Fidalgo

Portrait of a Young Fidalgo; a 16th-century rendition of a young Portuguese nobleman.

Fidalgo (Portuguese: [fiˈðalɣu], Galician: [fiˈðalɣʊ]), from Galician fillo de algo and Portuguese filho de algo—equivalent to a nobleman, but sometimes literally translated into English as "nobleman" —is a traditional title of Portuguese nobility that refers to a member of the titled or untitled nobility. A fidalgo is comparable in some ways to the French gentilhomme (the word also implies nobility by birth or by charge), and to the Italian nobile but having a higher rank to the British baronet as being a part of the aristocracy, not a commoner. The title was abolished after the overthrow of the monarchy in 1910 by the democratic federal republic and is also a family surname. [1][2][3]

  1. ^ https://royalty.miraheze.orgview_html.php?sq=Sri Lanka&lang=en&q=House_of_Orl%C3%A9ans-Braganza [bare URL]
  2. ^ "Principles".
  3. ^ ""I have obtained a nobiliary title from a deposed monarch. Do I belong to the nobility of his country?"". 9 August 2020.

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