Dictionary Definition
count
Noun
1 the total number counted; "a blood count"
2 the act of counting; "the counting continued
for several hours" [syn: counting, numeration, enumeration, reckoning, tally]
3 a nobleman (in various countries) having rank
equal to a British earl
Verb
1 determine the number or amount of; "Can you
count the books on your shelf?"; "Count your change" [syn: number, enumerate, numerate]
3 show consideration for; take into account; "You
must consider her age"; "The judge considered the offender's youth
and was lenient" [syn: consider, weigh]
4 name or recite the numbers; "The toddler could
count to 100"
5 put into a group; "The academy counts several
Nobel Prize winners among its members" [syn: number]
6 include as if by counting; "I can count my
colleagues in the opposition"
7 have faith or confidence in; "you can count on
me to help you any time"; "Look to your friends for support"; "You
can bet on that!"; "Depend on your family in times of crisis" [syn:
bet, depend, look, calculate, reckon]
8 take account of; "You have to reckon with our
opponents"; "Count on the monsoon" [syn: reckon]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /kaʊnt/
- Rhymes with: -aʊnt
Etymology 1
From conteNoun
Translations
the male ruler of a county
- Breton: kont -ed p
- Czech: hrabě
- Danish: greve
- Dutch: graaf
- Finnish: kreivi
- French: comte
- German: Graf
- Hebrew: רוזן (rozen)
- Hungarian: gróf
- Italian: conte
- Latin: comes
- Lithuanian: grafas
- Old English: eorl
- Polish: hrabia
- Portuguese: conde
- Romanian: conte
- Russian: граф
- Scottish Gaelic: iarla
- Slovene: grof
- Spanish: conde
- Swedish: greve
- Turkish: kont
the result of a tally that reveals the number of
items in a set
a countdown
- Czech: odpočet
- Dutch: aftelling
- Finnish: lähtölaskenta
- Polish: odliczanie
- Polish: odliczanie
- Romanian: numărătoare
- Russian: отсчёт
- Slovene: odštevanje
a charge of misconduct
- Finnish: syyte, syytekohta
- Spanish: punto, cargo
Translations
- German: Anzahl
- Spanish: conteo
Verb
- : To enumerate the
digits of one's numeral
system.
- Can you count to a hundred?
- : To determine the number (of objects in a group.)
- There are three apples; count them.
- to matter
- Your views don't count here
- to be an example of something
- Apples count as a type of fruit
- to consider something an example of something
- I count apples as a type of fruit
Translations
to enumerate or determine number
- Breton: kontañ
- Czech: počítat
- Danish: tælle
- Dutch: tellen
- Esperanto: konti
- Finnish: laskea
- French: compter (1,2)
- German: zählen
- Italian: contare
- Persian: شمردن
- Polish: liczyć
- Portuguese: contar
- Romanian: număra
- Russian: считать imperf
- Slovene: šteti, prešteti
- Spanish: contar
- Telugu: లెక్కించు (lekkiMchu)
to matter
- Czech: počítat s
- Italian: contare
- Polish: liczyć się
- Slovene: šteti
Extensive Definition
this
the style or title of nobility A count is a nobleman in European countries;
The word count comes from French
comte, itself from Latin comes—in its accusative
comitem—meaning "companion", and later "companion of the emperor,
delegate of the emperor". The British equivalent is an earl (whose wife is also a
"countess", for lack of an Anglo-Saxon term). Alternative "Count"
(Hakushaku) status are used in other countries with different names
such as during the Empire of
Japan.
Definition
In the late Roman Empire, the Latin title comes meaning (imperial) 'companion' denoted the high rank of various courtiers and provincial officials, either military or administrative: before Anthemius was made emperor in the West in 467, he was military comes charged with strengthening defenses on the Danube frontier.Military counts in the Late Empire and the
Germanic successor kingdoms were often appointed by a dux and later by a
king. From the start the count was in charge, not of a roving
warband, but settled in a locality, a countship, his main rival for
power being the bishop,
whose diocese was often
coterminous.
In many Germanic and
Frankish
kingdoms in the early Middle Ages,
the count might also be a count
palatine, whose authority derived directly from the royal
household, the "palace"
in its original sense of the seat of power and administration. This
other kind of count had vague antecedents in Late
Antiquity too: the father of Cassiodorus
held positions of trust with Theodoric, as comes rerum privatarum,
in charge of the imperial lands, then of comes sacrarum largitionum
(concerned with the strictly monetary fiscal matters of the realm)
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/texts/cassbook/chap1.html,
The position of comes was originally not
hereditary. By holding large estates, many counts were able to make
it a hereditary title—though not always. For instance, in
Piast Poland, the position of komes was not hereditary,
resembling the early Merovingian
institution. The title had disappeared by the era of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the office replaced with
other institutions. Only after the Partitions
of Poland did the title of "count" re-surface in the
German-derived title hrabia.
- The title of Count was also often conferred by the monarch as an honorific title for special services rendered, without an actual feudal estate (countship, county), just a title, with or without a domain name attached to it. In the UK, the equivalent Earl is often a courtesy title for the eldest son of a duke. In the United Kingdom stringent rules apply, often a future heir has a lower ranking courtesy title; in Italy, by contrast, all the sons of certain counts are counts (contini). In Sweden there is a distinction between counts (swedish: greve) introduced before 1809 and after. All children in countship families introduced before 1809 are called count/countess. In families introduced after 1809 only the head of the family is called count, the rest had a status similar to barons and was called Mr. and Ms./Mrs. (before the use of titles was abolished).
Comital titles in different European languages
The following lists are originally based on a Glossary on Heraldica.org by Alexander Krischnig. The male form is followed by the female, and when available, by the territorial circonscriptionEtymological derivations from the Latin comes
Etymological parallels of the German Graf (some unclear)
Compound and related titles
Apart from all these, a few unusual titles have been of comital rank, not necessarily to remain there.- Dauphin (anglicized Dolphin, possibly an etymological match; lang-la Delphinus) was a multiple (though rare) comital title in southern France before it became (informally) the courtesy title of the heir to the French royal crown, in chief of the province still known as the région Dauphiné
- Conde-Duque 'Count-Duke' is a rare title used in Spain, notably by Gaspar de Guzmán y Pimentel, Count-Duke of Olivares who had inherited the title of count of Olivares, but being created Duke of Sanlucar la Mayor by King Philip IV of Spain begged permission to preserve his inherited title in combination with the new honour — according to a practice almost unique in Spanish history; logically the incumbent ranks as Duke (higher than Count) just a he would when simply juxtapositioning both titles.
- Conde-Barão 'Count-Baron' is a rare title used in Portugal, notably by D. Luís Lobo da Silveira, 7th Baron of Alvito, who received the title of Count of Oriola in 1653 from King John IV of Portugal. His palace in Lisbon still exists, located in a square named after him (Largo do Conde-Barão).
- Archcount is a very rare title, etymologically analogous to
archduke, apparently
never recognized officially, used by or for:
- the count of Flanders (an original pairie of the French realm in present Belgium, very rich, once expected to be raised to the rank of kingdom); the informal, rather descriptive use on account of the countship's de facto importance is rather analogous to the unofficial epithet Grand Duc de l'Occident (before Grand duke became a formal title) for the even wealthier Duke of Burgundy
- at least one Count of Burgundy (i.e. Freigraf of Franche-Comté)
- In German kingdoms, the title Graf was combined with the word for the jurisdiction or domain the nobleman was holding as a fief and/or as a conferred or inherited jurisdiction, such as "Markgraf" (Margrave - see also Marquess), "Landgraf" ('landgrave'), "Freigraf" ('free count'), "Burggraf" ('Burgrave', where burg signifies castle; see also Viscount), Pfalzgraf (see (Count) Palatine), "Raugraf" (Raugrave, see 'graf'. Originally a unique title) and "Waldgraf" (waldgrave (comes nemoris), where wald signifies a large forest).
- The German Graf and Dutch graaf (lang-la Grafio) stems from the Byzantine-Greek grapheus or suggrapheus "he who calles a meeting [i.e. the court] together").
- These titles are not to be confused with various minor administrative titles containing the word -graf in various offices which are not linked to nobility of feudality, such as the Dutch titles Pluimgraaf (a court sinecure, so usually held by noble courtiers, may even be rendered hereditary) and Dijkgraaf (to the present, in the Low Countries, a managing official in the local or regional administration of water household trough dykes, ditches, controls etcetera; also in German Deichgraf, synonymous with Deichhauptmann, 'dike captain').
Lists of countships
Territory of today's France
West-Francia proper
Since Louis VII (1137–80), the highest precedence amongst the vassals (Prince-bishops and secular nobility) of the French crown was enjoyed by those whose benefice or temporal fief was a pairie, i.e. carried the exclusive rank of pair; within the first (i.e. clerical) and second (noble) estates, the first three of the original twelve anciennes pairies were ducal, the next three comital comté-pairies:- Bishop-counts of Beauvais (in Picardy)
- Bishop-counts of Châlons (in Champagne)
- Bishop-counts of Noyon (in Picardy)
- Count of Toulouse, until united to the crown in 1271 by marriage
- Count of Flanders (Flandres in French), which is in the Low countries and was confiscated in 1299, though returned in 1303
- Count of Champagne, until united to the crown (in 1316 by marriage, conclusively in 1361)
Other French countships of note included those
of:
Parts of today's France long within other kingdoms of the Holy Roman Empire
- Freigraf ('free count') of Burgundy (i.e present Franche-Comté)
- Countess Michelle Casiraghi Henning Maranzano of Provence
The Holy Roman Empire
See also above for parts of present FranceIn Germany
- See also Graf for various comital and related titles; especially those actually reigning over a principality that can be rendered as countship: Gefürsteter Graf, Landgraf, Reichsgraf; compare Markgraf, Pfalzgraf
In Italy
The title of Conte is very prolific on the peninsula, and modern counts occupy the position in rural society comparable to an English squire, members of rural gentry. In the eleventh century however, conti like the Count of Savoia or the Norman Count of Apulia, were virtually sovereign lords of broad territories. Even apparently "lower"-sounding titles, like Viscount, could describe powerful dynasts, such as the Visconti family who ruled a major city such as Milan. The essential title of a feudatory, introduced by the Normans, was signore, modelled on the French seigneur, used with the name of the fief. By the fourteenth century, conte and the Imperial title barone were virtually synonymous, but some titles of count, according to the particulars of the patent, might be inherited by the eldest son of a Count. Other younger brothers might be distinguished as "X dei conti di Y" ("X of the counts of Y"). However if there is no male to inherit the title and the count has a daughter, she can inherit the title: for example the Countess Luisa Gazelli di Rossana e di Sebastiano, mother of Queen Paola of Belgium. The Papacy and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies might appoint counts palatine with no particular territorial fief. Until 1812 in some regions, the purchaser of land designated "feudal" was ennobled by the noble seat that he held and became a conte. This practice ceased with the formal abolition of feudalism in the various principalities of early-19th century Italy, last of all in the Papal States.Many Italian counts left their mark on Italian
history as individuals, yet only a few contadi (countships; the
word contadini for its inhabitants remains the Italian word for
"peasant") were politically significant principalities, notably :
- Norman Count of Apulia
- Count of Savoy, later Duke (also partly in France and in Switzerland)
- Count of Asti
- Count of Montferrat (Monferrato)
- Count of Montefeltro
- Count of Tusculum
Roman count
Count is one of the nobiliary titles granted by the Pope as temporal sovereign (of the Papal State), and is thus often known as Roman count, its holder signified as Cavaliere (Cav., literally Knight). The title, which can be for life or hereditary, has been awarded since the Middle Ages, mostly to foreigners, and the pope continued to grant titles even after 1870 and the loss of most of the Papal territory. By the Lateran Accord of 1929, the Italian government recognized and confirmed the pope's power to grant titles, and the titles granted by the Pope were considered equivalent to Italian titles, contrary to which it had never been abolished. However, the title has not been granted since Pope Pius XII, John McCormack being the last to receive this honor.In Austria
The principalities tended to start out as margraviate and/or (promoted to) duchy, and became nominal archduchies within the Habsburg dynasty; noteworthy are:- Count of Tyrol
- Count of Cilli
- Count of Schaumburg
In Poland
Numerous small ones, particularly:In Galicia (Central Europe)
particularly see:In the Low Countries
Apart from various small ones, significant were :- in present Belgium :
- Count of Flanders (Vlaanderen in local Dutch), but only the small part east of the river Schelde remained within the empire; the far larger west, an original French comté-pairie became part of the French realm
- Count of Hainaut
- Count of Namur, later a margraviate
- Count of Leuven (Louvain) soon became the Duke of Brabant
- in the present Dutch kingdom of the Netherlands:
In Switzerland
- Count of Neuenburg
- Count of Toggenburg
- Count of Kyburg
- Count de Salis-Soglio
In other continental European countries
In Iberia
As opposed to the plethora of hollow 'gentry' counts, only a few countships ever were important in medieval Iberia; most territory was firmly within the Reconquista kingdoms before counts could become important. However, during the 19th century, the title, having lost its high rank (equivalent to that of Duke), proliferated.Portugal
Portugal itself started as a countship in 868, but became a kingdom in 1139 (see:County of Portugal). Throughout the History of Portugal, especially during the Constitutional Monarchy many other countships were created (see: List of Countships in Portugal).Spain
In Spain, no countships of wider importance exist, except in the former Spanish march.- Count of Barcelona - it became integrated in the kingdom of Aragon, which became one of the two main components of the Spanish realm
- Count of Aragon
- Count of Castile
- Count of Galicia
- Count of Lara
- Count Cassius, progenitor of the Banu Qasi
- Count of Urgel
Crusader states
- Count of Edessa
- Count of Tripoli (1102-1288)
Equivalents
Like other major Western noble titles, Count is sometimes used to render certain titles in non-western languages with their own traditions, even though they are as a rule historically unrelated and thus hard to compare, which are considered 'equivalent' in relative rank.This is the case with:
- the Chinese Bó (伯), hereditary title of nobility ranking below Hóu (侯) and above Zĭ (子)
- the Japanese equivalent Hakushaku (), adapted during the Meiji restoration
- the Korean equivalent Baekjak or Poguk
- in Vietnam, it is rendered Ba, one of the lower titles reserved for male members of the Imperial clan, above Tu (Viscount), Nam (Baron) and Vinh phong (lowest noble title), but lower than — in ascending order — Hau (Marquis), Cong (Prince), Quan-Cong (Duke) and Quoc-Cong (Grand Duke), all under Vuong (King).
See also
References
Sources
- Labarre de Raillicourt: Les Comtes Romains
- Westermann, Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in German)
External links
(incomplete)- Heraldica.org - here the French peerage
- Italian Titles of Nobility
- Pauly-Wissowa (in German)
- [http://65.66.134.201/cgi-bin/webster/webster.exe?firstp=10661 Webster's 1828 Dictionary]
count in Catalan: Comte
count in Czech: Hrabě
count in Danish: Greve (rang)
count in German: Graf
count in Estonian: Krahv
count in Spanish: Conde
count in French: Comte
count in Croatian: Grof
count in Icelandic: Greifi
count in Italian: Conte
count in Latin: Comes
count in Latvian: Grāfs
count in Hungarian: Gróf
count in Dutch: Graaf (titel)
count in Japanese: 伯爵
count in Norwegian: Greve
count in Polish: Hrabia
count in Portuguese: Conde
count in Russian: Граф (титул)
count in Slovenian: Grof
count in Swedish: Greve
count in Ukrainian: Граф (титул)
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Brahman, a reckoning of,
account, account of,
accounts, accusal, accusation, accusing, add up, adjudge, adjudicate, admit, aggregate, allegation, allegement, allow, amount, amount to something,
apportion, archduke, aristocrat, armiger, arraignment, article, aspect, assimilate, bank on, baron, baronet, batch, be featured, be
influential, be judicious, be persuasive, be prominent, be
regarded, be somebody, be something, be thought of, beat, beat a tattoo, beat the drum,
beat time, bill of particulars, blame, blue blood, body count, box
score, bringing of charges, bringing to book, budget, bunch, calculate, call off, call
over, call the roll, capitulation, carry weight,
case, cast, census, charge, check of, chunk, clutch, complaint, complete, comprehend, comprise, compute, consider, contain, count in, count of,
count on, count the beats, count up, cover, cut ice, cut some ice,
daimio, datum, deal, decrease, deem, delation, denouncement, denunciation, depend on,
detail, difference, divide, dose, drum, duke, earl, election returns, element, embody, embrace, encircle, enclose, encompass, enumerate, envisage, esquire, esteem, exercise judgment,
express an opinion, facet,
fact, factor, figure on, figure out,
figure up, fill, fill in,
fill out, fix, foliate, form an opinion,
gentleman, get top
billing, gob, grand duke,
grandee, group, have an in, have full play,
have influence, have personality, have pull, head count, heap, hidalgo, hold, hunk, impeachment, implication, import, imputation, incidental, include, incorporate, increase, indictment, information, innuendo, insinuation, instance, inventory, item, judge, keep time, lace-curtain,
laird, landgrave, landslide, large amount,
lawsuit, laying of
charges, look on, look upon, lord, lordling, lot, magnate, magnifico, margrave, marquis, matter, measure, mess, minor detail, minutia, minutiae, noble, nobleman, nose count, number, number among, numerate, occupy, official count, optimate, pack, page, paginate, palsgrave, parcel, part, particular, patrician, peer, pine, plaint, play drum, point, poll, portion, pound, presume, product, prosecution, quantify, quantity, quantize, rank, rate, ration, recapitulation, receive, reckon, reckon among, reckon in,
reckon on, reckon with, reckoning, recount, recounting, reduce, regard, rehearsal, rely on, rely upon,
repertory, reproach, respect, returns, ruffle, run over, score, seigneur, seignior, signify, silk-stocking, small
amount, sound a tattoo, squire, stand out, star, statement, suit, sum, summary, summation, summing, summing up, suppose, swell, tabs of, take in, take into
account, take into consideration, take up, tale, tally, tally of, tap, taxing, tell, the bottom line, the story,
the whole story, thing,
think of, thoroughbred, thrum, thump, tidal wave, tom-tom,
total, track of, true
bill, trust, unspoken
accusation, upper-cruster, veiled accusation, viscount, waldgrave, weigh, whole, x
number