or is literally translated as 'young
lord' or 'young
lady' in Dutch. In the
Middle Ages, such a person was a young and unmarried child of a high-ranking knight or nobleman. Many noble families could not support all their sons to become a knight, because of the expensive equipment. So the eldest son of a knight was a young lord, while his brothers remained as
esquires. However, in the
Low Countries (and other parts of
continental Europe), in most cases the head of most noble families carries a title, inheritance being by male lineage. As a result, most of the nobility is untitled in the
Netherlands. , or its female equivalent , developed therefore quite early into a different but general meaning: an honorific to show that someone does belong to the nobility but does not possess a title. The abbreviation
jhr. (for men) or
jkvr. (for women) is placed in front of the name, preceding academic but not state titles. The honorific could be compared more or less with "" in Austria or "" in Germany, though due to circumstances of German and especially
Prussian history, "Junker" assumed connotations of
militarism absent from the Dutch equivalent. Ranking this with the British nobility, it is roughly comparable to "
The Honourable" when the untitled person is a son or daughter of a baron, viscount, or the younger son of an earl; or "
Lord" or "
Lady" when the person belongs to the old untitled but high-ranking (Dutch) nobility from before 1815 (e.g. "Heer van X" or Lord of X). A female spouse of a is not named but , translated into English as
Madam and abbreviated as
Mrs. (with the use of her husband's name). However, if she is a in her own right, she can be styled as such (together with her maiden name), unless she chooses to use her husband's name. == Title of nobility ==