baronry

English

Etymology

baron + -ry

Noun

baronry (countable and uncountable, plural baronries)

  1. The state or quality of being a baron
    • 1887, F. Marion Crawford, Saracinesca:
      It had done well enough for a thousand years, it would do well enough still; it had stood firm against fierce sieges in the dark ages of the Roman baronry, it could afford to stand unchanged in its monumental strength against the advancing sea of nineteenth-century civilisation.
    • 1868, Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot, A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times:
      The order was revoked; but the feeling became even more intense when it was known that the king was getting ready to start for St. Denis, where his principal allies, the King of Bohemia, the Dukes of Hainault and of Lorraine, the Counts of Flanders and of Blois, "and a very great array of baronry and chivalry," were already assembled. "

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