MANORIAL SYSTEM

mənôrˈēəl, măn– or seignorial systemsēnyôrˈēəl, economic and social system of medieval Europe under which peasants' land tenure and production were regulated, and local justice and taxation were administered. The system was intimately related to feudalism but was not itself feudal, since it had no connection with the military and political concept of the fief. The fundamental characteristic of the manorial system was economic—the peasants held land from the lord (Fr. seigneur) of an estate in return for fixed dues in kind, money, and services. The manorial system prevailed in France, England, Germany, Spain, and Italy and far into Eastern Europe. A similar method of landholding by the peasants has existed in countries outside Europe, notably Japan and India.

Structure and Functions

The manorial system was essentially a local institution, and general statements concerning it are subject to exceptions. In its simple form it consisted of the division of the land into self-sufficient estates, each presided over by the lord of the manor and tilled by residents of the local village that usually accompanied each manorial estate. The lord, who might be the king, an ecclesiastical lord, a baron, or any lesser noble, owed military protection to the peasants. The land remained in the lord's holding and was loaned to the person who cultivated it in return for services and dues. The lord, however, did not have the right to withdraw the property or to increase the dues, and the rights of cultivation were in general heritable among the peasants. The peasants ordinarily were of two classes, the free and the unfree, but there was wide diversity in the status of the villein and serf, and the distinction became blurred. The terms free and servile came to be attached to the land rather than to the man, and a holding could be servile or free regardless of the status of the holder.

On the typical domain was the manor house of the lord. Some of the land he retained for his own use (the demesne). The domain was divided into arable, meadow (the commons), woodland, and waste. The arable was held by the peasants, and each holding was under its own fixed conditions; usually the holdings were by strips, and a single man might hold widely separated lands. The three-field system of agriculture generally prevailed, with one field devoted to winter crops, another to summer crops, and a third lying fallow each year. The meadow was generally held in common. The woodlands and fishponds usually belonged to the lord, and he had to be recompensed for the right to hunt animals, catch fish, and cut wood. In times of poor harvest the lord was to use his coin and credit to prevent starvation.

Small local industry was also a function of the manorial system, and dues owed the estate could include such items as cloth, building materials, and ironware. The payments made by serf and villein varied with the locality. There were usually fixed dues paid at certain times of the year. In addition to dues for the use of the lands and the use of the lord's mill and oven, there were personal work dues. There were also obligations to supply the lord with services—food, lodging, and the like—when he came to the manor. In addition there were dues for the rights of justice.

The manor was an administrative and political unit. There were manorial courts, and the lord or his agent presided over the administration of justice. The manor was also the unit for the raising of taxes and for public improvements. Thus the tenants were obliged to repair roads and bridges, maintain the castles, and take care of the military contributions. The manor was almost always under the charge the lord's agent, who might be assisted by provosts or bailiffs. The manor was looked upon as a permanent organization, and even when part of it was transferred to others by the lord, it remained a single manor. Thus one manor might have several direct lords. It did not necessarily coincide with a single estate; it might be larger or it might be only part of an estate.

History

Local manorial institutions developed with the decline of central Roman power. Like feudalism, the system received great stimulus from the collapse of Carolingian rule and from the invasions by Norsemen, Arabs, and Magyars. It reached its final form at different times in various countries, but in general it flourished from the 11th to the 15th cent.

The most perplexing problem concerning the manor is the question of the origin of manorial organization. The dispute between the so-called Romanists and Germanists as to the sources of the organization has never been settled; there is not sufficient evidence. Romanists point to the process that, in the later Roman Empire, produced independent estates. Germanists focus on the likenesses of the manor to what was supposedly the ancient German system of landholding (see mark). It is now generally accepted that both German and Roman influences contributed to the development of the manorial system.

Many economic and political factors contributed to the extinction of the manorial system. The spread of trade and a money economy promised greater profit to capitalist production than to the subsistence manor; the growth of new centralized monarchies competed with the local administration of the lord. Gradual decline took place with the wide development of towns and capitalistic commerce that tended to break down the small local economic unit, the manor, and to build up larger units.

Decline was early in Italy, where Roman city institutions persisted to some extent through the Middle Ages (see commune). In Spain it was soon modified, especially by Moorish conquest, but still existed in modified form in the 20th cent. In England the dissipation of the system had been long in process before it was hastened by the inclosure of estates. In France its disappearance was consummated by the French Revolution. In Austria and Prussia it was virtually ended by the reforms of Emperor Joseph II, Karl vom und zum Stein, and Hardenberg, but in Hungary it left traces until the 20th cent. In Russia it was profoundly altered by the abolition of serfdom (1861; see Emancipation, Edict of). Everywhere it left its mark upon succeeding institutions.

Bibliography

See P. G. Vinogradoff, Villainage in England (1892, repr. 1968) and The Growth of the Manor (3d ed. 1920, repr. 1968); N. S. B. Gras and E. C. Gras, The Economic and Social History of an English Village (1930, repr. 1969); H. S. Bennett, Life on the English Manor (1937, repr. 1960); M. Bloch, French Rural History (tr. 1966); J. W. Thompson, Economic and Social History of the Middle Ages (2 vol., new ed. 1959) and Economic and Social History of Europe in the Later Middle Ages (new ed. 1960).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Manorial System  - 1091 results

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...development of the medieval legal system. Consequently in writing with...law 1895 , Maitland utilized manorial court evidence to elucidate...Like Vinogradoff, he used manorial court rolls to verify and supplement...evidence provided by other manorial and state records and by the...
2 The Manorial System and its Legacy THE manorial system was the social and economic arm of feudalism, the...over, the bulk of the population. Of all the aspects of the manorial system, serfdom has been singled out as the defining characteristic...
...maintain a relatively self-sufficient, manorial economy . Revival of feudal bonds to the...crops for export. The result was a class system composed of a tiny group of wealthy landowners...merchant class, and the emerging interstate system with its need for resources to sustain...
...building an effective drainage system. This was very important in the...change was the slow spread of the manorial economy and the use of mounted...equality slowed the spread of the manorial system often used to support knights because...
...the long 12th century, when the urban system, the agricultural system and the core area political system began to spread in all directions in the...system of European states. 4 I.e. the manorial system of agrarian production, the proto...
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journal articles on: Manorial System  - 114 results

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...study of the European manorial system, with the main emphasis...the Eastern Danish manorial villages were typified...three-course rotation systems. Although all the agrarian...conditions of life in a manorial system were outlined, focusing...
...Conqueror transformed the manorial estate into a system of rule in which power...that would make the manorial system of land tenure outmoded...the bearing of the manorial estate on the cartographic...England was ruled by a system of land tenure that...
...Russophones: 1) the social impact of the German manorial system in Estonia versus the Russian manorial system in Russia; 2) traditional religious...this conjecture. German Baltic vs. Russian Manorial System In the last quarter of the nineteenth...
...seventeenth century the standing of manorial homage was still fully recognized...common land and open field systems-in some areas the custom...land economical to enclose, manorial resources were used to preserve...and a commitment to, the manorial system (and to what Ronald Hutton...
...was the ample evidence of manorial carrying services (especially...leading scholars on the English manorial system as it existed before William...research on early English land systems and, throughout the decade...fitted to compile a glossary of manorial terms such as forms the second...
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magazine articles on: Manorial System  - 20 results

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...Black Death, probably owing to the break up of the larger, manorial estates, the shortage of labour, or the reduced need to cultivate...the move towards drainage and sewage. Victorian metropolitan systems remain the backbone of our present sewerage infrastructure...
...farmers in the open fields of an old manorial hunting park in Nottinghamshire, considered...more than was normal under Englands manorial system in effect since the Middle Ages...large extent, on whether the governance system recognizes their stakeholder status...the creation of corporate governance systems that reflect the real sources of value...
...World version of the medieval French manorial system, and though most seigneurs were...English criminal law with its jury system, and in 1791, another British...which controlled their educational system and the English managerial class...
...peculiar, quite unlike the grants of other colonies. The system was palatinate, not altogether obsolete in England...The land was mostly carved up into large estates in a manorial system. The assemblys first (unreported) meeting was in...
...lands of the continental river systems. Progressive clearing on...replaced by a three-field system, thus shortening the fallow...society of the traditional manorial system was hierarchical, custom...tropical forests, European systems of exploitation led to the...
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newspaper articles on: Manorial System  - 18 results

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Medieval Manorial Splendour. Byline: Marsya Lennox Newly launched in the...plus the installation of zoned central heating, hot water system, new electrics, fire safety systems and internal telephones. Architectural features include...
...consequence of the rights or abuse of those rights and a system is needed to make sure that the commons are managed...through time to the Norman conquests of Britain and the manorial system. Village greens were part of Britains historical and...
...lighting and commission necessary public buildings. In many ways they are the unsung missing link between the old manorial system and the local government we know today. In West Bromwich they were in office from 1854 to 1882. It was the Town...
...consequences on the stability of the economy and well being for the individual. For example the break up of the ancient manorial system, which dictated the distribution of agricultural land, was precipitated by the outbreak of the bubonic plague...
...claiming our village greens as manorial waste,says parish councillor...a farmers wife. The feudal system existed in the 11th century...every year, to administer the manorial estate and allow usvillagers...by him under another ofhis manorial titles, Uwchterfyn. The Mail...
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encyclopedia articles on: Manorial System  - 21 results

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MANORIAL SYSTEM m nor e l, man or...estate. History Local manorial institutions developed...Like feudalism, the system received great stimulus...the ancient German system of landholding...development of the manorial system. Many economic...
SEIGNORIAL SYSTEM see manorial system ; feudalism . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Although analogous social systems have appeared in other civilizations...certain components of the system may be regarded as characteristic...intricately connected with the manorial system , it must be considered...classifications of society. The system broke down gradually. It...Western Europe. Other Feudal Systems Other ages and other lands...institutions. In Japan the feudal system was well ordered before the...
...servile duties of the lord (see also manorial system ). Although serfs were usually...during the Middle Ages the status of manorial peasants was regulated by local...Western Europe the breakdown of the manorial system allowed peasants to obtain...
...by the king (see manorial system ). The central government...feudalism . He used the feudal system to collect taxes, employed...other aspects of the legal system. The Hundred Years War with...long since under way) of the manorial and feudal systems, including the institution...
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