The Economic History of England, Volume 1A. & C. Black, 1915 |
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Page 17
... practice of loaning its land , nominally for three lives1 . This lænland , as it was called , anticipated in many respects the feudal ideas of a later period , and enabled the Church to establish a lordship which in the case of poorer ...
... practice of loaning its land , nominally for three lives1 . This lænland , as it was called , anticipated in many respects the feudal ideas of a later period , and enabled the Church to establish a lordship which in the case of poorer ...
Page 18
... practice of commendation 2. Those who commended themselves to a lord were protected in their life , not only by the ordinary wergild or penalty exacted for homicide , but by a special bot or compensation due to the lord , whose ...
... practice of commendation 2. Those who commended themselves to a lord were protected in their life , not only by the ordinary wergild or penalty exacted for homicide , but by a special bot or compensation due to the lord , whose ...
Page 25
... practice continental ideas with which they had long been familiar , and at the same time satisfy their own passion for order and system . With the coming of the Normans an age , first of construction and organization , and then of ...
... practice continental ideas with which they had long been familiar , and at the same time satisfy their own passion for order and system . With the coming of the Normans an age , first of construction and organization , and then of ...
Page 37
... practice had hardened into custom , and custom had gener- ally an authority scarcely less binding than law . Custom was the life of the manor , and very little was left to arbitrary caprice . The extenta or manorial surveys afford ...
... practice had hardened into custom , and custom had gener- ally an authority scarcely less binding than law . Custom was the life of the manor , and very little was left to arbitrary caprice . The extenta or manorial surveys afford ...
Page 44
... practice reflected the similarity between them . The dividing line was not a legal one . The legal features of villeinage its precarious tenure , its compulsion to predial service , its dependent status - were paralleled in the con ...
... practice reflected the similarity between them . The dividing line was not a legal one . The legal features of villeinage its precarious tenure , its compulsion to predial service , its dependent status - were paralleled in the con ...
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aliens apprentices arable Archæol bailiffs Black Death borough Bristol burgesses charter Chester citizens 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 222 - 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 449 - In like manner it shall be concerning the aids of the City of London. 13. And the City of London shall have all its ancient liberties and free customs, as well by land as by water : furthermore we will and grant, that all other cities and boroughs, and towns and ports, shall have all their liberties and free customs.
Page 7 - The object of all the races who broke up the Roman empire was not to settle in a desert, but to live at ease, as an aristocracy of soldiers, drawing rent from a peaceful population of tenants. Moreover, coming in small and narrow skiffs, the conquerors could not bring their families with them, and must in most cases have taken wives from the women of the country.
Page 153 - ... that the principal strength of an army consisteth in the infantry or foot. And to make good infantry, it requireth men bred, not in a servile or indigent fashion, but in some free and plentiful manner.
Page 205 - ... 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 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.
Page 226 - 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 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 97 - Because a great part of the people, and especially of workmen and servants, late died of the pestilence, many seeing the necessity of masters, and great scarcity of servants, will not serve unless they may receive excessive wages, and some rather willing to beg in idleness, than by labour to get their living...