Difference between revisions of "Gentry"

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People of the nobility, also known as gentry, of different [[House]]s belong to a hierarchy based on power, standing and relation to other Houses. Ultimately, the [[Family Register]] is the final arbiter of who is right and wrong, and they have earned this power through constant attention to precisely this one task. Everyone simply trusts them in a world where almost nothing can be trusted.
People of the nobility, also known as gentry, of different [[House]]s belong to a hierarchy based on power, standing and relation to other Houses. Ultimately, the [[Family Register]] is the final arbiter of who is right and wrong, and they have earned this power through constant attention to precisely this one task. Everyone simply trusts them in a world where almost nothing can be trusted.


In essence, everyone is part of "the gentry", insomuch it is seen as the system itself. However, clearly many people of some social classes are not considered "of the gentry" or "of nobility".
In essence, everyone is part of "the gentry", insomuch it is seen as the system itself. However, people of the lower social classes are not considered "of the gentry" or "of nobility".
 
 
=== Inheritance ===
 
Inheritance generally works in the same way for all people of all standings as it does for the Royals. In addition, the head of the family (which can be a female) can adopt willing individuals into the family (though it's rare this is done with adults) who lose their own family and gains the new one. This can be done to ensure the survival of a House or just to ensure other heirs do not inherit.
 
The heads of a family also have the opportunity to decide who gets what inheritance. A prioritisation order akin to the inheritence described below is usually applied, but "favourite children" can inherit more or less of monetary gains or land.
 
One difference between European Medieval Kingdoms is that it is quite specified how and when a woman can rule and it happens a little bit more frequently than in Europe, but not by a large margin. The reason for this is that these families suffer less from inbreeding and generally have larger families which in turn makes it more unlikely that the heir would be female. Though it does happen, and while there are social norms that look down upon it, it is seen as an acceptable necessity.
 
Regardless of the rank of a couple's child, for every social status from freeman and above, similar rules apply. This is much more important when this is inheritance includes a title, but it applies to general citizen rights, land and monetary items as well. First it is important to you determine the Head of the family (or House), which is the person with the higher social standing. This is most commonly the male, but can be a woman.
 
This is the prioritisation of inheritance:
# The spouse (until death or passing on the inheritance)
# Oldest male child of the couple.
#* Second oldest male child.
#* And so on.
# Oldest female child of the couple.
#* Second oldest female child.
#* And so on.
# Oldest male child of the couple's parents (sibling of the Head).
#* Second oldest male sibling of the couple's parents.
#* And so on.
# Oldest female child of the couple's parents.
#* Second oldest male sibling of the couple's parents.
#* And so on.
 
If any child of the previous couple was survived by children themselves, the same order is applied to them before moving another step up the family tree, applying the same method where male children have priority over female children. If no heir is found, the House or Estate has ceased to exist. If it had vassal Houses, these take over the titles and lands. This can be done through an election in the council or (more commonly) a small civil war or at least show of power in the Court. If it was a more common family, the Royal House takes over the titles, deeds, lands and monetary possessions.




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|An owned person with no rights
|An owned person with no rights
|-
|-
|colspan="5"|* Royal titles are bestowed upon the spouse of the actual owner of the power, but<br>their actual rank is that of "spouse of King/Queen". <br>** These are required to fight, but can also perform heroic deeds to gain land and<br>become true gentry.
|colspan="5"|* Royal titles are bestowed upon the spouse of the actual owner of the power, but
<br>their actual rank is that of "spouse of King/Queen".
<br>** These are required to fight, but can also perform heroic deeds to gain land and
<br>become true gentry.
|}
|}


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:'''King or Queen '''
:'''King or Queen '''
The titles of King and Queen are used for the heads of larger Houses that rule over a Kingdom. These are relatively small by modern standards, but these Kings and Queens demand the respect they feel they deserve. There is one Regent and one Regent's Spouse, but these are not titles used by anyone other than scholars. However, it does matter in terms of authority. The Regent has final say in all things within the kingdom, but is expected to listen to the Regent's Spouse as well as any council that the Kingdom hols. The Regent's Spouse is the second most powerful individual to the Regent and is in charge when the Regent is away, but the Regent's Spouse is generally never involved in military decisions, this is instead taken care of by the General (a military title, not a gentry title, but often held by someone in the Royal family).
The titles of King and Queen are used for the heads of larger Houses that rule over a Kingdom. These are relatively small by modern standards, but these Kings and Queens demand the respect they feel they deserve. There is one Regent and one Regent's Spouse. These are not titles used by anyone other than scholars but it does matter in terms of authority.
 
The Regent has final say in all things within the kingdom, but is expected to listen to the Regent's Spouse as well as any council that the Kingdom holds. The Regent's Spouse is the second most powerful individual to the Regent and is in charge when the Regent is away, but the Regent's Spouse is generally never involved in military decisions, this is instead taken care of by the General (a military title, not a gentry title, but often held by someone in the Royal family).
 
The inner workings of each Royal family varies a bit, but they do remain fairly similar.
 
 
:'''Prince or Princess'''
This is a more general title than the ones above and below it. The Crown Prince or Princess are going to become very important, but for many practical situations even the child minder has more power than a Prince. At the same time, some members of the family remains Princes and Princesses the rest of their lives, if their older brother produce children who inherit the actual title. The term is still their highest title, and they should be addressed as such.
 
It is also common to give Archdukedoms and Dukedoms to the close royal family. This means they are both Dukes of some region as well as Princes in relation to the royal family.
 
 
:'''Archduke or Archduchess'''
This is the highest title a non-royal can attain, though Duke families in turn often strive to become royals. Most commonly an Archduke has royal blood and may very well have been second in line to the throne at some point. It can also be related families who have done extraordinary deeds for the Kingdom, like saving the House from extinction in a battle.
 
Archdukes deal with large internal political and military issues and is only swearing fealty to the Crown. In turn, they usually have smaller houses that it is in charge of bringing in taxes or military support from secondary vassals that are sworn to the Crown (firstly) and to the Archduke (secondly). Primarily they are in charge of large lands themselves.
 
 
:'''Duke or Duchess'''
The title of Duke is very similar to the Archduke, but there is a difference in prestige, military might and/or responsibility and the size of their lands and secondary vassals. Dukes can also be of Royal blood, often not the immediate royal family, but perhaps well-though-of cousins or second cousins. There is a balance to be struck between keeping the allied Houses happy by providing titles for them as well as keeping as much of the essential power of a Kingdom within the Royal House.
 
 
:'''Hertig or Hertigess'''


The title is inherited, and there is a set priority for who will inherit the crown:
:'''Jarl/Count'''
# Oldest male child of the Royal couple.
:'''Baron'''
#* Second oldest male child.
:'''Baronet'''
#* And so on.
:'''Peer Knight'''
# Oldest female child of the Royal couple.
:'''Knight'''
#* Second oldest female child.
:'''''Squire'''''
#* And so on.
:'''Castellan/Captain '''
# Oldest male child of the previous Royal couple (sibling of the Regent).
:'''Esquire'''
#* Second oldest male sibling of the previous Royal couple.
:'''Freeman/Franklin/Citizen'''
#* And so on.
:'''Villein'''
# Oldest female sibling of the previous Royal couple.
:'''Cotter'''
#* Second oldest male sibling of the previous Royal couple.
:'''Slave'''
#* And so on.


If these don't exist, the inheritance goes to any surviving children of the previous Royal couple's children, starting with the previous Royal couple's oldest male child's male child, like above. If none of the children of the previous Royal couple had any heirs, the inheritance goes up another generation until a heir is found. The heir must have a direct lineage to a previous king.


If no heir is found, the House has ceased to exist and some of the vassal Houses takes over the crown. This can be done through an election in the council or (more commonly) a small civil war or at least show of power in the Court.




priority goes to the oldest male child of the royal couple, next is the second oldest male child and so on for all male children. Then the line continues with the female children of the couple, the oldest male sibling of the Regent, second oldest and so on, oldest female sibling, second and so on





Revision as of 14:38, 12 February 2015

The main use of titles in the Midrealms is to specify where someone is on the social hierarchy that rules everything. Mainly this revolves around Houses and their statuses as kept record of by the Family Register, but there are also titles within organisations separate from Houses, such as the Church of Rahn and less savoury organisations such as the Chamber of Shadows.


Noble Titles

People of the nobility, also known as gentry, of different Houses belong to a hierarchy based on power, standing and relation to other Houses. Ultimately, the Family Register is the final arbiter of who is right and wrong, and they have earned this power through constant attention to precisely this one task. Everyone simply trusts them in a world where almost nothing can be trusted.

In essence, everyone is part of "the gentry", insomuch it is seen as the system itself. However, people of the lower social classes are not considered "of the gentry" or "of nobility".


Inheritance

Inheritance generally works in the same way for all people of all standings as it does for the Royals. In addition, the head of the family (which can be a female) can adopt willing individuals into the family (though it's rare this is done with adults) who lose their own family and gains the new one. This can be done to ensure the survival of a House or just to ensure other heirs do not inherit.

The heads of a family also have the opportunity to decide who gets what inheritance. A prioritisation order akin to the inheritence described below is usually applied, but "favourite children" can inherit more or less of monetary gains or land.

One difference between European Medieval Kingdoms is that it is quite specified how and when a woman can rule and it happens a little bit more frequently than in Europe, but not by a large margin. The reason for this is that these families suffer less from inbreeding and generally have larger families which in turn makes it more unlikely that the heir would be female. Though it does happen, and while there are social norms that look down upon it, it is seen as an acceptable necessity.

Regardless of the rank of a couple's child, for every social status from freeman and above, similar rules apply. This is much more important when this is inheritance includes a title, but it applies to general citizen rights, land and monetary items as well. First it is important to you determine the Head of the family (or House), which is the person with the higher social standing. This is most commonly the male, but can be a woman.

This is the prioritisation of inheritance:

  1. The spouse (until death or passing on the inheritance)
  2. Oldest male child of the couple.
    • Second oldest male child.
    • And so on.
  3. Oldest female child of the couple.
    • Second oldest female child.
    • And so on.
  4. Oldest male child of the couple's parents (sibling of the Head).
    • Second oldest male sibling of the couple's parents.
    • And so on.
  5. Oldest female child of the couple's parents.
    • Second oldest male sibling of the couple's parents.
    • And so on.

If any child of the previous couple was survived by children themselves, the same order is applied to them before moving another step up the family tree, applying the same method where male children have priority over female children. If no heir is found, the House or Estate has ceased to exist. If it had vassal Houses, these take over the titles and lands. This can be done through an election in the council or (more commonly) a small civil war or at least show of power in the Court. If it was a more common family, the Royal House takes over the titles, deeds, lands and monetary possessions.


Summary of Gentry

Title Addressed Description
Male Female
King* Queen* Majesty Leader of House & Kingdom
Prince Princess Highness Possible heir to House & Kingdom
Archduke Archduchess Highness Royal family
Duke Duchess Grace Royal family (extended) or given
Hertig Hertigess Lord/Lady Border houses (more important)
Jarl/Count Jarless/Countess Lord/Lady Leader of a county
Baron Baroness Lord/Lady Majordomo/Hold/City
Baronet Baronetess Sir/Dame Majordomo/Smallhold
Peer Knight** Sir/Dame Low nobility
Knight** Sir/Dame "Tyrospur"/"Hedge Knight"
Squire** Mr/Mrs/Ms Servants of Knights
Castellan/Captain Castellan/Captain Captain of guard
Esquire Esquire/Sir/Dame Near-gentry person of high standing
Freeman/Franklin/Citizen Mr/Mrs/Ms Land owner ranked below gentry
Villein First name An unfree man working the land
Cotter First name An unfree man with no land
Slave First name/"slave" An owned person with no rights
* Royal titles are bestowed upon the spouse of the actual owner of the power, but


their actual rank is that of "spouse of King/Queen".
** These are required to fight, but can also perform heroic deeds to gain land and
become true gentry.

Details of Gentry

King or Queen

The titles of King and Queen are used for the heads of larger Houses that rule over a Kingdom. These are relatively small by modern standards, but these Kings and Queens demand the respect they feel they deserve. There is one Regent and one Regent's Spouse. These are not titles used by anyone other than scholars but it does matter in terms of authority.

The Regent has final say in all things within the kingdom, but is expected to listen to the Regent's Spouse as well as any council that the Kingdom holds. The Regent's Spouse is the second most powerful individual to the Regent and is in charge when the Regent is away, but the Regent's Spouse is generally never involved in military decisions, this is instead taken care of by the General (a military title, not a gentry title, but often held by someone in the Royal family).

The inner workings of each Royal family varies a bit, but they do remain fairly similar.


Prince or Princess

This is a more general title than the ones above and below it. The Crown Prince or Princess are going to become very important, but for many practical situations even the child minder has more power than a Prince. At the same time, some members of the family remains Princes and Princesses the rest of their lives, if their older brother produce children who inherit the actual title. The term is still their highest title, and they should be addressed as such.

It is also common to give Archdukedoms and Dukedoms to the close royal family. This means they are both Dukes of some region as well as Princes in relation to the royal family.


Archduke or Archduchess

This is the highest title a non-royal can attain, though Duke families in turn often strive to become royals. Most commonly an Archduke has royal blood and may very well have been second in line to the throne at some point. It can also be related families who have done extraordinary deeds for the Kingdom, like saving the House from extinction in a battle.

Archdukes deal with large internal political and military issues and is only swearing fealty to the Crown. In turn, they usually have smaller houses that it is in charge of bringing in taxes or military support from secondary vassals that are sworn to the Crown (firstly) and to the Archduke (secondly). Primarily they are in charge of large lands themselves.


Duke or Duchess

The title of Duke is very similar to the Archduke, but there is a difference in prestige, military might and/or responsibility and the size of their lands and secondary vassals. Dukes can also be of Royal blood, often not the immediate royal family, but perhaps well-though-of cousins or second cousins. There is a balance to be struck between keeping the allied Houses happy by providing titles for them as well as keeping as much of the essential power of a Kingdom within the Royal House.


Hertig or Hertigess
Jarl/Count
Baron
Baronet
Peer Knight
Knight
Squire
Castellan/Captain
Esquire
Freeman/Franklin/Citizen
Villein
Cotter
Slave




Tyrospur

Based on the word tyro for "new soldier" and "spur" being a nickname for lower ranking knights. Spur can be used both good and bad while "tyrospur" generally has a negative connotation. "Hedge knight" is mentioned as it is a popular culture reference in the real world.


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