The History of Civilization: From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the French Revolution, Volume 3G. Bell & sons, 1901 |
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Page vi
... proprietors ; 2 , the village and its inhabitants - Origin of feudal castles - Their multiplication in the 9th and 10th centuries - Causes of this - Efforts of the kings and powerful suzerains to oppose it - Futility of these efforts ...
... proprietors ; 2 , the village and its inhabitants - Origin of feudal castles - Their multiplication in the 9th and 10th centuries - Causes of this - Efforts of the kings and powerful suzerains to oppose it - Futility of these efforts ...
Page vii
... proprietors ; 2 , with the government- How a man became a bond - labourer - Historical origin of the class of bond - labourers — Uncertainty of the ideas of M. de Savigny - Conjectures EIGHTH LECTURE . p . 121 Of the state of the ...
... proprietors ; 2 , with the government- How a man became a bond - labourer - Historical origin of the class of bond - labourers — Uncertainty of the ideas of M. de Savigny - Conjectures EIGHTH LECTURE . p . 121 Of the state of the ...
Page 19
... is now its characteristic . 2. The amalgamation of sovereignty with property , I mean the attribution to the proprietor of the soil over all the inhabitants of that soil , of the whole or nearly c 2 CIVILIZATION IN FRANCE . 19.
... is now its characteristic . 2. The amalgamation of sovereignty with property , I mean the attribution to the proprietor of the soil over all the inhabitants of that soil , of the whole or nearly c 2 CIVILIZATION IN FRANCE . 19.
Page 28
... proprietors , it still continued the same ; the tie between the giver and the beneficiary was still considered personal and for life ; the benefice must have been so too . Most of the documents of the epoch , in fact , expressly say as ...
... proprietors , it still continued the same ; the tie between the giver and the beneficiary was still considered personal and for life ; the benefice must have been so too . Most of the documents of the epoch , in fact , expressly say as ...
Page 30
... proprietor , and shall leave posses- sion of it to his descendants , or to whom he will . " Dating from Louis le Debonnaire , concessions of this kind ་ ▾ Bal . , vol . i . , col . 13 . 2 L. i . , b . 14 . became frequent ; examples ...
... proprietor , and shall leave posses- sion of it to his descendants , or to whom he will . " Dating from Louis le Debonnaire , concessions of this kind ་ ▾ Bal . , vol . i . , col . 13 . 2 L. i . , b . 14 . became frequent ; examples ...
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according ancient bailiffs Beauvaisis benefices bishop of Beauvais borough burghers canons castle cause character Charlemagne charter chief church civilization coloni Concession condition Confirmation consent count court customs customs of Lorris dispute domains ecclesiastical Edited epoch Etampes fact faith feudal period feudal society feudal system formed French German give granted homage honour inhabitants institutions interdict judgment jurisdiction justice king of France kingdom knight labourers lands Laon liberty Lorris Louis le Gros Louis VII mayor and peers middle ages moral municipal system officers ordinance origin Orleans Paris person Philip Augustus Philip le Bel political possession possessors of fiefs present principle privileges properly so called proprietors provost recognised Recueil des Ordonnances reign relations Roman municipal royal royalty Saint Louis seigneur seneschal social sovereignty suzerain tenth century territory things third estate tion town Trans Translated vassals vols word
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