An Introduction to the Economic History of England, Volume 1A. & C. Black, Limited, 1915 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 94
Page 15
... royal officers . This view is also held to explain the differences between the various classes of men enumerated in Domesday Book3 . The lines of demarcation were fiscal lines . The villeins were those for whose geld the lord was ...
... royal officers . This view is also held to explain the differences between the various classes of men enumerated in Domesday Book3 . The lines of demarcation were fiscal lines . The villeins were those for whose geld the lord was ...
Page 16
... royal collectors sometimes experienced difficulty in gathering the tax because the villeins withheld their contributions , and this again conflicts with the theory that the lord was answerable for them . Hence , while no doubt the lords ...
... royal collectors sometimes experienced difficulty in gathering the tax because the villeins withheld their contributions , and this again conflicts with the theory that the lord was answerable for them . Hence , while no doubt the lords ...
Page 19
... royal grant ( bookland ) a ' superiority ' over a village the claim to many of its dues and services - a feudal lordship was straightway created . The population of the village passed from the control of the public authority to that of ...
... royal grant ( bookland ) a ' superiority ' over a village the claim to many of its dues and services - a feudal lordship was straightway created . The population of the village passed from the control of the public authority to that of ...
Page 20
... royal grant placing a district under a feudal lordship , or by the submission of individuals , village after village acquired a lord and could no longer boast itself a free village com- munity . Suit of court revealed itself a powerful ...
... royal grant placing a district under a feudal lordship , or by the submission of individuals , village after village acquired a lord and could no longer boast itself a free village com- munity . Suit of court revealed itself a powerful ...
Page 22
... royal grant with political authority over his subjects . Accordingly neither an economic nor a feudal interpretation unfolds a complete view of manorial develop- ment , and the two streams of social evolution must be treated side by ...
... royal grant with political authority over his subjects . Accordingly neither an economic nor a feudal interpretation unfolds a complete view of manorial develop- ment , and the two streams of social evolution must be treated side by ...
Common terms and phrases
aliens apprentices arable Archæol Black Death borough Bristol burgesses charter Chester cloth clothiers common Company complained County Hist court Coventry Coventry Leet Book craft gilds custom demesne Domesday Book economic Edward Edward III England English Hist Exchequer export fair farm fifteenth foreign gild merchant gild system granted Henry Henry III History husbandry Ibid industry infra journeymen king king's labour land Law Merchant Letter Book Little Red Book London lord lord's manor masters mayor mediaeval merchandise Merchant Adventurers merchant gild Merchant Taylors mistery monopoly municipal Norwich open field system ordinances Oxford Parl Patent Rolls Pipe Roll plough privileges realm Records of Leicester Records of Norwich reign rents Riley Roll Series Roman Royal Hist sell sixteenth century Southampton staple Statutes Supra tenants tion toll town trade Vict village villeinage villeins Vinogradoff wardens weavers wool woollen
Popular passages
Page 143 - Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth...
Page 63 - If churls have a common meadow or other partible land' to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and (cattle stray in and) eat up their common corn or grass ; let those go who own the gap and compensate to the others...
Page 224 - There be therefore more men hanged in England in a year for robbery and manslaughter than there be hanged in France for such manner of crime in seven years.
Page 262 - ... which heretofore have lent their goods to divers persons be greatly impoverished because there is no speedy Law provided for them to have recovery of their debts at the day of payment assigned, and by reason hereof many merchants have withdrawn to come into this realm with their merchandises, to the damage as well of the merchants as of the whole realm...
Page 220 - One ofred me velvet, sylke, and lawne, An other he taketh me by the hande, ' Here is Parys thred, the fynest in the land ' ; I never was used to such thyngs indede, And wanting mony, I might not spede.
Page 157 - to make the profit of the plough to be as good, rate for rate, as the profit of the graziers and sheep-masters". This was to be done by prohibiting the export of wool and permitting the export of corn. He appealed to man's self-interest, for every man would seek " where most advantage is " ; accordingly he advised that the profit of corn-growing should be increased, and that of 1 Strype, ii. App. Q, 57.
Page 297 - Also, whereas some workmen in the said trade have made hats that are not befitting, in deceit of the common people, from which great scandal, shame, and loss have often arisen to the good folks of the said trade...
Page 203 - ... foiled, than in other ferial days, as in fastening and making their booths and stalls, bearing and carrying, lifting and placing their wares outward and homeward, as though they did nothing remember the horrible defiling of their souls in buying and selling, with many deceitful lies and false perjury with drunkenness and strifes, and so specially withdrawing themselves and their servants from divine service...
Page 123 - There was also the possibility that enclosure, even when for purposes of arable farming, might be carried out unfairly and to the detriment of the poorer tenants. This was often the case in the eighteenth century, and was admitted even by Tusser : " The poor at enclosing do grutch [grumble] because of abuses that fall, Lest some man should have but too mutch, and some again nothing at all ". It is difficult to determine the extent to which agricultural Extent of land was enclosed for purposes of...
Page 136 - Brian, chief justice, said that his opinion hath always been, and ever shall be, that if such tenant by custom paying his services be ejected by the lord, he shall have an action of trespass against him, H.