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  2. Aristocracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristocracy

    However, as late as 1900, aristocrats maintained political dominance in Britain, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Austria and Russia, but it was an increasingly-precarious dominion. The First World War had the effect of dramatically reducing the power of aristocrats in all major countries. In Russia, aristocrats were imprisoned and murdered by the ...

  3. Old money - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_money

    Old money is "the inherited wealth of established upper-class families (i.e. gentry, patriciate)" or "a person, family, or lineage possessing inherited wealth". [1] It is a social class of the rich who have been able to maintain their wealth over multiple generations, often referring to perceived members of the de facto aristocracy in societies that historically lack an officially established ...

  4. The Four Hundred (Gilded Age) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Four_Hundred_(Gilded_Age)

    In 2009, the Museum of the City of New York compiled its own list, entitled "The New York City 400", of the 400 "movers and shakers" who made a difference in the 400 years of New York City history since Henry Hudson arrived in 1609. McAllister was "the only person on the original Four Hundred to also make the museum's list."

  5. The Aristocrats - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/aristocrats-140000012.html

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  6. Knickerbocker Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knickerbocker_Club

    Members of the Knickerbocker Club are almost-exclusively descendants of British and Dutch aristocratic families that governed the early 1600s American Colonies or that left the Old Continent for political reasons (e.g. partisans of the Royalist coalition against Cromwell, such as the "distressed Cavaliers" of the aristocratic Virginia settlers), or current members of the international aristocracy.

  7. American upper class - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_upper_class

    The American Family in Social-Historical Perspective,(1973): 267–80. Lundberg, Ferdinand: The Rich and the Super-Rich: A Study in the Power of Money Today (1968) McConachie, Bruce A. "New York operagoing, 1825-50: creating an elite social ritual." American Music (1988): 181–192. online; Ostrander, Susan A. (1986). Women of the Upper Class.

  8. Neo-feudalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-feudalism

    One of the primary characteristics of the age of techno-capitalist-feudalism, according to Bellemare, is "the degeneration of the old modern class-system into a post-modern micro-caste-system, wherein an insurmountable divide and stratum now exists in-between the "1 percent" and the "99 percent", or more specifically, the state-finance ...

  9. Papal nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_nobility

    American Francis Augustus MacNutt was a papal marquis, and Argentine Mercedes Castellanos de Anchorena was a papal marchioness. During the 1920s, Genevieve and Nicholas Frederic Brady of New York were granted papal dukedoms. Pontifical noble titles, like marquis Silva de Balboa, also as count of Urquijo.