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Gentry

Gentry (from Old French genterie, from gentil, "high-born, noble") are "well-born, genteel and well-bred people" of high social class, especially in the past.[1][2] Gentry, in its widest connotation, refers to people of good social position connected to landed estates (see manorialism), upper levels of the clergy, or "gentle" families of long descent who in some cases never obtained the official right to bear a coat of arms. The gentry largely consisted of landowners who could live entirely from rental income or at least had a country estate; some were gentleman farmers. In the United Kingdom, the term gentry refers to the landed gentry: the majority of the land-owning social class who typically had a coat of arms but did not have a peerage. The adjective "patrician" ("of or like a person of high social rank")[3] describes in comparison other analogous traditional social elite strata based in cities, such as the free cities of Italy (Venice and Genoa) and the free imperial cities of Germany, Switzerland, and the Hanseatic League.[a]

This article is about a class of people. For other uses, see Gentry (disambiguation).

The term "gentry" by itself, so Peter Coss argues, is a construct that historians have applied loosely to rather different societies. Any particular model may not fit a specific society, but some scholars prefer a single, unified term.[4][5]

Indo-Iranian – /Athravan, Kshatriyas/Rathaestar, Vaishyas

Brahmin

Celtic – , Equites, Plebes (according to Julius Caesar)

Druids

Slavic – , Voin, Krestyanin/Smerd

Volkhvs

Nordic – , Churl, Thrall (according to the Lay of Rig)

Earl

Anglo-Saxon – Gebedmen (prayer-men), Fyrdmen (army-men), Weorcmen (workmen) (according to )

Alfred the Great

Greece (Attica) – , Geomori, Demiourgoi

Eupatridae

Greece (Sparta) – , Perioeci, Helots

Homoioi

cultivate themselves morally;

participate in the correct performance of ritual;

show filial piety and loyalty where these are due; and

cultivate humaneness.

American gentry

Aristocracy

Cabang Atas

Gentlewoman

Grand Burgher

Habitus

Hanseaten (class)

Landed gentry

Nobility

Patrician (ancient Rome)

Gentleman farmer

Principalía

Priyayi

Redorer son blason

Bildungsbürgertum

Social environment

Symbolic capital

Szlachta

Yeoman

Acheson, Eric. A gentry community: Leicestershire in the fifteenth century, c. 1422–c. 1485 (Cambridge University Press, 2003).

Butler, Joan. Landed Gentry (1954)

Coss, Peter R. The origins of the English gentry (2005)

online

Heal, Felicity. The gentry in England and Wales, 1500–1700 (1994) .

online

Mingay, Gordon E. The Gentry: The Rise and Fall of a Ruling Class (1976)

online

O'Hart, John. The Irish And Anglo-Irish Landed Gentry, When Cromwell Came to Ireland: or, a Supplement to Irish Pedigrees (2 vols) (reprinted 2007)

Sayer, M. J. English Nobility: The Gentry, the Heralds and the Continental Context (Norwich, 1979)

Wallis, Patrick, and Cliff Webb. "The education and training of gentry sons in early modern England." Social History 36.1 (2011): 36–53.

online

Media related to Gentry at Wikimedia Commons

The dictionary definition of gentry at Wiktionary