Landed nobility or landed aristocracy is a category of nobility in the history of various countries, for which landownership was part of their noble privileges. Their character depends on the country.
The notion of landed gentry in the United Kingdom and Ireland varied over time.[1]
In Russian Empire landed nobles were called pomeshchiks, with the term literally translated as "estate owner".
Junkers were the landed nobility of Prussia and eastern Germany.
Landadel were the landed nobility of the Holy Roman Empire.
In Poland, szlachta were usually landowners, with magnates being the class of the wealthiest szlachta. Middle and smaller landed szlachta was called ziemiaństwo/ziemianie (from the word ziemia, land), usually translated as landed gentry.
In some places, e.g., in Low Countries before Spanish rule, urban nobility with landed estates was distinct from landed nobility.[2] In general, relations between landed nobility and towns was very complex in Europe.
In India, sardars, jagirdars, zamindars, mankaris were the landed aristocracies, which formed Indian feudalism. Sometimes, they were elevated to the status of 'princes' or 'royalty' owning princely states. Sometimes royal status was also reduced to the status of zamindars. Nambudiris and Nairs constituted the landed gentry and owned vast amounts of land spread out in current day Kerala and parts of Southern Tamil Nadu.
In the Philippines, the Principalía was the ruling and usually educated upper class in the towns of the Spanish Philippines. The distinction or status of being part of the principalía was a hereditary right. This upper class was exempted from tribute (tax) to the Spanish crown during the colonial period. The principales (members of the principalía) traced their origin from the pre‑colonial royal and noble class of Datu and Lakan of the established kingdoms, rajahnates, confederacies, and principalities, as well as the lordships of the smaller ancient social units called barangays in Visayas, Luzon, and Mindanao. The members of this class enjoyed exclusive privileges, including the right to vote, be elected to public office, and be addressed by the title: Don or Doña.
Within certain communities in Nigeria, the reigning monarchs (known as the traditional rulers) are often vested with inalienable landownership due to their positions, with them either owning tracts of land outright or holding them in trust for their states. Some communities don't follow this pattern, however. In the Kingdom of Lagos, for example, landownership is not traditionally vested in the Oba of Lagos, who is descended from later immigrants from the Kingdom of Benin, but is instead vested in the so-called Idejo class of titled aristocrats, who all claim descent from the earliest Yoruba settlers of Lagos.
In California, according to 1978 California Proposition 13, the tax basis on real estate is much lower for older property owners than for newcomers. Further, according to 1986 California Proposition 58 and 1996 California Proposition 193, the low tax basis is inherited by the children and grandchildren of property owners. NIMBY policies and rapidly increasing property values have led to a large socioeconomic gap in both homeownership and property tax burden. This has led some to call California property owners the new landed nobility.[3]
^F.M.L. Thompson (19 December 2013). English Landed Society in the Nineteenth Century. Routledge. pp. 44–. ISBN 978-1-317-82853-2.
^Study Day on the Landed Nobility and the City in Renaissance Europe[permanent dead link], University of Warwick, 17 March 2004
^Landlords and Heirs: Why Prop 13 isn’t just unfair, it’s un-American. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
Landednobility or landed aristocracy is a category of nobility in the history of various countries, for which landownership was part of their noble privileges...
The landed gentry, or the gentry, is a largely historical British social class of landowners who could live entirely from rental income, or at least had...
The British nobility is made up of the peerage and the (landed) gentry. The nobility of its four constituent home nations has played a major role in shaping...
the nobility of the Kingdom of Tonga.) More than a third of British land is in the hands of aristocrats and traditional landed gentry. Nobility is a...
The minor or petty nobility is the lower nobility classes. Petty nobility in Finland is dated at least back to the 13th century and was formed by nobles...
List of family seats of Scottish nobility List of family seats of Irish nobility List of family seats of Welsh nobility "UK Genealogy Archives - family...
The Russian nobility or dvoryanstvo (Russian: дворянство) arose in the Middle Ages. In 1914, it consisted of approximately 1,900,000 members, out of a...
early 14th century and to the Maltzahn in 1330, but the Ostens were still landed in the area after 1363. After the Thirty Years War, the castle was demolished...
constitutional monarchy with moderate participation in government for the landednobility. Its economy was overwhelmingly agrarian and among the weakest in the...
that have been used by the Sicilian nobility. Over the centuries many families emerged as landed aristocracy or nobility similar to the English gentry and...
term became popularly used as a loosely defined synecdoche for the landednobility (particularly of so-called East Elbia) who controlled almost all of...
centuries the Delle Piane family were members of the medieval civic nobility, of the landed lords typical of ecclesiastical vassalage, and subsequently of...
flowering had its material base in the prosperity of the elites, both the landednobility and urban patriciate at such centers as Kraków and Gdańsk. The name...
smaller local sejmik (assemblies of landednobility) in each of the Kingdom's provinces. At the time, Poland's nobility, which accounted for around 10% of...
granted nobility to all Calvinist pastors. The kings and the Transylvanian princes regularly ennobled commoners, but often without granting landed property...
Baltic German nobility was a privileged social class in the territories of today's Estonia and Latvia. It has existed continuously since the Northern Crusades...
by which the ancient landednobility lost its power base, the Swedish Crown recaptured lands earlier granted to the nobility. Reductions (Swedish: reduktion)...
radical anti-feudal dimension, supporting peasant rebellions against the landednobility. On April 23, 1521, after nearly a year of rebellion, the reorganized...
out in the male line, and in some regions an entire generation of landednobility was annihilated. The bailiffs of nine major northern towns were killed...
in the period before 1848, since these bodies were dominated by the landednobility. The uncertainties surrounding land ownership were a cause of rural...
Grand Duke revoked the financial privileges of the landednobility on a large scale (the landednobility became subject to taxation) and their Landstände...
clubs and some social sets. Signore and Signora (formerly signifying landednobility) are translations of "Lord" and "Lady", used also in the military hierarchy...
The German nobility (German: deutscher Adel) and royalty were status groups of the medieval society in Central Europe, which enjoyed certain privileges...
governing structures of society influenced by two theoretical actors, the "landed upper class" and the "imperial state". Both could be considered as "partners...