Viscount | viscount
Viscount,feminineviscountess,aEuropeantitleofnobility[1],rankingimmediatelybelowacount[2],orearl[3].IntheCarolingian[4]periodofEuropeanhistory,thevicecomites,ormissicomitis,weredeputies,vicars,orlieutenantsofthecounts,whoseofficialpowerstheyexercisedbydelegation.Asthecountshipseventuallybecamehereditary,thelieutenanciesdidaswell:forinstance,inFrancetheviscountsinNarbonne,inNîmes,andinAlbiappeartohavemadetheirofficehereditarybythebeginningofthe10thcentury.Evenso,viscountsremainedforsometimewi...
Viscount, feminine viscountess, a European title of nobility[1], ranking immediately below a count[2], or earl[3].
In the Carolingian[4] period of European history, the vicecomites, or missi comitis, were deputies, vicars, or lieutenants of the counts, whose official powers they exercised by delegation. As the countships eventually became hereditary, the lieutenancies did as well: for instance, in France the viscounts in Narbonne, in Nîmes, and in Albi appear to have made their office hereditary by the beginning of the 10th century. Even so, viscounts remained for some time with no other status than that of the count’s officers, either styling themselves simply vicecomites or qualifying their title with the name of the countship whence they derived their powers.
By the end of the 11th century, the universal tendency of feudalism to associate status with the possession of land caused the French viscounts to qualify their title with the name of their own most impo...