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The Honneurs de la Cour (Honors of the Court) were ceremonious presentations to the sovereign at the Royal Court of France which were formal for women but more casual for men. It was a very prestigious honour only granted to the families of ancient nobility. It allowed them to approach the King and the Queen of France. ==Overview== In France, the ''Honneurs de la Cour'' Formally such presentations were only granted to noble families able to prove a noble lineage dating back to 1400 A.D. without tracks of ennoblement. However the king could grant exemptions to families that had been dedicated to serve him. He could also refuse a valid candidate with sufficient nobility whose family was not involved enough in the king's wars as nobles were primarily mounted warriors who had sworn allegiance to their sovereign and promised to fight for him. On a list of candidates he would then place a remark next to the name of the refused applicant saying ''ne se peut'' ((フランス語:can't be)) or ''attendre'' (''wait''). The Honors of the Court should not be mistaken for court's life. In fact the oldest nobility did not always match the court nobility. Many families living at court were descendant from less ancient nobility while many nobles of antique nobility did not stay at court.〔Generally, the more ancient the nobility the more important the roots to the ancestral seat of the family and the more often the nobleman lived there.〕 Moreover, life at the Royal Court of Versailles was extremely expensive and many family were unable to afford it. The nobleman who was granted the presentation would follow a royal hunt on board of one of the king's carriages. At that point he would be casually introduced to the king. A noblewoman's presentation was much more formal, taking place during a specific ceremony. From 1715 to 1790,〔The ''Honneurs'' were codified in 1715 (the first year of Louis XV's reign), there were no more presentation after the fall of the monarchy in 1790.〕 942 families were granted the ''Honneurs de la Cour'', 880 of them were French. François Bluche who studied the royal genealogical archives specifies that among these 942 families "462 were able to prove a noble lineage dating back to 1400, if excluding sovereign houses and foreign nobles who, unlike one can think, made up more than half of the French nobleman received at Court". He has limited his work to a list of 43 Houses especially flattered by the King's archive, these 43 families are considered of major regional or national importance and members of the highest 18th century nobility. According to Régis Valette〔 only 280 of the 880 French families who were granted the ''honneurs de la Cour'' still remain today. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Honneurs de la Cour」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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