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Burgrave

 
Dictionary: Bur·grave

n.

[F.]
See Burggrave.


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Word Tutor: burgrave
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: n. - The military governor of a German town in the 12th and 13th centuries; A nobleman ruling a German castle and surrounding grounds by hereditary right.

WordNet: burgrave
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 2 meanings:

Meaning #1: a nobleman ruling a German castle and surrounding grounds by hereditary right

Meaning #2: the military governor of a German town in the 12th and 13th centuries


Wikipedia: Burgrave
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A burgrave is literally the count of (i.e. appointed over) a castle or fortified town. The English form is derived through the French from the German Burggraf and Dutch) burg- or burch-graeve (Mediaeval Latin language burcgravius or burgicomes).

  • The title is originally equivalent to that of castellan (Latin: castellanus) or châtelain, meaning keeper of a castle and/or fortified town (both can be called Burg in German, burg in Dutch).
  • In Germany, owing to the peculiar conditions of the Holy Roman Empire, though the office of burgrave had become a sinecure by the end of the 13th century, the title, as borne by feudal nobles having the status of Reichsfürst (Prince of the Empire), obtained a quasi-princely significance.

There were four hereditary burgraviates ranking as principalities within the Holy Roman Empire:

It was still included among the subsidiary titles of several German (semi-)sovereign princes; and the king of Prussia, whose ancestors were burgraves of Nuremberg for over 200 years, maintained the additional style of Burggraf von Nürnberg.

  • In the Low countries, the rank of burggraaf developed into the nobiliary equivalent of a viscount (see that article).
  • In the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795), the office was of senatorial rank (i.e. entitled to a seat in the upper chamber of the sejm or diet); with the exception of their primus, the burgrabia of the former capital Kracow, these castellans were deputies of the (equally senatorial) provincial voivode.

References

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Pulkrabek (family name)
burggrave
Frederick I (elector of Brandenburg)

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