Baron
Baron ({not transcribed}) , noun
[Old English baron, barun, Old French baron, accus. of ber, French baron, prob. from Old High German baro (not found) bearer, akin to English bear to support; compare O. Frisian bere, Late Latin baro, Italian barone, Sp. varon. From the meaning bearer (of burdens) seem to have come the senses strong man, man (in distinction from woman), which is the oldest meaning in French, and lastly, nobleman. Compare Latin baro, simpleton. See Bear to support.]
“The tenants in chief from the Crown, who held lands of the annual value of four hundred pounds, were styled Barons; and it is to them, and not to the members of the lowest grade of the nobility (to whom the title at the present time belongs), that reference is made when we read of the Barons of the early days of England's history.... Barons are addressed as ‘My Lord,' and are styled ‘Right Honorable.' All their sons and daughters are ‘Honorable.'”