takingastep t1_itd1xi3 wrote
> noble family
…Didn’t they do a whole revolution to try to get away from having a landed aristocracy?
satellite51 t1_itdd5sy wrote
OP wrote Nobel, so I understood it as having a Nobel prize winning family name. :D
Tark1nn t1_itgf4u7 wrote
no op made a mistake it is indeed noble not nobel
TatonkaJack t1_itgfb89 wrote
Tbh that would make sense why they get in more
Eurymedion t1_itehj2q wrote
Multiple revolutions, but France let the nobles keep their titles without the degree of power and influence they had before. In theory anyway.
takingastep t1_itejnau wrote
Yeah, "in theory". "In reality" seems to have become a different animal.
Eurymedion t1_itekpjf wrote
Names carry a lot of cachet regardless. Here's an article on how much influence French nobility still wield even though they technically have little legal standing in France:
glium t1_itiabgb wrote
How is that your take away from this article, when it's just a ton of people debating whether they should be called nobles ?
Fer4yn t1_itfsi58 wrote
Stripping nobility of their political privileges while letting them keep their wealth effectively amounts to nothing; the former noblemen simply become the top players of the capitalist game.
takingastep t1_itg6j73 wrote
I completely agree, because that's precisely what's happened IRL. Aristocrats, like billionaires, should not exist, and their power base (primarily money/assets/whatever political authority they've acquired) needs to be stripped from them entirely.
Pyrenees_ t1_itgq18o wrote
They still unofficially hold titles, and they have particles like Du Château instead of Château or Duchâteau
Rondodu t1_itilo8u wrote
Lower case "de", actually. Jean de La Fontaine, e.g.
Mwakay t1_itgrw7l wrote
It comes from a french study (that I stumbled upon recently), so I assume OP just mistranslated and meant influent/rich/powerful/top 1%. We don't have "official" nobility anymore, eventhough some families retain titles.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments