Civic Honours - Les Honneurs civiques. Workshop Groningen 20 September 2013 (original) (raw)
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Undeserved royal honours in The Netherlands
freiherrvonquast.wordpress.com, 2021
During state visits, it is common for heads of state to exchange national honours. The guests are invited by the foreign country, which acts as the official host for the duration of the state visit. An exchange of honours took place during the state visit of the Queen to the United Arab Emirates and Oman in November 2010. This article examines the tradition of exchanging honours in a political context and compares this tradition to the conventional requirements for the granting of official honours. The article focuses on The Netherlands, but it is reasonable to assume that its findings are applicable to many countries across Europe.
The Market of Honors : On the Bicentenary of the Legion of Honor
French Politics, Culture & Society, vol. 24, n° 1, Spring 2006, p. 8-26., 2006
This article focuses on the findings of a study of titles and honors in twentieth-century France, in which these signs are analyzed as a government technique in their own right. This article shows how, transformed into a state emulation, a style of bureaucratic authority was created, a mode of coercion that favored an impersonal style of control over and between various corps of administrators, artists, managers, journalists, or elected representatives. A government technique was constituted in the distribution of the croix de la légion d'honneur, the most famous of these decorations—one with a conception of exemplarity (that of marks of distinction serving as a model for behaviors transcending the frame of legal obligations) and an emphasis on the soundness of behaviors, the guarantee and objective of a policy of conduct openly intended to replace the policy of rights or classes inherited from the French Revolution. Philosophers and intellectuals were to transform this intuition into a political paradigm: virtue can also, in its own way, be a rule of policing. Rationalized by a fast-growing bureaucracy, these marks of grandeur that constituted a means of emulation have now been trivialized to the extent of no longer being analyzed as such. Reconsidering the conditions in which they operate, this article proposes an interpretation of uses and functions through which the decoration invented by Napoléon spawned an administration of honors, the crucible of a full-blown government science.
“FONS HONORUM” – Legally bestowing Titles & Honors
“FONS HONORUM” – Legally bestowing Titles & Honors, 2019
According to non-disputed international jurisprudence, the “Fons Honorum” or “fountains of honor” are the persons and/or entities that hold the exclusive prerogative of bestowing titles of nobility and honors legally as subjects of international law. These persons by origin, or ministry, must possess the attributes that constitute the sovereignty.
Journal of Alternative Perspectives in the Social Sciences, 2020
It is a common misconception that Republics lack official titles of honor to recognize distinguished individuals in their societies. The present study focuses on three important examples of Republics that bestow officially recognized titles of honor to prominent people. France is known for the egalitarian ideas of the French Revolution and by the many contributions of its enlightened philosophers to the field of political science and public policy. Nevertheless, France has one of the most well developed and respected honors systems in the world. Italy abolished the monarchy shortly after the end of the World War II but kept the title of "cavalieri"/knight as one of the highest honors bestowed by the Republic. A less clear-cut case is the honors system of the individual states in the United State of America. The present study concludes that titles of honor are not incompatible with a republican regime as long as those honors are not hereditary in nature but rather are based on merit.
Edinburgh lecture handout: Democratization of Honour.pdf
This is the handout for the Charles Gordon Mackay lecture, Edinburgh, Monday 25 February 2019. A film of the lecture, which was entitled, "The Democratization of Honour in Late Classical Athens and its De-democratization in early Hellenistic Athens", is available on the website of the "Honour in Classical Greece" ERC project based at Edinburgh: http://research.shca.ed.ac.uk/honour-in-greece/4-steven-lambert/
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The Politics of Honour in the Greek Cities of the Roman Empire, 2017
The Politics of Honour in the Greek Cities of the Roman Empire studies the honorific habits in the later Greek city, and in particular the honorific inscriptions that were set up for citizens, magistrates and (foreign) benefactors.
A Dutch saint and a database of badges and ampullae
Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture, 2004
121 Arthur Forgeais (1862-66). Collection de plombs historiés trouvés dans la Seine. 6 Vols. Paris, Aubry, especially parts II (Enseignes de pèlerinage) and IV (Imagerie religieuse) which focus on the badges. 122 Denis Bruna (1996). Enseignes de pèlerinage et enseignes profanes. Paris, Réunion des Musées Nationaux. 123 Some of his early publications on the subject: A.M. Koldeweij (1985). Der gude Sente Servaes. De