-
Under feudalism in
France and
England during the
Middle Ages,
tenure by
serjeanty (/ˈsɑːrdʒənti/) was a form of
tenure in
return for a
specified duty other...
-
manor and
lands under tenure by
serjeanty.
According to the
Liber Feodurum, or Book of Fees, Roland,
under his
serjeanty, was
obligated to
perform "a jump...
-
honorary nature, it was
termed grand serjeanty,
whereas more
practical or
menial service was
classified as
petty serjeanty. By
frankalmoin – A
tenure generally...
- of
kitchen or
culinary serjeanty, was
referred to by J.
Horace Round as the "Maupygernon
serjeanty" or the
Addington serjeanty. The
manor was held by...
- "barons".
Others forms of land
tenure under the
feudal system included serjeanty (a form of
tenure in
return for a
specified duty
other than
standard knight-service)...
-
feudal barony Feudal baron Knight's fee Knight-service
Baronage Peerage Serjeanty Copyhold Freehold Gavelkind Customary freehold Landed gentry Peerages...
-
Serjeant may
refer to: The
holder of a
serjeanty, a type of
feudal land-holding in
England A
generally obsolete spelling of sergeant,
although still used...
- of the Lord High Constable. The
constableship was
granted as a
grand serjeanty with the
Earldom of
Hereford by the
Empress Matilda to
Miles of Gloucester...
-
feudal barony Feudal baron Knight's fee Knight-service
Baronage Peerage Serjeanty Copyhold Freehold Gavelkind Customary freehold Landed gentry Peerages...
-
speaking such
service was
either military (knight-service) or non-military (
serjeanty, etc.).
Military service was
generally to a
maximum of 40 days per annum...