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 VII - THE PEASANTRY OF THE FEUDAL AGE. CONCLUSIONS
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
Legal and manorial records
I have divided my analysis of the condition of the feudal peasantry into two parts according to a principle forcibly suggested, as I think, by the material at hand. The records of trials in the King's Court, and the doctrines of lawyers based on them, cannot be treated in the same way as the surveys compiled for the use of manorial administration. There is a marked difference between the two sets of documents as to method and point of view. In the case of legal records a method of dialectic examination could be followed. Legal rules are always more or less connected between themselves, and the investigator has to find out, first, from the application of what principles they flow, and to find out, secondly, whether fundamental contradictions disclose a fusion of heterogeneous elements. The study of manorial documents had to proceed by way of classification, to establish in what broad classes the local variations of terms and notions arrange themselves, and what variations of daily life these groups or classes represent.
It is not strange, of course, that things should assume a somewhat different aspect according to the point of view from which they are described. Legal classification need not go into details which may be very important for purposes of manorial administration; neither the size of the holdings nor the complex variations of services have to be looked to in cases where the law of status is concerned.
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- Villainage in EnglandEssays in English Mediaeval History, pp. 211 - 220Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1892