nobleman$52829$ - определение. Что такое nobleman$52829$
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Что (кто) такое nobleman$52829$ - определение

PRIVILEGED SOCIAL CLASS IN CROATIA DURING THE ANTIQUITY AND MEDIEVAL PERIODS OF THE COUNTRY'S HISTORY
Croatian nobleman
  • Adam Franjo Burić, a Croatian nobleman
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  • Bratislava Kapitulská ruling family
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  • A monument commemorating King Tomislav in the country's capital city, [[Zagreb]].
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  • Coat of Arms with two gryphons on the Draskovic Family's personal residence at Trakoscan Castle (18th century?)
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  • general]] of the [[Habsburg monarchy]] imperial army
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  • Coat of arms of the [[House of Habsburg]]. The Habsburgs ruled the Kingdom of Croatia for just under 470 years, longer than any other dynasty
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  • Coat of arms of the Rukavina (of Klanačko polje) noble family, Croatia
  • Ban]] ([[Viceroy]])

Dutch nobility         
PRIVILEGED SOCIAL CLASS IN THE KINGDOM OF THE NETHERLANDS
Dutch nobleman
With the constitutional reform of 1848, the nobles lost their constitutional role with regards to selecting members for the States-Provincial. Thereafter, the only privileges currently enjoyed by the nobility are the carrying of titles and the grant of coats of arms by royal decree.
Žarko (nobleman)         
SERBIAN NOBLE
Zarko (nobleman); Lord Žarko
Žarko (; 1336–before 1371) was a 14th-century Serbian nobleman. After the death of Serbian Emperor Dušan the Mighty (r.
Malcolm Sinclair (Swedish nobleman)         
SWEDISH NOBLE
Malcolm Sinclair (A Swedish nobleman)
Malcolm Sinclair (1690 – 17 June 1739) was a Swedish officer, nobleman and envoy who was murdered by two Russian officers on his way home from the Ottoman Empire. The assassination eventually sparked the Russo-Swedish War of 1741–1743 and also inspired the so-called "Sinclairvisan", a song about Sinclair by Anders Odel.

Википедия

Croatian nobility

Croatian nobility (Croatian: plemstvo, lit. 'vlastelin'; French: la noblesse) was a privileged social class in Croatia during the Antiquity and Medieval periods of the country's history. Noble families in the Kingdom of Croatia included high ranking populates from Slavonia, Dalmatia, Istria, and Republic of Ragusa. Members belonged to an elite social hierarchy, normally placed immediately behind blood royalty, that possessed considerably more privileges or eminence than most other classes in a society. Membership thereof typically was often hereditary. Historically, membership in the nobility and the prerogatives thereof have been regulated or acknowledged by the monarch. Acquisition of sufficient power, wealth, military prowess or royal favour enabled commoners to ascend into the nobility. The country's royalty was heavily influenced by France's nobility resulting members of the Royal Courts to assume French titles and practices during French occupation. The controversial assumption of French practices contributed to wide spread political and social elitism among the nobles and monarch. The nobility regarded the peasant class as an unseen and irrelevant substrata of people which lead to high causality revolts and beheadings as well as sporadic periods of intense domestic violence.

Croatian Kings and Queen consorts often established duchies culminating in the Duchy of Croatia. Dukes or Duchesses were to rule a large territories within the Kingdom. Under the rule of the country's first King, Croatia became one of the most powerful kingdoms in the Balkans. Nobles possessed unprecedented power over the governed, and were one of the first members of royalty to advocate for monarchical absolutism. Many nobles were charged with the administration of numerous territories and at the height of the Kingdom's power royals ruled nearly eleven separate countries and dozens of extended domains.