enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Feudal land tenure in England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudal_land_tenure_in_England

    Under the English feudal system several different forms of land tenure existed, each effectively a contract with differing rights and duties attached thereto. Such tenures could be either free-hold if they were hereditable or perpetual or non-free if they terminated on the tenant's death or at an earlier specified period.

  3. Feudalism in England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudalism_in_England

    English feudalism. Feudalism as practiced in the Kingdoms of England during the medieval period was a state of human society that organized political and military leadership and force around a stratified formal structure based on land tenure. As a military defence and socio-economic paradigm designed to direct the wealth of the land to the king ...

  4. Land tenure in England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_tenure_in_England

    Land tenure in England. Even before the Norman Conquest, there was a strong tradition of landholding in Anglo-Saxon law. When William the Conqueror asserted sovereignty over England in 1066, he confiscated the property of the recalcitrant English landowners. Over the next dozen years, he granted land to his lords and to the dispossessed ...

  5. English feudal barony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_feudal_barony

    Illustration from Cassell's History of England, 1902. In the kingdom of England, a feudal barony or barony by tenure was the highest degree of feudal land tenure, namely per baroniam (Latin for "by barony"), under which the land-holder owed the service of being one of the king's barons. The duties owed by and the privileges granted to feudal ...

  6. 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.

  7. Socage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socage

    As feudalism declined, the prevalence of socage tenure increased until it became the normal form of tenure in the Kingdom of England. In 1660, the Statute of Tenures ended the practice of estates requiring owners to provide military or religious service, and most freehold tenures and other were converted into "free and common socage".

  8. History of English land law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_English_land_law

    The final, formal end of feudal land tenure in England came only after the English Civil War. When the monarchy was restored Parliament ensured with the Tenures Abolition Act 1660 that landlords' obligations of service and military provision were replaced by monetary payments and an annual payment financed by taxation .

  9. Tenures Abolition Act 1660 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenures_Abolition_Act_1660

    The Tenures Abolition Act 1660 (12 Cha. 2. c. 24), sometimes known as the Statute of Tenures, was an Act of the Parliament of England which changed the nature of several types of feudal land tenure in England. The long title of the Act was An Act takeing away the Court of Wards and Liveries, and Tenures in Capite, and by Knights-service, and ...