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Prince

(Redirected from Princess)
For other meanings, see Prince (disambiguation).

A prince (from the Latin princeps) is a male member of royalty or a royal family. A female prince is known as princess. Although this is the most commonly understood definition, there are also different systems in different countries.

On the European continent, notably in the German system, a prince is something more than a mere noble, but not necessarily royal, which makes comparing it with the British system of royal princes difficult.

In the Russian system, "knyaz" (translated as "prince", e.g., Prince Potemkin) is the highest degree of nobility, and sometimes, represents a mediatization of an older native dynasty which became subject to the Russian imperial dynasty. Rurikid branches used the knyaz title also after they were succeeded by the Romanovs as the Russian imperial dynasty.

In imperial China, the title of prince developed from being the highest title of nobility (synonymous with duke) in the Zhou Dynasty, to five grades of princes (not counting the sons and grandsons of the emperor) by the time of the fall of the Qing Dynasty.

A teritorry over which a prince rules is called principality.

A prince or princess may be:

  • A member of the higher nobility in certain countries and periods. Foreign-language titles such as Italian principe, German Fürst, Russian kniaz, etc., are often rendered as prince in English. For example, one can talk about Prince Bismarck (Ger. Fürst B.).
  • The term has also been used to describe the head of a feudal state; for example, it has been used as a synonym for duke at times.
  • In a similar sense, those who held land and titles within the Catholic Church hierarchy were sometimes designated "princes of the Church ".

See also:


Last updated: 02-08-2005 12:38:20
Last updated: 02-28-2005 17:29:36