- In
English law,
seignory or
seigniory,
spelled signiory in
Early Modern English (/ˈseɪnjəri/; French: seigneur, lit. 'lord'; Latin: senior, lit. 'elder')...
- Bulaux".
Starting in 1340, Les
Bulles was an
independent seigniory. In 1673, The
seigniory of Les
Bulles has been
annexed to the 'baronnie' of Jamoigne...
- hotels.
After its completion, the
property was
leased to the
private Seigniory Club
until 1970, when
Canadian Pacific Railway converted the property...
-
amongst many
small chiefs. It is
divided up, as it were, into forty-seven
seigniories, in each of
which a
Standing Committee is the court-baron and its chairman...
- Susedgrad-Stubica
Seigniory was a
medieval and
early modern feudal estate on what is
today Zagreb County, City of
Zagreb and Krapina-Zagorje County. The...
- Erguël is a
medieval seigniory of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Basel, and
under protectorate of Biel/Bienne,
under military jurisdiction from 1335, in...
- (part) of the
parish of
Notre Dame de la Nativité de Bécancour in the
seigniory of Bécancour. The
reserve is
situated alongside the Bécancour River, 20...
-
Townships of Blais, Jetté, La Vérendrye, Matalic, the
Seigniory of Lac-Matapédia, and that part of the
Seigniory of Lac-Mitis
bounded on the
northwest by the prolongation...
- muni****lity is made up of
forests where several chalets are built. The
seigniory of Bourg-Louis,
which includes the
territory of Saint-Raymond, was initially...
- "Rivière de Champlain". The deed of the
seigniory of Champlain,
dated April 8, 1664, does not name the
seigniory. The deed only
mentions that the granted...