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According to the ''Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English'', a Squire was "a man of high social status who owned most of the land in a particular country area". Originally the word just means "attendant of a knight". Thus it had a great connotation with battlefield. But by Tudor times its terminology changed so that then "squire" or "esquire" referred to the lord of a manor.
According to the ''Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English'', a Squire was "a man of high social status who owned most of the land in a particular country area". Originally the word just means "attendant of a knight". Thus it had a great connotation with battlefield. But by Tudor times its terminology changed so that then "squire" or "esquire" referred to the lord of a manor.


In fact, the "esquire" is one of the four groups of the [[gentry]]. Members of that group had a lower status than the [[nobility]] but were socially far above the [[Yeoman|yeomen]]. In the 14th century the monarch could confer the honor of being a member of the gentry and by the 16th century the squire got certain offices like "Justice of the Peace".
In fact, the "esquire" is one of the four groups of the [[gentry]]. Members of that group had a lower status than the [[nobility]] but were socially far above the [[Yeoman|yeomen]]. In the 14th century the monarch could confer the honor of being a member of the gentry and by the 16th century the squire got certain offices like "[[Justice of the Peace]]".





Latest revision as of 23:40, 22 December 2017

According to the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English, a Squire was "a man of high social status who owned most of the land in a particular country area". Originally the word just means "attendant of a knight". Thus it had a great connotation with battlefield. But by Tudor times its terminology changed so that then "squire" or "esquire" referred to the lord of a manor.

In fact, the "esquire" is one of the four groups of the gentry. Members of that group had a lower status than the nobility but were socially far above the yeomen. In the 14th century the monarch could confer the honor of being a member of the gentry and by the 16th century the squire got certain offices like "Justice of the Peace".


Sources:

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English

Oxford Companion to British History