What is another word for feudal lords?

Pronunciation: [fjˈuːdə͡l lˈɔːdz] (IPA)

Feudal lords were the landowners and rulers of feudal society. There are many synonyms for the term "feudal lords" that describe these powerful individuals who held significant control over their respective lands. Some of the synonymous terms include feudal barons, landlords, and nobles. Other synonyms include feudal magnates, lords of the manor, and landed gentry. These individuals held immense power and authority over their land and people, often leading to significant political and social implications. While the use of such terms may vary depending on the historical context, they all refer to individuals who held a position of power and leadership within feudal society.

What are the hypernyms for Feudal lords?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Feudal lords

  • The reason why China suffers bitterly from endless wars is because of the existence of feudal lords and kings.
    Qin Shi Huangdi
  • The official style is at once humble, polite, curt and disagreeable: it derives partly from that used in Byzantine times by the eunuch slave-secretariat, writing stiffly in the name of His Sacred Majesty, whose confidence they enjoyed, to their fellow-slaves outside the palace precincts — for the Emperor had summary power over everyone; and partly from the style used by the cleric-bureaucracy of the Middle Ages, writing stiffly in the name of the feudal lords to their serfs and, though cautious of offending their employers, protected from injury by being servants of the Church, not of the Crown, and so subject to canon, not feudal, law. The official style of civil servants, so far as it recalls its Byzantine derivation, is written by slaves to fellow-slaves of a fictitious tyrant; and, so far as it recalls its mediaeval derivation, is written by members of a quasi-ecclesiastical body, on behalf of quasi-feudal ministers (who, being politicians, come under a different code of behaviour from theirs) to a serflike public.
    Robert Graves

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