- Hereditary title
Hereditary titles, in a general sense, are
title s, positions or styles that arehereditary and thus tend or are bound to remain in particular families. Some hereditary titles are inherited only by the eldest son (seeprimogeniture ) [cite web| last = Murphy| first = Michael Dean| title = A Kinship Glossary: Symbols, Terms, and Concepts| url = http://www.as.ua.edu/ant/Faculty/murphy/436/kinship.htm| accessdate = 2006-10-05 ] ; others may pass to the eldest child of either gender, or to all children of a family equally (although this is rare), or can be shared and thus multiplied in the case of a title and/or divided in the case of a 'real' object. In some traditions adoption is a common way around biological kinship, as in the Hindu tradition to assure there is a male heir of the samecaste . Fact|date=February 2007Prominent examples of hereditary titles include:
*Hereditarymonarchy - in theUnited Kingdom (and the variousCommonwealth realm s),Bhutan ,Brunei ,Cambodia ,Japan ,Nepal ,Thailand ,Belgium ,Denmark ,Luxembourg ,Liechtenstein ,Monaco , theNetherlands ,Norway ,Spain ,Sweden ,Jordan ,Morocco ,Qatar ,Saudi Arabia ,Tonga andBahrain . Different national constitutions use different modes of succession to the inheritance in their monarchies, especially in the Orient often adding a choice moment (e.g. at a family council) to mere birth right which thus only grants only eligibility. A special case are the two elective monarchies,Malaysia [ [http://www.malaysianmonarchy.org.my/portal_bi/rk1/rk1.htm Yang di-Pertuan Agong ] ] and theUnited Arab Emirates , where the constituent states of each federation are hereditary monarchies but those rulers form an electoral college which assigns the federal position of head of state to one of their number for a term (of five years).
*Titles ofnobility in the United Kingdom and other countries (seepeerage ). In the United Kingdom, most titles of nobility (peerage s and the lower title ofBaronet ) pass only to the eldest son (or occasionally the eldest daughter in the absence of heirs male); all other sons and daughters ofpeers are commoners though they may use one or more not independently heritablecourtesy title s, either justLord ,Lady orHonourable depending on the rank of the peerage held by their father or mother, or also a title styled like a peerage without a seat in the Lords, usually one or two ranks below father's.cite web|url=http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerage/sitepages/page66b.asp|title=Burke's Guide to British Titles: Courtesy Titles|publisher=Burke's Peerage and Gentry|date=2005|accessdate=13 November|accessyear=2006] In many European countries titles may be inherited by all the heirs male of a family whose members all share the same title at the same time (for instance, within theszlachta nobility ofPoland or in the nobilities of the successor states of theHoly Roman Empire ). In the Far East the main (Chinese-induced) tradition is rather for titles to devaluate as the generations succeed to each other, but not to the same rank.
*Some court titles, e.g. in theUnited Kingdom , includingEarl Marshal [ [http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Documents/earl_marshal.htm Earl Marshal ] ] andLord Great Chamberlain . Most of these aresinecure s, i.e. purely ceremonial. They pass generally to the eldest son (except for that of Lord Great Chamberlain, which is split between the heads of theCholmondeley andWilloughby families).
*Many other -especially feudal age- offices became inheritable, often connected to military (e.g.keeper of a castle; in Japan evenShogun ) and/or domanial functions, which is also why some such functions became noble titles (e.g. Burgrave, Margrave)
*While the hereditary membership of a privileged class or caste may imply a title or not (sometimes confusingly called untitled nobility), it frequently forms a prerequisite for various titled positions, e.g.quarters of nobility required by a military order. Fact|date=February 2007ee also
* Titles
* Titles (in professional writing)
*Honorifics
* Styles
* Styles (royal and noble)
* Styles (United Kingdom)
* Styles (United Kingdom; forms of address)
*Monarchy
*Nobility
*Peerage (United Kingdom)
*Royal and noble ranks
*Great officers of state (United Kingdom)
*Aristocracy Notes
External links
* [http://www.hereditarytitles.com/ Hereditary titles]
* [http://www.aristocracyuk.co.uk/hereditary_titles_a_guide/ Hereditary Titles - A Guide]
* [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/odegard/titlefaq.htm Noble, princely, royal, and imperial titles]
* [http://www.chinet.com/~laura/html/titles01.html British titles of nobility]
* [http://www.faketitles.com/ Fake titles]
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