Morganatic marriage - Edit 1
Before modification by Camilla at 01/12/2009 09:47:50 AM
I learnt a new word today. From my The Chap calendar, actually. December started, so I turned the leaf, and on certain dates is entered a historical event. The one filling the 10th is that Edward VIII abdicated the throne after being refused permission for a morganatic marriage.
Now I know the story (king falls in love with American divorcée; king abdicates when he is not allowed to marry her), but the term "morganatic marriage" was new to me. It sounds excellent. Actually, it sounds like it has some sinister link to Morgana Le Fay. But that may just be in my brain.
At any rate, I assumed it would mean marriage to a divorcée, although I wondered why they had given it such an exotic name. But then I checked, and it turns out a morganatic marriage is a marriage between a royal, or noble, and a person of inferiour rank, "where the rank of the inferior partner remains unchanged and the children of the marriage do not succeed to the titles, fiefs, or entailed property of the parent of higher rank" (according to merriam-webster).
So. I learnt something new today.
Now I know the story (king falls in love with American divorcée; king abdicates when he is not allowed to marry her), but the term "morganatic marriage" was new to me. It sounds excellent. Actually, it sounds like it has some sinister link to Morgana Le Fay. But that may just be in my brain.
At any rate, I assumed it would mean marriage to a divorcée, although I wondered why they had given it such an exotic name. But then I checked, and it turns out a morganatic marriage is a marriage between a royal, or noble, and a person of inferiour rank, "where the rank of the inferior partner remains unchanged and the children of the marriage do not succeed to the titles, fiefs, or entailed property of the parent of higher rank" (according to merriam-webster).
So. I learnt something new today.