Alright, I can provide you with some titles and posthumous titles that appear in novels. I hope you like them. Empress Dowager: - Empress Dowager Xiaozhuang - Empress Dowager cisheng - Empress Dowager Cixi - Empress Dowager Emperor: - Tang Taizong - Tang Xuanzong - Tang Gaozong - Tang Zhongzong - Tang ruizong - later Zhou shizong - song Taizu - song renzong - song zhezong - Yuan Shizu - Ming Taizu The Duke: - Duke: hereditary - Duke: hereditary - Duke: Xianzu Baochan King - Duke: Xianzu King Zhao Wu - Duke: Xianzu Xuanxiao King - Duke: Xianzu Huairen King - Duke: Xianzu Shengwu King Marquis: - Marquis: hereditary - Marquis: Hereditary - Marquis: Founding Marquis - Marquis: Founding Father - Marquis: Founding Son - Marquis: Marquis Zhaolie - Marquis: Marquis Zhaoxian - Marquis: Marquis Zhaoyi Earl: - Earl: Hereditary - Earl: Hereditary - Count: Founding Father - Earl: Founding Son - Earl: Zhao Xianzi - Earl: Zhao Yizi - Earl: Xianqingzi Baron and Viscount: - Baron: Hereditary - Baron: hereditary - Baron: Founding Man - Baron: Founding Son - Baron: Zhao Qingzi - Viscount: hereditary - Viscount: hereditary - Viscount: Founding Son - Viscount: Zhao Yizi - Viscount: Xianqingzi These titles and posthumous titles are common in novels. If you have any other needs, feel free to tell me at any time.
Duke, marquis, uncle, and son was a system of nobility. In China, this title system had been established during the Western Zhou Dynasty. Dukes had the highest status, and most of them were descendants of the royal family of the Zhou Dynasty. Marquises were important officials of the Zhou emperor. Earls were below marquises. Viscounts and barons were lower nobles. Viscounts were generally responsible for the governor of a county. There were relatively more barons. They were mainly personal titles and were not closely related to specific fiefs. The titles differed in terms of social status, size of fief, and military power. For example, the Zhou emperor had jurisdiction over a thousand miles, while dukes and marquises had fiefs of a hundred miles, earls had fiefs of seventy miles, and viscounts and barons had fiefs of fifty miles. The later dynasties 'nobility system was mostly developed on the basis of the Zhou Dynasty. In Japan, after the Meiji Restoration, the Chinese were divided into five levels: duke, marquis, earl, viscount, and baron. The families of the old ministers and daimyo, the important ministers of the downfall movement and the Wuchen War, and some of the royal family who were demoted to ministers could obtain titles. These titles symbolized privilege and status, and influenced the government at that time. Ever since Ito Hirofumi became prime minister, the position of prime minister and noble status had been merged for a long time. Europe also had a similar system of nobility, but it was similar to the system of nobility in the Western Zhou Dynasty, but there were some differences. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"
In the British nobility system, this was the ranking of nobility from low to high. Baron was the lower rank of nobility. In the beginning, only the landlord could be called a baron. After Charles II in 1387, it became an official title. Viscounts were originally the assistant of counts, but later evolved into independent existences and could be inherited. Earls appeared earlier. Their titles were introduced to England by King Canute of Denmark in the early 11th century. Before the middle of the 11th and 12th centuries, they were mostly vassals who guarded one area. Marquis was the second rank of nobility. Dukes had the highest status among the nobles. In England, only direct relatives of the royal family could have the title of duke. In addition, these titles were divided into hereditary titles and lifelong titles. Hereditary titles could be inherited by immediate family members, while lifelong titles were first-generation nobles (titles were limited to barons). After the establishment of the lifelong nobility system in 1958, there were basically no hereditary nobles in the United Kingdom. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"
Marquis, earl, viscount, and baron were part of the western nobility system. In the West, the title of nobility was divided into hereditary nobility and lifelong nobility according to whether it could be passed on to future generations. The former could be inherited by the eldest son after death, while the latter could only be held when the person was alive. The enfeoffment system of China Western Zhou Dynasty was similar to the dukedom system of dukes and marquises. Some people believed that the Western nobility system borrowed the name of China Western Zhou Dynasty in translation. In 1711, when the Western missionary Francis Wei first created the Western nobility term, he translated the China fifth rank (duke, marquis, uncle, male). Later, there was a phenomenon of export to domestic sales, which was said to be a Western original. In ancient China, the title of nobility was a title given by the emperor to his blood-related relatives and meritorious officials. It was a symbol of social status and the amount of material benefits enjoyed. The basis for granting titles varied from dynasty to dynasty. The western nobility system was also related to a certain social status, power, and wealth. For example, different titles had different land, population, and political power. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"
In ancient China, the title of nobility was a title bestowed by the emperor to his blood-related relatives and meritorious officials. It was a symbol of social status and the amount of material benefits enjoyed. There was also a system of nobility in the West. In ancient China, a duke was usually an important minister or an elder relative of the emperor (under the enfeoffment system of the Western Zhou Dynasty). In the West, it was translated as "Dakes" by the missionary, which was a high-ranking title in the Western nobility system. Dukes were highly respected and often had large fiefs or power. Earls were meritorious officials in ancient China, and their status was one level lower than marquises. Western missionaries translated them as "commons." In the Western nobility system, they were below dukes and marquises. They also had a certain status, power, and corresponding wealth and territory. Baron had its place in the ancient China nobility system. In the West, it was translated as "Baro". In the Western nobility system, it was a relatively low rank, possessing a certain amount of property and a lower degree of social privileges. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"
The ranking of dukes, marquises, uncles, uncles,
In the ancient China nobility system, there were duke, marquis, uncle, son, male, and so on. A duke was usually an important minister or a direct relative of the emperor. His fief was often within the royal territory of the emperor. A marquis was usually a great meritorious minister, a relative of the emperor, or a person who had a distant direct relationship with the emperor. An earl was also a meritorious minister, but his rank was lower than that of a marquis. A viscount was also lower than an earl. These titles were given by the emperor to his blood-related relatives and meritorious officials. It was a symbol of social status and the amount of material benefits they enjoyed. Generally, different titles were awarded according to the degree of blood relationship or the size of their contributions. In the West, there were also dukes, marquises, earls, viscounts, and barons. According to whether they could be passed on to future generations, they were divided into hereditary noble titles and lifelong noble titles. The former could be inherited by the eldest son after death, while the latter could only be held by the eldest son while he was alive. In the western nobility system, the dukes, marquises, earls, and viscounts were ranked in descending order. The title system in the West was similar to the title system in ancient China. Some people believed that the Western title system borrowed the relevant concepts from China in the process of construction. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"
In China, the title of duke, marquis, and earl originated from the Zhou Dynasty and was used until the Qing Dynasty. In the West, in 1711, the Western missionary Francis Wei first created the Western title of nobility. He translated the China fifth-class dukes and marquises. These titles had existed for a long time in the feudal history of the West and were still used in some countries. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"
The meaning of the posthumous title of some empresses is as follows: Ci Hui loves his parents is filial piety, love and education must be Zhou is kindness, justice and purity are pure, soft virtue flowing light is Yi, gentle benevolence is Shu, virtue is benevolent is gentle, quiet and upright is stable. While waiting for the TV series, you can also click on the link below to read the classic original work of "Dafeng Nightwatchman"!
There were many ways to address an emperor, including zhen, your majesty, emperor, lord, supreme, my lord, your majesty, everyone, father, and so on. In addition, the emperor could also be addressed as the Nine Five Supreme, Long Live, Emperor, Son of Heaven, Official, Emperor, and other nicknames. In different eras and cultural backgrounds, emperors were addressed differently.
In China and the West, there were counts, viscounts, and barons. In China, the title system had a long history. In the Zhou Dynasty, there were five titles of nobility: duke, marquis, uncle, son, and male. Although the title system of each dynasty had different changes, these titles had an important meaning in history. For example, during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, the system of knighthood gradually changed from being based on blood relations to the size of contributions to the country. In the West, dukes, marquises, counts, viscounts, and barons were common ranks of nobility. In the West, the title of nobility was divided into hereditary nobility and lifelong nobility according to whether it could be passed on to future generations. The former could be inherited by the eldest son after death, while the latter could only be held when the person was alive. There was also a view that the Western nobility system was formed in the early 16th century when Western missionaries translated a large number of Chinese classics and translated the relevant terms into the Latin-based system. These titles represented a certain social status, power, material benefits, and so on. However, in different cultures and different historical periods, their specific content, scope of power, and promotion methods would vary. Click on the link below to read the comic "The Viscountess Bits Everyone When She's Crazy"