Hello to all
I'm a professional writer currently working on a piece of fiction set in late Victorian England and I would like to be sure I have understood correctly the principle of primogeniture as applied to successions within a noble family. Specifically:
An English Lord is married but dies before he could have children. As I understood things, this would mean that his title and his entire fortune (estate, wealth etc.) would legally and automatically go to his male next-of-kin, even if this individual is a very remote cousin and does not belong to nobility. This heir would then become entitled and sole inheritor to everything. Is this correct or have I misunderstood something?
I thank you in advance.*
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I'm a professional writer currently working on a piece of fiction set in late Victorian England and I would like to be sure I have understood correctly the principle of primogeniture as applied to successions within a noble family. Specifically:
An English Lord is married but dies before he could have children. As I understood things, this would mean that his title and his entire fortune (estate, wealth etc.) would legally and automatically go to his male next-of-kin, even if this individual is a very remote cousin and does not belong to nobility. This heir would then become entitled and sole inheritor to everything. Is this correct or have I misunderstood something?
I thank you in advance.*
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