- 1854 Act, ss. 28–29 The
Seigniorial Amendment Act of 1859, S.Prov.C. 1859, c. 48
Munro 1915, p. 149. An Act
respecting seigniorial dues in the Province,...
-
feudal rents were paid in 1970
under the
modified provisions of the
Seigniorial Dues
Abolition Act of 1935.
Middle Ages
portal France portal United Kingdom...
- were
generally outlawed and
commoners were thus
compelled to use the
seigniorial oven to bake
their bread. Such use was
subject to payment, in kind or...
- the
feudal system,
which allowed it to
shape for
itself an
extensive seigniorial patrimony,
which among other cities and
territories included the city...
- 38–105. doi:10.1093/past/141.1.38. Campbell,
Bruce M.S. (2000).
English Seigniorial Agriculture, 1250–1450.
Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-30412-2...
-
their own courts, and
large landholders also held
their own
manorial and
seigniorial courts as needed. The
degree to
which common law drew from
earlier Anglo-Saxon...
- of the
seigniorial rights in Acadia,
various rents and fees were due to the Crown. In the Minas,
Piziquid and
Cobequid Districts the
seigniorial fees were...
- same year the
vacancy of the
Bishopric and
attribute for
themselves all
seigniorial rights (to make laws, to
declare war and peace, to mint coin etc.). This...
- (pronounced [mærʑæˈni]; Tatar: (әл-)Мәрҗани мәчете;
formerly Äfände, i.e.
Seigniorial, The
First Cathedral Mosque, The Yunısovs' Mosque), also
spelled al-Marjani...
-
diversified and
complex set of
links with
their neighbors. They
received seigniorial rights;
provided work to the
rural poor and were in
daily contact with...