Swedish order of precedence

A detailed Swedish order of precedence, including the names of each individual office-holder, was published by the Office of the Marshal of the Realm between 1930 and 1974.[1] From 1975 until 2011 it was included in the more extensive Court Calendar published annually by the same office.[2] The order of precedence of 2011 included 425 individual names arranged into groups numbered 1 to 10.[3] No order of precedence is known to have been published since then.

Sweden no longer uses nobility as a prerogative for any position of power, but they still retain their titles.

Footnotes

  1. Placeringslista utgiven av Riksmarskalksämbetet till ledning vid Kungl. Maj:ts hov, Riksmarskalksämbetet, Stockholm, 1930-1974.
  2. Hovkalender, Riksmarskalksämbetet, Stockholm, 1975-2011.
  3. Hovkalender 2011, Riksmarskalksämbetet, Stockholm, p. 25-32.
gollark: Guaranteed ZERO collisions (for string inputs)!
gollark: excellent replacement for all hashing algorithms:```lualocal function coolhash(x) return tostring(x):reverse()end```
gollark: Which you're somehow using to seed the regular RNG for some incredibly stupid reason.
gollark: SHA256 is *already* a perfectly good hashing algorithm.
gollark: The RNG isn't cryptographically secure whatever you do.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.