Everything about Grand Duchy totally explained
A
grand duchy is a territory whose
head of state is a
Grand Duke or
Grand Duchess.
The only grand duchy in existence today is
Luxembourg. It has been a grand duchy since 1815 when the
Netherlands became an independent kingdom and Luxembourg was handed over to the King of the Netherlands,
William I. Luxembourg remained a Dutch dominion until
1890 when
William III, King of
the Netherlands and Grand Duke of Luxembourg, died without leaving a male heir, so that in the Netherlands he was succeeded by a female and, in the Luxembourgish Grand Duchy, by a distant male cousin, Duke Adolf of Nassau who became HRH Grand Duke
Adolphe—an arrangement necessitated by
Salic law being applicable to Luxembourg but not to the Netherlands. The present
Grand Duke of Luxembourg is
Henri.
However there are other houses of Europe that style themselves as Grand Dukes even if not wholly recognized by the rest of society.
The contemporary independent republics of
Finland and
Lithuania have been Grand Duchies during certain eras of their history.
The title and origins of grand duchies
The
title Grand Duke (
Latin:
Magnus Dux,
German:
Großherzog,
Italian:
Gran Duca,
French:
Grand-Duc,
Spanish:
Gran Ducado,
Swedish:
Storhertig,
Lithuanian:
Didysis kunigaikštis,
Polish:
Wielki książę,
Czech:
Velkovévoda) ranks in honour below
King but higher than a sovereign
Duke (
Herzog) or
Prince (
Fürst).
Grand Duchy is the appellation of the territory of a sovereign Grand Duke's territory.
Grand Duke is also the usual and established translation of sovereign
Grand Prince in languages which don't have separate words meaning
prince for (1) the non-ruling relatives of a monarch, and (2)
monarch (sovereign or like) princes. English and French use Grand Duke in this way.
Grand Duke is also the usual and established translation in English and French of the Russian courtesy title
Velikiy Knjaz (grand prince) of Russia, which from 17th century belonged to members of the family of the Russian tsar, although those Grand dukes were not sovereigns.
The title of sovereign
Grand Duke and it as translation of
Grand Prince thus have clearly different meanings.
Western Grand Dukes and their sovereignties
The proper term of "Grand Duchy" was a later invention, probably originating in Western Europe, to denote lands of a particularly mighty duke, as the
duchy had around the end of Middle Ages inflated to belong to rulers of a middle-sized town or a shire or similar relatively small fiefs, instead of the big provinces it once belonged to. See
Grand Duke.
One of the first examples was the unofficial use of Grand Duke by the Dukes of
Burgundy during the 15th century, when they ruled a vast tract of modern-day eastern France as well as most of the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg. The first monarchy ever officially titled "Grand Duchy" was the
Medici sovereignty of
Tuscany under overlordship of the
Holy Roman Emperors. They received the title in 1569. Tuscany remained a grand duchy until
1860, when it was annexed by
Piedmont-Sardinia as part of Italy's reunification.
Expanded use of the term lapsed until the early nineteenth century, when Napoleon used the title "Grand Duchy" for several territories given to his allies. The elevation of these figures to the title of Grand Duke usually accompanied an expansion of their fiefs with additional lands obtained from defeated powers such as
Prussia. Though Napoleon was defeated at
Waterloo and his vassal territories like the
Grand Duchy of Berg were erased from the European map, the representatives assembled at the
Congress of Vienna consented to yet more uses of the title by restored dukes and princes, especially for several of those in the lands that had constituted the Holy Roman Empire. As a result, the 19th century saw a new group of monarchies titled Grand Duchy around Central Europe, such as the Grand Duchy of
Hesse-Darmstadt.
At the same time, the courtesy use of the title "Grand Duke" in Russia expanded because of the births of several male dynasts. The new set of grand dukes afforded the Romanovs a respite from the continued issue of the male succession that plagued it during the 18th century.
Within
Germany, use of the title expanded after 1815, but its application wasn't universal. This is somewhat ironic, given that a Burgundian ruler in what were once Germany's western border regions first adopted the title, and considering that it was a German overlord, the Holy Roman Emperor, who first granted the official title to an Italian prince. However, in the German language (which has separate words for royal prince, "Prinz", and for sovereign prince, "Fürst"), the Grand Dukes of Lithuania and historic Russian states, as well as other Eastern European princes and later Russian dynasts, were referred to with the title "Großfürst", a direct translation, rather than using the version "Großherzog".
The title
Magnus Dux or Grand Duke (
Didysis kunigaikštis in Lithuanian) is said to have been used by the rulers of
Lithuania, and after rulers from the
Jagiellon dynasty became kings of
Poland, it was later found among the titles used by kings of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Polish kings of the Swedish
Vasa dynasty also used this grand princely title for their non-Polish territories. Modern translations normally credit the Lithuanian monarch with the title of High King.
Abundance of grand duchies
Between the
Napoleonic Wars and
World War I there were at least eight grand duchies in Europe:
A considerable number of grand duchies were created in the
Napoleonic era and later following the
Congress of Vienna and the foundation of the
German Confederation.
- The Grand Duchy of Tuscany (1569-1860, part of Italy afterwards)
- The Grand Duchy of Berg (1806-1813, part of Prussia afterwards)
- The Grand Duchy of Würzburg (1806-1814, part of Bavaria afterwards)
- The Grand Duchy of Baden (1806-1918, part of the German Empire since 1871)
- The Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt (1806-1918, part of the German Empire since 1871)
- The Grand Duchy of Finland (1809-1917 in Personal Union with Russia, Republic since 1917)
- The Grand Duchy of Frankfurt (1810-1813, part of several German states afterwards)
- The Grand Duchy of Poznan (1815-1848 as part of Prussia)
- The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (since 1815, in Personal Union with the Netherlands until 1890)
- The Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1815-1918, part of the German Empire since 1871)
- The Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1815-1918, part of the German Empire since 1871)
- The Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1815-1918, part of the German Empire since 1871)
- The Grand Duchy of Oldenburg (1829-1918, part of the German Empire since 1871)
- The Grand Duchy of Cracow (1846-1918 in Personal Union with Austria, part of Poland)
The term "Grand Duchy" is often, but incorrectly, attributed to the
Duchy of Warsaw (
1807-
1813).
Today Luxembourg is the only remaining grand duchy. However some old Grand Duchies still retain the titles granted to them usually in the
Congress of Vienna.
Note that a
Grand Duke or
Grand Duchess as a translation isn't necessarily associated with a Grand Duchy; see the relevant articles for more information.
Styles and forms of address
Most often, a reigning Grand Duke was
styled Royal Highness. Other members of the families differed in style. Junior members, for example in Hesse-Darmstadt and Baden, generally bore the style of
Grand Ducal Highness. For instance, prior to her marriage, Empress Alexandra of Russia was known as "Her Grand Ducal Highness Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine"
Ihre Großherzogliche Hoheit Alix Prinzessin von Hessen und bei Rhein).
The only current grand ducal family in existence, the
Grand Ducal Family of Luxembourg styles its junior members as
Royal Highnesses, but this is due to their alternative status of Princes of
Parma (although this title was relinquished in 1995).
A Russian Grand Duke or Grand Duchess was an
Imperial Highness.
Grand Prince
Grand Princes were medieval monarchs who ruled a nation or several tribes, and were usually at the time translated as
kings. However, a grand prince was usually only
primus inter pares within a dynasty, other princes of the dynasty were approximately as entitled to succession as the then ruler (succession was for example through
agnatic seniority or
rotation), and often other members of the dynasty ruled parts of the same realm as some sort of "sub-princes". Such was usual in Eastern Europe, for example among Russians and Lithuanians. As the position of current ruler wasn't as elevated as that of Western kings, they've been treated more like great princes than full kings.
Velikiy Kniaz was from the
11th century was at first the title of the leading
Prince of
Kievan Rus' (head of the
Rurikid House), then of several princes of the
Rus'. From
1328 the
Velikii Kniaz of
Muscovy appeared as the Grand Duke for "all of Russia" until
Ivan IV of Russia in
1547 was
crowned as
Tsar.
The title
Grand Prince was used in
Slavic,
Baltic,
and
Russian,
Великий князь The Slavic "knjaz" and the Baltic "kunigaitis" (nowadays usually translated as Prince) is actually a cognate of King. Thus, "Veliki Knjaz" was more like
high king than "grand duke".
An established use of the title was in
Grand Duchy of Lithuania (since 14th century) and
Grand Duchy of Moscow.
These countries moved slowly towards
primogeniture or their rulers obtained another Kingdom, whereby the position of the head of the dynasty became more elevated compared to other dynasts. In such situations, those monarchs assumed a higher title, such as Tsar or sole King.
The title Grand Prince (which in many of those lands already was in later grand princely epochs awarded simultaneously to several rulers in the more expanded dynasty) continued as a courtesy title for all or several members of the dynasty, such as the
Grand Duke of Russia (veliki knjaz) in Russia's imperial era. The title
Velikiy Kniaz, finally formalized by Alexander III, was given to sons and grandsons (through male lines) of the Tsars and Emperors of Russia. The daughters and paternal granddaughters of Russian Emperors, as well as the consorts of Russian Grand Dukes, were generally called "Grand Duchesses" in English.
A more accurate translation of the Russian title would be
Great Prince — especially in the pre-Petrine era — but the term is neither standard nor widely used in English. In German, however, a Russian Grand Duke was known as a
Großfürst, and in
Latin as
Magnus Princeps.
In
1582 king
John III of Sweden added
Grand Prince of Finland to the subsidiary titles of the Swedish kings, however without any factual consequences,
Finland already being a part of the Swedish realm.
After the Russian conquests, it continued to be used by the Russian Emperor in his role as ruler of
Lithuania (
1793-
1918) and of
Grand Duchy of Finland (
1809-
1917) as well. The
Holy Roman Empire ruling house of
Habsburg instituted a similar Grand Principality in
Transylvania (Großfürst von
Siebenbürgen) in
1765.
The title
Didysis kunigaikštis (in Lithuanian) was used by the rulers of
Lithuania, and after
Jagiello also became kings of
Poland and was later found among the titles used by kings of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Polish kings of the Swedish
Vasa dynasty also used the grand princely title for their non-Polish territories.
It is said that the Latinized translation of Lithuanian rulers was sometimes
Magnus Dux or Grand Duke.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Grand Duchy'.
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