Nobility - Nobility By Nation

Nobility By Nation

A list of noble titles for different European countries can be found at Royal and noble ranks.

For the proper address of holders of these titles, see Royal and noble styles.
For the English Wikipedia category, see Category:Nobility by nation
  • Armenian nobility
  • Austrian nobility
  • Baltic nobility related to the modern area of Estonia and Latvia
  • Belgian nobility
  • Bohemian nobility
  • Brazilian nobility
  • British nobility
    • British peerage
      • English peerage
        • Welsh Peers
      • Scottish peerage
      • Irish peerage
      • Peerage of Great Britain
      • Peerage of the United Kingdom
  • Chinese nobility
  • Croatian nobility
  • Cuban nobility
  • Danish nobility
  • Dutch nobility
  • Egyptian nobility
  • Ethiopian Nobility
  • Fijian nobility
  • Filipino nobility
  • Finnish nobility
  • French nobility
  • German nobility
    • Freiherr
    • Graf
    • Junker
  • Hungarian nobility
  • Imperial Roman titles
    • Byzantine aristocracy and bureaucracy
  • Irish nobility
    • Chiefs of the Name
  • Italian nobility
  • Japanese nobility
  • Korean nobility
  • Lithuanian nobility
  • Malay nobility
  • Malagasy nobility
  • Maltese nobility
  • Mexican nobility
  • Mongolian nobility
  • Nigerian nobility
    • Emir
    • Oba
    • Obi
  • Norwegian nobility
  • Ottoman titles
  • Polish nobility
  • Polynesian nobility
  • Portuguese nobility
  • Romanian nobility
  • Russian nobility
    • Boyars
  • Samoan nobility
  • Serbian nobility
  • Spanish nobility
  • Swedish nobility
  • Switzerland nobility
  • Thai royal and noble titles

Read more about this topic:  Nobility

Famous quotes containing the words nobility and/or nation:

    If there be no nobility of descent in a nation, all the more indispensable is it that there should be nobility of ascent—a character in them that bear rule, so fine and high and pure, that as men come within the circle of its influence, they involuntarily pay homage to that which is the one pre-eminent distinction, the Royalty of Virtue.
    Henry Codman Potter (1835–1908)

    ... a nation to be strong, must be united; to be united, must be equal in condition; to be equal in condition, must be similar in habits and feeling; to be similar in habits and feeling, must be raised in national institutions as the children of a common family, and citizens of a common country.
    Frances Wright (1795–1852)