Definition of "primogeniture"
primogeniture
noun
countable and uncountable, plural primogenitures
The principle that the eldest child, traditionally the eldest male, has an exclusive right of inheritance.
Quotations
Anglo-Saxon kings did not succeed on the basis of primogeniture. All the kings offspring were known as aethelings -- throneworthy -- and from this gene pool the royal family would select the aetheling who seemed best qualified for the job.
2003, Robert Lacey, Danny Danziger, The Year 1000: What life was like at the turn of The First Millennium
Primogeniture acting as a law of inheritance in the case of intestacy applied in fact to all real property, however humble. Movables and personal property in this context were subject to equal division, the elder son inheriting all real property as well as his share of the personal property.
2011, Zouheir Jamoussi, Primogeniture and Entail in England: A Survey of Their History and Representation in Literature, page 10
(countable) An instance of such a right of inheritance, established by custom or law.
Quotations
The King of Sardinia, by a decree of the 9th of Dec. has abolished—1. The prohibition against the erection of primogenitures and feudal rights, enacted by the 9th section of the edict of the 29th of July 1797, or by any other law; restricting, however, to those primogenitures and majorats only which shall be erected in favour of persons […] .
1818, The Annual Register for the Year 1817, volume 59, page 142
All primogenitures, trusts, rights of presentation, and every other description of entail on real property, movables, or fixtures, rents, annuities, seigneuries, or of any other kind whatsoever, are suppressed, which are from henceforward restored to the class of absolutely free.
1860, American State Papers, page 704