Count
{{Short description|Nobility title in European countries}}
{{About|the title of nobility|the Roman title|Comes|other uses|Count (disambiguation)}}
{{Redirect|Countess}}
{{More citations needed|date=August 2016}}
{{Ranks of Nobility}}
File:Johan Erik Lindh - Portrait of Carl Gustaf Mannerheim (1797-1854).jpg (1797–1854), the governor of the Vyborg Province, entomologist and the grandfather of Baron C. G. E. Mannerheim]]
Count (feminine: countess) is a historical title of nobility in certain European countries, varying in relative status, generally of middling rank in the hierarchy of nobility.Pine, L. G. Titles: How the King Became His Majesty. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1992. p. 73. {{OCLC|27827106}}. Especially in earlier medieval periods the term often implied not only a certain status, but also that the count had specific responsibilities or offices. The etymologically related English term "county" denoted the territories associated with some countships, but not all.
The title of count is typically not used in England or English-speaking countries, and the term earl is used instead. A female holder of the title is still referred to as a countess, however.
Origin of the term
{{Main|Comes}}
The word count came into English from the French {{lang|fr|comte}}, itself from Latin {{lang|la|comes}}—in its accusative form comitem. It meant "companion" or "attendant", and as a title it indicated that someone was delegated to represent the ruler.
In the late Roman Empire, the Latin title comes denoted the high rank of various courtiers and provincial officials, either military or administrative. Before Anthemius became emperor in the West in 467, he was a military comes charged with strengthening defenses on the Danube frontier.{{cite web |title=An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors |publisher=University of South Carolina |url=http://www.roman-emperors.org/anthemiu.htm |access-date=2008-04-10}}
In the Western Roman Empire, "count" came to indicate generically a military commander{{cn|date=January 2023}} but was not a specific rank. In the Eastern Roman Empire, from about the seventh century, "count" was a specific rank indicating the commander of two centuriae (i.e., 200 men).
The medieval title of comes was originally not hereditary.{{cite book |last1=Institut für Wissenschaftliche Zusammenarbeit mit Hochschulen der Entwicklungsländer (Tübingen, Germany) |title=Philosophy and History |date=1976 |publisher=Philosophy and History |page=105}} It was regarded as an administrative official dependent on the king, until the process of allodialisation during the 9th century in which such titles came to be private possessions of noble families.{{cite book |first=John M.|last=Jeep |title=Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia |date=2001 |publisher=Psychology Press |isbn=0824076443 |page=140}} By virtue of their large estates, many counts could pass the title to their heirs—but not always. For instance, in Piast Poland, the position of komes was not hereditary, resembling the early Merovingian institution. The title had disappeared by the era of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the office had been replaced by others. Only after the Partitions of Poland did the title of "count" resurface in the title hrabia, derived from the German Graf.
In the Frankish kingdoms in the early Middle Ages, a count might also be a count palatine, whose authority derived directly over a royal household, a palace in its original sense of the seat of power and administration. This other kind of count had vague antecedents in Late Antiquity too: the father of Cassiodorus held positions of trust with Theodoric, as comes rerum privatarum, in charge of the imperial lands, then as comes sacrarum largitionum ("count of the sacred doles"), concerned with the finances of the realm.{{cite web |url=http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/texts/cassbook/chap1.html |title=Archived copy |access-date=2005-06-21 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050510135935/http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/texts/cassbook/chap1.html |archive-date=2005-05-10 }}
In the United Kingdom, the title of earl is used instead of count. Although the exact reason is debated by historians and linguists, one of the more popular theories proposes that count fell into disuse because of its phonetic similarity to the vulgar slang word cunt.{{Cite web |title=Why England has 200 countesses – and zero counts - CSMonitor.com |url=https://www.csmonitor.com/layout/set/amphtml/The-Culture/In-a-Word/2023/0522/Why-England-has-200-countesses-and-zero-counts |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=www.csmonitor.com}}
=Land attached to title=
{{Main|County}}
It is only after some time that the continental medieval title came to be strongly associated with the ownership of and jurisdiction over specific lands, which led to evolution of the term county to refer to specific regions. The English term county, used as an equivalent to the English term shire, is derived from the Old French conté or cunté which denoted the jurisdiction of a French count or viscount.The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology, C. W. Onions (Ed.), 1966, Oxford University Press The modern French is comté, and its equivalents in other languages are contea, contado, comtat, condado, Grafschaft, graafschap, etc. (cf. conte, comte, conde, Graf). The title of Count also continued to exist in cases which are not connected to any specific to a geographical "county".
In the United Kingdom, the equivalent "Earl" can also be used as a courtesy title for the eldest son of a duke or marquess. In the Italian states, by contrast, all the sons of certain counts were little counts (contini). In Sweden there is a distinction between counts (Swedish: greve) created before and after 1809. All children in comital families elevated before 1809 were called count/countess. In families elevated after 1809, only the head of the family was called count, the rest have a status similar to barons and were called by the equivalent of "Mr/Ms/Mrs", before the recognition of titles of nobility was abolished.
Comital titles in different European languages
The following lists are originally based on a Glossary on Heraldica.org by Alexander Krischnig. The male form is followed by the female, and when available, by the territorial circumscription.
= Etymological derivations from the Latin {{lang|la|comes}} =
class="wikitable" |
scope="col" | Language
! width=250pt | Male title ! scope="col" | Female title/Spouse ! scope="col" | Territory/Notes |
---|
scope="row" | Albanian
| {{lang|sq|Kont}} | {{lang|sq|Konteshë}} | {{lang|sq|Konte}} |
scope="row" | Armenian
| {{lang|hy|Կոմս}} ({{lang|hy-Latn|Koms}}) | {{lang|hy|Կոմսուհի}} ({{lang|hy-Latn|Komsuhi}}) | |
scope="row" | Bulgarian
| {{lang|bg|Кмет}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Kmet}}), present meaning: mayor; | {{lang|bg|Кметица}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Kmetitsa}}), woman mayor | {{lang|bg|Кметство}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Kmetstvo}}); medieval {{lang|bg|Комитат}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Komitat}}) |
scope="row" | Catalan
| {{lang|ca|Comte}} | {{lang|ca|Comtessa}} | {{lang|ca|Comtat}} |
scope="row" | English
| Count | Countess (even where Earl applies) | Earldom for an Earl; Countship or county for a count. (County persists in English-speaking countries as a sub-national administrative division.) |
scope="row" | French
| {{lang|fr|Comte}} | {{lang|fr|Comtesse}} | {{lang|fr|Comté}} |
scope="row" | Greek
| {{lang|grc|Κόμης}} ({{lang|grc-Latn|Kómēs}}) | {{lang|grc|Κόμησσα}} ({{lang|grc-Latn|Kómēssa}}) | {{lang|grc|Κομητεία}} ({{lang|grc-Latn|Komēteía}}); in the Ionian Islands the corresponding Italianate terms {{lang|grc|κόντες}} {{lang|grc-Latn|kóntes}}, {{lang|grc|κοντέσσα}} {{lang|grc-Latn|kontéssa}} were used instead. |
scope="row" | Hungarian
| {{lang|hu|Vikomt}} | {{lang|hu|Vikomtessz}} | Actually meaning viscount. These forms are now archaic or literary; {{lang|hu|Gróf}} is used instead. |
scope="row" | Irish
| {{lang|ga|Cunta}} | {{lang|ga|Cuntaois}} | Honorary title only. |
scope="row" | Italian
| {{lang|it|Conte}} | {{lang|it|Contessa}} | {{lang|it|Contea}}, {{lang|it|Contado}} |
scope="row" style="font-weight: normal;" | Latin (medieval and later; not classical) | {{lang|la|Comes}} | {{lang|la|Comitissa}} | {{lang|la|Comitatus}} |
scope="row" | Maltese
| {{lang|mt|Konti}} | {{lang|mt|Kontessa}} | |
scope="row" | Monegasque
| {{lang|lij-MC|Conte}} | {{lang|lij-MC|Contessa}} | |
scope="row" | Portuguese
| {{lang|pt|Conde}} | {{lang|pt|Condessa}} | {{lang|pt|Condado}} |
scope="row" | Romanian
| {{lang|ro|Conte}} | {{lang|ro|Contesă}} | {{lang|ro|Comitat}} |
scope="row" | Romansh
| {{lang|rm|Cont}} | {{lang|rm|Contessa}} | |
scope="row" | Spanish
| {{lang|es|Conde}} | {{lang|es|Condesa}} | {{lang|es|Condado}} |
scope="row" | Turkish
| {{lang|tr|Kont}} | {{lang|tr|Kontes}} | {{lang|tr|Kontluk}} |
= Etymological derivations from German {{lang|de|Graf}} and/or Dutch {{lang|nl|Graaf}} =
class="wikitable" |
scope="col" | Language
! scope="col" | Male title ! scope="col" | Female title / Spouse ! scope="col" | Territory |
---|
scope="row" | Afrikaans
| {{lang|af|Graaf}} | {{lang|af|Gravin}} | {{lang|af|Graafskap}} |
scope="row" | Belarusian
| {{lang|be|Граф}} ({{lang|be-Latn|Hraf}}) | {{lang|be|Графiня}} ({{lang|be-Latn|Hrafinia}}) | {{lang|be|Графствa}} ({{lang|be-Latn|Hrafstva}}) |
scope="row" | Bulgarian
| {{lang|bg|Граф}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Graf}}) | {{lang|bg|Графиня}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Grafinya}}) | {{lang|bg|Графство}} ({{lang|bg-Latn|Grafstvo}}) |
scope="row" | Croatian
| {{lang|hr|Grof}} | {{lang|hr|Grofica}} | {{lang|hr|Grofovija}} |
scope="row" | Czech
| {{lang|cs|Hrabě}} | {{lang|cs|Hraběnka}} | {{lang|cs|Hrabství}} |
scope="row" | Danish
| {{lang|da|Greve}} | {{lang|da|Grevinde}} (Count's wife) | {{lang|da|Grevskab}} |
scope="row" | Dutch
| {{lang|nl|Graaf}} | {{lang|nl|Gravin}} | {{lang|nl|Graafschap}} |
scope="row" | English
| Grave (for example Landgrave, Margrave), reeve, sheriff | Gravin | Graviate |
scope="row" | Estonian
| {{lang|et|Krahv}} | {{lang|et|Krahvinna}} | {{lang|et|Krahvkond}} |
scope="row" | Finnish
| {{lang|fi|Kreivi}} | {{lang|fi|Kreivitär}} | {{lang|fi|Kreivikunta}} |
scope="row" | German
| {{lang|de|Graf}} | {{lang|de|Gräfin}} | {{lang|de|Grafschaft}} |
scope="row" | Greek
| {{lang|el|Γράβος}} (Gravos) | | |
scope="row" | Georgian
| {{lang|ka|გრაფი/თავადი}} ({{lang|ka-Latn|Grapi/Tavadi}}) | {{lang|ka|გრაფინია/თავადი}} ({{lang|ka-Latn|Grapinia/Tavadi}}) | {{lang|ka|საგრაფო/სათავადო}} ({{lang|ka-Latn|Sagrapo /Satavado}}) |
scope="row" | Hungarian
| {{lang|hu|Gróf}} | {{lang|hu|Grófnő}} (born a countess), {{lang|hu|Grófné}} (married to a count) | {{lang|hu|Grófság}} |
scope="row" | Icelandic
| {{lang|is|Greifi}} | {{lang|is|Greifynja}} | {{lang|is|Greifadæmi}} |
scope="row" | Latvian
| {{lang|lv|Grāfs}} | {{lang|lv|Grāfiene}} | {{lang|lv|Grāfiste}} |
scope="row" | Lithuanian
| {{lang|lt|Grafas}} | {{lang|lt|Grafienė}} | {{lang|lt|Grafystė}} |
scope="row" | Luxembourgish
| {{lang|lb|Grof}} | {{lang|lb|Gréifin}} | |
scope="row" | Macedonian
| {{lang|mk|Гроф}} ({{lang|mk-Latn|Grof}}) | {{lang|mk|Грофица}} ({{lang|mk-Latn|Grofica}}) | {{lang|mk|Грофовија}} ({{lang|mk-Latn|Grofovija}}) |
scope="row" | Norwegian
| {{lang|no|Greve/Greive}} | {{lang|no|Grevinne}} | {{lang|no|Grevskap}} |
scope="row" | Polish
| {{lang|pl|Hrabia}}, {{lang|pl|Margrabia}} | {{lang|pl|Hrabina}}, {{lang|pl|Margrabina}} | {{lang|pl|Hrabstwo}} (translation of foreign term "county") |
scope="row" | Romanian
| {{lang|ro|Grof}} (also {{lang|ro|Conte}}, see above), Greav |Grofiță | |
scope="row" | Russian
| {{lang|ru|Граф}} ({{lang|ru-Latn|Graf}}) | {{lang|ru|Графиня}} ({{lang|ru-Latn|Grafinya}}) | {{lang|ru|Графство}} ({{lang|ru-Latn|Grafstvo}}) |
scope="row" | Serbian
| {{lang|sr|Гроф}} ({{lang|sr-Latn|Grof}}) | {{lang|sr|Грофица}} ({{lang|sr-Latn|Grofica}}) | {{lang|sr|Грофовија}} ({{lang|sr-Latn|Grofovija}}) |
scope="row" | Slovak
| {{lang|sk|Gróf}} | {{lang|sk|Grófka}} | {{lang|sk|Grófstvo}} |
scope="row" | Slovene
| {{lang|sl|Grof}} | {{lang|sl|Grofica}} | {{lang|sl|Grofija}} |
scope="row" | Swedish
| {{lang|sv|Greve}} | {{lang|sv|Grevinna}} | {{lang|sv|Grevskap}} |
scope="row" | Ukrainian
| {{lang|uk|Граф}} ({{lang|uk-Latn|Hraf}}) | {{lang|uk|Графиня}} ({{lang|uk-Latn|Hrafynya}}) | {{lang|uk|Графство}} ({{lang|uk-Latn|Hrafstvo}}) |
Lists of countships <!--preferably weighted lists of major counts and interesting particularities-->
=Territory of today's France=
==Kingdom of the Western Franks==
Since Louis VII (1137–80), the highest precedence amongst the vassals (Prince-bishops and secular nobility) of the French crown was enjoyed by those whose benefice or temporal fief was a pairie, i.e. carried the exclusive rank of pair; within the first (i.e. clerical) and second (noble) estates, the first three of the original twelve anciennes pairies were ducal, the next three comital comté-pairies:
- Bishop-counts of Beauvais (in Picardy)
- Bishop-counts of Châlons (in Champagne)
- Bishop-counts of Noyon (in Picardy)
- Count of Toulouse, until united to the crown in 1271 by marriage
- Count of Flanders (Flandres in French), which is in the Low countries and was confiscated in 1299, though returned in 1303
- Count of Champagne, until united to the crown (in 1316 by marriage, conclusively in 1361)
Later other countships (and duchies, even baronies) have been raised to this French peerage, but mostly as apanages (for members of the royal house) or for foreigners; after the 16th century all new peerages were always duchies and the medieval countship-peerages had died out, or were held by royal princes
Other French countships of note included those of:
==Parts of today's France long within other kingdoms of the Holy Roman Empire==
- Freigraf ("free count") of Burgundy (i.e. present Franche-Comté)
- The Dauphiné
=The Holy Roman Empire=
See also above for parts of present France
==In Germany==
{{Main|Graf}}
A Graf ruled over a territory known as a Grafschaft ('county'). See also various comital and related titles; especially those actually reigning over a principality: Gefürsteter Graf, Landgraf, Reichsgraf; compare Markgraf, Burggraf, Pfalzgraf (see Imperial quaternions).
====Northern Italian states====
The title of Conte is very prolific on the peninsula. In the eleventh century, Conti like the Count of Savoy or the Norman Count of Apulia, were virtually sovereign lords of broad territories. Even apparently "lower"-sounding titles, like Viscount, could describe powerful dynasts, such as the House of Visconti which ruled a major city such as Milan. The essential title of a feudatory, introduced by the Normans, was signore, modeled on the French seigneur, used with the name of the fief. By the fourteenth century, conte and the Imperial title barone were virtually synonymous{{citation needed|date=August 2018}}.
Some titles of a count, according to the particulars of the patent, might be inherited by the eldest son of a Count. Younger brothers might be distinguished as "X dei conti di Y" ("X of the counts of Y"). However, if there is no male to inherit the title and the count has a daughter, in some regions she could inherit the title.
Many Italian counts left their mark on Italian history as individuals, yet only a few contadi (countships; the word contadini for inhabitants of a "county" remains the Italian word for "peasant") were politically significant principalities, notably:
- Norman Count of Apulia
- Count of Savoy, later Duke (also partly in France and in Switzerland)
- Count of Asti
- Count of Montferrat (Monferrato)
- Count of Montefeltro
- Count of Tusculum
==In Austria==
The principalities tended to start out as margraviate or (promoted to) duchy, and became nominal archduchies within the Habsburg dynasty; noteworthy are:
- Count of Tyrol
- Count of Cilli
- Count of Schaumburg
== In the Low Countries ==
Apart from various small ones, significant were :
- in presentday Belgium :
- Count of Flanders (Vlaanderen in Dutch), but only the small part east of the river Schelde remained within the empire; the far larger west, an original French comté-pairie became part of the French realm
- Count of Hainaut
- Count of Namur, later a margraviate
- Count of Leuven (Louvain), later a dukedom
- Count of Loon
- in the presentday Netherlands:
- Count of Guelders later Dukes of Guelders
- Count of Holland
- Count of Zeeland
- Count of Zutphen
== In Switzerland ==
File:DeSalisClothBellonna.jpg.]]
- Count of Geneva
- Count of Neuchâtel
- Count of Toggenburg
- Count of Kyburg
- Count de Salis-Soglio (also in the UK, Canada and Australia)
- Count de Salis-Seewis
- Count of Panzutti
- Count In-Albon
=In other continental European countries=
== Holy See ==
{{Further|Papal count}}
Count/Countess was one of the noble titles granted by the Pope as a temporal sovereign, and the title's holder was sometimes informally known as a papal count/papal countess or less so as a Roman count/Roman countess, but mostly as count/countess. The comital title, which could be for life or hereditary, was awarded in various forms by popes and Holy Roman Emperors since the Middle Ages, infrequently before the 14th century, and the pope continued to grant the comital and other noble titles even after 1870, it was largely discontinued in the mid 20th-century, on the accession of John XXIII. The Papacy and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies might appoint counts palatine with no particular territorial fief. Until 1812 in some regions, the purchaser of land designated "feudal" was ennobled by the noble seat that he held and became a conte. This practice ceased with the formal abolition of feudalism in the various principalities of early-19th century Italy, last of all in the Papal States.
== In Poland ==
{{Main|Noble titles in Poland}}
{{See also|Szlachta}}
Poland was notable throughout its history for not granting titles of nobility. This was on the premise that one could only be born into nobility, outside rare exceptions. Instead, it conferred non-hereditary courtly or civic roles. The noble titles that were in use on its territory were mostly of foreign provenance and usually subject to the process of indygenat, naturalisation.
== In Hungary ==
{{Main|Hungarian nobility}}
Somewhat similar to the native privileged class of nobles found in Poland, Hungary also had a class of Conditional nobles.
==On the Iberian peninsula==
As opposed to the plethora of hollow "gentry" counts, only a few countships ever were important in medieval Iberia; most territory was firmly within the Reconquista kingdoms before counts could become important. However, during the 19th century, the title, having lost its high rank (equivalent to that of Duke), proliferated.
===Portugal===
{{see also|List of countships in Portugal}}
Portugal itself started as a countship in 868, but became a kingdom in 1139 (see:County of Portugal). Throughout the history of Portugal, especially during the constitutional monarchy many other countships were created.
===Spain===
File:Heraldic Crown of Spanish Count.svg of a count (Spanish heraldry)]]
In Spain, no countships of wider importance exist, except in the former Spanish march.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}}
- County of Barcelona, the initial core of the Principality of Catalonia, later one of the states of the Crown of Aragon, which became one of the two main components of the Spanish crown.
- Count of Aragon
- Count of Castile
- Count of Galicia
- Count of Lara
- Count Cassius, progenitor of the Banu Qasi
- County of Urgell, later integrated into the Principality of Catalonia.
- The other Catalan counties were much smaller and were absorbed early into the County of Barcelona (between parentheses the annexation year): County of Girona (897), County of Besalú, County of Osona, which included the nominal County of Manresa (1111), County of Berga and County of Conflent (1117) and County of Cerdanya (1118). From 1162 these counties, together with that of Barcelona, were merged into the Principality of Catalonia, a sovereign state that absorbed some other counties: County of Roussillon (1172), County of Pallars Jussà (1192), County of Empúries (1402), County of Urgell (1413) and County of Pallars Sobirà (1487), giving the Principality its definitive shape.
=South Eastern Europe=
==Bulgaria==
In the First Bulgarian Empire, a komit was a hereditary provincial ruler under the tsar documented since the reign of Presian (836-852)Лъв Граматик, [http://kroraina.com/NI/izvori/GIBI_V/156.gif Гръцки извори за българската история, т. V, стр. 156]; Жеков, Ж. България и Византия VII-IX в. - военна администрация, Университетско издателство "Св. Климент Охридски", София, 2007, {{ISBN|978-954-07-2465-2}}, стр. 254 The Cometopouli dynasty was named after its founder, the komit of Sredets.
==Montenegro and Serbia==
The title of Serdar was used in the Principality of Montenegro and the Principality of Serbia as a noble title below that of Voivode equivalent to that of Count.
= Crusader states =
- Count of Edessa
- Count of Tripoli (1102–1288)
Equivalents
Like other major Western noble titles, Count is sometimes used to render certain titles in non-western languages with their own traditions, even though they are as a rule historically unrelated and thus hard to compare, but which are considered "equivalent" in rank.
This is the case with:
- the Chinese Bó (伯), or "Bojue" (伯爵), hereditary title of nobility ranking below Hóu (侯) and above Zĭ (子)
- earl of Britain
- the Japanese equivalent Hakushaku ({{lang|ja|伯爵}}), adapted during the Meiji restoration
- the Korean equivalent Baekjak (백작) or Poguk
- in Vietnam, it is rendered Bá, one of the lower titles reserved for male members of the Imperial clan, above Tử (Viscount), Nam (Baron) and Vinh phong (lowest noble title), but lower than—in ascending order—Hầu (Marquis), Công (Prince), Quận-Công (Duke/Duke of a commandery) and Quốc-Công (Grand Duke/Duke of the Nation), all under Vương (King) and Hoàng Đế (Emperor).
- the Indian Sardar, adopted by the Maratha Empire, additionally, Jagirdar and Deshmukh are close equivalents
- the Arabic equivalent Sheikh
- In traditional Sulu equivalent to Datu Sadja
In fiction
{{See also|List of fictional nobility#Counts and countesses}}
The title "Count" in fiction is commonly, though not always, given to evil characters, used as another word for prince or vampires:
{{Div col|small=yes}}
- Count Nefaria
- Count Vertigo
- Count von Count
- Count Duckula
- Count Olaf
- Count Chocula
- Count Paris
- Count of Monte Cristo
- Count Dooku
- Count Dracula
- Count Orlok
- Count Arthur Strong
{{Div col end}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- Labarre de Raillicourt: Les Comtes Romains
- Westermann, Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in German)
External links
{{Commons category|Counts}}
{{EB1911 poster|Count}}
{{Wiktionary}}
- [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/france/peerage.htm Heraldica.org - here the French peerage]
- [http://www.regalis.com/nobletitles.htm Italian Titles of Nobility] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120527112610/http://www.regalis.com/nobletitles.htm |date=2012-05-27 }}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060214093646/http://65.66.134.201/cgi-bin/webster/webster.exe?firstp=10661 Webster's 1828 Dictionary]
{{Authority control}}