A widow, especially one who has inherited title or property from her deceased husband.
From Old French 'douagère' (woman endowed with a dower), from Latin 'dotare' (to endow). The '-age' or '-er' suffix indicates status or role. In feudal times, a widow received property called a 'dower' to support her after her husband died.
Dowager queens and dowager countesses still exist in real life—Kate Middleton will become a 'dowager princess' if Prince William becomes king! The whole concept emerged because, historically, women had almost no way to support themselves, so their husbands' estates had to care for them.
Dowager denotes a widow holding property/rank through a deceased husband—legally/socially defined by marital status and widowhood rather than individual identity or wealth.
Use 'widow' for marital status or name individually; avoid implying reduced status through husband's prior position.
["widow","woman of independent means","property holder"]
Many dowagers wielded significant political and financial power (e.g., Catherine the Great, Eleanor of Aquitaine)—the title often undersells their agency.
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