- In
English law,
subinfeudation is the
practice by
which tenants,
holding land
under the king or
other superior lord,
carved out new and
distinct tenures...
-
overlord in the
English feudal system was a lord of a
manor who had
subinfeudated a
particular manor,
estate or fee, to a tenant. The
tenant thenceforth...
-
enfeoffment to
another of the king's followers.
Where the
deceased had been
subinfeudated by a tenant-in-chief, the fee
reverted temporarily to the
crown for...
-
overlord in the
English feudal system was a lord of a
manor who had
subinfeudated a
particular manor,
estate or fee, to a tenant.
Overlord may also refer...
- (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) At
Domesday Ernulf was
subinfeudating 28
estates to
other landholders. Some of
these were of French, probably...
- fees in the form of
feudal baronies to his followers, who then in turn
subinfeudated (i.e. sub-divided) the
lands comprising their baronies into
manors to...
- Tenants-in-chief held
variable proportions of
their manors in demesne, and had
subinfeudated to others,
whether their own
knights (often
tenants from Normandy),...
-
because it
formed part of the
manor of
Monks Risborough. It was
later subinfeudated (i.e.
granted as a
feudal sub-manor) to a
military subtenant and was...
-
directly of the king, that is to say he was not a tenant-in-chief. His
subinfeudated estate was
called a "mesne estate" or
Afterlehen in the Holy
Roman Empire...
- the
Domesday survey of property, Ernulf's
manor in
Kingsbury had been
subinfeudated to
Albold as Lord. It was not
mentioned again until 1317, when, under...