n.
[F.]
See
| Dictionary: Bur·grave |
| Word Tutor: burgrave |
| WordNet: burgrave |
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 |
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).
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.
(incomplete)
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| Pulkrabek (family name) | |
| burggrave | |
| Frederick I (elector of Brandenburg) |
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