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5->'''Ella:''' You're married?\
6'''Sir Peter:''' She has money, Ella. And she's very fond of my title. It was either get married or sell the house.
7-->-- ''Film/EllaEnchanted''
8%%% Quote changed per discussion: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1327331003042025100&page=248
9%%% Please consult the thread if you'd like to suggest a new quote.
10
11A marriage between a NouveauRiche family who want respect from the upper class and an ImpoverishedPatrician family. The tradeoff is obvious. The rich family climbs a few steps up the social ladder, and the impoverished family climbs out of the financial hole.
12
13This can set up a number of plots. For one, it's likely to be an ArrangedMarriage, in which case either the bride and/or groom is probably none too happy about it. Often we get a RunawayBride, and all the subsequent adventures she has, or the wedding goes through, and we see the drama that can ensue from such a pairing.
14
15This has been TruthInTelevision for centuries, but it became especially notorious during the [[UsefulNotes/VictorianBritain Victorian Era]]/TheGildedAge when many British noble families were running out of money and married their sons to brides from families of American industrialists and businessmen (the most prominent example being Consuelo Vanderbilt and the Duke of Marlborough; in the same family, the match between Lord Randolph Churchill and American finance heiress Jennie Jerome produced UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill). These women were known derogatorily as "dollar princesses". The trope is also sometimes inverted in Continental European works when provincial NouveauRiche males seek lovers/mistresses/[[HighClassCallGirl courtesans]] from ImpoverishedPatrician families, either those who were [[BlueBlood born so]] or even women who have been married at some point in their past to a BlueBlood and so lay claim to a real or fictitious title.
16
17Compare GoldDigger, MealTicket, TrophyWife. Contrast MarryForLove, UnableToSupportAWife, AltarDiplomacy.
18
19----
20!!Examples:
21
22[[foldercontrol]]
23
24[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
25* ''Manga/BoysOverFlowers'': Tsukasa’s mom, [[EvilMatriarch Kaede]], is a super wealthy businesswoman who puts money and status above everything. After succeeding in marrying off her daughter, Tsubaki, to her chosen wealthy businessman, she tries to do the same to her son, Tsukasa. Upon learning her son is in love with a commoner, Tsukushi, she tries everything to keep them apart, including forcing Tsukushi's parents and friends' parents/relatives’ business go downhill or fired from their jobs. [[spoiler:Eventually she's failed as she notices how much Tsukasa loves Tsukushi that she reluctantly lets her son marries Tsukushi.]]
26* ''Anime/CodeGeass'': Suggested to be the reason behind the Ashford family's attempts at setting up Milly with various suitors. The Ashfords are very rich but lost most of their political standing after the murder of Marianne, one of the Emperor's wives and Lelouch and Nunnally's mother, as she was the noblewoman they threw their support behind. The man Milly ultimately gets engaged to, Earl Lloyd Asplund, is technically nobility but not very wealthy and works as an engineer. Subverted in that [[spoiler:Lloyd doesn't give a damn about money, he just wants to inherit the 1st-generation Knightmare Frame the Ashfords happen to own. When Milly breaks the engagement later in the series, he doesn't care at all.]]
27* In ''Manga/EmmaAVictorianRomance'', this is the main reason Viscount Campbell approves his daughter Eleanor's engagement to William Jones despite his disdain for anyone who is not an aristocrat (the Joneses are wealthy merchants, and relative newcomers to high society). There is a great deal of gossip about the Jones family fortune and the Campbell family's financial straits at the party celebrating their engagement.
28* ''Anime/HelloSandybell'': The driving force behind the arranged marriage between Mark Wellington and Kitty Shearer. The Wellingtons are aristocrats with very little wealth left, whereas the Shearers own an extremely successful business empire. Deconstructed when [[spoiler:Kitty's father opposes it because the Wellingtons were terrible with money and Kitty's future husband will have to manage the Shearer estate in his passing. He refuses to allow Mark into the family, saying that his business comes first.]]
29* ''Manga/{{Lady}}'': Lynn's father is the Viscount Marble/George Russell, a British aristocrat. When George was young, he was married to his college sweetheart Frances Russell, with who he had his first daughter Sarah, and after she died in childbirth he married a Japanese woman named Misuzu Midorikawa, with who he had Lynn. Lynn lived all her life in Japan and moved to England at the age of five, but Misuzu died in a car accident on the way. Now that George is single and eligible for marriage, his father, Duke Warbawn, pressures him to marry Baron Madeleine Waverly for her wealth because he's [[RichInDollarsPoorInSense in tons of debt]] for his poor financial decisions. Even though Madeleine has enough money to pay off his debts, George doesn't want to marry her, and opts for earning the money by more ethical means. As the Russells become poorer and poorer, Duke Warbawn's pressure increases, to the point he even offers to accept Lynn (who he previously excluded for being half Japanese) if George marries Madeleine.
30* PlayedForDrama in ''Manga/TheRoseOfVersailles'': Alain de Soissons and his family are impoverished nobles, with his sister Diane being engaged to another impoverished noble... Who suddenly marries the daughter of a rich family without even bothering to call off the engagement to Diane until the last moment, [[DrivenToSuicide causing her to kill herself]] and [[HeroicBSOD Alain to sit near her body in tears for days]].
31* Found in ''Manga/SteppingOnRoses'': Nozomu, the heir to a banking fortune, has an arranged marriage to ImpoverishedPatrician Miu. When she asks about divorcing Nozumu, her father says that they need his money.
32* In ''Manga/TheSecretAgreement'', this is the idea behind the ''very'' sudden wedding between Iori and Hisayo. The well-respected Hanayashiki family arranges a marriage with the wealthy Yonekura family to restore their fortunes. The Hanayashikis are guaranteed financial security and the Yonekuras benefit from the Hanayashiki reputation. The groom stays for the ceremony but ends up running away that night, chasing after his lover. The remaining family members seem to get along, however, and still consider it a legitimate alliance.
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Arts]]
36* Shown in Pavel Fedotov's 1848 painting ''Matchmaking of the Major'', where a noble, but rather poor retiring major intends to marry a rich merchant's daughter. The painter wrote a none too short [[http://az.lib.ru/f/fedotow_p_a/text_0030.shtml poem]] commenting on the art piece.
37* The concept is relentlessly satirized in 18th Century British artist William Hogarth's ''Art/MarriageALaMode'', a series of paintings that tell the story of an ArrangedMarriage between the son of a [[ImpoverishedPatrician bankrupt Earl]] and the daughter of a [[NouveauRiche greedy businessman]]. The marriage is a disaster right from the start, with both partners quickly engaging in affairs with other people and generally neglecting each other and the crumbling state of their household. In the end, the husband is [[DuelToTheDeath killed in a duel]] against his wife's lover when he catches them in the act. The wife then [[DrivenToSuicide commits suicide]] after both her husband has died and her lover has been executed for his murder.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Fan Works]]
41* ''Fanfic/QueensOfMewni'': While Estelaria the First Star's marriage to Jett Stone was a love match, it couldn't be denied that he ''also'' came from the richest family in the Butterfly Kingdom. It's said their daughter and Estelaria's successor, Hemera the Builder, would have had a ''very'' different reign if she hadn't had the Stone fortune available to build Mewni Castle with.
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
45* In ''WesternAnimation/CorpseBride'', Victor's parents have money and are extremely excited to get a chance to be part of the nobility. Victoria's parents are noble and are absolutely disgusted that marrying her off to the NouveauRiche is the only way to get out of their [[ImpoverishedPatrician perpetual poverty]] -- they even acknowledge that the only thing that would be worse would be marrying someone else poor. However, once Victor and Victoria meet, [[PerfectlyArrangedMarriage they like each other for other reasons.]]
46** Later on, Victoria's parents find a lesser nobleman with almost as much money as Victor's family and decide to switch to him instead - except he's a gold-digging serial killer.
47* In the Disney movie ''WesternAnimation/ThePrincessAndTheFrog'', Prince Naveen comes to New Orleans to find a young woman from a suitably wealthy family to marry, because his parents have cut him off. [[spoiler: After many adventures and quite the BelligerentSexualTension with the low-born Tiana, however, they marry and they work together in the restaurant she builds.]]
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
51* ''Film/CatherineCalledBirdy2022'': Birdy's cash-strapped parents try to find a rich husband for her to get out of debt.
52-->'''Finneas:''' There are plenty of men foolish enough to trade their fortune for the prefix of 'lord'.
53* Film/{{Crimson Peak}}: Impoverished aristocrat [[ByronicHero Sir Thomas Sharpe]] marries [[TheIngenue Edith Cushing]], daughter of a rich American businessman. [[spoiler: Turns out, [[TheBluebeard this isn't his first attempt at restoring the family fortune]].]]
54* In ''Film/{{Titanic 1997}}'': The blue-blood girl Rose gets engaged to the millionaire Caledon, heir to an American steel tycoon. Rose's father got her family into debt, and their family name is their only real asset now. [[spoiler: After the whole Titanic "adventure" takes place and Rose loses her TrueLove, the poor artist Jack, she hides from Cal and disappears from his life, ultimately becoming a famous actress.]]
55* ''Film/ShakespeareInLove'': Viola, a daughter of a wealthy merchant, marries Lord Wessex, who needs money.
56* ''Film/GosfordPark'':
57** Sir William [=McCordle=] was a wealthy industrialist who married Lady Sylvia, the daughter of an Earl whose family was impoverished. Sir William pays an allowance to his wife's aunt, Constance, Countess of Trentham; he expresses his intention to stop paying this money before he is murdered.
58** The Honourable Freddie Nesbitt married his wife, Mabel, who was the daughter of a glove manufacturer. Their marriage isn't happy.
59* ''Film/TheLastDuel'': Marguerite de Thibouville and Jean de Carrouges wed largely because de Carrouges needs money and Marguerite's family needs social capital.
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Literature]]
63* The novel ''Literature/TheBuccaneers'' by Edith Wharton (and the BBC mini-series based on it) revolves around five wealthy and ambitious American girls, their guardians and the titled, landed but impoverished Englishmen who marry them as the girls participate in the London Season in search of a titled English gentleman for matrimonial purposes.
64* ''Literature/TheAlloyOfLaw'': The protagonist Wax, who is the current Lord of an old but currently broke house, arranges a marriage contract with a woman from a young and well-off house.
65* A theme in Creator/GeorgeRRMartin's ''Literature/AFeastForCrows'' in his Epic Fantasy ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
66** The Vale Houses are being increasingly forced into this, as their notorious snobbishness means many of them are having financial problems. ManipulativeBastard Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish is using his skill with money and connections to Gulltown merchants to set up marriage alliances between debt-consumed High Lords and wealthy merchants.
67*** Lyonel Corbray is a prominent example. We hear that the only one of the Arryn branches aside from the main line that isn't impoverished are the Gulltown Arryns, due to their marrying merchants.
68*** Littlefinger engaged his bastard niece Alayne Stone to Harrold Hardyng, a cousin to the Waynwoods and heir to the Eyrie through his mother's mother due to deaths in the main Arryn line (though Alayne is really Sansa Stark, heir to the North due to the (presumed) death of all her brothers).
69** In the Westerlands, the Westerlings, an old and honorable but increasingly minor house, married into the Spicers, a relatively new house formed by a family of spice merchants. Because of this, the other Westerlands Houses look down on them.
70* Creator/JaneAusten:
71** ''Literature/{{Persuasion}}'':
72*** Mr. William Elliot of the Kellynch family and a future baronet (Sir Walter's heir presumptive) married a low-born woman from a butcher's family who was vastly rich. He wanted to be independent and get wealthy quickly, and when he was young, he did not value the baronetcy and his Blue Blood connections a lot. His wife loved him very much, but he didn't love her at all. It's implied he treated her rather harshly, if not outright cruelly. Moreover, Mr Elliot doesn't mix with her family after her death, so they gained very little from this marriage while Mr Elliot was all take and no give.
73*** Anne Elliot fell for Captain Wentworth before the start of the plot. Her friends and aristocratic family tell her to reject him because he's poor. A few years on, he's risen up through the ranks of the navy and made quite a lot of money, while Sir Walter Elliot is deep in debts. However, the marriage of Captain Wentworth and Anne Elliot relies on their love, and he doesn't care much for her coming from Blue Blood and she doesn't really care about his great wealth beyond being happy that they can afford to get married and have a comfortable income.
74** In ''Literature/SenseAndSensibility'', Willoughby marries Miss Gray. He's a gentleman (and a scoundrel) of the landed gentry with a mansion house called Combe Magna, and he will inherit another house from his childless kinswoman, Mrs. Smith. However, he lives extravagantly and is deep in debts. Miss Gray has a dowry of fifty thousand pounds, which makes her the wealthiest heiress in Creator/JaneAusten's 'verse. Her feelings for him are not entirely clear, but he was a fashionable, handsome man, and she wanted to get married so she could part with her guardians with whom she didn't get along. Willoughby claims he loves Marianne Dashwood, who is lovely, intelligent, and passionate, but poor as a church mouse; Miss Gray, being rather plain, is understandably jealous, but it's only Willoughby's words. They are not an ideal couple but the narrator says at the end of the book that they were not ''always'' unhappy together.
75* In ''Literature/ArciaChronicles'', everyone ''thinks'' that this is the reason why Alexander (the king's youngest brother) marries Jacqueline re Flo (daughter and sole heir of the wealthy late KingMaker). However, in reality, he does it mainly to protect his UnluckyChildhoodFriend from other, less scrupulous suitors.
76* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
77** Subverted in ''Literature/MenAtArms'' with Sam Vimes (then poor and a common copper) marrying Sybil Ramkin (the richest and highest-titled lady in Ankh-Morpork). Only in later books is it revealed (or RetConned) that the Vimes family was nobility before being stripped of their titles and money for killing the last king of Ankh-Morpork, and Vimes becomes a Duke only some time after he's married.
78** Referenced in ''Literature/TheTruth'', when William separates himself from his father by using the dwarf tradition of repaying the costs of his childhood.:
79--->'''Lord de Worde:''' Do you really think that family is a matter of money?\
80'''William:''' We-ell, ''yes'', historically speaking. Money, land and titles. It's amazing how often we failed to marry ''anyone'' who didn't have at least two out of three.
81* In ''Literature/TheLeopard'' Don Fabrizio, a Sicilian Prince, arranges a marriage for his nephew, an [[ImpoverishedPatrician impoverished princeling]] with the daughter of a NouveauRiche (whose father was one of his peasants). Fortunately the betrothed are besotted with each other, and the practical advantages of the marriage are a great element of their infatuation.
82* ''Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar'':
83** Kethry of the ''Vows and Honor'' trilogy has a vicious version of this in her backstory: when she was twelve years old, her brother decided to fix his ImpoverishedPatrician status by marrying her off against her will to a rich and ambitious merchant with a thing for little girls. Kethry's old nurse managed to help her escape, but unfortunately not before [[MaritalRapeLicense the wedding night]].
84** The reasons and political maneuvering behind the various forms of ArrangedMarriage among the nobility are a theme of ''Closer to Home''. Many of the young ladies (and, more to the point, their parents) are hoping to land wealthy merchants who will parade them at social functions, instead of older nobles merely looking for someone to provide an [[SpareToTheThrone heir and a spare]]. The main characters, members of the more sexually liberated Heralds, decide that something ought to be done about a culture that raises girls to aspire to no more than a good match.
85* In Creator/AgathaChristie's ''Literature/TheMysteryOfTheBlueTrain'' Derek and Ruth Kettering are the classic example of British nobleman with troubled finances with a filthy rich American heiress. They are miserable together and seek the company of other people.
86* Eodar of ''Literature/GloryInTheThunder'' turned down his one chance to marry into money. He pressures his daughter not to make the same mistake.
87* The ''laotong'' relationship in ''Literature/SnowFlowerAndTheSecretFan'' ends up serving this purpose between the families of two little girls, who will be bound as dear friends for the rest of their lives. Lily's family (that of the narrator) is rich, ascending farmers; Snow Flower's family is high-ranking and aristocratic, but penniless. Lily's family learns elegant manners from Snow Flower; Snow Flower prepares for her descent into the working class with her time spent at Lily's.
88* ''Literature/MastersOfRome'': The marriage of Gaius Marius to Julia, aunt of Gaius Julius Caesar, is a classic example. The Caesars are impoverished nobility with just enough means to maintain a decent lifestyle and Marius is a very wealthy 'New Man' who desperately needs some political clout. In all justice to Julia's father he likes and admires Marius as a man and believes he will be a good husband. Also the proposed bride and groom fancy each other from the start making it a PerfectlyArrangedMarriage.
89* One of these was set up in the backstory of ''Literature/CounselorsAndKings'', in the form of the marriage arrangement between Keturah (a powerful wizardess and rising star in TheMagocracy of Halruaa who had nonetheless yet to accrue a significant fortune or powerbase) and Dhamari (a less talented wizard who was not considered nobility because he came from a family of {{Muggles}}, despite the fact that said family were very successful and wealthy merchants). [[spoiler: However, this was just a smokescreen for Dhamari and his ally, Kiva, to get a child of Keturah's who they could control]].
90* An increasing trend of this comes up as a background detail of the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' as the series progresses, as the aristocracy - sorry, [[InsistentTerminology warrior caste]] - of Barrayar, the Vor, have just spent the last generation taking advantage of UterineReplicator technology to selectively produce sons, and many Vor families are also seeing fortunes dwindle as the economy changes from contact with galactic society.
91** Emperor Gregor's marriage to Laisa Toscane of Komarr has undertones of this. The Emperor is ''not'' an ImpoverishedPatrician, but the merchant fleets of the Toscanes deal in ''just that much wealth'' to add some of that flavor to their relationship. Taxes from Komarr are an incredibly significant income stream for the Barrayaran Imperium.
92* In the backstory to ''Literature/HarryPotter'', [[ImpoverishedPatrician impoverished pureblood witch]] Merope Gaunt left her degenerate family to marry a wealthy {{Muggle|s}}, Tom Riddle Senior, whom she'd drugged with a LovePotion. This...didn't work out. Her husband abandoned her once she stopped doping him, so she quickly ended up destitute and alone, and her remaining relatives never saw any of the Riddle family's wealth either. Ultimately, instead of rejuvenating the Gaunt family's wealth, marrying outside BlueBlood rejuvenated their ''bloodline'', allowing their son to become one of the most powerful wizards of all time instead of being pathetically inbred. Unfortunately, this son turned out to be Tom Riddle Junior, also known as [[BigBad Lord Voldemort]]. He was at least as depraved as his ancestors for three reasons -- because of his family's prior mental illness due to [[InbredAndEvil inbreeding]], because he grew up in a loveless orphanage after Merope [[DeathByChildbirth died giving birth to him]], and (possibly) because being conceived through use of a LovePotion [[TheSociopath left him unable to feel love naturally]]. Voldemort also developed ideas on [[FantasticCasteSystem pureblood supremacism]] akin to his maternal family's attitudes [[BoomerangBigot despite being a half-blood]], apparently unaware of how his Muggle parentage [[HybridPower benefitted him]].
93* In the Literature/SherlockHolmes story ''The Adventure of the Noble Bachelor,'' this is the background of the mystery. Lord Robert St. Simon is a London aristocrat who married a wealthy American woman, Hatty Doran. [[spoiler:Whose previous husband was NotQuiteDead]].
94* The first ''Literature/{{Flashman}}'' book averts this, then fulfills it. Harry Flashman is first shown as a well-to-do member of the gentry who is forced to marry a Scottish merchant's daughter who he seduced for her beauty, not money. Later on, his father reveals he has squandered what is left of the family fortune, leaving Harry totally dependent on his wife's money. In a later book, he refers to her as a 'Scotch pension", a Victorian expression referring to this trope.
95* ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'':
96** Cullen's mothers had a brother who ''was'' married off for money and status to the princesses' mothers -- and ended up killed as part of a political game, which Cullen's mothers have regretted since, one of them calling their late brother a sacrificial lamb. The Whistlers couldn't pay the price that Cullen normally would have gotten, but Cullen's eldest sister agrees to the price anyway, stating that she wants Cullen to be happy and doesn't want to bear the same regrets their mothers do.
97** Played straight with the marriage offer of the Porters, who are nobility, but never married a royal prince, which they seek to amend by marrying a descendant of [[spoiler: Prince Alannon]], even though he may be poorer than they are. [[spoiler: It's also part of their political scheming. They already placed themselves in the line of succession of the monarchy and the wealth and titles that come with it by having their brother marry the Princesses, but marrying a descendant of a former prince would make their claim on the monarchy twofold if [[ShameIfSomethingHappened something were to happen]] to the Princesses -- a tragedy they just so happen to be planning.]]
98* ''Literature/TheFrenchLieutenantsWoman'': Ernestina Freeman is the only daughter of a rich industrialist and fabulously wealthy. She's engaged to Charles Smithson who is from aristocratic circles. He's not poor though and actually a future heir to his uncle's house and title. Ernestina chooses Charles and cleverly manages to attract him, and he proposes. Turns out Charles' uncle marries and has a son of his own, so Charles is left much poorer than presumed. He's now expected to "deserve" Ernestina's dowry and correctly assumes Mr Freeman will want him to be involved in the family business. Charles doesn't show it, but his gentleman's honour is insulted. In the ending that turns out to be Charles' imagination, Charles expects that his resentment will gradually vanish and that he'll find his new responsibilities interesting. Their marriage is supposed to be this trope as well as marrying for love. In reality, Charles breaks the engagement off, mainly because of his infatuation and relationship with Sarah, the titular French lieutenant's woman.
99* ''Literature/HolmesOnTheRange:'' In the first book, Lady Clara is the daughter of an ImpoverishedPatrician and is viewed as being DefiledForever by British society for her past romance with her father's secretary. SocialClimber George Edwards (the son of a successful but despised SnakeOilSalesman) is willing to overlook her past (and pay her father's debts) if marrying her will get him accepted into high society. [[spoiler:Clara is already secretly married, and commits suicide after being exposed as one of the book's villains.]]
100* ''Literature/JaneEyre'': The expected match between Miss Rosamond Oliver and St. John Rivers is supposed to be Nobility Marries Money as well as a marriage based on mutual love and affection. Miss Oliver is an heiress, the only child of Mr. Oliver who is the proprietor of a needle-factory and iron foundry. St. John Rivers is a clergyman and Impoverished Patrician. Jane the narrator notes that Mr Oliver considered his good birth, old name, and respectable profession as sufficient compensation for the want of fortune. However, St. John aspires to be a missionary and he sacrifices love and domestic happiness for his lofty dream.
101* ''Literature/BelisariusSeries'': Calopodius and Anna - Anna's family is extremely blue-blooded but has fallen on hard times, while Calopodius's family is immensely wealthy but only has an illustrious pedigree due to the diligent efforts of scribes creating it from whole cloth. Becomes a PerfectlyArrangedMarriage.
102* The ''Literature/WorldOfTheFiveGods'' book ''Penric's Demon'' starts with an example on the lower end of the spectrum. Not only is the Barony of kin Jurald a petty mountain vale where the local sports include poaching, archery, and tax evasion; but what the last head of the family did not blow on gambling and drink, the current one is bleeding away with his susceptibility to "any pious beggar, be they in rags or temple robes." Therefore, Penric kin Jurald, younger brother to the incumbent, was on his way down the road to make his betrothal to the daughter of a prosperous cheese merchant in town official when the plot started.
103* ''Star of Deltora'', the latest ''Literature/DeltoraQuest'' SequelSeries, introduces the Collectors of Illica, who have long ago sunk their fortunes into vast collections of rare and valuable artifacts. Their MO is to marry their children off to wealthy foreigners, then drain their new in-laws dry in service of the Collections.
104* In ''[[Literature/MastersOfRome The First Man In Rome]]'', the marriage between Gaius Marius and Julia Caesaris Major is this. The Julii Caesar are an ImpoverishedPatrician family who need money to ensure their sons can become senators and their daughters can have sizable dowries to make decent marriages. Marius, on the other hand, is very wealthy but his plebeian status means he can only go so far in the patrician-dominated senate. In exchange for bankrolling his brothers-in-law's political careers and sister-in-law's dowry, Marius would gain a a patrician wife and through her, acceptance in the highest levels of politics. [[PerfectlyArrangedMarriage Julia and Marius fell in love immediately, though, so it all worked out]].
105* In ''Literature/TheSorrowsOfSatan'', the Earl of Elton is waiting for his wife to die so he can marry the 20-year-old American heiress, Diana Chesney, despite her being the same age as his daughter, so he can pay off his many debts.
106[[/folder]]
107
108[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
109* ''Series/{{Andor}}'' has this in spirit. Mon Mothma, who will someday go on to become more or less the BigGood of the Rebel Alliance, is a Senator first under the Republic and then the early days of the Empire who comes from a prestigious family with a history of being leaders and politicians, which practically makes her nobility on her home world. During the events of ''Andor'', in order to continue discretely channeling funds to the nascent rebellion, Mothma has to enlist the aid of an extremely wealthy man from her world who is about halfway between a MorallyBankruptBanker and a gangster. Said man suggests that Mothma arrange an... ''introduction'' between his son and Mothma's daughter, who are just about the same age. Their planet has a long history of [[ArrangedMarriage arranging marriages]] between prominent families when the children are young, a tradition Mothma ''despises'' (she herself was forced into an arranged marriage with her UpperClassTwit husband Perrin when they were fifteen, and the first season shows their relationship as [[AwfulWeddedLife an utter failure]]), and she knows that it amounts to case of this trope. She will gain his exorbitant wealth and [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections connections]] that allow her to bypass Imperial regulations on moving money around, he will gain her family's legitimacy and reputation. Very reluctantly she has the two meet at a party, and by the end of the season the two teens are apparently bethrothed.
110* The ''Series/{{Blackadder}} III'''s episode "Amy and Amiability" was headed in this direction. Prince George, who was bankrupted by Parliament at the beginning of the season, attempted to marry the daughter of a wealthy industrialist for her money. Regrettably, it turns out she's poor too.
111* In ''Series/{{Brass}}'', Bradley Hardacre is a parody of the classic NouveauRiche businessman who tries to use marriage as a path into the aristocracy. His wife, Lady Patience, is evidently from a noble family, giving her a courtesy title, and their marriage is certainly no love match. Furthermore, in the course of the series, he persuades his daughter Isobel to marry an aged and depraved aristocrat in the hope that this will help him acquire a title of his own.
112* ''Series/TheBuccaneers2023'': Too new-money for the Gilded Age New York social set, the Elmsworth and St. George daughters are sent across the pond to snag even older money to add legitimacy — English aristocracy. Conversely, Lord Seadown is urged by his snobby mother to wed one of them as it would keep their noble estates afloat.
113* The page quote is provided from an episode of ''Series/LawAndOrder'' that featured a case made more complicated by the fact that the murder involved neighboring families with engaged children with a very complex relationship. It turns out the engagement was a merger between impoverished patricians on the one hand and ''nouveau riche'' on the other.
114* The trope is all over the place in ''Series/DowntonAbbey'':
115** Just to start with, it forms the backstory of the show. Lord Grantham went to New York to find his bride; he found Cora Levinson, daughter of a dry-goods magnate from [[UsefulNotes/{{Ohio}} Cincinnati]]. A significant fraction of the first season's drama comes from the fact that, at the old Earl's insistence, Cora's money was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entail entailed]] to the estate - i.e. it can't be separated from the land and title. 30 years later, they only have daughters (outside a few ancient, mostly Scottish oddities, British noble titles are very strictly part of the HeirClubForMen), and thus the family is very anxious about what will happen to the daughters.[[note]]Irony of ironies, entail [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Property_Act_1925 would be abolished thirteen years later]].[[/note]] Fortunately for Robert and Cora, though, they ended up falling (and, somewhat more remarkably, ''staying'') deeply in love with each other after the wedding (well, ''he'' did; she loved him already).
116** Lord Grantham's sister, Lady Rosamund, was married to a Mr. Marmaduke Painswick, a very wealthy but untitled banker whose grandfather was a self-made manufacturer (sure, his grandmother's father was a baronet, but that only goes so far). As the Dowager Countess put it, he wasn't ''quite'' a "rough diamond," "just cut and polished relatively recently."
117** In Series 2, Lord Grantham's eldest daughter, Lady Mary, is courted by a self-made newspaperman, Sir Richard Carlisle. Sir Richard, rather a rough diamond but very rich and very powerful ([[TheSpymaster he knows everything that happens in Britain]]) and well in line for a peerage during the next Tory government, hopes that a marriage to an earl's daughter would ease his path to the upper crust. However, it eventually proves that he and Lady Mary simply don't work as a couple, so this is, essentially, a subversion.
118** In Series 3, Matthew - a middle-class solicitor, the heir-presumptive to the title and estate, and by this point Lady Mary's husband - comes into money just as Lord Grantham finds out that he had lost everything (being [[RichInDollarsPoorInSense a bit of a fool in financial matters]], he had put the whole fortune in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Trunk_Railway one basket]], which was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_National_Railway nationalised by the Canadian government]]). However, Matthew's new money comes from Mr. Reginald Swire, the father of his late fiancée, Lavinia Swire (Mr Swire himself was, like Matthew, a solicitor; his brother was apparently a Liberal minister and linked to the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marconi_scandal Marconi scandal]]); Matthew, who blamed himself and his happiness with Mary for Lavinia's death, feels guilty taking Mr Swire's money. [[ConflictBall Commence half a series' worth of conflict]].
119** The old, widowed, and impoverished Lord Aysgarth (whose title, although "merely" a barony, is apparently very old) tries to pull this on Martha Levinson; she declines, saying she "ha[s] no interest in being a 'great lady,'" but offers to invite him to Newport so he can meet some old rich American widows who do. His daughter, Madeleine, has more success with Harold Levinson, but he eventually proves as savvy as his mother. In the end, they exchange YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre speeches and part as friends.
120* Although technically not "nobility", Pete Campbell of ''Series/MadMen'' definitely qualifies as an ImpoverishedPatrician - despite being able to trace his ancestry to the original Dutch settlers on Manhattan (except perhaps for Virginia planters and Boston Brahmins, you really can't get any more BlueBlood than that in America!), and his family on his mother's side (the Dyckmans) once owning half of Upper Manhattan,[[note]]There really was a Dyckman family that owned half of Upper Manhattan, by the way; Dyckman Street in Inwood (''waaaaayyy'' at the north end of Manhattan Island) is named for them.[[/note]] by 1960 the Campbells are in serious financial trouble on account of his grandfather's bad investments in the 1920s and his father's more recent profligacy. So he marries Trudy Vogel, the daughter of a [[SelfMadeMan self-made]] executive at pharmaceutical firm Richardson-Vicks (the guys who make Clearasil anti-acne cream - the critical account that makes Pete so attractive to Sterling Cooper - as well as, well, Vicks. Like [=NyQuill=] and [=VapoRub=]).[[note]]Ironically, Trudy is played by Creator/AlisonBrie, who is, um, able to trace her ancestry to the original Dutch settlers on Manhattan--she's a Schermerhorn, related to the likes of Caroline Schermerhorn Astor and none other than UsefulNotes/FranklinDelanoRoosevelt.[[/note]] This has... mixed results.
121* In ''Series/{{Medici}}'', Giovanni de' Medici, who came up from the bottom, marries off his elder son Cosimo to Contessina de' Bardi, a noblewoman, who is the daughter of an ImpoverishedPatrician. Her father made some bad investments and is now forced to give his daughter away for a fraction of what he would otherwise get. Meanwhile, Giovanni sees this as an opportunity to legitimize his House as a noble family. While Contessina's father hopes his daughter will serve as his eyes and ears in the Medici camp, Cosimo makes it clear that he expects his wife to be loyal to him and to the Medici, no one else.
122* ''Series/CrashLandingOnYou'' has a variation. The Ris are not nobility in the traditional sense, but instead a very high-ranking military family with a lot of clout (which may as well make them nobility in authoritarian North Korea). In episode 6 it is explicitly stated that they are marrying Jeong-hyuk to Dan, a department store heiress, for money.
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126* It is heavily implied in ''Theatre/AnInspectorCalls'' that Sheila is probably engaged to Gerald (who is the son of Lord and Lady Croft) because of this, but her anger towards his revealed adultery with another woman shows that she probably loved him regardless of his family's history. Her father, Mr. Birling, shows delight at the news of the engagement; Gerald's father owns a rival manufacturing company and Birling hopes the marriage will make them merge, and possibly earn him a knighthood from the King. When his daughter says that she doesn't want to marry Gerald after the news, Birling is the first person to defend him, pointing out that many men in high authority are womanizers and that she's just overreacting, hoping to keep the couple together.
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130* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasyRoleplay'' mentions that this is common in The Empire, and less so in Bretonnia. In The Empire, noble titles can be bought and sold, and becoming nobility through marrying is neither uncommon nor particularly scandalous. In Bretonnia, where [[FantasticCasteSystem in order to be a noble all your grandparents must also have been nobles]], only truly desperate nobles or lesser sons with little prospect of an inheritance marry merchants because none of their children will be nobles and thus able to carry on the family name.
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134* In ''VideoGame/TheLastStory'', although both were nobility, Jirall's family had fallen on hard times, but they were close relatives of the emperor. Count Arganan was quite wealthy, so he set up his niece, Calista, to marry Jirall and tie his family to the throne.
135* In ''VideoGame/PrincessMaker2'', the PlayerCharacter and the Daughter can be considered as local nobility since the Father is the Hero who saved the Realm years ago; if the Daughter defeats a Young Dragon from the Western Desert, he will fall in LoveAtFirstPunch with her, so he and [[CoolOldGuy his grandfather]] will later offer the Father 10,000G as engagement gift. If the player engages the daughter to the Young Dragon, the player can kiss their money problems goodbye from then on. [[spoiler: If the Daughter has no other prospect love interest, they get married and it's all but stated that, despite the groom's wimpiness, [[WeaknessTurnsHerOn they're more]] [[MarriageBeforeRomance or less]] [[HappilyMarried happy in the end]]. However, if the Daughter has the [[UptownGirl Prince of the Realm]] as a suitor, she'll marry him instead [[RagstoRoyalty and become Queen]], [[TheFirstCutIsTheDeepest leaving the Dragon heartbroken]].]]
136* ''VisualNovel/TheUnexpectedHeiress'': A marriage is arranged between Francis Somerset, the son of a viscount whose estate is [[ImpoverishedPatrician running low on funds]], and Amelia Hayes, the daughter of a NouveauRiche American magnate. [[PerfectlyArrangedMarriage They truly were in love]], but Amelia suddenly dies in Francis's arms. The families are determined to make the marriage go through and send in the protagonist, Lillian, to take her place. Francis and Lillian maintain the façade of a happy couple while trying to solve Amelia's murder before their wedding takes place. One of Lillian's romantic prospects is Francis's younger brother John, but the families aren't as pleased with that pairing.
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140* ''Webcomic/CirqueRoyale'': This was the intention with the betrothal of Quinn and Leo, because the Cashworthys were the richest family in the kingdom. [[spoiler:This was in part because the kingdom was broke and needed the money the Cashworthys would bring to the kingdom.]] However, Quinn ran away from home with their close friend Kingston when he was having a bad mental break and married him instead.
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