- An
Afterlehen or
Afterlehn (plural: Afterlehne,
Afterlehen) is a fief that the
liege lord has
himself been
given as a fief and
which he has then, in turn...
-
feudal tenure.
Within the Holy
Roman Empire,
mesne fiefs were
known as
Afterlehen,
which became inheritable over time and
could have up to five "stations"...
- tenant-in-chief. His
subinfeudated estate was
called a "mesne estate" or
Afterlehen in the Holy
Roman Empire. Traditionally, he is a lord of the
manor who...
-
count who was not a
Reichsgraf was
likely to
possess only a
mesne fief (
Afterlehen) — he was
subject to an
immediate prince of the empire, such as a duke...
-
lordship (secular or ecclesiastical/monastic). The best-known of
these were:
Afterlehen: A
subfief whereby the v****al
awarded a part of his fief to a
third party...
-
Denmark and
Holstein retained its
independence and its
position as an
afterlehen of Saxe-Lauenburg (which, as part of the
former Saxony,
inherited this...
-
reasons to the
lords of Walsee. In 1328 the
Walseer gave
Kornberg as an
Afterlehen to the
Lords von Graben.
Because of that the new
family line
changed their...
- In the 14th and 15th centuries, both
parts of the
castle were not only
Afterlehen fiefs, but also
mortgaged properties (Pfandobjekte).
Among the
noble families...
- and
moved to
Upper Palatinate,
keeping only few fiefs, the so-called
Afterlehen, e.g. in
Bernstein near
Wunsiedel and Dörflas, now a part of Marktredwitz...
- town of Schnaittach,
acquired the
castle as a so-called
mesne fief or
Afterlehen, were
given relatively little property and few rights, but the community...