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Primogeniture

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Primogeniture is the common tradition of inheritance by the first-born of the entirety of a parent's wealth, estate or office; or in the absence of children, by collateral relatives, in order of seniority of the collateral line.

It is often used in monarchies. As a mechanism of succession in hereditary monarchies, some sort of primogeniture has for long been the most used, but it is not the only tradition; nor is it likely the oldest method. For other mechanisms of inheritance in hereditary monarchies, see "Order of succession"; and see also "elective monarchy". Primogeniture became the most common method of succession in hereditary monarchies as a slow development, correlating with the development of the average life-span in wealthier classes (particularly with the wealth of a monarch's family) increasing to a level where the eldest children of a parent were, on average, more or less adult at the time of the death of the parent. This correlated with the wealthier and healthier conditions and more and better food; and with less personal participation in violent activities, such as warring, marauding, robber expeditions and duels.

Definitions

Agnatic primogeniture

Agnatic primogeniture or patrilineal primogeniture (a form of male primogeniture) is inheritance by the eldest surviving male child. This is sometimes referred to as a form of Salic law. Male primogeniture happens at least in two known systems: Agnatic Primogeniture and Quasi-Salic Succession. Only males may succeed to the throne. The mentioned two forms are distinct, depending upon whether a female is accepted as the legitimate recipient in a transfer of succession rights, or not.

Male-preference primogeniture

Male-preference primogeniture is inheritance by the eldest surviving male child, but females may inherit, provided the subject has no surviving sons. The term agnatic-cognatic primogeniture is used in the same meaning. This is the usual "feudal" primogeniture, in the Western European culture, such as the Castilian Siete Partidas. Earlier definitions of "cognatic primogeniture" referred to any form of primogeniture which allows females; today the term may refer to equal primogeniture (below).

Absolute primogeniture

Absolute, equal or lineal primogeniture is inheritance by the oldest surviving child without regard to gender. It is also known as full cognatic primogeniture today. Some monarchies adopted this practice during the late 20th century. It is well established that many female rulers have reigned throughout history but there is no evidence that earlier cultures practiced fully equal primogeniture. Sweden adopted fully equal primogeniture in 1980. The beneficiary of this was Victoria of Sweden. Several other monarchies have since followed, such as Belgium, the Netherlands and Norway (with Princess Ingrid Alexandra of Norway as second in line to the throne after her father, Crown Prince Haakon). In Japan, there are currently debates over whether to adopt lineal or some form of mixed primogeniture, as Princess Aiko is the only child of Crown Prince Naruhito. (Occasionally, equal primogeniture has won in historical cases of Japanese succession: While it is true that most succession events in Japan had since time immemorial went in favor of a male heir, not necessarily the eldest of the sons themselves, it nevertheless is established by two precedents [of 1629 CE and of 642 CE] that an imperial princess may ascend the throne in preference and prior to her younger brothers. In 1629, the imperial princess Okiko ascended the Japanese throne as Reigning Empress Meisho tenno, as successor of her father, prior to her younger half-brother and other males. Only after her abdication 14 years later, her brother Tsuguhito (Emperor Go-Komyo tenno) ascended. However, her offspring would never have been allowed to ascend the throne. Zapatero's government intends to reform the Spanish Constitution of 1978 to assure the inheritance of Infanta Leonor of Spain.

Matrilineal primogeniture

No known monarchy in Europe applies or has applied matrilineal primogeniture (uterine primogeniture) or any other form of hereditary succession to total exclusion of males. Certain tribes in Africa, however, apply matrilineal primogeniture, see Rain Queen. There is some evidence that matrilineal descent and consort was an important factor deciding successions in ancient Egypt, though any matrilineal rule was certainly not consistent, nor was any primogeniture strictly patrilineality either. Cambodian royal custom requires for an heir's relevancy that (s)he be born of the royal dynasty in both maternal and paternal sides.

Historical examples

A case of agnatic primogeniture is exemplified in the French royal milieu, the Salic Law (attributed to the Salian Franks) forbade any inheritance of a crown through the female line. This accounts for the dispute over the legitimate successor of Charles IV of France (Edward III of England or Philip VI of France), the separation between Hanover (where Ernest I succeeded) and the United Kingdom upon the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837, the separation of the (arch)ducal house of Luxembourg from the royal house of the Netherlands, and partially explains the role of Carlism in Spain.

From Middle Ages, we have one practical system of succession in primogeniture, so-called Quasi-Salic inheritance: succession is allowed also through female line, just females themselves do not inherit, but the sons of females do. (For example, a grandfather, without sons, is succeeded by his grandson, a son of his daughter, when the daughter in question is yet alive. Or an uncle, without own children, is succeeded by his nephew, a son of his sister, when the sister in question is yet alive.) This actually fulfills the Salic condition of "no land comes to a woman, but the land comes to the male sex".

The most common hereditary system in feudal Europe was based on a form of primogeniture, where a lord was succeeded by his eldest son, and failing sons, by either daughters or by sons of daughters. Great Britain and Spain, where also females are allowed to succeed, are today continuing this old model of succession law. In most medieval Western European feudal fiefs, females (such as daughters and sisters) were allowed to succeed, brothers failing, but usually the husband of the heiress became the real lord and most often also got title, iure uxoris.

In more complex medieval cases, the sometimes conflicting principles of proximity of blood and primogeniture battled, and outcomes could have been idiosyncratic. Proximity meant that a heir closer in degrees of kinship to the lord in question was given precedence although that heir was not necessarily the primogenitural heir.

However, primogeniture increasedly won legal cases over proximity in later centuries.

Later, when lands were strictly divided among noble families and tended to remain fixed, agnatic primogeniture (practically the same as Salic Law) became the most usual: succession going to the eldest son of the monarch; if the monarch had no sons, the throne would pass to the nearest male relative through male line.

Some countries however accepted female rulers early on, so that if the monarch had no sons, the throne would pass to the eldest daughter. (This sort of primogeniture was the rule that let Elizabeth II become Queen.)

In England, primogeniture was mandatory for inheritance of land. Until the Statute of Wills was passed in 1540, a will could only control the inheritance of personal property. Real estate (land) passed to the eldest male descendant by operation of law. The statute added a provision that a landowner could "devise" land by the use of a new device called a "testament". The rule of primogeniture in England was not changed until the Administration of Estates Act in 1926.

Preference for males, existing in most systems of primogeniture (and in other mechanisms of hereditary succession) comes mostly from the perceived nature of the tasks and role of the monarch: A monarch most usually was, firstly and foremostly, a military protector.

Other principles of succession

Proximity or seniority mean that power rests tighter in hands of older generation and also that monarchs have shorter reigns. They tend to lead to some form of partition of the inheritance.

Primogeniture has often meant underage monarchs and regency arrangements. Primogeniture tends to keep the inheritance undivided and even in increase.

Arguments in favour of primogeniture

Primogeniture prevents the subdivision of estates and diminishes internal pressures to sell property (for example, if two children inherit a house and one cannot afford to buy out the other's share). In Western Europe most younger sons of the nobility, having no prospect of inheriting land or property, were obliged to seek careers in the Church, the Armed Forces or in Government. Wills often included bequests to a monastic order who would take the disinherited. Many of the Spanish Conquistadors were young sons who had to make their fortune in war. In the late 17th and early 18th Centuries, many specifically chose to leave England for Virginia in the Colonies. Most, if not almost all, of the early Virginians who were plantation owners were such younger sons who had left England because of primogeniture laws. These Founding Fathers of the United States of America were nearly universally descended from the landed gentry of England, with many being descended from English Kings of the late 14th and early 15th Centuries, especially through the prodigious offspring of Edward III of England. William Shakespeare's King Lear can be seen as an argument in favor of primogeniture as the tragically flawed action of Lear is dividing his country into three amongst his daughters. The division of his land marks the beginning of the unraveling of everything else in the play.

Arguments against primogeniture

The fact that the eldest son "scooped the pool" often led to ill-feeling amongst younger sons (and of course daughters). Through marriage, estates inherited by primogeniture were combined and some nobles achieved wealth and power sufficient to pose a threat even to the crown itself. Alternately, one might think that, as with most property, the land will go to its most useful purpose no matter what the initial distribution (the Coase Theorem). Finally, nobles tended to complain about and resist rules of primogeniture (though this opposition might indicate primogeniture among nobles was good for the king).

Primogeniture also can lead to less than able successors. See for example Christian VII of Denmark who was likely schizophrenic and Afonso VI of Portugal who was a half-wit.

Other methods of succession

There are several other ways to organize hereditary succession, which produce more or less different outcome than primogeniture. Some examples of widely used methods of alternative order of succession:

See also

External links

 


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