• Hereditary
monarchy – in
Bhutan,
Brunei,
Cambodia,
Japan,
Thailand,
Tonga,
Belgium,
Denmark,
Luxembourg,
Liechtenstein,
Monaco, the
Netherlands,
Norway,
Spain,
Sweden,
Jordan,
Morocco,
Qatar,
Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait,
Oman,
Bahrain,
Lesotho,
Eswatini, and the
Commonwealth realms. Other national constitutions use different modes of succession to their monarchies, e.g. the
election of the Pope in the
Vatican City, and especially in East Asia often adding an element of selection (e.g. at a family council) among eligible relations of the monarch, such as in
Cambodia. Special cases are the two federal monarchies,
Malaysia and the
United Arab Emirates, where the constituent states of each federation are hereditary monarchies, but those rulers form an
electoral college that assigns the federal position of
head of state (
President of the United Arab Emirates) to one of their number (
Ruler of Abu Dhabi) for a term (of five years). A similar system existed in the
Holy Roman Empire. • Titles of
nobility in the United Kingdom (
Duke,
Marquess,
Earl,
Viscount and
Baron) and other countries (see
peerage). In the United Kingdom, most titles of nobility (peerages and the lower title of
Baronet) pass only to the eldest son (or in the non ducal
Peerage of Scotland to the eldest daughter in the absence of male heirs); all other sons and daughters of peers are commoners though they may use one or more not independently inheritable
courtesy titles, either
Lord,
Lady or The
Honourable depending on the rank of the peerage held by their father or mother, or another title styled like a peerage, but without a seat in the
House of Lords, usually one or two ranks below their father's. In many European countries, titles may be inherited by all the heirs – male and female – of a family, whose members thus all share the same title at the same time (for instance, within the
szlachta nobility of
Poland or in the nobilities of the successor states of the
Holy Roman Empire). Indeed in Poland a coat of arms could eventually be correctly adopted by marriage to a titled
szlachta spouse – either male or female. In the Far East, the main (Chinese-induced) tradition was rather for titles to devalue as the generations succeed each other, but not to the same rank. • Hereditary
chieftaincy – manifested in countries in various parts of
Africa,
Asia,
South America, and
Oceania. Examples range from the politically powerful (such as the
Nigerian chiefs and the
king of the Zulu Nation) to the merely titular (such as the
rajas,
babus and
rais of
India and the
Arab sheikhs). • Some
court titles, e.g. in the
United Kingdom, including
Earl Marshal and
Lord Great Chamberlain. Most of these are
sinecures, i.e. purely ceremonial. They pass generally to the eldest son (except for that of Lord Great Chamberlain, which is split between the heads of the
Cholmondeley and
Willoughby families). • Many other – especially feudal age – offices became inheritable, often connected to military (e.g. keeper of a castle, such as
Castellan; in Japan even
shōgun) or domanial functions, which is also why some such functions became noble titles (e.g.
Burgrave,
Margrave). • Certain religious positions, such as the
Aga Khan and
Dā'ī al-Mutlaq. ==Coparcenary==