The
comital title of is common to various European territories where German was or is the official or vernacular tongue, including Austria, Germany, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, Alsace, the
Baltic states and other former
Habsburg crown lands. In Germany, all legal privileges of the nobility have been officially abolished since August 1919, and , like any other hereditary title, is treated as part of the legal surname. In Austria, its use is banned by law, as with all hereditary titles and
nobiliary particles. In
Switzerland, the title is not acknowledged in law. In the monarchies of Belgium, Liechtenstein and Luxembourg, where German is one of the
official languages, the title continues to be recognised, used and, occasionally, granted by the national , the reigning monarch. From the
Middle Ages, a usually ruled a territory known as a ('county'). In the
Holy Roman Empire, many Imperial counts () retained near-sovereign authority in their lands until the
Congress of Vienna subordinated them to larger, neighboring monarchs through the
German mediatisation process of 1815, preserving their precedence, allocating familial representation in local legislatures, some jurisdictional immunities and the prestigious privilege of . In regions of Europe where nobles did not actually exercise over the populace, the long retained specific
feudal privileges over the land and in the villages in his county, such as rights to
peasant service, to periodic fees for use of common infrastructure such as timber, mills, wells and pastures. These rights gradually eroded and were largely eliminated before or during the 19th century, leaving the with few legal privileges beyond land ownership, although comital estates in German-speaking lands were often substantial. Nonetheless, various rulers in German-speaking lands granted the hereditary title of to their subjects, particularly after the abolition of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. Although lacking the prestige and powers of the former Imperial counts, they remained legal members of the local nobility, entitled to whatever minor privileges were recognised at the ruler's court. The title, translated as "count", was generally accepted and used in other countries by custom. Many
Continental counts in Germany and Austria were titled without any additional qualification. Except in the
Kingdom of Prussia from the 19th century, the title of was not restricted by
primogeniture: it was inherited by all legitimate descendants in the
male line of the original titleholder, the males also inheriting an approximately equal share of the family's wealth and estates. Usually a hyphenated suffix indicated which of the familial lands a particular line of counts held, e.g. . In the medieval Holy Roman Empire, some counts took or were granted unique variations of the title, often relating to a specific domain or jurisdiction of responsibility, e.g. , , (
Count Palatine), , , , , , etc. Although as a title ranked, officially, below those of (duke) and (prince), the
Holy Roman Emperor could and did recognise unique concessions of authority or rank to some of these nobles, raising them to the status of or "princely count". But a title with such a prefix did not always signify a higher than comital rank or membership in the . Only the more important of these titles, historically associated with degrees of sovereignty, remained in use by the 19th century, specifically and . In Russia, the title of
Graf (; feminine: Графиня,
romanized Grafinya) was introduced by
Peter the Great. The first Russian
graf (or count) was
Boris Petrovich Sheremetev, elevated to this dignity in 1706 for the pacification of the . Then Peter granted six more
graf dignities. Initially, when someone was elevated to the ''graf's'' dignity of the
Russian Empire, the elevated person's recognition by the German Emperor in the same dignity of the Holy Roman Empire was required. Subsequently, the latter ceased to be obligatory. ==Nobiliary titles containing the term ==