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  1. Dictionary
    Ar·is·toc·ra·cy
    /ˌerəˈstäkrəsē/

    noun

    • 1. the highest class in certain societies, especially those holding hereditary titles or offices: "the ancient Polish aristocracy had hereditary right to elect the king"
  2. aristocracy. (in some countries) people born in the highest social class, who have special titles synonym nobility. British society still has quite a strong class system which is based on birth and social position. The upper class consists mainly of members of the aristocracy.

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  4. a class of persons holding exceptional rank and privileges, especially the hereditary nobility. a government or state ruled by an aristocracy, elite, or privileged upper class. government by those considered to be the best or most able people in the state.

  5. 1. A hereditary ruling class; nobility. 2. a. Government by a ruling class. b. A state or country having this form of government. 3. a. Government by the citizens deemed to be best qualified to lead. b. A state having such a government. 4. A group or class considered superior to others.

  6. aristocracy definition: the highest social class, usually in countries that have or had a royal family. Learn more.

    • Definition
    • Challenges Confronting Aristocracy
    • The Special Case of The British
    • Bibliography

    Before going into these issues in more detail, it is useful to define briefly what aristocracy means in the nineteenth-century European context. In almost every European state in 1789 there existed a group called the nobility whose membership was defined in law and that enjoyed a range of privileges. The term nobilityhad vastly different meanings f...

    Two overall challenges confronted aristocracy in the long nineteenth century. The first were the egalitarian values and ideologies that sprang from the eighteenth-century radical Enlightenment and were embodied in the French Revolution. The second were a number of interrelated changes in society that can broadly be defined as modernization. These i...

    Throughout the long nineteenth century the British aristocracy was the most admired and emulated in Europe. To some extent this was but one aspect of widespread admiration and emulation of the world's richest, most powerful, but also in many ways most liberal, society and polity. There were also, however, very specific aristocratic reasons for admi...

    Becker, Seymour. Nobility and Privilege in Late Imperial Russia.DeKalb, Ill., 1985. Berdahl, Robert M. The Politics of the Prussian Nobility: The Development of a Conservative Ideology, 1770–1848.Princeton, N.J., 1988. Cannadine, David. The Decline and Fall of the British Aristocracy. New Haven, Conn., 1990. Cardoza, Anthony L. Aristocrats in Bourg...

  7. aristocracy. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ar‧is‧toc‧ra‧cy /ˌærəˈstɒkrəsi $ -ˈstɑː-/ noun (plural aristocracies) [ countable usually singular] the people in the highest social class, who traditionally have a lot of land, money, and power dukes, earls, and other members of the aristocracy the landed aristocracy ...

  8. May 21, 2024 · Aristocracy refers to a traditional ruling class that historically derived its power from controlling agricultural production. This class reached its zenith during the feudal system but gradually faced challenges from emerging social groups during the Industrial Revolution.

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