Dictionary Definition
knight
Noun
1 originally a person of noble birth trained to
arms and chivalry; today in Great Britain a person honored by the
sovereign for personal merit
2 a chessman in the shape of a horse's head; can
move two squares horizontally and one vertically (or vice versa)
[syn: horse] v : raise
(someone) to knighthood; "The Beatles were knighted" [syn: dub]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Knight
English
Etymology
From Old English cniht (‘boy’).Pronunciation
- /naɪt/
- Rhymes with: -aɪt
Noun
- A warrior,
especially of the Middle Ages.
- King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
- Nowadays, a person on whom a knighthood has been conferred by a monarch.
- A chess piece often in the shape of a horse's head that is moved two squares in one direction and one at right angles to that direction in a single move, leaping over any intervening pieces.
Synonyms
- i-c chess piece horse (rare)
Translations
warrior, especially of the Middle Ages
- Bosnian: vitez
- Croatian: vitez
- Czech: rytíř
- Danish: ridder
- Dutch: ridder
- Esperanto: kavaliro
- Finnish: ritari
- French: chevalier
- German: Ritter
- Greek: ιππότης (ippótis)
- Hebrew: פרש (parash) , אביר (abír)
- Hungarian: lovag
- Icelandic: riddari
- Italian: cavaliere
- Japanese: 騎士 (きし, kishi)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: سوارا
- Latin: eques
- Persian: (shahsavar)
- Polish: kawaler
- Portuguese: cavaleiro
- Russian: рыцарь (rýtsar’)
- Scottish Gaelic: ridire
- Serbian:
- Slovak: rytier
- Slovene: vitez
- Spanish: caballero
- Swedish: knekt
- Turkish: şövalye
- Ukrainian: лицар (lýtsar)
person on whom a knighthood has been conferred
by a monarch
- Bosnian: vitez
- Croatian: vitez
- Czech: rytíř
- Dutch: ridder
- Finnish: ritari
- French: chevalier
- German: Ritter
- Polish: rycerz (ancient), kawaler (modern)
- Russian: рыцарь (rýtsar’)
- Scottish Gaelic: ridire
- Serbian:
- Slovene: vitez
- Spanish: caballero
- Swedish: riddare
- Turkish: şövalye
- Ukrainian: лицар (lýtsar)
chess piece
- Arabic: (ħeʂān), (fáras)
- Bosnian: konj, skakač
- Croatian: konj, skakač
- Czech: jezdec
- Danish: springer
- Dutch: paard
- Esperanto: ĉevalo
- Finnish: ratsu, hevonen
- French: cavalier
- German: Springer
- Hebrew: פרש
- Hindi: घोड़ा (gho.rā)
- Hungarian: huszár
- Icelandic: riddari
- Italian: cavallo
- Japanese: ナイト (naito) (in Western chess), 桂馬 (けいま, keima) (in shogi)
- Korean:
- Persian: (asb)
- Polish: skoczek, konik
- Portuguese: cavalo
- Russian: конь (kon’)
- Serbian:
- Slovak: jazdec
- Slovene: konj, skakač
- Spanish: caballo
- Swedish: springare, häst
- Turkish: at
- Ukrainian: кінь (kin’)
- ttbc Indonesian: ksatria, satria
- ttbc Old English: cniht
Verb
- To confer knighthood upon.
- The king knighted the young squire.
Translations
to confer a knighthood upon
- Dutch: ridderen
- Finnish: lyödä ritariksi
- French: faire chevalier
- German: zum Ritter schlagen
- Hungarian: lovaggá ütés
- Persian: (shovalye kardan)
- Polish: pasować (na rycerza) (ancient), nadać rangę kawalerską (modern)
- Portuguese: dar o título de cavaleiro
- Russian: посвящать в рыцари (posvjaščát’ v rýtsari)
- Swedish: dubba
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
- For other uses, see Knight (disambiguation) or Knights (disambiguation).
The British
legend of King Arthur,
popularised throughout Europe in the
Middle
Ages by Geoffrey
of Monmouth in his Historia
Regum Britanniae ("History
of the Kings of Britain") written in the 1130s, and Sir
Thomas
Malory's Le Morte
d'Arthur (The Death of Arthur) written in 1485, were important
in defining the ideal of
chivalry which is
essential to the European ideal of the knight as an elite warrior sworn to uphold the
values of faith, loyalty, courage and honour such as Knights
Templar. In a parallel development in Japan, Bushidō
("Way of
the Warrior") written down between the 9th and 12th centuries
and Heike
monogatari ("Tale of
the Heike") popularised by Kakuichi in 1371,
defined the ideal of the Samurai warrior.
Origins of the knight
In the second century A.D. the nomadic tribes of the Central Asian steppes would pass through the Hindu Kush and raid the cities of what is now Iran. Their tactics consisted of a mass charge of mounted warriors firing arrows as they attacked. This onslaught overwhelmed their opponents. They were stopped only when the Sassanian rulers of Iran put armor on their warriors and their horses. These heavily armored cataphracts withstood the onslaught of arrows and then counterattacked with lances. This system of defense was effective but very expensive. There were not only the high costs of the armor for man and horse but the horses themselves were extra expensive because they were a special breed. In addition the warriors required extensive training.The Sassanian rulers
of Iran
financed these cataphracts by assigning them
each an area which was responsible for providing their armor and
horse and supporting them while they were trained. This arrangement
led to the feudal social
structure with the military elite at the top and the peasant-serfs at the bottom. Sassanian
literature such as
Karnamag-i Artaxshir-i Papakan (Deeds of
Ardashir) and the Shahnameh
(The
Book of Kings) bear testimony to their pursuit of chivalry.
Later the system of heavily armored cataphracts spread to the
steppes north of the Black Sea and
on into Europe. The Sarmatians, an
Iranian-language-speaking people, displaced the Scythians in what
is now south Russia and the
Ukraine.
The realm of the Sarmatians
extended from the Han Empire in
the east to the Roman Empire
in the west. From the Chinese,
among other things, the Sarmatians
adopted the dragon
motif.
In the third century A.D. the Sarmatians
fought the Romans near
the mouth of the Danube River on the
Black
Sea. The Sarmatians lost
the battle but they so impressed the Romans with
their fighting prowess that the terms of the peace called for six
thousand Sarmatian
warriors and their horses to join the Roman army.
The Emperor Marcus
Aurelius sent 5500 of these Sarmatians to
the northern border of the Roman Empire
in Britain to
guard it against attacks by the Celts.
Physical artifacts of this Sarmatian force
have been found, including retirement villages. There are other
things which may be cultural artifacts of the Sarmatian
presence. There is a good chance that Celtic
dragon image came from Sarmatian sources. The really intriguing
possibility is a link between the Arthurian legends
and the Sarmatians. In
the religion of the Sarmatian the
altar was a sword embedded in a stone. Arthur's father was
Uther Pendragon.
Pendragon
means "dragon's head" and
refers to the dragon-head symbol on a shield. The evidence suggests
that the Sarmatians with
their armor created a military caste that survived several
centuries and provided the leadership in the early feudal era.
Knighthood as known in Europe was characterized
by two elements, feudalism and service as a
mounted combatant. Both arose under the reign of the Frankish
emperor Charlemagne,
from which the knighthood of the Middle Ages can be seen to have
had its genesis.
Some portions of the armies of Germanic
tribes (and super-tribes, such as the Suebi) which occupied
Europe from the third century had always been mounted, and
sometimes such cavalry
in fact composed large majorities, such as in the armies of the
Ostrogoths.
However, it was the Franks who came to
dominate Western and Central Europe after the fall of
Rome in the West, and they generally fielded armies composed of
large masses of infantry, with an infantry
elite, the
comitatus, which often rode to battle on horseback rather than
marching on foot. Riding to battle had two key advantages: it
relieved fatigue, particularly when the elite soldiers wore
armour (as was
increasingly the case in the centuries after the fall of Rome in
the West); and it gave the soldiers more mobility to react to the
raids of the enemy, particularly the invasions of Muslim armies which
started occurring in the seventh century. So it was that the armies
of the Frankish ruler and warlord Charles
Martel, which defeated the Umayyad Arab
invasions at the Battle of
Tours in 732, were still largely infantry armies, the elites
riding to battle but dismounting to fight in order to provide a
hard core for the levy of the infantry warbands.
As the eighth century progressed into the
Carolingian
Age, however, the Franks were generally on the attack, and larger
numbers of warriors took to their
horses to ride with the Emperor in his wide-ranging campaigns
of conquest. At about this time the Franks increasingly remained on
horseback to fight on the battlefield as true cavalry rather than
as mounted infantry, and would continue to do for centuries
thereafter. Although in some nations the knight returned to foot
combat in the fourteenth century, the association of the knight
with mounted combat with a spear, and later a lance, remained a
strong one.
These mobile mounted warriors made Charlemagne’s
far-flung conquests possible, and to secure their service he
rewarded them with grants of land called benefices. These were given to
the captains directly by the emperor to reward their efforts in the
conquests, and they in turn were to grant benefices to their
warrior contingents, who were a mix of free and unfree men. In the
century or so following Charlemagne’s death, his newly enforced
warrior class grew stronger still, and Charles
the Bald declared their fiefs to be hereditary. The period of
chaos in the ninth and tenth centuries, between the fall of the
Carolingian central authority and the rise of separate Western and
Eastern Frankish kingdoms (later to become France and Germany,
respectively), only entrenched this newly-landed warrior class.
This was because governing power, and defense against Viking, Magyar
and Saracen
attack, became an essentially local affair which revolved around
these new hereditary local lords and their demesnes. The resulting
hereditary, landed class of mounted elite warriors, the knights,
were increasingly seen as the only true soldiers of Europe, hence
the exclusive use of miles for them.
The medieval institution
In the early Middle Ages the term knight
designated a professional fighting man in the emerging feudal
system. Some were as poor as the peasant class. However, over
time, as this class of fighter became more prominent in
post-Carolingian France, they became wealthier and began to hold
and inherit land. Eventually, on the Continent of Europe, only
those men could be knighted whose fathers or grandfathers had been
knights; and the knightly families became known as the nobility. (In the British
Isles, "nobility" is more restricted, to the Peerage.)
From the 12th century, the concept continued
being tied to cavalry,
mounted and armoured
soldiers. Because of the
cost of equipping oneself in the cavalry, the term became
associated with wealth and social status, and eventually knighthood
became a formal title. However, from 1350 onwards the knights
themselves more frequently dismounted for battle. Significantly the
nobility, who at this time were also expected to be leaders in
times of war, responded to this new class by becoming members of
it. Nobles had their sons trained as gentlemen and as professional
fighters in the household of another noble. When the young man had
completed his training he was ready to become a knight, and would
be honoured as such in a ceremony known as dubbing (knighting) from
the French "adoubement." It was expected that all young men of
noble birth be knights and often take oaths swearing allegiance, chastity, protection of other
Christians, and respect of the laws laid down by their forebears,
though this varied from period to period and on the rank of the
individual Medieval Britain placed great importance on an
individual’s status in society. Popular among this society were the
knights, those that fought for kings and feudal lords and died for
them. Eldest sons comprised of this class in society because of the
inheritance passed on to them while the younger sons entered the
church or became landless knights.
Becoming a knight
The process of training for knighthood began before adolescence, inside the prospective knight’s home, where he learned courtesy and manners. A knight was usually the son of a vassal. Around the age of 7 to 8 years, he would be sent away to train and serve at a grander (kings) household as a page (this was so his mother or sisters would not spoil him). Here, he would serve as a kind of waiter and personal servant to his elders. For at least seven years a page was cared for by the women of the house, who instructed him in manners, courtesy, cleanliness, and religion. The women often taught the page to sing, dance, play an instrument (most commonly a lute) or on very rare occasions, to read; reading and writing were valuable but less necessary skills for knights. He would also learn how to playbattle, in order to learn adult battle techniques. He also acted as a personal servant to the knight, taking care of his master’s armor, equipment, and horse. This was to uphold the knight’s code of Chivalry that promoted generosity, courtesy, compassion, and most importantly, loyalty. The knight acted as a tutor and taught the squire all he needed to know to become a knight. As the squire grew older, he was expected to follow his master into battle, and attend to his master if the knight fell in battle. Some squires became knights for performing an outstanding deed on the battlefield, but most were knighted by their lord when their training was judged to be complete.Several methods were used to become a knight. The
first method “involved the King or tenant-in-chief conferring the
title, known as ‘dubbing’”. The second method “had stronger
religious undertones”. The future knight did things such as keeping
vigil, “taking a purifying bath, heard Mass and had his spur put
on”. The third method called for the future knight to read a
service called “Benedicto Novi Militis”. There was, however,
another method called apprenticeship wherein the individual is
taken as a servant and was taught the manners and skills to be a
knight. Aside from being military-trained, knights were taught
chivalry, manners that enacted values such as “loyalty, generosity”
and “social service”. These manners were supposed to be fulfilled
by the knights in order to receive their privileges.
In various traditions, knighthood was reserved
for people with a minimum of noble quarters (as in many orders of
chivalry), or knighthood became essentially a low degree of
nobility, sometimes even conferred as a hereditary title below the
peerage. Meanwhile kings
strove, as an expression of
absolutism, to monopolize the right to confer knighthood, even
as an individual honour. Not only was this often successful, once
established, this prerogative of the Head of
State was even transferred to the
successors of dynasties in republican regimes, such as the British
Lord Protector of the Commonwealth.
Knighthood as a purely formal title bestowed by
the British monarch unrelated to military service was established
in the 16th century. (However, military knights remained among the
Knights
of Malta until 1798.) The British title of baronet was established by
James
I of England in 1611 as an inheritable knighthood, ranking
below Baron (the lowest Peerage title).
Knighthood and the feudal system
In times of war or national disorder the monarch
would typically call all the knights together to do their annual
service of fighting. This could be against threats to the nation or
in defensive and offensive wars against other nations. Sometimes
the knights responding to the call were the nobles themselves,
and sometimes these men were hired by nobles to fight in their
stead; some noblemen were disinclined or unable to fight.
As time went by, monarchs began to prefer
standing (permanent) armies led by officers
rather than knights, because they could be used for longer periods
of time, were more professional and were generally more loyal. This
was partly because those noblemen who were themselves knights, or
who sent knights to fight, were prone to use the monarch's
dependency on their resources to manipulate him. This move from
knights to standing
armies had two important outcomes: the implementation of a
regular payment of "scutage" to monarchs by noblemen
(a money payment instead of active military service) which would
strengthen the concept and practice of taxation; and a general
decrease in military
discipline in knights, who became more interested in their
country estates and chivalric pursuits, including
their roles as courtiers.
The Knights
of Malta also dropped their traditional role of heavy cavalry
as they moved from one island fortress to another across the
Mediterranean
Sea. Instead they became skilled in Naval
warfare and engaged in frequent sea battles with the Ottoman
Empire and the Barbary
Pirates until nearly the end of the 18th century.
In some countries, knighthood was merged into the
nobility, remaining only as a low or genetic noble title; thus the
aristocratic estate's chambers in the diets of the realms of Sweden
and Finland were each called House of
knights. Similarly the hereditary lords of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth when assembled would often call
themselves The Equestrian Order (for their notorious admiration for
ancient Rome after which they modelled their realm) although they
were legally separate and elevated in privilege above the
scartabelli (lower nobility) and knights created by their kings
(the equites aurati) who would not automatically qualify into such
assemblies.
The knight owned a land that his tenants
maintained while he was away fighting for the king. In exchange for
the land’s maintenance, the knight promised protection to its
tenants and those living in the land, which consisted of villeins,
cottars and peasant farmers. Because the life of a knight was
short, inheritance was hereditary. In most cases, the eldest sons
received the inheritance unless the younger sons made it clear that
the eldest was capable of supporting himself. Such conditions were
applicable to different areas, as rules for inheritance varied in
different places. Despite these rules, sons that did not receive
inheritance usually moved to towns, or worked for the lands of
their brother.
Chivalric code
details chivalry The chivalrous knight was idealized as brave in battle, loyal to his king and God, and willing to sacrifice himself for the greater good. Towards his fellow Christians and countrymen, the knight was to be merciful, humble, and courteous. Towards noble ladies above all, the knight was to be gracious and gentle.The decline of the medieval knight
The causes of the decline of the armoured knight have been a source for much debate, and are likely to include a number of contributing factors. However, it is unlikely that developing technology rendered the knight obsolete; on the contrary, it contributed to their development. Plate armour was first developed to resist crossbow bolts of the early medieval period; the rise of the English longbowmen during the Hundred Years' War led to the increase in -and sophistication of- plate armour, which culminated in the full harness worn by the beginning of the 15th century. Quality plate was chosen by wealthy knights for its effectiveness; records show that from at least the 14th century armour was 'proved' before sale, and stamped to show it could resist handweapons and missiles (from crossbow and longbow and, later arquebus and pistol), fired at close range. By the 14th century most plate was made from hardened steel and quality armour was increasingly being improved to resist threat from firearms. This did not render the plate increasingly impracticable; a full harness of musket-proof plate from the 17th century weighed 70 lb, significantly less than 16th century tournament armour.While infantry abandoned their cheap
mass-produced armour in the late 16th century, good armour
continued to be worn by horsemen. Even in the Napoleonic
wars many heavy cavalry divisions, including the French
Cuirassiers,
wore steel helmets and breastplates.
Early firearms revolutionised siege warfare but
made little impact on the field. Modern trials using 15th century
handguns demonstrate that they were hard to fire and were unable to
penetrate 2mm steel plate at 30 yards. Firearms improved over the
centuries, but by the early nineteenth century muskets had an
accuracy of 40-75% (depending on make) at 100 yards; at 200 yards
it was only 25-37%. In battle they were effective at 50-100 yards
when fired in volley. Loading was slow, producing a musket fire
rate of between three and five rounds a minute. This offered little
defence against charging cavalry, when an infantry division’s only
defence was to form square, a
manoeuvre which demanded firm discipline and tight formation to
maintain the protective wall of bayonets to hold off the charge. A
slightest break in formation left the men at mercy of the cavalry.
Thus, even against firearms, the armoured knight would remain
effective.
It seems likely that changing army structures and
economic factors led to the decline of knights, rather than any
obsolescence in their effectiveness. By the sixteenth century, the
concept of a combined-arms professional army (with improved,
trained infantry tactics) first developed by the Swiss had spread
throughout Europe. The rise in professional armies, with its
emphasis on training and paid contracts - rather than ransom and
pillaging which reimbursed knights in the past - and the high costs
involved in outfitting and maintaining knights’ armour and horses
led many of the traditional knightly classes to abandon their
profession.
- Knights Hospitaller, founded during the First Crusade, 1099 to present
- Order of Saint Lazarus established ca. 1100 to present
- Knights Templar, founded 1118, disbanded 1307
- Teutonic knights, founded ca. 1190, ruling Prussia until 1525
Chivalric orders
details Chivalric order After the Crusades, the military orders became idealized and romanticized, resulting in the late medieval notion of chivalry, as reflected in the Arthurian romances of the time. The creation of chivalric orders was fashionable among the noblesse in the 14th and 15th centuries, as remains reflected in contemporary honours systems, and the term order itself. Examples of notable orders of chivalry include:- the Order of Saint George founded by Charles I of Hungary in 1325/6
- the Order of the Garter founded by Edward III of England in ca. 1348
- the Order of the Dragon of St. George founded by Milos Obilic in ca. 1370
- the Order of the Dragon founded by king Sigismund of Luxemburg in 1408
- the Order of the Golden Fleece founded by Philip III, Duke of Burgundy in 1430
- the Order of Saint Michael founded by Louis XI of France in 1469
From roughly 1560, purely honorific orders were
established, designed as a way to confer prestige and distinction,
unrelated to military service or chivalry in the more narrow sense.
Such orders were particularly popular in the 17th and 18th
centuries, and knighthood continues to be conferred in various
countries:
- The United Kingdom (see British honours system) and some Commonwealth of Nations countries;
- Most European countries, such as The Netherlands (see below).
- The Holy See — see Papal Orders of Chivalry.
There are other monarchies and also republics that also follow the practice.
Modern knighthoods are typically awarded in recognition for
services rendered to society, services which are no longer
necessarily martial in nature. The British musician Elton John,
for example, is a Knight
Bachelor, thus entitled to be called Sir Elton. The female
equivalent is a Dame.
In the British honours system the knightly style
of Sir is accompanied by the given name,
and optionally the surname. So, Elton John may be
called Sir Elton or Sir Elton John, but never Sir John. Similarly,
actress Judi Dench DBE
may be addressed as Dame Judi or Dame Judi Dench, but never Dame
Dench.
Wives of knights, however, are entitled to the
honorific "Lady" before their husband's surname. Thus Sir Paul
McCartney's ex-wife was formally styled Lady McCartney (rather
than Lady Paul McCartney or Lady Heather McCartney). The style Dame
Heather McCartney could be used for the wife of a knight; however,
this style is largely archaic and is only used in the most formal
of documents, or where the wife is a Dame in her own right (such as
Dame Norma Major,
who was knighted six years before her husband Sir John Major was
knighted). The husbands of Dames have no honorific; hence Dame
Norma's husband remained The Rt Hon John Major until he received
his own knighthood.
Outside the British honours system it is usually
considered improper to address a knighted person as 'Sir' or
'Dame'. Some countries, however, historically did have equivalent
honorifics for knights, such as Cavaliere in
Italy (e.g.
Cavaliere Benito
Mussolini), and Ritter in Germany and
Austro-Hungarian Empire (e.g. Georg
Ritter von Trapp'').
State Knighthoods in the Netherlands are issued
in three orders, the Order of
William, the
Order of the Netherlands Lion, and the Order
of Orange Nassau. Additionally there remain a few hereditary
knights in The Netherlands.
In France, among other
orders are the Légion
d'Honneur, the
Ordre National du Mérite, the
Ordre des Palmes académiques and the
Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. The lowest of the ranks
conferred by these orders is Chevalier, meaning Knight.
In the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth the monarchs tried to establish
chivalric orders but the hereditary lords who controlled the Union
did not agree and managed to ban such assemblies. They feared the
King would use Orders to gain support for absolutist goals and to
make formal distinctions among the peerage which could lead to its
legal breakup into two separate classes the King would later play
one against the other and eventually limit the legal privileges of
hereditary nobility. But finally in 1705 King August II managed to
establish the
Order of the White Eagle which remains Poland's most
prestigious order of that kind. The head of state (now the
President as the acting Grand Master) confers knighthoods of the
Order to distinguished citizens, foreign monarchs and other heads
of state. The Order has its Chapter. There were no particular
honorifics that would accompany a knight's name as historically all
(or at least by far most) its members would be royals or hereditary
lords anyway. So today, a knight is simply referred to as "Name
Surname, knight of the White Eagle (Order)".
Modern ranks
Within most Continental European orders, and many other orders, the following rankings (or similar rank structures) exist:- Grand Cross or Grand Cordon
- Grand Officer
- Commander
- Officer
- Knight or Chevalier
Within the British
honours system, and some members of the Commonwealth
of Nations, the following rankings (or similar rank structures)
exist, of which only the two highest ranks are considered
knights:
Consequently to the fact of being not an order of
chivalry but an order of merits, some republican orders have
created new ranks: e.g.
Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Hereditary knighthoods in Great Britain and Ireland
There are traces of the Continental system of hereditary knighthood in British usage, however. There were three hereditary knighthoods in the Kingdom of Ireland:- Knight of Glin, the Black Knight, (FitzGerald of Limerick)
- Knight of Kerry, the Green Knight, (FitzGerald of Kerry) - the current holder is Sir Adrian FitzGerald
- The White Knight Fitzgibbon , (Fitzgibbon), now dormant , but there is a claimant.
It seems likely that the above "Palatine"
hereditary knighthoods, created under the Earl of Desmond, were in
some respects modeled on an archaic form of knighthood mentioned in
the Chronicles
of Jean
Froissart (c.1337-c.1405). In Book IV, Ch. 64, we find the tale
of four Irish kings being prepared to receive English knighthood.
Initially, they seem dismissive of the idea, stating that they were
knights already, explaining that "in Ireland, a king makes his son
a knight, and should the child have lost his father, then the
nearest relation." This was to take place at the age of seven
years.
While "warrior orders" or "warrior clans" were
described in ancient Ireland in the theoretical service of the
High
King or Provincial Kings, there is no evidence to support the
survival of any such orders into the historical period. However,
Gaelic Irish knighthood, in its archaic and hereditary context
designating the untitled martial nobility, was clearly practiced
well into the 14th century.
Knighted Clergymen
Since the reign of
Edward VII a Clerk in
Holy Orders in the Church of
England or in another Anglican
Church has not normally received the accolade on being
appointed to a degree of knighthood. He receives the insignia of
his honour and may place the appropriate letters after his name or
title but he may not be called Sir and consequently his wife may
not be called Lady. The Rt Revd the
Hon Sir Paul Reeves did receive the accolade and is correctly
called Sir but it is not clear how this situation arose. Ministers of other
Christian Churches are entitled to receive the accolade. For
example, His Eminence
Sir Norman Cardinal Gilroy did receive the accolade on his
appointment as
Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British
Empire in 1969. A knight who is subsequently ordained does not
lose his title. A famous example of this situation was The Revd Sir
Derek Pattinson, who was ordained just a year after he was
appointed Knight
Bachelor, apparently somewhat to the consternation of officials
at Buckingham Palace. A woman Clerk in
Holy Orders may be appointed a Dame in exactly the
same way as any other woman since there are no military
connotations attached to the honour. A Clerk in
Holy Orders who is a Baronet is entitled
to use the title Sir.
Notes
References
- Kaveh Farrokh, "Sassanian Elite Cavalry AD 224-642", Osprey Publishing.
- David Nicolle, "Arthur and the Anglo-Saxon Wars: Anglo-Celtic Warfare, A.D.410-1066", Osprey Publishing.
- Arnold, Benjamin, German Knighthood, 1050-1300 Oxford:Clarendon Press, 1985.
- Bloch, Marc: Feudal Society, tr. Manyon London:Rutledge, Keagn Paul (1965)
- Bluth, BJ; Marching with Sharpe, UK: HarperCollins, 2001, ISBN 0004145372
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See also
- Chivalric orders
- Papal Orders of Chivalry
- Feudalism
- Nobility
- Heavy Cavalry
- Tournament (medieval)
- Mêlée
- Jousting
- livery collar
- Vityaz and bogatyr, Kievan Rus' terms translated as "knight".
- Vitez, a Croatian term
- Vitez, a Serbian term
- Knight-errant
- Cavalry tactics
- Destrier
- Philippe de Novare, a model knight
- Samurai, a similar class in Japanese history
- Xiá, a similar class in Chinese history
- Kshatriya, a similar class in Indian history
- Mamluk, a similar class in Middle Eastern history
External links
- Association of Papal Orders in Great Britain
- Modern Honours of the UK
- ">http://www.chivalricorders.org/vatican/main2.htm}}
- International Commission for Orders of Chivalry
knight in Bulgarian: Рицар
knight in Bosnian: Vitez (vojnik)
knight in Czech: Rytíř (titul)
knight in Danish: Ridder
knight in German: Ritter
knight in Esperanto: Kavaliro
knight in Spanish: Caballero
knight in Persian: شوالیه
knight in Finnish: Ritari
knight in French: Chevalerie
knight in Hebrew: אביר
knight in Croatian: Vitez
knight in Hungarian: Lovag
knight in Indonesian: Kesatria
knight in Icelandic: Riddari
knight in Italian: Cavalleria medievale
knight in Japanese: 騎士
knight in Low German: Ridder
knight in Dutch: Ridder
knight in Norwegian Nynorsk: Riddar
knight in Norwegian: Ridder
knight in Polish: Rycerz
knight in Polish: Kawaler (tytuł
szlachecki)
knight in Portuguese: Cavaleiro
knight in Russian: Рыцарь
knight in Simple English: Knight
knight in Slovenian: Vitez
knight in Serbian: Витез
knight in Swedish: Riddare
knight in Ukrainian: Рицар
knight in Vietnamese: Hiệp sĩ
knight in Chinese: 骑士
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Bayard,
Don Quixote, Gawain,
Lancelot, Ritter, Sidney, Sir Galahad, advance, aggrandize, bachelor, banneret, baronet, battler, belligerent, belted knight,
bickerer, bishop, blade, bravo, brawler, broncobuster, buckaroo, bully, bullyboy, caballero, castle, cavalier, cavalryman, chessman, chevalier, circus rider,
combatant, companion, competitor, contender, contestant, cowboy, cowgirl, cowpuncher, disputant, duelist, elevate, enforcer, ennoble, equestrian, equestrienne, exalt, fencer, feuder, fighter, fighting cock, foilsman, gallant, gamecock, gaucho, gladiator, goon, gorilla, graduate, hatchet man, hood, hoodlum, hooligan, horse soldier,
horseback rider, horsebacker, horseman, horsewoman, jockey, jouster, kick upstairs, king, knight bachelor, knight
banneret, knight baronet, knight-errant, man, militant, mounted policeman,
pass, pawn, piece, plug-ugly, postboy, postilion, prefer, promote, puncher, quarreler, queen, raise, rider, rioter, rival, rook, rough, roughrider, rowdy, ruffian, sabreur, scrapper, scuffler, squabbler, steeplechaser, strong arm,
strong-arm man, strong-armer, struggler, swashbuckler, sword, swordplayer, swordsman, thug, tilter, tough, trick rider, tussler, up, upgrade, vaquero, wrangler