-
Ceorl may
refer to any of the following:
Ceorl, a
rider of
Rohan in J.R.R. Tolkien's
fictional world of Middle-earth Churl, a
social rank in Anglo-Saxon...
- for a
ceorl,
incidentally revealing that
ceorls were
required to
serve in the army.
Scholars have
disagreed on the
military value of the
ceorl, but it...
-
thegnly woman who
married a
ceorl retained her
noble status. A
successful thegn might hope to be
promoted to earl. A
prosperous ceorl could become a landlord...
- law and order. His laws
concerned all
levels of society: the nobility,
ceorls (freemen), and slaves. Traders, missionaries, and
other foreigners who lacked...
-
status of
slave (þræll, þēow)
contrasts with that of the
freeman (karl,
ceorl) and the
nobleman (jarl, eorl). Look up
thrall in Wiktionary, the free dictionary...
- an
amount reflected as the
basic fee due for the
death of a
churl (or
ceorl) both in
later Anglo-Saxon and
continental law codes. In the 8th century...
- but the word soon came to mean "a non-servile peasant",
still spelled ċeorl(e), and
denoting the
lowest rank of freemen.
According to the
Oxford English...
-
meaning was "free man". The Old
English descendant of this word was Ċearl or
Ċeorl, as the name of King
Cearl of Mercia, that
disappeared after the Norman...
-
Thegn (thane)
Thingmen /
housecarl (retainer)
Reeve /
Verderer (bailiff)
Ceorl (churl, free tenant)
Villein (serf)
Cottar (cottager) Þēow (thrall, slave)...
-
Cearl (or
Ceorl) was an
early king of
Mercia who
ruled during the
early part of the 7th century,
until about 626. He is the
first Mercian king mentioned...