Introduction to the Law of Tenures ...His Majesty's law printers, for J. Nourse, 1768 - 222 strán (strany) |
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alien ancient anſwer apud Barons becauſe Bract Burgage Cafe Charta Charter Common Law Commune Confilium Concilium Confent Confequence Crag Cuftom Domino Efcheat Efcuage Eftates eſtabliſhed Exam exprefs fame fays Fealty Fee Tail feems Feoffment Feudal Law Feudatary feudi feudo feudum fhall fhould Fief firft fome fuam fuch fuerit fuis funt fuppofe fuum Gavelkind Gloff Hanneton Henry Henry III Hift himſelf ibid jure feud King Knight-Service Lands Liberi Lord Coke military moſt muſt nifi nure obferved old Tenures omnes Perfons Poffeffion poffit poteft quæ quam Quia Quia Emptores quod Reaſon refpect Regis regni Relief Saxon Sect Seld Senfe Service Sir Henry Spelman Socage Somn Spelm Spelman Stat Statute Stry Succeffion Tenant Tenure terras thefe theſe thofe Treat Treatife ufus feud underſtood Vafallus Vaffal Verb Vide Villenage Zafius in ufus
Populárne pasáže
Strana 137 - all the Lands and Tenements in England in the Hands of Subjects are holden mediately or immediately of the King: For in the Law of England we have not properly
Strana 49 - feudal Laws, were all brought into Europe by the ancient Goths, and by them fettled in all the Provinces (which they conquered) of the Roman Empire, and among the Reft by the Saxons in England, as well as by the Franks in Gaul, and the Normans in Normandy. Temp. Introd. to the
Strana 89 - they were Arbitrary, Temporary, or for Life only; yet when they became Hereditary, and did consequently often defcend upon Infants, who by reafon of their Age, could neither perform nor
Strana 165 - it remained much longer a Queftion, Whether the King's Tenants might have aliened any Part of their Lands to hold of themfelves^ as the Tenants of Common Lords might, before the
Strana 48 - either held of a mefne Lord, and not immediately of the King^ or at leaft of the King as of an Honour or Manor, and not in Chief.
Strana 39 - it can hardly be imagined that, while FEUDS were precarious and held at the Will of the Lord, or indeed that, while they were
Strana 39 - that the Lord's Obligation upon Eviction, rather prevailed upon the Reafon of contracted and improper FEUDS, than from the Nature of a pure original FEUD
Strana 61 - of them from the Hands of William I. yet it does not follow, that this King took all the Lands of England out of the Hands of their