Associations to the word «Margrave»
Noun
- Brandenburg
- Baden
- Moravia
- Tuscany
- Palatine
- Elector
- Dietrich
- Saxony
- Leopold
- Boniface
- Otto
- Bohemia
- Fief
- Frederick
- Casimir
- Albrecht
- Saxe
- Bavaria
- Archduke
- Odo
- Sigismund
- Conrad
- Dorothea
- Tyrol
- Hermann
- Rudolf
- Verona
- Pomerania
- Anhalt
- Provence
- Herman
- Maximilian
- Brabant
- Matilda
- Emanuel
- Friedrich
- Prussia
- Nuremberg
- Silesia
- Bernhard
- Elisabeth
- Duchy
- Stade
- Habsburg
- Este
- Albert
- Duke
- Georg
- Hesse
- Count
- Vassal
- Trier
- Palatinate
- Magdalena
- Christoph
- Austria
- Joachim
- Slav
- Gertrude
- Oder
- Agnes
- Mainz
- Sophie
- Ernst
- Ludwig
- Lorraine
- Philipp
- Marches
- Iii
- Burgundy
- Weimar
- Sophia
- Married
- Mecklenburg
- Wilhelm
- Iv
- Siegfried
- Principality
- Schleswig
- Turin
- Eldest
- Holstein
- Helene
- Rhine
- Achilles
- Ernest
- Augsburg
Adverb
Wiktionary
MARGRAVE, noun. A feudal era military-administrative officer of comital rank in the Carolingian empire and some successor states, originally in charge of a border area.
MARGRAVE, noun. A hereditary ruling prince in certain feudal states of the Holy Roman Empire and elsewhere; the titular equivalent became known as marquis or marquess.
Dictionary definition
MARGRAVE, noun. The military governor of a frontier province in medieval Germany.
MARGRAVE, noun. A German nobleman ranking above a count (corresponding in rank to a British marquess).
Wise words
Words are but symbols for the relations of things to one
another and to us; nowhere do they touch upon absolute
truth.