Spotlight | Spanish aristocrats lose their glamour | Indiainteracts.com
SPANISH ARISTOCRATS LOSE THEIR GLAMOUR
With all their tax and other privileges (such as that of obtaining a diplomatic passport) having been abolished decades ago, the bearers of hereditary aristocratic titles are "limited to keeping alive the memory of a moment in our historic past," the government said in a 2006 legal bulletin.
The bulletin was announcing a law ending one of the last aristocratic traditions: the first right of sons to inherit titles before daughters.
The aristocracy no longer exists as a class, neither economically, nor socially, nor culturally," said publisher Jacobo Martinez de Irujo, one of the Duchess of Alba's six children
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"Aristocrats cannot even be distinguished for the quality of their education," he told the daily El Pais.
SPANISH ARISTOCRATS LOSE THEIR GLAMOUR
With all their tax and other privileges (such as that of obtaining a diplomatic passport) having been abolished decades ago, the bearers of hereditary aristocratic titles are "limited to keeping alive the memory of a moment in our historic past," the government said in a 2006 legal bulletin.
The bulletin was announcing a law ending one of the last aristocratic traditions: the first right of sons to inherit titles before daughters.
The aristocracy no longer exists as a class, neither economically, nor socially, nor culturally," said publisher Jacobo Martinez de Irujo, one of the Duchess of Alba's six children
...
"Aristocrats cannot even be distinguished for the quality of their education," he told the daily El Pais.