Coronet
A coronet is a small crown consisting of ornaments fixed on a metal ring. By one definition, a coronet differs from a crown in that a coronet never has arches, and from a tiara in that a coronet completely encircles the head, while a tiara does not. By a slightly different definition, a crown is worn by an emperor, empress, king or queen; a coronet by a nobleman or lady. See also diadem.
In other languages, this distinction is not made as usually the same word for crown is used irrespective of rank
The main use is now actually not on the head but as a rank symbol in heraldry, adorning a coat of arms.
Etymology
The word stems from the Old French coronete, a diminutive of coronne, itself from the Latin corona, from the Ancient Greek κορώνη.Traditionally, such headgear is – as indicated by the German equivalent Adelskrone – used by nobles and by princes and princesses in their coats of arms, rather than by monarchs, for whom the word crown is customarily reserved in formal English, while many languages have no such terminological distinction. Other than a crown, a coronet shows the rank of the respective noble. Hence, in German and Scandinavian languages there is also the term Rangkrone.
For equivalents, both physical and emblematic, in other languages and cultures, see under crown.
Commonwealth usage
In the United Kingdom, a peer wears his or her coronet on one occasion only: for a royal coronation, when it is worn along with coronation robes, equally standardised as a luxurious uniform.In the peerages of the United Kingdom, the design of a coronet shows the rank of its owner, as in German, French and various other heraldic traditions. Dukes were the first individuals authorised to wear coronets. Marquesses acquired coronets in the 15th century, earls in the 16th and viscounts and barons in the 17th. Until the barons received coronets in 1661, the coronets of earls, marquesses and dukes were engraved while those of viscounts were plain. After 1661, however, viscomital coronets became engraved, while baronial coronets were plain. Coronets may not bear any precious or semi-precious stones.
- The coronet of a duke has eight strawberry leaves of which five are seen in two-dimensional representations.
- The coronet of a marquess has four strawberry leaves and four silver balls, slightly raised on points above the rim, of which three leaves and two balls are seen.
- The coronet of an earl has eight strawberry leaves and eight "pearls" raised on stalks, of which five are visible.
- The coronet of a viscount has sixteen "pearls" touching one another, nine being seen in representation.
- The coronet of a baron or Lord of Parliament in the Scots peerage has six "pearls" of which four are visible.
Royal usage
Members of the British Royal Family often have coronets on their coats of arms, and may wear actual coronets at coronations. They were made, according to regulations made by King Charles II in 1661, shortly after his return from exile in France during the Restoration. They vary depending upon the prince's relationship to the monarch. Occasionally, additional royal warrants vary the designs for individuals. The most recent royal warrant concerning coronets was the 19 November 1917 warrant of George V.Rather than a coronet, the heir apparent receives a crown with a single arch.
There is evidence to support the wearing of coronets amongst Welsh royalty and nobility, particularly in the Kingdom of Gwynedd. Llywelyn's coronet was for a while kept with the English crown jewels.
British coronet rankings
Danish coronet rankings
Spanish coronet rankings
All over the world, Spanish heraldry has used these crowns and coronets:Swedish coronet rankings
Former monarchies
Kingdom of France usage
This hierarchy among the French nobility, which was identical for non-royal titles to the British hierarchy of peers, should not be understood to be as rigid in the ranking of titleholders as the latter. In particular, title was not a good indication of actual preeminence or precedence: Ancestry, marriages, high office, military rank and the family's historical renown counted far more than the precise title. Some distinguished families held no higher title than count or even baron, but were proud of their ancient origin. Moreover, most of the nobility was legally untitled, some hereditary titles could be acquired by a nobleman who purchased a "titled" fief, while titres de courtoisie were freely assumed in the absence of strict regulation by the French crown and became more numerous than titles legally borne. As an example, the title of marquis ranks in principle immediately after duke, but was so ridiculed by the late 18th century that Napoleon omitted it from his own scale of titles. In the 17th and 18th centuries, people assumed and used freely coronets of ranks that they did not have; and, in the 19th and 20th centuries abuse was still made of "courtesy titles". Titles continued to be granted until the Second Empire fell in 1870, and legally survive among their descendants.The only title that was never usurped under the ancien régime, and rarely without some excuse afterwards, was the title of duc, because it was so often attached to the rank peer of France, which carried specific legal prerogatives such as the right to a seat in the Parliament of Paris. As a result, the title of duc was actually, as well as nominally, at the top of the scale after the royal family and foreign princes, and a cut above all of the other nobility.
Prince: this was not a title in Old Regime France, but a rank, hence there was no coronet.
- Roi: closed crown of fleurs-de-lis.
- Dauphin : initially an open crown of fleurs-de-lis; starting with Henri IV's son, the crown is closed with dolphins instead of arches.
- Fils de France et Petit-Fils de France : open coronet of fleurs-de-lis.
- Prince du Sang : first a coronet alternating fleurs-de-lis and acanthus leaves, e.g., on François de Montpensier's coinage in Dombes, c. 1575. In the 17th and 18th centuries they used a coronet of fleurs-de-lis like the enfants de France. The legitimized princes ranked immediately after the princes of the blood, and were given the same coronet.
- Pair de France : a coronet of the title with a crimson velvet cap, a mantle armoyé fringed with gold and lined with ermine.
- Duc : a coronet of acanthus leaves.
- Marquis: a coronet of alternating acanthus leaves and groups of three pearls in trefoil.
- Comte : a coronet of pearls.
- Vicomte : 4 large pearls alternating with smaller pearls.
- Vidame : a small coronet with 4 crosses.
- Baron: a circle of gold wreathed with a string of small pearls.
- Chevalier : coronet, but a helm.
- Ecuyer : no coronet, but a helm. Helms were reserved for nobles, titled or untitled, by the 16th century regulations that were universally ignored. In principle, a helm without coronet indicated an untitled noble, chevalier or écuyer.
Holy Roman Empire
- Herzogskrone: the coronet of a Herzog displays five visible leaves, with a crimson bonnet on top, surmounted by five visible arches and a globus cruciger.
- Fürstenkrone: the coronet of a Fürst shows five visible leaves, with a crimson bonnet on top, surmounted by three visible arches and a globus cruciger.
- Landgrafenkrone: the coronet of a Landgraf shows five visible leaves, surmounted by three visible arches and a globus cruciger.
- Grafenkrone: the coronet of a Graf displays nine visible tines with pearls. Some of the senior comital houses used coronets showing five leaves and four pearls.
- Freiherrnkrone: the coronet of a Freiherr shows seven visible tines with pearls.
- Adelskrone: the coronet of Adel members displays five visible tines with pearls. Sometimes, the central and outer tines are leaves and the other tines are headed by pearls. In the southern states of Bavaria and Württemberg, usually all tines are headed by pearls.
Precisely because there are many traditions and more variation within some of these, there is a plethora of continental coronet types. Indeed, there are also some coronets for positions that do not exist or entitle one to a coronet in the Commonwealth tradition. Such a case in French heraldry, where coronets of rank did not come into use before the 16th century, is the vidame, whose is a metal circle mounted with three visible crosses.
Often, coronets are substituted by helmets, or only worn on a helmet.