The communal organisation of the peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid than the manorial order. Even the feudal period shows everywhere traces of a peasant class living and working in economically self-dependent communities under the loose authority... A Social History of England - Page 15de Frederick Bradshaw - 1927 - 404 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Arthur Cayley Headlam - 1894 - 548 pages
...were recruited, and that originally they had formed the great mass of the peasantry. He shows, too, that the communal organisation of the peasantry is...ancient and more deeply laid than the manorial order, so that he opens the road to the recognition of an early state of society, in which, though custom... | |
| Paul Vinogradoff - 1892 - 490 pages
...regard to their rulers. Whichever way we may look, one and the same observation is forced upon us : the communal organisation of the peasantry is more...laid than the manorial order. Even the feudal period that has formed the immediate subject of our study shows everywhere CHAP. v1. Concfueion0. 409 traces... | |
| Frederick Pollock - 1892 - 398 pages
...rule of Roman or Romanised lords over a nation of serfs, and has shown in this first part of his work that ' the communal organisation of the peasantry...ancient and more deeply laid than the manorial order.' CHARLES ELTON. THE REFORM OF LEGAL ADMINISTRATION AN UNAUTHORISED PROGRAMME. who are striving for the... | |
| Nathaniel J. Hone - 1906 - 446 pages
...manorial system has recorded his deliberate opinion that "the communal organization of the [English] peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid than...of a lord whose claims may proceed from political causes and affect the semblance of ownership, but do not give rise to the manorial connection between... | |
| Nathaniel J. Hone - 1906 - 476 pages
...manorial system has recorded his deliberate opinion that "the communal organization of the [English] peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid than...a peasant class living and working in economically self- % dependent communities under the loose authority of a lord V whose claims may proceed from political... | |
| George Shaw-Lefevre Baron Eversley - 1910 - 434 pages
...debatable point. Vinogradoff has declared that in his view— " The communal organisation of the [English] peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid than...of a lord, whose claims may proceed from political causes and affect the semblance of ownership, but do not give rise to the manorial connection between... | |
| Sir John Arthur Ransome Marriott - 1914 - 190 pages
...trustworthy experts has expressed his conviction that " the communal organisation of the [English] peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid than...of a lord whose claims may proceed from political causes and affect the semblance of ownership, but do not give rise to the manorial connection between... | |
| Peter Hampson Ditchfield - 1920 - 306 pages
...upon the original free community, and I desire to quote Professor Vinogradoffs opinion. He writes: The communal organisation of the peasantry is more...of a lord whose claims may proceed from political causes and affect the semblance of ownership, but do not give rise to the manorial connexion between... | |
| Newell LeRoy Sims - 1928 - 730 pages
...129, 339, 352. "Ditchfield, op. cit., p. 66. 13 Hid., pp. 35-36. 518 The Structural Element zation of the peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid...of a lord whose claims may proceed from political causes and affect the semblance of ownership, but do not give rise to the manorial connection between... | |
| William Austin - 1928 - 496 pages
...45. THE Hi NUKED or FLITT. Vinogradoff2 thought the communal organisation of the English peasantry more ancient and more deeply laid than the manorial...everywhere traces of a peasant class living and working in self-dependent communities under the loose authority of a lord. Maitland,3 however, thinks there was... | |
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