Studies and Notes Supplementary to Stubbs' Constitutional History Down to the Great Charter, Volume 1University Press, 1908 |
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Page xii
... Conquest onwards , a continuous history of every reign . Mr. Maitland has called attention to the advantages of the plan which by combining narrative and analysis allows no detail of importance to escape , and gives a marvellously ...
... Conquest onwards , a continuous history of every reign . Mr. Maitland has called attention to the advantages of the plan which by combining narrative and analysis allows no detail of importance to escape , and gives a marvellously ...
Page 6
... Conquest . According to him , when the Normans arrived in England , they brought with them no new principle in the management of estates . Already , tempore regis Edwardi , we find the manor , with a lord's demesne and a village ...
... Conquest . According to him , when the Normans arrived in England , they brought with them no new principle in the management of estates . Already , tempore regis Edwardi , we find the manor , with a lord's demesne and a village ...
Page 7
... conquest of the island ; it is impossible , therefore , that the free village community , conforming to the mark system , can have been introduced by them into England , since the first documents that we have on their social condition ...
... conquest of the island ; it is impossible , therefore , that the free village community , conforming to the mark system , can have been introduced by them into England , since the first documents that we have on their social condition ...
Page 10
... conquest , or to fall , like Coote or Mr. Seebohm , into the opposite extreme . It is not reasonable to seek a single origin for English institutions , and to pretend to explain by one formula a very complex state of things , which was ...
... conquest , or to fall , like Coote or Mr. Seebohm , into the opposite extreme . It is not reasonable to seek a single origin for English institutions , and to pretend to explain by one formula a very complex state of things , which was ...
Page 13
... conquest , by the wholesale immigration of the Angles and Saxons was no doubt immense . Stubbs is justified Anglo - Saxon in appealing to the philological argument : the fact that the Celtic and Latin languages disappeared before Anglo ...
... conquest , by the wholesale immigration of the Angles and Saxons was no doubt immense . Stubbs is justified Anglo - Saxon in appealing to the philological argument : the fact that the Celtic and Latin languages disappeared before Anglo ...
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Studies and Notes Supplementary to Stubbs' Constitutional History: Down to ... Charles Petit-Dutaillis No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
Anglo Anglo-Saxon Articuli Baronum auxilium baronage barons Bémont borough burgesses burh Carta Celtic century ceorl charter of Henry chroniclers clause Commune of London Conqueror Const Constitutional History court customs Demy 8vo document Domesday Book edition England English Historical Review English Law English towns estates Exchequer existed five hides folkland France French Gartside Germanists granted Guilhiermoz Henry II Hist homines HUGHES MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY Ibidem importance institutions interest John Lackland king knight service knight's fee Lecture liberties lord MacKechnie Magna Carta Maitland MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS manor Mary Bateson Middle Ages military service Normandy oath organisation origin Philip Augustus Pollock and Maitland Professor question quod quoted Ralph of Coggeshall regis reign Roman Round Saxon scholars scutage Seebohm seignorial SHERRATT & HUGHES socage Stubbs tallage tenants-in-chief tenure thegn theory University of Manchester Victoria History village community Villainage villeins Vinogradoff volume wergild word
Popular passages
Page 136 - Nullus liber homo capiatur, vel imprisonetur, aut dissaisiatur, aut utlagetur, aut exuletur, aut aliquo modo destruatur, nee super eum ibimus, nee super eum mittemus, nisi per legale judicium parium suorum vel per legem terrae.
Page 33 - ... ut omnino desit locus, ubi filii nobilium aut emeritorum militum possessionem accipere possint...