Enter your search keyword(s):

Click to search our directories-AllWebHunt, Encyclopedic, TopChoice, Or Google, Alexa, About & Yahoo:

 

Untitled Document
Websites

Arts
Movies, Television, Music...

Business
Jobs, Industries, Investing...

Computers
Internet, Software, Hardware...

Games
Video Games, Role playing, Gambling...

Health
Fitness, Medicine, Alternative...

Home
Family, Consumers, Cooking...

Kids & Teens
Arts, School Time, Teen Life...

News
Media, Newspapers, Weather...

Recreation
Travel, Food, Humor...

Reference
Maps, Education, Libraries...

Science
Biology, Psychology, Physics...

Shopping
Autos, Clothing, Gifts...

Society
People, Religion, Issues...

Sports
Baseball, Soccer, Basketball...

Travel
Cruises, Destinations, Reservations...


Country directories
United States, United Kingdom, Europe...


Translated directories
Deutsch, Español, Français...


Articles

Nature

Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Earth science, Ecology, Geography, Physics

Society
Anthropology, Archaeology, Business, Communication, Economics, Government, History, Law, Linguistics, Politics, Psychology, Public affairs, Sociology, State

Technology
Agriculture, Architecture, Engineering, Internet, Transport, Vehicles

Abstraction
Computer science, Logic, Mathematics, Philosophy, Statistics

Culture
Arts and crafts, Dance, Entertainment, Films, Fine arts, Games, Hobbies, Humor, Language, Literature, Media, Music, Recreation, Religion, Sports, Television, Visual arts and design

Human
Education, Family, Food, Health, Housing, Medicine, Personal life

Edit | Discuss Article

Primogeniture

Primogeniture is inheritance by the first-born of the entirety of a parent's wealth, estate or office. Primogeniture often occurs in regulating royal succession to the throne in a monarchy.

Agnatic primogeniture is inheritance by the oldest surviving male child, and if there are none then the oldest surviving female child.

Cognatic primogeniture is inheritance by the oldest surviving child without regards to gender. The first country to adopt full cognatic primogeniture was Sweden in 1980. The beneficiary of this was Victoria of Sweden. Several other monarchies have since followed, such as Belgium, the Netherlands and Norway (with Princess Ingrid Alexandra of Norway as second in line to the throne after her father, Crown Prince Haakon).

A special case of primogeniture exemplified in the French royal milieu, the Salic Law (attributed to the Salian Franks) forbade any inheritance of a crown through the female line. This accounts for the dispute over the legitimate successor of Charles IV of France (Edward III of England or Philip VI of France), the loss of Hanover to Ernest I from the United Kingdom upon the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837, the separation of the royal house of Luxemburg from that of the Netherlands, and partially explains the role of Carlism in Spain.

In England, primogeniture was mandatory for inheritance of land. Until the Statute of Wills was passed in 1540, a will could only control the inheritance of personal property. Real estate (land) passed to the eldest male descendant by operation of law. The statute added a provision that a landowner could "devise" land by the use of a new device called a "testament".

Arguments in favour of primogeniture

Primogeniture prevents the subdivision of estates and the requirement to sell property (for example, if two children inherit a house and one cannot afford to buy out the other's share). In England the younger sons of the nobility, having no prospect of inheriting land or property, were obliged to seek careers in the Church, the Armed Forces or in Government.

Arguments against primogeniture

The fact that the eldest son "scooped the pool" often led to ill-feeling amongst younger sons (and of course daughters). Through marriage, estates were combined and some nobles achieved wealth and power sufficient to pose a threat even to the crown itself.

See also


Source | Copyright

Related categories
Webmasters: Add your website here:


Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
 Submit a Site - Open Directory Project (modified) - Become an Editor

Modified contents copyright 2005. All rights reserved.