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See also: borne by the highest class of the See also: Spanish See also: nobility
.
It would appear to have been originally assumed by the most important nobles to distinguish them from the mass of the ricos hombres, or See also: great barons of the See also: realm
.
It was thus, as See also: Selden points out, not a general See also: term denoting a class, but " an additional dignity not only to all See also: dukes, but to some marquesses and condes also " (Titles of Honor, ed
.
1672, p
.
478)
.
It formerly implied certain privileges; notably that of sitting covered in the royal presence
.
Until the See also: time of See also: Ferdinand and Isabella, when the power of the territorial nobles was broken, the grandees had also certain more important rights, e.g. freedom from
See also: taxation, immunity from arrest save at the See also: king's express command, and even—in certain cases—the right to renounce their allegiance and make war on the king
.
Their number and privileges were further restricted by
See also: Charles I
.
(the emperor Charles V.), who reserved to the
See also: crown the right to bestow the title
.
The grandees of See also: Spain were further divided into three classes: (1) those who spoke to the king and received his reply with their heads covered; (2) those who addressed him uncovered, but put on their hats to hear his answer; (3) those who awaited the permission of the king before covering themselves
.
All grandees were addressed by the king as " my See also: cousin " (mi prima), whereas ordinary nobles were only qualified as " my kinsman " (mi pariente)
.
The title of " See also: grandee," abolished under King See also: Joseph See also: Bonaparte, was revived in 1834, when by the Estaludo real grandees were given precedence in the Chamber of Peers
.
The designation is now, however, purely titular, and implies neither See also: privilege nor power
.
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