Margrave: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
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|  Created page with "The title of Margrave (Marquis or Marquess) dates to Charlemagne's reign, when the emperor appointed trusted noblemen of military background to oversee newly acquired territor..." | 
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Latest revision as of 19:46, 18 November 2014
The title of Margrave (Marquis or Marquess) dates to Charlemagne's reign, when the emperor appointed trusted noblemen of military background to oversee newly acquired territories, frontier lands known as marches. The word Graf, 'leader,' was combined with march, and the word Margraf or Margrave was born. The titles Duke (from the Latin dukis) and Count (comte, from the Old French for companion) also date to the era of the Carolingians.
Rhiannon Ottersdale Middle Kingdom Historian