Earl was the
Anglo-Saxon form and
jarl the
Scandinavian form of a title meaning
"
chieftain" and referring especially to
chieftains set to rule a territory in a king's stead. In
Scandinavia, it became obsolete in the
Middle Ages and was replaced with
duke (
hertig/
hertug); in later
medieval Britain, it became the equivalent of the continental
count (in England in the earlier period, it
was more akin to
duke, while in Scotland it
assimilated the concept of
mormaer).
In modern
Britain
, an earl is
a member of the peerage, ranking below a
marquess and above viscount. The
English never developed a feminine form of
earl; the wife of an earl is styled
countess (the continental equivalent).
Etymology
- See also Ríg for the account in
Norse mythology of the warrior Jarl
or Ríg-Jarl presented as the ancestor of the class of
warrior-nobles.
According to
Procopius, the
Heruli, after having raided the European continent
for several generations, returned to Scandinavia in 512 AD as a
result of military defeats. As their old territory was now occupied
by the Danes, they settled next to the
Geats in
present-day Sweden. While the
Proto-Norse word for this mysterious tribe may
have been
erilaz, which is
etymologically near "jarl" and "earl", and it has
often been suggested they introduced the
runes
in Scandinavia, no elaborate theory exists to explain how the word
came to be used as a title. Arguably, their knowledge in
interpreting runes also meant they were gifted in martial arts and,
as they gradually integrated,
eril or
jarl
instead came to signify the rank of a leader.
The
Norman-derived equivalent
"count" was not introduced following the
Norman Conquest of England though
"countess" was and is used for the female title. As Geoffrey Hughes
writes, "It is a likely speculation that the Norman French title
'Count' was abandoned in England in favour of the Germanic 'Earl'
[…] precisely because of the uncomfortable phonetic proximity to
cunt".
The
Irish,
Scottish Gaelic, and
Welsh words for "count" or "earl"
(
iarla in Irish and Scottish Gaelic,
iarll in
Welsh) are all descended from English "earl" or one of its
ancestors. In Scotland the word earl was used in English to refer
to a
mormaer.
Earls in the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth
See also List of earldoms

An earl's coronation robes.
Forms of address
An earl has the title Earl of [X] when the title originates from a
placename, or
Earl [X] when the title comes from a
surname. In either case, he is referred to as
Lord [X], and his wife as
Lady [X]. A countess who holds an earldom in her
own right also uses
Lady [X], but her husband does not
have a title (unless he has one in his own right).
The eldest son of an earl, though not himself a
peer, is entitled to use a
courtesy title, usually the highest of his
father's lesser titles (if any); younger sons are styled
The
Honourable [
Forename] [
Surname], and
daughters
The Lady [
Forename] [
Surname]
(
Lady Diana Spencer being a
well-known example).
England
Changing power of English earls
In
Anglo-Saxon England
, earls had
authority over their own regions and right of judgement in
provincial courts, as delegated by the king. They collected
fines and taxes and in return received a "
third penny", one-third of the money they
collected. In wartime they led the king's armies. Some
shires were grouped together into larger units known
as
earldoms, headed by an
ealdorman or
earl. Under
Edward the
Confessor earldoms like Wessex, Mercia, East Anglia and
Northumbria—names that represented earlier independent
kingdoms—were much larger than any shire.
Earls originally functioned essentially as royal governors. Though
the title of Earl was nominally equal to the continental
duke, unlike them earls were not de facto rulers in
their own right.
After the
Norman Conquest,
William the Conqueror tried to rule
England using the traditional system but eventually modified it to
his own liking. Shires became the largest secular subdivision in
England and earldoms disappeared. The Normans did create new earls
like those of Herefordshire, Shropshire, and Cheshire but they were
associated with only a single shire at most. Their power and
regional jurisdiction was limited to that of the Norman
counts.There was no longer any administrative layer
larger than the shire, and shires became "counties". Earls no
longer aided in tax collection or made decisions in country courts
and their numbers were small.
King
Stephen increased the number
of earls to reward those loyal to him in his war with his cousin
Empress Matilda. He gave some earls
the right to hold
royal castles or
control the
sheriff and soon other earls
assumed these rights themselves. By the end of his reign, some
earls held courts of their own and even minted their own coins,
against the wishes of the king.
It fell to Stephen's successor
Henry
II to again curtail the power of earls. He took back the
control of royal castles and even demolished castles that earls had
built for themselves. He did not create new earls or earldoms. No
earl was allowed to remain independent of royal control.
The English kings had found it dangerous to give additional
power to an already powerful
aristocracy, so gradually
sheriffs assumed the governing role.
The details of this
transition remain obscure, since earls in more peripheral areas,
such as the Scottish and Welsh marches and
Cornwall
, retained
some viceregal powers long after other earls had lost them.
The loosening of central authority during
the Anarchy also complicates any smooth
description of the changeover.
By the 13th century, earls had a social rank just below the king
and princes, but were not necessarily more powerful or wealthier
than other noblemen. The only way to become an earl was to inherit
the title or marry into one—and the king reserved a right to
prevent the transfer of the title. By the 14th century, creating an
earl included a special public ceremony where the king personally
tied a sword belt around the waist of the new earl, emphasizing the
fact that the earl's rights came from him.
Earls still held influence and as "companions of the king", were
regarded as supporters of the king's power. They showed that power
for the first time in 1327 when they deposed
Edward II. They would later do the same
with other kings they disapproved of. Still, the number of earls
remained the same until 1337 when
Edward III declared that he intended
to create six new earldoms.
Earls, land and titles
A loose connection between earls and shires remained for a long
time after authority had moved over to the sheriffs. An official
defining characteristic of an earl still consisted of the receipt
of the "third penny", one-third of the revenues of justice of a
shire, that later became a fixed sum. Thus every earl had an
association with some shire, and very often a new creation of an
earldom would take place in favour of the county where the new earl
already had large estates and local influence.
Also, due to the association of earls and shires, the medieval
practice could remain somewhat loose regarding the precise name
used: no confusion could arise by calling someone earl of a shire,
earl of the county town of the shire, or earl of some other
prominent place in the shire; these all implied the same. So there
were the "earl of Shrewsbury" (Shropshire), "earl of Arundel",
"earl of Chichester" (Sussex), "earl of Winchester" (Hampshire),
etc.
In a few cases the earl was traditionally addressed by his family
name, e.g. the "earl Warenne" (in this case the practice may have
arisen because these earls had little or no property in Surrey,
their official county). Thus an earl did not always have an
intimate association with "his" county.
Another example comes
from the earls of Oxford
, whose
property largely lay in Essex. They
became earls of Oxford because earls of Essex and of the other
nearby shires already existed.
Eventually the connection between an earl and a shire disappeared,
so that in the present day a number of earldoms take their names
from towns, mountains, or simply surnames. Nevertheless, some
consider that the earldoms named after counties (or county towns)
retain more prestige.
Order of precedence
List of English earls in
order of precedence
Scotland
The oldest
earldoms in Scotland
originated
from the office of mormaer, such as the
Mormaer of Fife, of Strathearn, etc; later earldoms
developed by analogy.
Coronet
A British earl is entitled to a coronet bearing eight strawberry
leaves (four visible) and eight silver balls (or pearls) around the
rim (five visible). The actual coronet is mostly worn on certain
ceremonial occasions, but an Earl can bear his coronet of rank on
his coat of arms above the shield.
Scandinavia
Norway
In
mediæval Norway
, the title
of jarl was the highest rank below the king
himself. The
jarl was the only one beside the king
himself who was entitled to have a
hird (large
armed retinue). There was usually no more than one
jarl in
mainland Norway at any one time, sometimes none.
The ruler of the
Norwegian dependency of Orkney
held the
title of jarl, and after Iceland
had
acknowledged Norwegian overlordship in 1261, a
jarl was sent there as well as the king's high
representative. In mainland Norway the title
jarl
was usually used for one of two purposes:
- To appoint a de facto ruler in cases where the king
was a minor or seriously ill (e.g. Håkon galen in 1204 during the minority of king Guttorm, Skule
Bårdsson in 1217 during the illness of king
Inge Bårdsson).
- To appease a pretender to the throne without giving him the
title of king (e.g. Eirik, the brother of king Sverre).
In 1237,
jarl Skule
Bårdsson was given the rank of
duke
(
hertug). This was the first time this title had been used
in Norway, and meant that the title
jarl was no longer the
highest rank below the king. It also heralded the introduction of
new noble titles from continental Europe, which were to replace the
old Norse titles. The last
jarl in mainland Norway was
appointed in
1295
Some Norwegian jarls:
Sweden
The usage
of the title in Sweden
was similar
to Norway's. Known jarls from the 12th and 13 century were
Birger Brosa,
Jon
jarl,
Folke Birgersson,
Karl Döve,
Ulf
Fase and the most powerful of all jarls and the last to hold
the title,
Birger jarl.
Iceland
Only one person ever held the title of Earl (or Jarl) in Iceland.
This was
Gissur Þorvaldsson,
who was made Earl of Iceland by King
Haakon IV of Norway for his efforts in
bringing Iceland under Norwegian kingship during the
Age of the Sturlungs.
Notes
- See the Järsberg Runestone from the 6th
century carrying the inscription ek erilaR [...] runor
waritu...
- Lindström (2006:113–115).
- Crouch p108
References
- David Crouch, The Normans (2002) ISBN 1 85285 387
5
- Marc Morris, The King's Companions (History
Today December 2005)
- Geoffrey Hughes, Swearing : a social history of foul
language, oaths and profanity in English, ISBN
0-14-026707-7
- Lindström, Fredrik; Lindström, Henrik (2006). Svitjods
undergång och Sveriges födelse. Albert Bonniers förlag. ISBN
91-0-010789-1