... hay-fields, or the proportion of cattle to be turned into the common pasture, exists still in the manorial courts and in the meetings of the townships : the very customs of relief and surrender which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants... Tetney, Lincolnshire: A History - Side 12av Rev. John Wild - 1901 - 112 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| William Stubbs - 1874 - 658 sider
...and surrender which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the witness...whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted. Still The Mst»ribetween all this and the enjoyment of political rights there, is no iiasout. , grown... | |
| John Richard Green - 1881 - 580 sider
...feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the wit ness of the community to whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted." Stubbs, "Const. Hist." i. 95, 96. CHAPTER V. THE STRIFE OF THE CONQUERORS. 577—617. IMPORTANT as... | |
| John Richard Green - 1885 - 492 sider
...and surrender, which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the witness...whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted." Stubbs, "Const. Hist." i. 95, 96. CHAPTER V. THE STRIFE OF THE CONQUERORS. 577—617. IMPORTANT as... | |
| George Laurence Gomme - 1886 - 266 sider
...Again we have to note that the customs of relief and surrender are remnants of the policy of the time when every transfer of property required the witness...was reflects very clearly its origin. It had to make presentment to a higher court of all wrong-doers and criminals within its jurisdiction; a presentment... | |
| George Laurence Gomme - 1886 - 264 sider
...required the witness of the community, to whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted (Stubbs' Const. Hist. Eng., i, 85). The extensive criminal...was reflects very clearly its origin. It had to make presentment to a higher court of all wrong-doers and criminals within its jurisdiction; a presentment... | |
| George Elliott Howard - 1889 - 556 sider
...and surrender which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the witness...community, to whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted."1 V.— THE PARISH. (a). — The Ancient Parish. In several respects the parish is the most... | |
| William Stubbs - 1891 - 720 sider
...and surrender which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the witness...whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted. Still between all this and the enjoyment of political rights there is no immediate connexion. It is... | |
| George Laurence Gomme - 1897 - 296 sider
...and surrender, which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the witness...whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted " (Const. Hist., i. 84, 85). This is extremely important, but there is more to be added which our great... | |
| 1881 - 982 sider
...surrender, which are often regarded as distinctly " feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer " of property required the witness..." membership the new tenant was thereby admitted." Most of the laud in the Deccan at the date of the introduction of British rule was held on mirasi tenure,... | |
| CALCUTTA - 1881 - 470 sider
...surrender, which are often regarded as distinctly " feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer " of property required the witness..." membership the new tenant was thereby admitted." Most of the land in the Deccan at the date of the introduction of British rule was held on mirasi tenure,... | |
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