ItalianGenealogy.com
   Login or Register
HomeForumIl Mio Account
Main Menu
 Home Opzioni membri Community Databases Genealogy forums Ancestry
 Groups
 Facci Pubblicità
Sponsors
Donate
Please support ItalianGenealogy.com

Help me help you, by supporting the future development of extensions, or simply
to say thank you.

Interesting Books
: How Professional Genealogists Determine Ancestral Nobility in Italy
Heraldry

This concise historical presentation is intended not as an exhaustive sociological treatise, but as a general introduction for the layman. It is presumed that the reader has already reviewed Italian Heraldry, Nobility & Genealogy. Because of the highly individual nature of genealogical and heraldic projects, many of these observations are necessarily generalities.

Italian nobiliary practices cannot be compared directly to those of other countries, such as Scotland or Russia. Even within Italy, regional differences must be considered because until circa 1870 this nation did not exist as a politically unified state.

The Italian Republic was founded by popular referendum in 1946. Two years later, the Italian Constitution established that titles of nobility and coats of arms henceforth were not to be recognised officially by the state, although in some cases the predicato (territorial designation) associated with a titled family could be legally attached to a surname. Thus, the Lanza family, princes of Trabia, are no longer addressed in legal documents (passports, etc.) by the title principe (prince), but their full surname is Lanza di Trabia, not simply "Lanza". It is important to observe that the use of aristocratic titles in Italy is no way outlawed, and historical titles are often used socially, with the titles of cavaliere (knight) and dama (dame) recognised in some cases. A consequence of the lack of governmental recognition of titles in Italy is the proliferation of impostors - people who claim, or even bestow, fraudulent or unsurped titles.

While there exist no means to petition for "official" recognition of Italian noble titles or coats of arms, some private organisations, such as those associated with the former ruling dynasties, continue to recognise these.

The greater titles of nobility are Principe (Noble Prince), Duca (Duke), Marchese (Marques), Conte (Count), Visconte (Viscount) and Barone (Baron). The wife or widow of one of these noblemen is styled by the feminine version of her husband's title - Principessa, Duchessa, et al. In former times, the son of a titled noblemen was occasionally addressed by courtesy by his father's title. The minor titles of nobility are Patrizio (Patrician), Nobile (Nobleman) and Cavaliere Ereditario (Hereditary Knight).

The historical evidence of an ancestor's nobiliary title is usually obvious and can be confirmed through juridical investigation because of documents creating or recognising the rank. The former use of certain titles (particularly baron) without authority must be considered in some cases because rural families of untitled nobility were often identified as "baronial" in the absence of fuedal rights or recognition by the crown.

Nobile is the most frequent aristocratic rank in Italy because, in addition to families that were never actually titled, the younger sons (cadets) of titled noblemen were traditionally regarded as nobili. Thus one encounters such usage as, for example, Giuseppe Lanza dei Principe di Trabia (Giuseppe Lanza of the Princes of Trabia). In Addition to those whose untitled nobility was recognised formally, there were familes of rural gentility that were considered by tradition to be of untitled minor nobility - an Italian class analogous to Britain's landed gentry. Establishing the nobiliary status of such families depends upon various factors and is essentially twofold.

Firstly, documentary evidence must indicate that several ancestors in the same line were accorded honorific forms of address (Magnifico, Illustrissimo, don) in civil or church records before the nineteenth century. Such designations were applied rather loosly in centuries past - especially in rural localities, where any literate tradesman might be addressed as "don". While most local officials or wealthy landholders could not claim nobility, the use of such titles does serve to support the possibility of nobility in some cases.

Secondly, associated heraldic evidence must exist. The family must have been attributed a coat of arms that appertained to that family in particular, not to another in the same region which coincidentally bore the same surname. The coat of arms might be found as the engraving on an ancestral residence or the seal in a document. Perhaps it was recorded in a heraldic reference which mentions a proven (and legitimate) ancestor.

Circumstantial evidence is important, but it can be misleading. For example, one might conclude that local residents who share the surname of the local duke are his kin, and therefore nobles. Documentary research, however, might well demonstrate the contrary - for they might descend from the ducal family's servants.

Anecdotes are rarely accurate or demonstrable. A frequent story is that of an ancestor's having been the illegitmate child of a nobleman. Typically, he was born to an unwed mother whose family subsequently sought to salvage her dignity by alleging aristocratic paternity. It is usually impossible to prove this.

Inviato da Edmondo il Giovedì, 18 Luglio @ 16:28:04 CEST (46324 letture)
": How Professional Genealogists Determine Ancestral Nobility in Italy" | Login/Crea Account | 2 commenti
Limite
I commenti sono di proprietà dell'inserzionista. Noi non siamo responsabili per il loro contenuto.

Re: How Professional Genealogists Determine Ancestral Nobility in Italy (Voto: 1 )
di Shaggydoll il Giovedì, 04 Gennaio @ 17:49:21 CET
Can you tell me where the Congi name originates from?

| Parent

Re: How Professional Genealogists Determine Ancestral Nobility in Italy (Voto: 1 )
di qqqq il Venerdì, 07 Maggio @ 02:42:05 CEST
Actually, cheap wow gold fresh water is in a short supply,buy wow gold fresh water consumption remains great.tiffany Besides, with the development of industry, wow buy goldmore water is needed. Moreover,cheapest wow golda lot of our rivers and lakes have been so polluted that water from them is undrinkableyy2010.5.7

| Parent

Links Correlati
 Inoltre Heraldry

Articolo più letto relativo a Heraldry:
Italian Heraldry, Nobility and Genealogy
Valutamento Articolo
Punteggio medio: 4.49
Voti: 100


Per favore prenditi un secondo e vota l'articolo:

Eccellente
Molto Buono
Buono
Regolare
Pessimo

Opzioni

 Pagina Stampabile  Pagina Stampabile

 Invia questo Articolo ad un Amico  Invia questo Articolo ad un Amico

Languages
Brazilian Português English Italiano Espanõl
User Info

Benvenuto Anonimo

Nickname
Password

Iscrizioni:
Ultimo: pbuschini
Nuovi di oggi: 2
Nuovi di ieri: 11
Complessivo: 31527

Persone Online:
Iscritti: 6
Visitatori: 109
Totale: 115
Chi è online:
 Iscritti:
01: carolinechurch > Forums
02: jennabet > Forums
03: johnnyonthespot > Home
04: joycerose > Forums
05: OrsaraPagano > Forums
 Visitatori:
01: Forums
02: Forums
03: Forums
04: Forums
05: Forums
06: Forums
07: Forums
08: Forums
09: Forums
10: Forums
11: Forums
12: Forums
13: Forums
14: Forums
15: Your Account
16: Forums
17: Forums
18: Forums
19: Forums
20: Forums
21: Forums
22: Forums
23: Forums
24: Forums
25: Forums
26: Forums
27: Forums
28: Forums
29: Forums
30: Forums
31: Forums
32: Forums
33: Forums
34: Forums
35: Forums
36: Forums
37: Forums
38: Forums
39: Forums
40: Forums
41: Forums
42: Forums
43: Forums
44: Forums
45: Forums
46: Forums
47: Forums
48: Forums
49: Forums
50: Forums
51: Forums
52: Forums
53: Your Account
54: Forums
55: Forums
56: Forums
57: Forums
58: Forums
59: Forums
60: Forums
61: Forums
62: Home
63: Forums
64: Forums
65: Forums
66: Forums
67: Forums
68: Your Account
69: Forums
70: Forums
71: Forums
72: Your Account
73: Forums
74: Forums
75: Forums
76: coppermine
77: Forums
78: Forums
79: Forums
80: Forums
81: Forums
82: Forums
83: Forums
84: Forums
85: Forums
86: Forums
87: Forums
88: Forums
89: Forums
90: Forums
91: Forums
92: Forums
93: Forums
94: Forums
95: Forums
96: Forums
97: Forums
98: Forums
99: Forums
100: Forums
101: Forums
102: Forums
103: Forums
104: Forums
105: Forums
106: Forums
107: Forums
108: Forums
109: Forums
Nascosto: 1
Staff Online:

Nessuno dello Staff è online!
Forums
Ultimi 10 Messaggi

Declaration of Intention vs Petition For Naturalization?
Ultimo messaggio di williamsburger in Emigration, Immigration, Naturalization and Italian citizenship il Set 02, 2010 at 22:52:14

ASCIUTTO // BOTTINO
Ultimo messaggio di williamsburger in Italian Genealogy il Set 02, 2010 at 22:45:05

Mansoni Family of Livorno, Tuscany
Ultimo messaggio di anne70115 in Italian Genealogy il Set 02, 2010 at 22:44:10

Strambino LaSagna and Gillono Families
Ultimo messaggio di pbuschini in Italian Genealogy il Set 02, 2010 at 22:38:58

Genoveffa Noschese/Noshase/Nachasi
Ultimo messaggio di terrimusto in Italian Genealogy il Set 02, 2010 at 22:25:54

Carterina Iannotta, 2 marriage annotations
Ultimo messaggio di oilman19 in Italian language, handwriting , script & translations il Set 02, 2010 at 22:13:48

Ancestry. com free Immigration Collection
Ultimo messaggio di Squigy in Off Topic - We don't only do Italian Genealogy il Set 02, 2010 at 22:09:26

Help!
Ultimo messaggio di vj in Emigration, Immigration, Naturalization and Italian citizenship il Set 02, 2010 at 21:58:08

family history centers
Ultimo messaggio di maestra36 in Italian Genealogy il Set 02, 2010 at 21:54:14

Extended Visa
Ultimo messaggio di jennabet in Emigration, Immigration, Naturalization and Italian citizenship il Set 02, 2010 at 21:42:42

Photo Album

Sapri
Sapri

Ovindoli
Ovindoli

Firenze
Firenze

Venezia
Venezia

Galleria
Our Advertisors





Interactive software released under GNU GPL, Code Credits, Privacy Policy
.: fisubsilver shadow phpbb2 style by Daz :: CPG-Nuke port by norseman :: ported to CPG-Dragonfly by jamin :: modified for v9.2 by Edmondo:.