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" ceorls " have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and eat up their common corn or grass ; let those go who own the gap, and compensate to the others... "
The History and Antiquities of Colchester Castle - Página 141
por John Horace Round, Colchester Castle - 1882 - 147 páginas
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History of England During the Early and Middle Ages, Volumen1

Charles Henry Pearson - 1867 - 718 páginas
...in fact there had been a right of enclosure from the first. Ine's laws (s. 42) recognize the case, " if ceorls have a common meadow or other partible land to fence and some have fenced their land, some not," &c. Some passages in Domesday Book seem to refer to the...
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Reeves' History of the English Law: From the time of the Romans to the end ...

John Reeves, William Francis Finlason - 1869 - 686 páginas
...evidently belonged to manors, and held pasture land of the manor in common, as copyholders do still. *' If ceorls have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and cattle come in, and eat up their common corn or...
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On the Agricultural Community of the Middle Ages: And Inclosures of the ...

Erwin Nasse - 1872 - 116 páginas
...J?am oSrum, J?e hiora dael getynedne haebben, }?one ae (f) werdlan J?e Jmer gedon sie." Literally, " if ceorls" have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not—and eat up their common corn or grass; let those go...
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The Constitutional History of England, in Its Origin and Development, Volumen1

William Stubbs - 1874 - 688 páginas
...passages where the word mark occurs, but it is not found in the full sense in the laws. 1 Ini, 5 42. ' If ceorls have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and [strange cattle come in and] eat up the common...
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The theory of village communities

Denman Waldo Ross - 1880 - 42 páginas
...the references to Von Maurer). Then Canon Stubbs quotes the law of Ine, King of Wessex (§ 42) : " If ceorls have a common meadow or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, and so on." He cites this as evidence to establish the existence of...
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The Making of England

John Richard Green - 1881 - 580 páginas
...society. Kinsmen, as we have seen, fought side by side in the hour of battle, and the feelings of 1 " If ceorls have a common meadow, or other partible land, to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and strange cattle come in and eat up the common corn...
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The History and Antiquities of Colchester Castle

John Horace Round, Colchester Castle - 1882 - 164 páginas
...us."7 Morant was right. It was not till the present century that this much-needed reform took place s and that the obsolete tenure resultant from this strange...in the Laws of Ine of Wessex (circ690 AD). — " If oeorls have a common meadow or other partible land to fence " &c. (s. 42). 1 Coke on Littleton. 2 Maine....
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The Germs and Developments of the Laws of England: Embracing the Anglo-Saxon ...

1889 - 382 páginas
..."BORH." 41. A man may make denial of "borh," if he know that he does right. OF A "CEORL'S" MEADOW. 42. If " ceorls " have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and eat up their common corn or grass ; let those go...
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The Constitutional History of England in its Origin and Development

William Stubbs - 1891 - 720 páginas
...passages where the word mart occurs, but it is not found in the full sense in the laws. 1 Ini, 5 43 : 'If ceorls have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and [strange cattle come in and] eat up the common...
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Practical Rhetoric

John Duncan Quackenbos - 1896 - 492 páginas
...from an Anglo-Saxon law, encountered a vacancy, and filled in by conjecture the bracketed words : — "If ceorls have a common meadow, or other partible land to fence, and some have fenced their part, some have not, and [strange cattle come in and] eat up the common...
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