- as Roussillon,
brought together the
medieval administrative courts, or
vigueries, of Roussillon, Conflent, and the
north of the
County of
Cerdanya which...
- also a
position that
could be held by non-nobles; or, in the south, into
vigueries or
baylies supervised by a
viguier or a bayle. To
reduce the case load...
- is made up of five
secondary bailiwicks,
corresponding to five
former vigueries. Some
authors attempt to
equate the
concept of
province with that of generality...
- a
castellan (position
could be held by non-nobles); or, in the south,
vigueries or baylies, sat by a
viguier or bayle. The
bailie court was
presided over...
-
judge of a
Court of ****ize to that of a
judge of a
Court of
Common Pleas.
Vigueries largely disappeared after 1749,
following an
edict suppressing the lower...
- and Riom.
Hubert Jaillot , 1695 , 64.5 x 47
Provence divided into its
vigueries and
adjoining lands,
Jaillot , nd , 65 x 45
Italy divided according to...
- square; it got its
power from the
local canal.
Lorgues was one of 12
vigueries (an area for
administering justice and finance) in Provence, and the Palais...
-
according to him, was made by
nature itself,
which is not the case of the "
vigueries"
established solely for
accounting purposes. It
described all of natural...
- the
medieval castrum. In 1388, the
Lantosque Valley became one of the
vigueries of the
County of Nice,
which came
under Savoyard rule. In 1518, André...
-
Roman building. In 1384
Roquemaure was the chef-lieu of one of the 13
vigueries in the sénéchaussée of
Beaucaire and Nîmes. It was the site of a royal...