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Encyclopedia Britannica



PRINCE (Lat. princeps, from primus capio, " I am the first to take "; Ital. principe, Fr. prince)

This article appears in Volume V22, Page 344 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PRE-PYR
PRINCE (Lat. princeps, from primus capio, " I am the first to take "; Ital. principe, Fr. prince) , a title implying either political power or social rank. The Latin word princeps originally signified " the first " either in place or action (cf. Ger. Furst; O.H.G. foristo= English "first "). As an honorary title it was applied in the Roman republic to the princeps senatus, i.e. the senator who stood first on the censor's
list
 , and the princeps juventutis, i.e. the first on the roll of the equestrian order. The assumption of the style of princeps senatus by
Augustus
  (q.v.) first associated the word with the idea of sovereignty and dominion, but throughout the period of the empire it is still used as a title of certain civil or military officials (e.g. princeps officii, for the
chief
  official of a provincial governor, in the Theodosian code, leg. I., De offic. rect. prov. i. 7; princeps militiae, i.e. the
commander
  of a cohort or legion); while in the middle ages the term is still applied vaguely in charters to the magnates of the state or the high officials of the palace, principes being treated as the equivalent of proceres, optimates or seniores. Yet the idea of sovereignty as implied in the word princeps, used as a title rather than as a designation, survived strongly. In the Visigothic and Lombard codes princeps is the equivalent of rex or imperator; and when, after the overthrow of the Lombard kingdom by the Franks, Arichis II. (d. 787) of Beneventum wished to assert his independent sovereignty, he had himself anointed and crowned, and exchanged his style of duke for that of prince.
From Italy the use of the title spreadfirst, with the Crusaders,
to the Holy Land, where Bohemund, son of Tancred, took the
style of prince of Antioch; next, with the Latin conquerors, into
the East Roman Empire, where in 1205 William de Champlette,
a cadet of the house of Champagne, founded the principality
of Achaea and the Morea. This example was followed by lesser
magnates, who styled themselves loosely, or were so styled by
the chroniclers, " princes," even though they had little claim
to independent sovereignty. From the East the
fashion was carried back to France; but there the
erection of certain fiefs into " principalities," which became
common in the 15th and 16th centuries, certainly implied no
concession of independent sovereignty, and the title of " prince "
thus bestowed ranked below that of " duke," being sometimes
borne by cadet branches of ducal houses, e.g. the princes of Leon
and of Soubise, cadets of the house of Rohan. On the other
hand, the title of " prince " was borne from the time of Charles
of the blood " (princes du sang), who took precedence in due
order after the king. To these were added, from the time of
Louis XIV., the princes legitimes, recognized bastards of the
sovereign, who ranked next after the princes of the blood. Thus,
e.g. the princes of Conde, Conti and Lamballe owed their exalted
precedence, not to their principalities, but to their royal descent.
In Germany, Austria and other countries formerly embraced
in the Holy Roman Empire the title of " prince " has had a some-
what different history. During the first period of
Germany. the empire, the " princes " were the whole body of
the optimates who took rank next to the emperor. In the 11th
century, with the growth of feudalism, all feudatories holding
in
chief
  of the Crown ranked as " princes," from dukes to simple
counts, together with archbishops, bishops and the abbots of
monasteries held directly of the emperor. Towards the end of
the 12th century, however, the order of princes (Ffirstenstand)
was narrowed to the more important spiritual and temporal
feudatories who had a right to a seat in the diet of the empire
in the " college of princes " (Furstenbank). Finally, in the
13th century, seven of the most powerful of these separated
themselves into a college which obtained the sole right of electing
the emperor. These were called " prince electors " (Kurfursten),
and formed the highest rank of the German princes (see ELECTOR).
The formal designation of " prince " (Furst) was, however,
extremely rare in Germany in the middle ages. Examples are
the princes of Mecklenburg (Prilislav I., prince of the Holy Roman Empire in 1170) and Rugen, the latter title now belonging to the kings of Prussia. In the 17th century some half-dozen more principalities were created, of which that of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (1697) survives as a sovereign house. The 18th century increased their number, and of the princely houses of this period those of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (1710), Waldeck (1712) and Reuss, elder branch (1778), have preserved their sovereignty. Of the other sovereign " princes " in Germany, Reuss, cadet branch, obtained the title in 1806, Schaumburg-Lippe in 1807. Outside the German Empire the prince of Liechtenstein, whose title dates from 1608, still remains sovereign.
Thus, in Germany, with the decay of the empire the title "prince" received a sovereign connotation, though it ranks, as in France, below that of " duke." There are, however, in the countries formerly embraced in the Holy Roman Empire other classes of " princes." Some of these inherit titles, sovereign under the old empire, but " mediatized " during the years of its collapse at the beginning of the 19th century, e.g. Thurn and Taxis (1695), Hohenlohe (1764), Leiningen (1779); others received the title of " prince " immediately before or after the end of the empire as " compensation " for ceded territories, e.g. Metternich-Winneburg (1803). Besides these mediatized princes, who transmit their titles and their privilege of " royal " blood to all their legitimate descendants, there are also in Austria and Germany " princes," created by the various German sovereigns, and some dating from the period of the old empire, who take a lower rank, as not being " princes of the Holy Roman Empire " nor entitled to any royal privileges. Some of these titles have been bestowed to give a recognized rank to the morganatic wives and children of royal princes, e.g., the princes of Battenberg, or the title of " princess " of Hohenberg borne by the consort of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand d'Este; others as a reward for distinguished service, e.g. Hardenberg, Blucher, Bismarck. In this latter case the rule of primogeniture has been usual, the younger sons taking the title of " count " (Graf). These non-royal princes are ranked in the Almanach de Gotha with British and French dukes and Italian princes. All these various classes of princes are styled Furst and have the predicate " Serene Highness " (Durchlaucht). The word Prinz, actually synonymous with Furst, is reserved as the title of the non-reigning members of sovereign houses and, with certain exceptions (e.g. Bavaria), for the cadets of mediatized ducal and princely families. The
heir
  to a throne is " crown prince " (Kronprinz), " hereditary grand duke " (Erbgrossherzog) or " hereditary prince " (Erbprinz). The
heir
  to the crown of Prussia, when not the son of the monarch has the .title of " prince of Prussia " (Prinz von Preussen).1
In Italy the title " prince " (principe) is also of very unequal value. In Naples, following the precedent set by Arichis II., " much affecting the glory of a greater name than duke," it ranked above that of duke. In other parts linty' of Italy the heads of great families sometimes bear the title of " prince," e.g. Prince Corsini, duke of Casigliano; sometimes that of " duke," e.g. the Caetani, princes of Teano, whose chief is styled " duke of Sermoneta," the title of " prince of Teano " being borne by his eldest son. The title of "prince of Naples "is attached to the eldest son of the king of Italy. The excessive multiplication of the title has tended to deprive it of much social value in itself, and under the democratic constitution of Italy it confers neither power nor precedence.
" Prince " is also the translation of the Russian title knyaz, though veliky knyaz, the style of the Imperial princes, is rendered " grand duke." Some of the Russian, or Polish- Russia Russian, princely families are of great importance-
e.g.the Czartoryskis,the Swiatopolk-Czetwertynskis,or the Russian
1 Furst may or may not be a sovereign or territorial title, but it is only borne by the head of the family, e.g. Heinrich XIV., regierender Furst (reigning prince) von Reuss or Furst Bismarck. Prinz always implies cadetship, e.g. Prinz Heinrich XLV. Reuss. The title Prinz von Preussen, therefore, excludes any idea of territorial sovereignty, whereas the correct German rendering of that of prince of Wales, which originally at least implied such sovereignty, would be Furst von Wales.
France.
branch of the I.ubomirskis. But, in general, though the title " prince " implies descent from one or other of the ruling dynasties of Russia, it is in itself of little account, being exceedingly common owing to its being borne by every member of the family. The predicate of " Serene Highness," though borne by certain magnates who were princes before they became Russiansas in the case of the families mentioned aboveis not attached to the Russian title of "prince." In some cases, however, it is conferred with the title by imperial warrant (e.g. Lieven, 1826).
The title of " prince " is also borne by the descendants of those Greek Phanariot families (see PHANARIOTS), e.g. Mavrocordato, Turkey. Ypsilanti, Soutzo, who formerly supplied hospodars
to the Turkish principalities on the Danube. In the Ottoman Empire the rulers appointed to the quasi-independent Christian communities subject to it have usually been designated " prince, " and the title has thus come to signify in connexion with the Eastern Question a sovereignty more or less subordinate. As such it was rejected on behalf of the Bavarian prince Otho, when he accepted the throne of Greece, in favour of that of " king. " On the other hand, the substitution, in 1852, in Montenegro of the title of " prince and lord " (knyaz i gospodar) for the ancient title of vladika (archbishop) certainly Monaca. implied no such subordination. The only other
instance in Europe of " prince " as a completely sovereign title is that of the prince of Monaco, the formal style having been adopted by the Grimaldi lords in 1641.
In Great Britain " prince " and " princess " as titles are
confined to members of the royal family, though non-royal dukes
are so described in their formal style (see D1r1LE).
Nor is this use of great antiquity; the custom of
giving the courtesy title of " prince " to all male
descendants of the sovereign to the third and fourth generation
being of modern growth and quite foreign to English traditions.
It was not till the reign of Henry VII. that the king's sons began
to be styled " princes "; and as late as the time of Charles II.,
the daughters of the duke of
York
 , both of whom became queens
regnant, were called simply the Lady Mary and the Lady Anne.
The title of " princess royal, " bestowed on the eldest daughter
of the sovereign was borrowed by King George II. from Prussia.
Until
recent
  years the title " prince " was never conferred on
anybody except the heir-apparent to the Crown, and his princi-
pality is a peerage. Since the reign of Edward III. the eldest
sons of the kings and queens of England have always been dukes
of
Cornwall
  by birth, and, with a few exceptions, princes of
Wales by creation. Before that Edward I. had conferred the
principality on his eldest son, afterwards Edward II., who was
summoned to and sat in parliament as prince of Wales. But
Edward the Black Prince was the
original
  grantee
Prince of
of the principality as well as of the dukedom, under
the special limitations which have continued in
force to the present day. The entail of the former was " to
him and his heirs the kings of England " and of the latter " to
him and his heirs the first-begotten sons of the kings of England. "
Hence when a prince of Wales and duke of
Cornwall
  succeeds
to the throne the principality in all cases merges at once in the
Crown, and can have no separate existence again except under
a fresh creation, while the dukedom, if he has a son, descends
immediately to him, or remains in abeyance until he has a son
if one is not already born. If, however, a prince of Wales and
duke of Cornwall should die in the lifetime of the sovereign,
leaving a son and heir, both dignities are extinguished, because
his son, although he is his heir, is neither a king of England
nor the first-begotten son of a king of England. But, if instead
of a son he should leave a brother his heir, thenas was
decided in the reign of James I. on the death of Henry, prince
of Wales, whose heir was his brother Charles, duke of
York
 
the dukedom of Cornwall would pass to him as the first-begotten
son of the king of England then alive, the principality of Wales
alone becoming merged in the Crown. It has thus occasionally
happened that the dukes of Cornwall have not been princes of
Wales, as Henry VI. and Edward VI., and that the princes
of Wales have not been dukes of Cornwall, as Richard II. and George III.
But even now the cadets of the reigning family can only by royal intervention legally be saved from merging, as of old, in the general untitled mass of the people. The children of the sovereign other than his eldest son, though by courtesy " princes " and " princesses, " need a royal warrant to raise them de jure above the common herd; and even then, though they be dubbed " Royal Highness " in their cradles, they remain " commoners " till raised to the peerage. In 1905 King Edward VII. established what appears to be a new precedent, by conferring the titles of "princess" and "highness" upon the daughters of the princess Louise, duchess of Fife, created " princess royal. "
This use of the word " prince "which has in England so lofty a connotationto translate foreign titles of such varying importance and significance naturally leads to a good deal of confusion in the public mind. It is not uncommon in English society to see, e.g. a Russian prince, who may be only the cadet of a family not included in the Almanach de Gotha, given precedence as such over the untitled members of a great English ducal family, and treated with some of that exaggerated deference paid to " royalty. " On the other hand, the insular complacency of many Englishmen is apt to regard all German princes with a certain contempt, whereas the title is in Germany sometimes associated with sovereign power, sometimes with vast territorial possessions, and always with high social position.
See, Du Cange, Glossarium, s.v. " Princeps," ed. G. A. L. Henschal (Niort, 1883); John Selden, Titles of Honour (London, 1672); Almanach de Gotha (1906); H. Schulze, Die Hausgesetze der regierenden deutschen Fiirstenhduser (3 vols., Jena, 18621883) ; H. Rehm, Modernes Fiirstenrecht (Munich, 1904). (W. A. P.)


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