Dictionary Definition
Marquis
Noun
1 humorist who wrote about the imaginary life of
cockroaches (1878-1937) [syn: Don Marquis,
Donald Robert Perry Marquis]
2 nobleman (in various countries) ranking above a
count [syn: marquess]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
Etymology
-
- marquis; : markis, marchis; : marchensis; : marcha.
Noun
- A nobleman in England, France, and Germany, of a rank next below that of duke. Originally, the marquis was an officer whose duty was to guard the marches or frontiers of the kingdom. The office has ceased, and the name is now a mere title conferred by patent.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
A marquess () or marquis (/mɑrˈkiː/) is a nobleman of hereditary rank in
various European monarchies and some of their colonies. The term is
also used to render equivalent oriental styles as in imperial China
and Japan. In the British
peerage it ranks below a duke and above an earl, on the continent usually
equivalent where a cognate title exists. A woman with the rank of
marquess, or the wife of a marquess, is a marchioness, (pronounced
/ˌmɑrʃəˈnɛs/) or marquise (pronounced
/mɑrˈkiːz/).
Marquesses in the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth
Peerage of England
Unlike the continent, in England (later Britain, ultimately the UK) the monarchy is the only authority capable of awarding hereditary titles. It managed to keep a tight grip on aristocratic titles, so the ranks of the peerage still correspond fairly neatly to the wealth of those who bear titles. Thus, there are currently only 34 marquessates (see list).The first marquess in England was
Robert de Vere, 9th Earl of Oxford, who was created Marquess
of Dublin by Richard
II on 1 December
1385. On
13
October 1386, the patent of
this marquessate was recalled, and Robert de Vere was raised to
Duke of
Ireland.
John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset, the second legitimate son
of John of
Gaunt, was raised to the second marquessate as Marquess
of Dorset in September 1397. In 1399, he was
disgraced, and the king revoked his marquessate. The Commons
petitioned Richard for his restoration but he himself objected
stating "the name of marquess is a strange name in this realm".
From that period the title appears to have been dormant till the
reign of Henry VI, when it was revived in 1442. The only woman to
be created a marquess in her own right was Anne Boleyn,
who was created Marquess of Pembroke in preparation for her
marriage to Henry
VIII. The investiture ceremony was held at Windsor
Castle on September 1
1532.
Forms of address
A British marquess is formally styled "The Most Honourable The Marquess of [X]"note style and informally styled "Lord [X]', and his wife "Lady [X]". As with dukes, all sons bear the courtesy style "Lord Forename [Surname]" and all daughters bear the courtesy style "Lady Forename [Surname]". This courtesy style for the eldest son, however, is often trumped by a subsidiary title of his father, such as earl or viscount, which is used instead (especially for signing documents, the signature being only the name of the title, [X]). This form of signature is true for all peers, including peers by courtesy. For example, the Marquess of Salisbury would sign his name merely "Salisbury".A marquess by courtesy, however, (which would
always be the heir to a dukedom, since the courtesy title of an
heir must always be at least one rank below that of the peer) does
not enjoy the style of "Most Honourable", but is merely known as
the Marquess of [X]. The genuine marquess as a peer, however, is
always the "Most Honourable the Marquess of [X]", to differentiate
a marquess by courtesy (i.e., the heir to a dukedom) from a
marquess in his own right.
The spelling of the title in Scotland is very
often the "marquis" variation, particularly when the title was
created prior to the formation of the United Kingdom in 1707.
Coronet
A British marquis is entitled to a coronet bearing eight strawberry leaves (three visible) and four silver balls (or pearls) around the rim (two visible). The actual coronet is mostly worn on certain ceremonial occasions, but a marquis can bear his coronet of rank on his coat of arms above the shield.Marquesal titles in other European languages
- The following list may still be incomplete. Female forms follow after a slash; many languages have two words, one for the "modern" marquess and one for the original margrave.
Germanic languages
- Danish Markis / Markise
- Dutch Markies, Markgraaf / Markiezin, Markgravin
- Faroese Markgreivi / Markgreivakona
- German Markgraf, Marquis / Markgräfin, Marquise
- Icelandic Markgreifi / Markgreifynja
- Luxemburgish Marquis / Marquise
- Norwegian (only awarded to a few Danish families) Markis / Markise
- Old English: Þegn / Hlǣfdiġe
- Swedish Markis, Markgreve / Markise, Markgrevinna
Romance languages
- Latin Marchio
- Catalan Marquès / Marquesa
- French Marquis, Margrave/Marquise
- Italian Margravio, Marchese / Marchesa
- Monegasque Marchise / Marchisa
- Portuguese Margrave, Marquês / Marquesa
- Rhaeto-Romanic Marchis / Marchesa
- Romanian Marchiz / Marchiză
- Spanish Marqués / Marquesa
Slavonic and Baltic languages
- Belarusian Markiz / Markiza
- Bulgarian Markiz / Markiza
- Croatian Markiz / Markiza
- Czech Markýz / Markýza
- Latvian Marķīzs / Marķīze
- Lithuanian Markizas / Markizė
- Macedonian Markiz / Markiza
- Polish Margrabia, Markiz / Margrabina, Markiza
- Russian Markiz / Markiza
- Serbian Markiz / Markiza
- Slovak Markíz / Markíza
- Slovene Markiz /
- Ukrainian Markiz / Markiza
Other languages
- Albanian: Markiz / Markizë
- Estonian: Rajakrahv / Rajakrahvinna or simply Markii/Markiis
- Finnish: Rajakreivi / Rajakreivitär or simply Markiisi /Markiisitar
- Greek (modern): Markisios / Markisia
- Hungarian: Őrgróf (Márki) / Őrgrófnő (Márkinő) / Őrgrófné (consort of an Őrgróf)
- Maltese: Markiż / Markiża
Outside Europe
Various European monarchies created titles of various ranks, including marquess, in chief of "titles" (estates, or simply the names of places or regions) in their colonial territories overseas, e.g., in Spanish and South America, regardless whether the ennobled families resided there.Equivalent non-Western titles
Like other major Western noble titles, marquess or marquis 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, which are considered "equivalent" in relative rank.This is the case with:
- in ancient China, 侯 (hóu) was the second of five noble ranks created by King Wu of Zhou and is generally translated as marquess or marquis.
- in imperial China, 侯 (hóu) is generally, but not always, a middle-to-high ranking, hereditary nobility title. Its exact rank varies greatly from dynasty to dynasty, and even within a dynasty. It is often created with different sub-ranks.
- in Meiji Japan, Kōshaku (侯爵), a hereditary peerage (Kazoku) rank, was introduced in 1884, granting a hereditary seat in the upper house of the imperial diet just as a British peerage did (until Tony Blair's House of Lords Act 1999), with the ranks usually rendered as baron, viscount, count, marquis and duke. The Japanese rendered these titles in Chinese (though there the titles devaluate when a new generation succeeds), though the Western titles were used in translation.
- in Korea, the seven main grades of nobility were similar to those in China, with ranks descending by one degree with each succeeding holder of the title. As in China, Champan, rendered as marquis, was the third, only under gun (prince) and kung (duke) and above poguk (count), pansoh (viscount), chamise (baron) and chusa (no Western equivalent, but somewhat similar to the British title of baronet)
- in Vietnam's Annamite realm / empire, hau was a senior title of hereditary nobility, equivalent to marquis, for male members of the imperial clan, ranking under vuong (king), quoc-cong (grand duke), quan-cong (duke) and cong (prince, but here under duke, rather like a German Fürst), and above ba (count), tu (viscount), nam (baron) and vinh phong (no equivalent, roughly baronet).
See also
- Marquise
- Marquise de Pompadour
- List of Marquesses in the British Isles
- List of Marquessates in the British Isles
- List of Marquesses in Portugal
- The Marchioness, a boat that collided on the River Thames in 1989.
- Premier Marquess, the Marquess of Winchester
- Mark (county)
- "My Lord Marquis", part of the second act of the comic operetta Die Fledermaus composed by Johann Strauss II
Notes
note styleAlthough the vast majority of marquessates are named after places, and hence their holders are known as the "Marquess of X", a very few of them are named after surnames (even if not the bearer's own), and hence their holders are known as the "Marquess X". In either case, he is still informally known as "Lord X", regardless whether there is an of in his title, and it is always safe to style him so.Sources and references
- The Chronological Peerage of England, hereditarytitles.com as of March 2, 2003; http://www.hereditarytitles.com/Page70.htm; omits Normanby, misspells Hartington as Martington, places Marquess of Lorn and Kintyre in peerage of England (Scotland is more probable).
- EtymologyOnLine
- Encyclopædia Britannica 1911: "Buckingham and Normanby, John Sheffield, 1st Duke of (1648-1721)" mentions the title Marquess of Normanby in peerage of England.
- RoyalArk on non-European dynasties, here China under the Manchu (last) Emperors, see also Glossary, and via Home look up other nations
marquis in Bulgarian: Маркиз
marquis in Catalan: Marquès
marquis in Czech: Markýz
marquis in German: Markgraf
marquis in Modern Greek (1453-): Μαρκήσιος
marquis in Spanish: Marqués
marquis in Esperanto: Markizo
marquis in Persian: مارگراف
marquis in French: Marquis
marquis in Italian: Marchese
marquis in Dutch: Markgraaf
marquis in Japanese: 侯爵
marquis in Norwegian: Marki
marquis in Polish: Markiz
marquis in Portuguese: Marquês
marquis in Russian: Маркиз
marquis in Slovak: Markíz
marquis in Finnish: Markiisi
marquis in Swedish: Markis (titel)
marquis in Chinese: 侯爵
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Brahman, archduke, aristocrat, armiger, baron, baronet, blue blood, count, daimio, duke, earl, esquire, gentleman, grand duke,
grandee, hidalgo, lace-curtain, laird, landgrave, lord, lordling, magnate, magnifico, margrave, noble, nobleman, optimate, palsgrave, patrician, peer, seigneur, seignior, silk-stocking,
squire, swell, thoroughbred,
upper-cruster, viscount, waldgrave