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Peerage
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When a person becomes a dame what do they do to her? eg a man is knighted
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Presuming you are not talking Widow Twankee?? Nobilitation means the act of making one a noble but I prefer QMs word above. less of a mouthful shall we say.
Becoming a dame is the female equivalent of the knighthood.
The honour of knighthood comes from the days of medieval chivalry, as does the method used to confer the knighthood: the accolade, or the touch of a sword by the sovereign.
Although Knights Bachelor do not comprise an order of chivalry, knighthood is a dignity which has its origins in Britain in Saxon times. They are styled "Sir" (except for clergymen who do not receive the accolade) and their wives "Lady".
Women receiving the honour are styled "dame" but do not receive the accolade. Instead their honour is pinned on them - in order, say officials, to avoid a sword "disaster" caused by their hats. (??!!)
Investitures are held twice a year at Buckingham Palace and they alternate between the Queen and Prince Phillip. Once invested, a Dame can not only be addressed using the title - her mail can be sent to Dame (So and So) DBE.
Becoming a dame is the female equivalent of the knighthood.
The honour of knighthood comes from the days of medieval chivalry, as does the method used to confer the knighthood: the accolade, or the touch of a sword by the sovereign.
Although Knights Bachelor do not comprise an order of chivalry, knighthood is a dignity which has its origins in Britain in Saxon times. They are styled "Sir" (except for clergymen who do not receive the accolade) and their wives "Lady".
Women receiving the honour are styled "dame" but do not receive the accolade. Instead their honour is pinned on them - in order, say officials, to avoid a sword "disaster" caused by their hats. (??!!)
Investitures are held twice a year at Buckingham Palace and they alternate between the Queen and Prince Phillip. Once invested, a Dame can not only be addressed using the title - her mail can be sent to Dame (So and So) DBE.
no, really, I don't think knights are peers - the peerage (and I think nobility is the same as peerage) is limited to dukes, marquesses, earls, viscounts and barons. See wikipedia. If I'm right then ennobled won't do; and I don't think there is a word for daming.
One meaning of 'ennoble' - in use since the 1600s - has been to 'dignify' or 'elevate'. There's little doubt in my mind but that making a woman a 'Dame' fits that definition perfectly.
Whether she then becomes 'a noble' is largely irrelevant. When we call someone a 'gentleman' we do not usually mean he is "entitled to bear arms" or "of gentle birth".
Whether she then becomes 'a noble' is largely irrelevant. When we call someone a 'gentleman' we do not usually mean he is "entitled to bear arms" or "of gentle birth".