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Prince regnant : ウィキペディア英語版
Prince

A prince is a male ruler, monarch, or member of a monarch's or former monarch's family. ''Prince'' is also a hereditary title in the nobility of some European states. The feminine equivalent is a princess. The English word derives, via the French word ''prince'', from the Latin noun ''princeps'', from ''primus'' (first) + ''capio'' (to seize), meaning "the chief, most distinguished, ruler, prince".〔Cassell's Latin Dictionary, ed. Marchant & Charles, 260th thousand〕
==Historical background==

The Latin word ''prīnceps'' (older Latin
*prīsmo-kaps, literally "the one who takes the first ()"), became the usual title of the informal leader of the Roman senate some centuries before the transition to empire, the ''princeps senatus''.
Emperor Augustus established the formal position of monarch on the basis of ''principate'', not ''dominion''. He also tasked his grandsons as summer rulers of the city when most of the government were on holiday in the country or attending religious rituals, and, for that task, granted them the title of ''princeps''.
The title has generic and substantive meanings:
* generically, ''prince'' refers to members of a family that ruled by hereditary right, the title being used to refer either to sovereigns or to cadets of a sovereign's family. The term may be broadly used of persons in various cultures, continents or eras. In Europe, it is the title legally borne by dynastic cadets in monarchies, and borne by courtesy by members of formerly reigning dynasties.
* as a substantive title, a ''prince'' was a monarch of the lowest rank in post-Napoleonic Europe, e.g. Princes of, respectively, Andorra, Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Mingrelia, Monaco, Waldeck and Pyrmont, Wallachia, etc.
* also substantively, the title was granted by popes and secular monarchs to specific individuals and to the heads of some high-ranking European families who, however, never exercised dynastic sovereignty and whose cadets are not entitled to share the princely title, e.g. de Beauvau-Craon, Colonna, von Bismarck, von Dohna-Schlobitten, von Eulenburg, de Faucigny-Lucinge, von Lichnowsky, von Pless, Ruffo di Calabria, (de Talleyrand) von Sagan, van Ursel, etc.
* generically, cadets of some non-sovereign families whose head bears the non-dynastic title of prince (or, less commonly, duke) were sometimes also authorized to use the princely title, e.g. von Carolath-Beuthen, de Broglie, Demidoff di San Donato, Lieven, de Mérode, Pignatelli, Radziwill, von Wrede, Yussopov, etc.
* substantively, the heirs apparent in some monarchies use a specific princely title associated with a territory within the monarch's realm, e.g. the Princes of, respectively, Asturias (Spain), Grão Pará (Brazil, formerly), Orange (Netherlands), Viana (Navarre, formerly), Wales (UK), etc.
* substantively, it became the fashion from the 17th century for the heirs apparent of the leading ducal families to assume a princely title, associated with a ''seigneurie'' in the family's possession. These titles were borne by courtesy and preserved by tradition, not law, e.g. the ''princes de'', respectively, Bidache (Gramont), Marcillac (La Rochefoucauld), Tonnay-Charente (Mortemart), Poix (Noailles), Léon (Rohan-Chabot),

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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