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- TERMS (By Michael Adams aka Morgoth, c. November 1988)
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- FEUDAL TERMS OF ENGLAND
- (and other places)
- A
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- ABBEY: A monastic community of either monks or nuns. Ruled by an (m.)
- Abbot or (f.) Abbess Usually founded by a particular monastic order and
- bound by their rules. Abbeys many times owe some form of feudal obligation
- to a lord/lady or higher organization. Basically they are self contained
- with all basic function performed by the residents and needs from the
- local area.
-
- ABJURATION: A renunciation, under oath, of heresy to the Christian faith,
- made by a Christian wishing to be reconciled with the church.
-
- ADULTERINE CASTLE: A castle build with out a persons liege lords approval.
-
- AMERCEMENT: A financial penalty inflicted at the MERCY of the king or his
- justices for various minor offences. The offender is said to be "IN MERCY"
- and the monies paid to the crown to settle the matter is called
- "amercement" (See also Fines).
-
- ANATHEMA: A condemnation of heretics, similar in effect to major
- excommunication. It inflicts the penalty of complete exclusion from
- Christian society.
-
- APOSTATE: The term used to describe one who leaves religious orders after
- making solemn profession. It is considered a serious crime in the eyes of
- the church, being not only a breach of faith with God but also with the
- founders and benefactors of their religious house.
-
- ARD-RIGH (Ir.): High King in Gaelic. RIGH meaning King.
-
- ARPENT: A measure of land roughly equal to a modern acre.
-
- ASSART: To turn woodlands into pasture or cropland. To assart lands within
- a forest with out license is a grave offence.
-
- ASSIZE: The meeting of feudal vassals with the king it also refers to
- decrees issued by the king after such meetings.
-
- ASYLUM (Right of/Also called Right of Sanctuary) The right for a Bishop to
- protect an fugitive from justice or to intercede on his behalf. Once
- asylum is granted the fugitive cannot be removed, until after a months
- time. Fugitives who find Asylum must pledge an oath of adjuration never to
- return to the realm, after which they are free to find passage to the
- borders of the realm by the fastest way. If found within the borders after
- a months time they may be hunted down as before with no right of asylum to
- be granted ever again.
-
- AUGUSTINIAN CANONS: Religious/Monastic rules based on Love of God and
- Neighbor, respect for authority, care of the sick, and self-discipline.
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-
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- B
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- BAN: A King's power to command and prohibit under pain of punishment or
- death, mainly used because of a break in the King's Peace. Also a royal
- proclamation, either of a call to arms, or a decree of outlawry. In
- clerical terms, an excommunication on condemnation by the church.
-
- BANALITIES: Fees which a feudal lord imposes on his serfs for the use of
- his mill, oven, wine press, or similar facilities. It some times includes
- part of a fish catch or the proceeds from a rabbit warren.
-
- BARBER-SURGEON: Monastic who shaves faces/heads and performs light surgery.
-
- BARD: A minstrel or poet who glorifies the virtues of the people and
- chieftains.
-
- BARON: A vassal who holds directly from the crown and serves as a member
- of the king's great council. It is not, of itself, a title, but rather a
- description of the Tenants in Chief class of nobility.
-
- BARROW: An earthen burial mound.
-
- BELTANE EVE: The night of April 30, one of the two times of the year when
- mortal rules are believed to be suspended and supernatural occurrences are
- most common. Sometimes called May Day Eve. See Samhain Eve.
-
- BENEDICTINE ORDER: Monastic order founded by St. Benedictine. Monks take
- vows of personal poverty, chastity and obedience to their abbot and the
- Benedictine Rule.
-
- BENEFICE (L. beneficium): A grant of land given to a member of the
- aristocracy, a Bishop, or a monastery, for limited or hereditary use in
- exchange for services. In ecclesiastic terms, a benefice is a church
- office that returns revenue. Also known as a the fee, feud, or fief coming
- from the Germanic feofum which comes from the Frankish "fehu" and "od"
- meaning live stock and movable possessions or property "chattel".
-
- BENEFIT OF CLERGY: A privilege enjoyed by members of the clergy, including
- tonsured clerks, placing them beyond the jurisdiction of secular courts.
-
- BLACK CANON: A common name for Augustinian Canons, derived from the color
- of their robes.
-
- BLACK MONKS: A common name for members of the Benedictine Order derived
- from the color of the habits.
-
- BORDERS (The): Name given to the Border lands between the Avalonian Empire
- and else where.
-
- BOROUGH (also burg, burgh and burh): A tow with the right of self
- government granted by royal charter.
-
- BOROUGH-ENGLISH: A term which designates the custom of ultimogeniture
- (All lands inherited by the youngest son).
-
- BREHON LAWS (also called Feinechus): An ancient Gaelic legal system.
-
- BURGESS: The holder of land or house within a borough.
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-
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- C
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- CANONS: See elsewhere for definition.
-
- CANTREF: A welsh political and administrative division, similar to English
- shires.
-
- CARDINAL VIRTUES: Prudence, Temperance, Fortitude and Justice.
-
- CARUCATE: A measurement of land, equal to a hide (used in Danelaw)
-
- CASTLE: Fortification:
- Arrow Loop: A narrow vertical slit cut into a wall through which
- arrows could be fired from inside.
- Bailey: Castle year or Ward.
- Barbican: The gateway or outworks defending the drawbridge.
- Bastion: A small tower at the end of a curtain wall or in the middle of
- the outside wall.
- Batter: A sloping part of a curtain wall. The sharp angle at the base
- of all walls and towers along their exterior surface.
- Battlement: A narrow wall built along the outer edge of the wall walk
- to protect the soldiers against attack.
- Berm: Flat space between the base of the curtain wall and the inner
- edge of the moat.
- Cesspit: The opening in a wall in which the waste from one or more
- garderobes was collected.
- Corbel: A projecting block of stone built into a wall during
- construction.
- Crenelation: Battlement.
- Daub: A mud of clay mixture applied over wattle to strengthen and seal
- it.
- Drawbridge: A heavy timber platform built to span a moat between a gate
- house and surrounding land that could be raised when required to block
- an entrance.
- Dungeon: The jail, usually found in one of the towers.
- Embrasure: The low segment of the altering high and low segments of a
- battlement.
- Finial: A slender piece of stone used to decorate the tops of the
- merlons.
- Foundation:
- Garderobe: A small latrine or toilet either built into the thickness of
- the wall or projected out from it.
- Gate House: The complex of towers, bridges, and barriers built to
- protect each entrance through a castle or town wall.
- Great Hall: The building in the inner ward that housed the main meeting
- and dining area for the castle's residence.
- Half-timber: The common form of medieval construction in which walls
- were made of a wood frame structure filled with wattle and daub.
- Hoarding: A temporary wooden balcony suspended from the tops of walls
- and towers before a battle, from which missiles and arrows could be
- dropped or fired accurately toward the base of the wall.
- Inner Curtain: The high wall the surrounds the inner ward.
- Inner Ward: The open area in the center of a castle.
- Merlon: The high segment of a alternating high and low segments of a
- battlement.
- Moat: A deep trench dug around a castle to prevent access from the
- surrounding land. It could be either left dry or filled with water.
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-
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- C
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- Mortar: A mixture of sand, water, and lime used to bind stones together
- permanently.
- Outer Curtain: The wall the encloses the outer ward.
- Outer Ward: The area around the outside of and adjacent to the inner
- curtain.
-
- CASTLE:
- Palisade: A sturdy wooden fence usually built to enclose a site until
- a permanent stone wall can be constructed.
- Portcullis: A heavy timber grille that could be raised or lowered
- between the towers of each gate house to open or close the passage.
- Postern Gate: A side or less important gate into a castle.
- Putlog Hole: A hole intentionally left in the surface of a wall for
- insertion of a horizontal pole.
- Rubble: A random mixture of rocks and mortar.
- Scaffolding: The temporary wooden frame work built next to a wall to
- support both workers and materials.
- Siege: The military tactic that involves the surrounding and
- isolation
- of a castle, town or army by another army until the trapped forces are
- starved into surrender.
- Steward: The man responsible for running the day to day affairs of the
- castle in absence of the lord.
- Truss: One of the timber frames built to support the roof over the
- great hall.
- Turret: A small tower rising above and resting on one of the main
- towers, usually used as a look out point.
- Wall Walk: The area along the tops of the walls from which soldiers
- defend both castle and town.
- Wattle: A mat of woven sticks and weeds.
-
- CATHEDRAL CHURCH: The church of the diocese where a Bishop has the throne
- (cathedra) and where he presides. Simplified to Cathedral.
-
- CHAMBERLAIN: An officer of the royal household. He is responsible for the
- Chamber, meaning that he controls access to the person of the King. He is
- also responsible for administration of the household and the privates
- estates of the king. The Chamberlain is one of the four main officers of
- the court, the others being the Chancellor, the Justiciar, and the
- Treasurer.
-
- CHANCELLOR: The officer of the royal household who serves as the monarch's
- secretary or notary. The chancellor is responsible for the Chancery, the
- arms of the royal government dealing with domestic and foreign affairs.
- Usually the person filling this office is a Bishop chosen for his
- knowledge of the law.
-
- CHARTER OF FRANCHISE: Documents granting liberty to a serf by his lord. The
- term also applies to the freedom granted to the inhabitants of a town or
- borough. the issue of a Charter of Franchise frees the town from servitude
- to feudal lords.
-
- CLERGY: Term used to include all members of religious orders. The clergy
- are generally exempt from jurisdiction of civil courts as well as from
- military service.
-
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- C
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- COMMON LAW: The term referring to the legal procedures that are becoming
- universal.
-
- COMMUNE CONCILIUM: Norman equivalent of Anglo Saxon Witan. Decision taken
- at such meetings, either judicial or military, are binding on the vassals.
-
- CONFESSION: The public or private acknowledgment of sinfulness regarded as
- necessary to obtain divine forgiveness.
-
- CONSTABLE: The title of an officer given command of an army or an important
- garrison. Also the officer who commands in the king's absence.
-
- COTTAGER: A peasant of lower class, with a cottage, but with little or no
- land.
-
- COUNT: The continental equivalent of the English Earl. Ranks second only to
- Duke.
-
- COUNTY: The English Shire.
-
- COUNTY PALATINE: See PALATINATE
-
- COURT OF COMMON PLEAS: A common law court to hear please involving disputes
- between individuals. Almost all civil litigation is within its term of
- reference, as is supervision of manorial and local courts.
-
- CRANNOG: An Irish dwelling residing on a natural or man-made island.
-
- CRUSADES: Self explanatory.
-
- CULDEES: Religious ascetics "Culdee means servant of god" Irish/Scottish
- preservers of old Gaelic Customs.
-
- CYMRAEG: Welsh Language Name for itself.
-
- CYMRU: Welsh name for the Welsh. (CUMREE)
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-
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- D
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- DANEGELD: Tribute paid to the Danes (Dane Gold).
-
- DEMESNE: The part of the lord's manorial lands reserved for his own use an
- not allocated to his serfs or freeholder tenants. Serfs work the demesne
- for a specified numbers of days per week. The demesne may either be
- scattered among the serfs land, or a separate area, the latter being more
- common for meadow and orchard lands.
-
- DENARIUS: The English silver penny, hence the abbreviation "d" and the coin
- most common circulation.
-
- DIOCESE: A district subject to the jurisdiction of a Bishop/Archbishop.
- The name is derived from the administrative districts created by the roman
- emperor Diocletian
-
- DOUBLE MONASTERY: Combined monastery for men and women but sexually
- separated. Ruled by either an abbot or abbess.
-
- DRENG: The name given to a free peasant in Northumbria and sometimes in
- Yorkshire and Lancashire. The name usually implies that land is held in
- return for military service.
-
- DUKE: A title from the Roman Dux, which has been held over from roman time
- by the ruler of a district called a duchy. In England the title is reserved
- for members of the royal family.
-
- DUN: Scottish single family hill fort.
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-
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- E
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- EARL: The highest title attainable by an English nobleman who is not of
- royal blood. Also known in earlier times as Ealdorman. Word related to Jarl.
-
- EIRE: Ireland.
-
- ERSE: Irish Language.
-
- ESCHEAT: The right of a feudal lord to the return of lands held by his
- vassal, or the holding of a serf, should either die with out lawful heirs
- or suffer outlawry.
-
- EXCHEQUER: The financial department of the royal government. The chief
- officers of the Exchequer are the Treasurer, the Chancellor and the
- Justiciar. Sheriffs, in their role as regional chief accountants, present
- reports to the exchequer at Easter and Michaelmass.
-
- EXCOMMUNICATION: Exclusion from the membership of the church or from
- communion with faithful Christians. Those judged "tolerati" may still
- mingle with the faithful, but those "vitandi" cannot and are exiled.
-
- EYRE: The right of the king (or justices acting in his name) to visit and
- inspect the holdings of any vassal. this is done periodically, usually at
- irregular intervals of a few years.
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-
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- F
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- FAIR: A market held at regular intervals, usually once to twice a year.
- Fairs tend to offer a wider range of goods than normal markets.
- They are generally licenced by either the king/a local lord or a chartered
- town.
-
- FARM: A fixed sum, usually paid annually, for the right to collect all
- revenues from land; in effect, rent. Lords may farm land to vassals,
- receiving a fixed annual rent in place of the normal feudal obligation.
- Many sheriffs farm out their shires, contracting in advance to pay a fixed
- annual sum to the crown, thus obtaining the right to collect any additional
- royal revenues for their own profit.
-
- FEALTY (Oath of): The oath by which a vassal swore loyalty to his lord,
- usually on a relic of saints or on the bible.
-
- FELONY: In feudal law, any grave violation of the feudal contract between
- lord and vassal. Later it was expanded in common law to include any crime
- against the King's peace and has come to mean any serious crime.
- Example: Murder is now a Felony, taking the burden off prosecution from the
- victim's family and giving it to the crown.
-
- FEUDALISM: The system of governing whereby semiautonomous landed nobility
- have certain well defined responsibilities to the king, in return for the
- use of grants of land (fiefs) exploited with the labor of a semi-free
- peasantry (serfs).
-
- FIEF: Heritable lands held under feudal tenure; the lands of a tenant in
- chief. Sometimes this can apply to an official position. Often called a
- Holding.
- FIEF: Normally a land held by a vassal* of a lord in return for stipulated
- services, chiefly military. Sometimes unusual requirements were stipulated
- for transferring a fief. For example: Henry de la Wade held 42 acres* of
- land in Oxfordby the service of carrying a gyrfalcon (see: falconry birds)
- when ever Kind Edward I wished to go hawking.*
-
- FIEF DE HAUBERT: 11 cent French term equivelant to the knight term Knights
- Fee (see: knighthood) becuase of the the coat (hauberk*) of mail* which
- it entitled and required every tenant to own and wear when his services
- were needed. This provided a definite estate in france, for only persons
- who had this estate or greater were allowed to wear hauberks.
-
- FIEF-RENTE: money paid by a lord in an annual manner to a vassal in return
- for homage*, fealty*, and military service (usually knight service) and
- it could include various other things than money, such as wine, cheese.
- provide chickens, or wood
-
- FINE: A sum of money paid to the Crown to obtain some grant, concession, or
- privilege. Unlike amercement, a fine os not a monetary penalty, although
- failure to offer and pay a customary fine for some right, will undoubtedly
- lead to an amercement.
-
- FITZ: An Anglo Norman prefix meaning son.
-
- FORFEITURE: The right of a feudal lord to recover a fief when a vassal
- fails to honor his obligations under the feudal contract.
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-
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- F
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- FORMARIAGE (also called merchet): The sum commonly paid by a serf to his
- lord when the serf's daughter marries a man from another manor.
-
- FRANK PLEDGE: The legal condition under which each male member of a
- tithing (district) over the age of twelve is responsible for the good
- conduct of all other members of the tithing.
-
- FYRD: The Anglo Saxon Militia. Special King's Peace prevailed while to or
- from or during Fyrd service.
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-
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- G
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- GAEL: A name given to Celtic inhabitants of Scotland, Ireland and the Isle
- of Mann.
-
- GUILDS: A term applied to trade associations. The aims of such association
- are to protect members from the competition of foreign merchants and
- maintain commercial standards. The first guilds where merchant guilds,
- later came craft guilds as industry has gotten more specialized. Guilds
- maintain a system of education, whereby apprentices serve a master for
- five to seven years before becoming a journeyman at about age nineteen.
- Journeymen work in the shop of a master until they can demonstrate to the
- leaders of his guild that they are ready for master status. Guild members
- are forbidden to compete with each other, and merchants are required to
- sell at a "just price".
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-
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- H
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- HANSEATIC LEAGUE: An association of merchants and towns of northern Germany.
-
- HEPTARCHY (seven kingdoms of the): Names given to the seven pre-Viking
- Kingdoms of England. Wessex, Mercia, Northumbria, Kent, East Anglia,
- Essex and Sussex.
-
- HERESY: Any religious doctrine inconsistent with, or inimical to, the
- orthodox beliefs of the church.
-
- HERIOT: A payment which a feudal lord may claim from the possessions of a
- dead serf or other tenant, essentially a death tax. There are various
- forms of heriot. Generally if a tenant dies in battle the heriot is
- forgiven.
-
- HIDE: A unit of measurement for assessment of tax, theoretically 120 acres,
- although it may vary between 60 and 240 acres. It is by custom the land
- that can be cultivated by one eight ox plow in one year.
-
- HOMAGE: The ceremony by which a vassal pledges his fealty to his liege,
- and acknowledges all other feudal obligations, in return for a grant of
- land.
-
- HONOR: A holding or group of holdings forming a large estate, such as the
- land held by an Earl.
-
- HOUSESTEADS: Housesteads are forts strategically placed on a craggy
- precipice.
-
- HOWDEN: A college of secular priests.
-
- HUE AND CRY: The requirement of all members of a village to pursue a
- criminal with horn and voice. It is a duty of any person discovering a
- felony to raise the hue and cry and his neighbors are bound to assist him
- in pursuit and capture of the offender.
-
- HUNDRED: Anglo Saxon institution. Subdivision of a Shire. Theoretically
- equals one hundred hides but hardly ever. Generally has their own court
- which meets monthly to handle civil and criminal law. In Danish is called
- a wapentakes (weapons taking?).
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-
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- I
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- INFIDEL: Any one having a strong adversity to Christianity.
-
- INTERDICT: The ecclesiastical banning in an area of all sacraments except
- for baptism and extreme unction. In general it does not ban high feast days.
- Used to force persons/institution/community or secular lords to a view
- dictated by the church/pope.
-
- INLAND: Land exempt from tax (See Warland).
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-
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- J
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- JUS PRIMAE NOCTIS: the right by which a lord may sleep first night with the
- bride of a newly married serf, although the custom maybe avoided by the
- payment of a fine.
-
- JUSTICIAR: The head of the royal judicial system and the king's viceroy when
- absent from the country.
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-
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- K
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- KNIGHT: The retainer of a feudal lord who owes military service for his
- fief, usually the service of one fully equipped, mounted warrior.
- The ideals to which a knight may aspire are notably prowess, loyalty,
- generosity and courtesy.
-
- KNIGHT'S FEE: In theory, a fief which provides sufficient revenue to
- equip and support one knight. This is approximately twelve hides or 1500
- acres, although the terms applies more to revenue a fief can generate
- than its size; it requires about thirty marks per year to support a
- knight.
-
- KNIGHT HOSPITALLER: Holy order knights pledged to administer to the sick
- and protect the holy places.
-
- KNIGHT TEMPLAR: Similar to the KNIGHT HOSPITALLER.
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-
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- L
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- LEASE FOR THREE LIVES: A term of lease of land, usually for the life of
- its holder, his son or wife, and a grandson.
-
- LEET: The term used for a subdivision of land in Kent equivalent to a
- hundred.
-
- LIVERY: To be given land as a gift from the king. Also means to be given
- the right to wear a lord livery (modified form of his coat of arms).
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-
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- M
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- MAN: In this sense to be a lord's man, to owe obligations to, in the
- forms of labor or service. A woman can be someone's man.
-
- MAN-AT-ARMS: A soldier holding his land, generally 60-120 acres,
- specifically in exchange for military service. Sometimes called a Yeoman.
-
- MANOR: A small holding, typically 1200-1800 acres, with its own court and
- probably its own hall, but not necessarily having a manor house. The manor
- as a unit of land is generally held by a knight (knight's fee) or managed
- by a bailiff for some other holder.
-
- MARCHER LORDS: The name commonly given to Norman landholders on the Welsh
- border.
-
- MARK: A measure of solver, generally eight ounces, accepted throughout
- western Europe. In England is worth thirteen shillings and four pence, two
- thirds of one pound.
-
- MARKET: A place where goods may be bought or sold, established in a
- village or town with the authorization of a king or lord. This noble
- extends his protection to the market for a fee, and allows its merchants
- various economic and judicial privileges. See also fair.
-
- MICHAELMASS: Feast of St. Michael on 29 Sept.
-
- MILITARY RELIGIOUS ORDERS: See Knights Templar and Hospitaller.
-
- MINSTREL: A poet and singer, also called a jongleur, who lives and travels
- off of the largess of the aristocracy.
-
- MONASTERY: A place where Monks or Nuns live for a religious life.
-
- MONEYER: A person licenced by the crown to strike coins, receiving the
- dies from the crown, and keeping 1/240 of the money coined for him self.
-
- MORMAER: A Gaelic Title (Great Steward) given to the rulers of the seven
- provinces of Celtic Scotland.
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-
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- N
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- NUN: Women dedicated to the religious life usually a member of a religious
- order.
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-
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- O
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- ORDEAL: A method of trail in which the accused is given a physical test
- (usually painful and/or dangerous) which can only be met successfully if he
- is innocent.
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-
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- P
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- PALATINATE: In England, a county in which the tenant in chief exercises
- powers normally reserved for the king, including the exclusive right to
- appoint justiciar, hold courts of chancery and exchequer, and to coin
- money. The kings writ is not valid in a County Palatinate.
-
- PRIMOGENITURE: The right of the eldest son to inherit the estate or office
- of his father.
-
- PRIORY: Any religious house administered by a prior or prioress. If the
- prior was subject to a resident abbot, the house is called an abbey or
- monastery. The title prioress is held in certain religious houses for women.
- ===========================================================================
-
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- R
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- RAPE: The Sussex equivalent of a "hundred".
-
- REEVE: A royal official, or a manor official appointed by the lord or
- elected by the peasants.
-
- RELIEF: The fee paid by the heir of a deceased person on securing
- possession of a fief. Tradition determines the amount demanded.
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-
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- S
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- SCUTAGE: The sum that the holder of a knight's fee may pay his lord in
- lieu of military service. Sometimes used as a form of tax.
-
- SERF: A Semi-free peasant who works his lord's demesne and pays him
- certain dues in return for the use of land, the possession (not
- ownership) of which is heritable. These dues, usually called corvee, are
- almost in the form of labor on the lord's land. Generally this averages to
- three days a week. Generally subdivided into classes called: Cottagers,
- small holders, or villeins although the later originally meant a free
- peasant who was burdened with additional rents and services.
-
- SERGEANT: A servant who accompanies his lord to battle, or a horseman of
- lower status used as light cavalry. Also means a type of tenure in service
- of a nonknightly character is owed a lord. Such persons might carry the
- lords banner, serve in the wine cellar, make bows/arrows or any other
- dozen occupations. Sergeants pay the feudal dues of wardship, marriage,
- and relief but are exempt from scutage (nonknightly).
-
- SHERIFF: The official who is the chief administrative and judicial officer
- of a shire. Many of its jobs where taken over by the itinerant justice,
- coroner, and justice of the peace. Collected taxes and forwarded them on
- to the exchequer, after taking his share. Also many times responsible for
- making sure that the Kings table is well stocked while king is in his
- county (I.e.. Royal Game Preserve).
-
- SHILLING: Measure of money used only for accounting purposes and equal to
- 12 pennies.
-
- SHIRE: English county. The shire court conduct the administrative, judicial
- and financial business of of people living in the county.
-
- SIMONY: The buying or selling of spiritual things, particularly church
- offices and benefice.
-
- SMALL HOLDER: A middle class peasant, farming more land than a cottager but
- less than a villein. A typical small holder would have 10-20 acres.
-
- SOKEMAN: Another name for a free villager.
-
- SULONG: A measurement of land in Kent. Equal to two "hides".
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-
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- T
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- TALLAGE: A tax levied on boroughs and on the tenants living on royal
- estates.
-
- TENANT IN CHIEF: A lord or institution (the Church being most common)
- holding land directly from the king. All Earls are Tenants in Chief.
-
- TEUTONIC KNIGHTS: German Fighting Order with main bases in Prussia,
- Hungary and Germany. Recruits almost exclusively from German Speaking
- peoples of Europe.
-
- THANE: Originally meaning a Military Companion to the King. It has come to
- mean a land holding administrative office.
-
- THIRD PENNY: the local earls one third share of fines in shire or hundred
- courts, often allocated afterwards to a particular manor or church as
- income.
-
- TITHE: One tenth of a persons income given to support the church.
-
- TONSURE: The rite of shaving the crown of the head of the person joining a
- monastic order or the secular clergy. It symbolizes admission to the
- clerical state.
-
- TOURNEY: Mock combat for knights.
-
- TOWN AIR IS FREE AIR: Words used in many town charters to proclaim freedom
- any serf who lives there for a year and a day with out being claimed by his
- lord.
-
- TREASURER: The chief financial officer of the realm, and senior officer of
- the "Exchequer".
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-
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- U
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- USURY: The interest charged on a loan. Forbidden by church law (based upon
- biblical). Commonly used by Knight Hospitallers and Knight Templars in
- Later Medieval Times.
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-
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- V
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- VASSAL: A free man who holds land (fief) from a lord to whom he pays homage
- and swears fealty. He owes various services and obligations, primarily
- military. But he is also required to advise his lord and pay him the
- traditional feudal aids required on the knighting of the lords eldest son,
- the marriage of the lords eldest daughter and the ransoming of the lord
- should he be held captive.
-
- VILLEIN: The wealthiest class of peasant. they usually cultivate 20-40
- acres of land, often in isolated strips.
-
- VIRGATE: One quarter of a "hide".
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-
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- W
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- WAPENTAKE: See Hide
-
- WARDSHIP: The right of a feudal lord to the income of a fief during the
- minority of its heir. The lord is required to maintain the fief and to
- take care of the material needs of the ward. When the ward come of age,
- the lord is required to release the fief to him in the same condition in
- which it was received.
-
- WARLAND: Land liable for tax, as opposed to inland, which is generally
- exempt from tax.
-
- WASTE: The term generally given to land which is unusable or uncultivated
- with in a holding. It is not taxed. It is sometimes referred to land
- destroyed by war or raids, which is like wise not subject to tax.
-
- WITAN (also called the Witenagemot): Council composed of nobles and
- ecclesiastics which advised the Anglo Saxon Kings of England. Also chose
- the successor to the throne. Resembles the "commune concilium".
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-
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- Y
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- YOKE: A measurement of land in Kent equal to one quarter of a "sulong".
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-