afterwards exchanged for " earl
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British dukes rank next to princes and princesses of the blood royal, the two archbishops of Canterbury and York
bear the titles " Lord " and " Lady " before their Christian names, also by courtesy. A duke in the British peerage, if not royal, is addressed as "Your Grace " and is styled " the Most Noble." (See ARCHDUKE, GRAND DUKE, and, for the ducal coronet, CROWN AND_CORONET.) (W. A. P.)' So Ego Haroldus dux, Ego Tostinus dux, in a charter of Edward the Confessor (,o6o), Hist. MSS. Comm. 12th rep. app. pt. ix. p. 581. End of Article: FEUDALISM If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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