Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- FIRST ESSAY: THE PEASANTRY OF THE FEUDAL AGE
- CHAPTER I THE LEGAL ASPECT OF VILLAINAGE. GENERAL CONCEPTIONS
- CHAPTER II RIGHTS AND DISABILITIES OF THE VILLAIN
- CHAPTER III ANCIENT DEMESNE
- CHAPTER IV LEGAL ASPECT OF VILLAINAGE. CONCLUSIONS
- CHAPTER V THE SERVILE PEASANTRY OF MANORIAL RECORDS
- CHAPTER VI FREE PEASANTRY
- CHAPTER VII THE PEASANTRY OF THE FEUDAL AGE. CONCLUSIONS
- SECOND ESSAY: THE MANOR AND THE VILLAGE COMMUNITY
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
CHAPTER VI - FREE PEASANTRY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- FIRST ESSAY: THE PEASANTRY OF THE FEUDAL AGE
- CHAPTER I THE LEGAL ASPECT OF VILLAINAGE. GENERAL CONCEPTIONS
- CHAPTER II RIGHTS AND DISABILITIES OF THE VILLAIN
- CHAPTER III ANCIENT DEMESNE
- CHAPTER IV LEGAL ASPECT OF VILLAINAGE. CONCLUSIONS
- CHAPTER V THE SERVILE PEASANTRY OF MANORIAL RECORDS
- CHAPTER VI FREE PEASANTRY
- CHAPTER VII THE PEASANTRY OF THE FEUDAL AGE. CONCLUSIONS
- SECOND ESSAY: THE MANOR AND THE VILLAGE COMMUNITY
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
Summary
I hope the heading of this chapter may not be misunderstood. It would be difficult to speak of free peasantry in the modern sense at the time with which we are now dealing. Some kind or form of dependence often clings even to those who occupy the best place among villagers as recognised free tenants, and in most cases we have a very strong infusion of subjection in the life of otherwise privileged peasants. But if we keep to the main distinctions, and to the contrast which the authorities themselves draw between the component elements of the peasant class, its great bulk will arrange itself into two groups: the larger one will consist of those ordinarily designated as villains; a smaller, but by no means an insignificant or scanty one, will present itself as free, more or less protected by law, and more or less independent of the bidding of the lord and his steward. There is no break between the two groups; one status runs continuously into the other, and it may be difficult to distinguish between the intermediate shades; but the fundamental difference of conception is clearly noticeable as soon as we come to look at the whole, and it is not only noticeable to us but was noticed by the contemporary documents.
General condition of England
In very many cases we are actually enabled to see how of freedom and legal security gradually emerge from subjection. One of the great movements in the social life of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries is the movement towards the commutation of services for money rents.
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- Villainage in EnglandEssays in English Mediaeval History, pp. 178 - 210Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1892