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  2. Feudal duties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudal_duties

    Feudal duties were the set of reciprocal financial, military and legal obligations among the warrior nobility in a feudal system. [1] These duties developed in both Europe and Japan with the decentralisation of empire and due to lack of monetary liquidity, as groups of warriors took over the social, political, judicial, and economic spheres of the territory they controlled. [2]

  3. Category:Feudal duties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Feudal_duties

    This category lists the various types of obligations due under feudalism, such as military service and payment of taxes, and those articles where feudal duties are paramount. Pages in category "Feudal duties"

  4. Sentencia Arbitral de Guadalupe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentencia_Arbitral_de...

    500th anniversary of the royal remensa treaty signed at Santa Maria, Amer. The Sentencia Arbitral de Guadalupe (Arbitral Decision of Guadalupe) was a legal decree delivered by King Ferdinand II of Aragon at the Monastery of Santa María de Guadalupe in Extremadura, Spain on 21 April 1486 to free the Catalan remensa peasants who were subjects of the lord of the manor and tied to his lands and ...

  5. Baronage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baronage

    Barons could hold other executive offices apart from the duties they owed the king, such as an earldom, though immediately after the Norman Conquest of 1066, very few barons did. An Earl, at the time, was the highest executive office concerned with shire administration, holding higher responsibilities than the sheriff , whose title would later ...

  6. Quia Emptores - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quia_Emptores

    In subinfeudation, the new tenant would become a vassal owing feudal duties to the person who alienated. The previous tenant would become the lord to the new tenant. Both these practices had the effect of denying the great lord of the land his rights of feudal estate. The bond of homage was between lord and servant.

  7. Land tenure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_tenure

    The legal concept of land tenure in the Middle Ages has become known as the feudal system that has been widely used throughout Europe, the Middle East and Asia Minor.The lords who received land directly from the Crown, or another landowner, in exchange for certain rights and obligations were called tenants-in-chief.

  8. Ecclesiastical fief - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesiastical_fief

    This system of feudal tenure was not always restricted to lands, as church revenues and tithes were often farmed out to secular persons as a species of ecclesiastical fief. Strictly speaking, however, a fief was usually defined as immovable property whose usufruct perpetually conceded to another under the obligation of fealty and personal homage.

  9. Feudal baron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudal_baron

    The duties and privileges owed by feudal barons cannot now be defined exactly, but the main duty certainly was the provision of soldiers to the royal feudal army on demand by the king. A further duty, which involved considerable expense and travel, clearly also a privilege, was the attendance at the king's feudal court, the precursor of ...