Courtier

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A courtier is a person who attends the court of a monarch or other powerful person. Historically the court was the centre of government as well as the residence of the monarch, and social and political life were often completely mixed together. Monarchs very often expected the more important nobles to spend much of the year in attendence on them at court. Courtiers were not all noble, as they included clergy, soldiers, clerks, secretaries, and agents and middlemen of all sorts with regular business at court. Promotion to important positions could be very rapid at court, and for the ambitious there was no better place to be. As social divisions became more rigid, a divide, barely present in Antiquity or the Middle Ages, opened between menial servants and other classes at court, although Alexandre Bontemps, the valet of Louis XIV was a late example of a "menial" who managed to establish his family in the nobility. The key commodities for a courtier were access and information, and a large court operated at many levels - many successful careers at court involved no direct contact with the monarch himself.

The largest and most famous European court was that of the Chateau de Versailles in its heyday, although the Forbidden City of Beijing was even larger and more isolated from national life. Very similar features marked the courts of all very large monarchies, whether in Dehli, Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, Ancient Rome, Byzantium, or the Caliphs of Bagdad or Cairo. However the European nobility generally had independent power and was less controlled by the monarch until roughly the 18th century, which gave European court life a more complex flavour.

A large topic in contemporary literature, courtiers were often regarded as marked by insincerity, skill at flattery and intrigue, ambition and lack of regard for the national interest. More positive aspects of the stereotype would include the role played by the court in the development of politeness - a concept in origin to close to that of the "politician" - and the arts.

In modern English, the term is often used metaphorically for contemporary political favourites or hangers-on.

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