- (1046–256 BC)
relatives and
descendants of the
ruling family were
granted enfeoffments in
return for
pledging military service to the King or
Emperor in times...
- The
Electorate of Saxony, also
known as
Electoral Saxony (German: Kurfürstentum
Sachsen or Kursachsen), was a
territory of the Holy
Roman Empire from 1356...
-
Emperor Gaozu of Han (256 – 1 June 195 BC), also
known by his
given name Liu Bang, was the
founder and
first emperor of the Han dynasty,
reigning from...
- In
these 16
carucates of land I have 5
knights enfeoffed by the old
enfeoffment:
Richard de Haia
holds 1 knight's fee; and he
withheld the
service which...
- of that fee." At a
similar time,
during the
period 1145-1154, a
major enfeoffment by
Roger de
Mowbray put
William in control, or
perhaps just confirmed...
- was
implemented in
local areas, and at the same time, the
system of
enfeoffment was established.
Counties and
countries were
parallel to each other,...
- her new
estates after the King's death, tied them up in a
series of
enfeoffments. This
meant that
legally they
ceased to be
royal gifts which could be...
- Duke
Xiang of Qin (Chinese: 秦襄公; pinyin: Qín Xiāng Gōng; died 766 BC),
personal name unknown, was a duke of the Qin state,
ruling from 777 BC to 766 BC...
-
Yuxiong (Chinese: 鬻熊; pinyin: Yùxióng,
reigned 11th
century BC), also
known as Yuzi or
Master Yu (Chinese: 鬻子; pinyin: Yùzǐ), was an
early ruler of the...
-
Christianity gradually replaced that of the Gr****
Byzantine tradition. At the
enfeoffments of 1072 and 1092, no
great undivided fiefs were created. The
mixed Norman...