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    "source_title": "Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911)",
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    "chunk_id": "1911:burgrave:aacbacceec08",
    "title": "BURGRAVE",
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    "verified_text": "burgrave, the eng. form, derived through the fr., of the ger. _burggraf_ and flem. _burg_ or _burch-graeve_ (med. lat. _burcgravius_ or _burgicomes_), _i.e._ count of a castle or fortified town. the title is equivalent to that of castellan (lat. _castellanus_) or _chatelain_ (_q.v._). in germany, owing to the peculiar conditions of the empire, though the office of burgrave had become a sinecure by the end of the 13th century, the title, as borne by feudal nobles having the status of princes of the empire, obtained a quasi-royal significance. it is still included among the subsidiary titles of several sovereign princes; and the king of prussia, whose ancestors were burgraves of nuremberg for over 200 years, is still styled burgrave of nuremberg.",
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