Dictionary Definition
magnate n : a very wealthy or powerful
businessman; "an oil baron" [syn: baron, big
businessman, business
leader, king, mogul, power, top
executive, tycoon]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From lang=laNoun
Extensive Definition
Magnate, from the Late Latin
magnas, a great man, itself from Latin magnus 'great',
designates a noble or other man in a high social position, by
birth, wealth or other qualities. In reference to the Middle Ages,
the term is often used to distinguish higher territorial landowners
and warlords such as counts, earls, dukes and
territorial-princes, from the
baronage.
The term was specifically applied to the members
(equivalent to British Peers) of the Upper House in the Apostolic
Kingdom of Hungary, the Főrendiház or House of
Magnates.
Magnates were a social class
of wealthy and influential nobility in the
Kingdom of Poland and Grand
Duchy of Lithuania (and later the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth), and some other medieval realms. In Spain,
since late Middle Ages there is the highest class of nobility who
hold appellation of Grandee of
Spain. In Sweden, wealthiest medieval lords were known as
storman (plural stormän), "great men", a similar description as
magnate, and same meaning. In England, the term magnate has often
been applied to the extremely powerful nobles that Edward III
created when he split his kingdom amongst his sons rather than
choosing one son to inherit the entire kingdom. The ensuing
conflict between these powerful nobles (and their successors) and
whomever was king led to the aristocratic wars known as the
War
of the Roses.
In the Middle Ages a
bishop sometimes held
territory as a magnate, collecting the revenue of the manors and the
associated knights'
fees.
Magnates in Poland and Lithuania
In Poland and Lithuania all members of the
nobility (szlachta)
were equal under the law. "Magnate" (lang-pl magnat) was thus not an official
title but rather a position of social
class, based on wealth. Magnates (or higher
nobility) vied for political power with the lesser and middle
nobility (see Ruch
egzekucyjny) and the Król (Monarch). From the second half of
the 17th
century, the magnates emerged as the victors in the struggle
for power in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as they were able
to concentrate most of the land in their own hands and bribe
smaller nobles to preserve the appearance of democracy: "Golden
Liberty" in the parliaments, not only the local Sejmiks but also in
the national Sejm.
There were several other terms for "magnate" in
Poland and Lithuania:
- Możny - "powerful one"; used up to the 15th century, later replaced by Magnat;
- królik, plural królewięta - "petty kings", used especially of magnates with large fiefdoms in Lithuania or Ukraine; rather negative (król in Polish means "king", but the diminutive królik also means "rabbit");
- pan - lord (much later, by title devaluation, Mister); this could also apply to members of the common szlachta and was often used by people from other social classes;
- starsi bracia - "older brothers"; all members of the szlachta referred to each other as Pan brat, but Magnates who were appointed to the Senate of Poland often styled themselves senior brothers, referring to the nobles from the Sejm ("parliament") as młodsi bracia ("junior brothers");
- karmazyn - "the crimson one", from their expensive crimson-coloured clothing (especially the boots).
Several Magnates held high feudal titles or
peerage ranks such as prince or count. With few exceptions, mostly
dating from the Union of
Lublin, and special privileges permitting some Lithuanian
magnates to use them, such titles were forbidden by law. Titles
from offices however were very popular: see
Offices in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Magnates in England
The large number of extremely powerful nobles, many of whom had claims to the throne, led to over 100 years of aristocratic civil war, in the form of the War of the Roses.Left with some problematic choices for his heir,
Edward
III decided to make some of his illegitimate children
legitimate by an Act of
Parliament and include them in the succession. This created
what Allison Weir refers to as a "race of magnates."
Eventually this led to large numbers of claimants
to the throne, most of whom tried to attain the throne by usurping
their predecessors. In this period, despite laws governing
succession, most of the succession was determined not as much by
primogeniture as
by military victory.
In the Tudor period, after Henry
VII defeated Richard
III at Bosworth
Field, Henry made a point of executing or neutralizing as many
magnates as possible. Henry VII would make parliament attaint undesirable nobles and
magnates, thereby stripping them of their wealth, protection from
torture, and power. Henry VII also used the
Court of the Star Chamber to have powerful nobles executed.
Henry
VIII would continue this approach in his reign; he inherited a
survivalistic mistrust of nobles from his father. Henry VIII
ennobled very few men and the ones he did were all "new men,"
greatly indebted to him and having very limited power.
See also
- Aristocracy
- Leidang
- List of szlachta (this article lists the families of the magnate class, or higher nobility).
- Swedish nobility
Sources
http://www.warsoftheroses.co.uk/chapter_1.htm
Allison Weir, Princes in the Tower.
magnate in German: Magnat
magnate in Spanish: Magnate (alta nobleza)
magnate in French: Magnat (titre)
magnate in Italian: Magnate
magnate in Lithuanian: Magnatas
magnate in Japanese: マグナート
magnate in Polish: Magnat
magnate in Portuguese: Magnata
magnate in Russian: Магнаты
magnate in Ukrainian: Магнат
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Brahman, Establishment, VIP, archduke, aristocrat, armiger, banker, baron, baronet, big boss, big
businessman, big gun, big man, big name, big wheel, big-timer,
bigwig, blue blood,
brass, brass hat, business
leader, businessman,
captain of industry, celebrity, count, czar, daimio, dignitary, dignity, director, duke, earl, elder, enterpriser, entrepreneur, esquire, fat cat, father, figure, financier, gentleman, grand duke,
grandee, great man,
hidalgo, important
person, industrialist, interests, king, lace-curtain, laird, landgrave, lion, little businessman, lord, lordling, lords of creation,
magnifico, man of
commerce, man of mark, manager, margrave, marquis, merchant prince,
mogul, nabob, name, noble, nobleman, notability, notable, optimate, palsgrave, panjandrum, patrician, peer, person of renown, personage, personality, pillar of
society, plutocrat,
power, power elite,
prince, ruling circle,
sachem, seigneur, seignior, silk-stocking,
somebody, something, squire, swell, the great, the top,
thoroughbred, top
brass, top executive, top people, tycoon, upper-cruster, very
important person, viscount, waldgrave, worthy