VILLEIN

vĭlˈən [O.Fr.,=village dweller], peasant under the manorial system of medieval Western Europe. The term applies especially to serfs in England, where by the 13th cent. the entire unfree peasant population came to be called villein. The localism of medieval economy has made a general definition of villein status exceedingly difficult. The villein was a person who was attached to the manor and who performed the servile work of the lord and in some respects was considered the property of the lord. Various distinctions of villeinage, or serfdom, were sometimes made. In privileged villeinage the services to be rendered to the lord were certain and determined; in pure villeinage the services were unspecified, and the villein was, in effect, subject to the whim of the lord. The villein was theoretically distinguished from the freeholder by the services and duties he owed to the lord; these included week-work (a specified number of days' work on the lord's demesne each week throughout the year) and boon days (work required at busy periods during the seasonal year, as at plowing or harvesting time), payment on the marriage of the villein's daughter, payment of tallage on demand, and the like. In practice, however, distinctions blurred, and all land tenure on the manor tended to approach a common level. The villein in England was protected by law against all except his lord, and some guarantee against the lord's power was gradually extended by the royal courts. In the 14th cent. English villeinage began to disappear. A contributing factor in its decline was the increasing substitution of money payments for manual services; rents replaced labor dues. The Black Death of 1349 (see plague), by greatly reducing the population and thus making labor scarce, made the demands of villeins more difficult to refuse and thus hastened the decline. The growth of towns also influenced the breakdown of the older class distinctions and the building up of new.

For bibliography, see manorial system; feudalism.

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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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Questia Books and Articles on: Villein
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books on: Villein  - 573 results

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...free tenure, whilst a villein would hold by villein tenure, but this did...Ages the number of villeins declined, and the...oppressive lords, and villeins whose complaints have...services due from a villein tenant were as rigidly...
...his sister who was sold as a villein for 10 shillings. The proof...sale, but the production of villein kin, men ready to declare themselves villeins. This proof the prior did...prior and whether he was a villein or not. The prior agreed...
...the villein and his direct descendants through the male. There were basically two types of villeins, villeins in gross and villeins regardant . A villein in gross was annexed to the person of the lord and could be transferred by deed from one owner...
...man takes a bondwoman to wife and they dwell in her villein tenement, then their offspring will be born serfs...tenement is very curious; it shows that to keep villein status and villein tenure apart was in practice a difficult matter...
...time and labour of his villeins, and counted all that...considered lawful to sell the villein with or without his...proclaimed a rebel, the villeins on his Yorkshire manors...limb or honour, the villein was entitled, at the...Among the numerous villeins of the royal demesne...
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journal articles on: Villein  - 20 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 >>  
 
...serfdom and chattel slavery. Villeins regardant were attached to the land, while villeins in gross were attached to...legal disabilities of the villein and their similarity to...40 it is undisputed that villeins could be bought and sold...
...medieval English villein was not in the same...to the status of villeins or bondsmen (Commons...villanus" (or villein) interchangeably. Thirdly, the villeins person emphatically...rule makes him the villein rightless...
...some sort, ranging from the villein class--over a third of the...custom, but others, called villeins, were tied to the land in...used to assert the right to a villein. The writ directed the sheriff to deliver to the lord his villein who had run away from the manor...
...population known in Latin as villeins.(10) The policy of the...status. Any male slave or villein (no cases involving women...have been her or her husbands villeins. Even if we can be sure of...standing and some were even villeins. 79 Gallina has already done...
...pulled out thy tongue for saying so" (59-61). Yet even here, the offense is to have been termed low-born (villain/ villein, 55). In the context of the populist theater, then, its carnivalesque orientation still close to the surface in the plays...
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magazine articles on: Villein  - 3 results

 
 
...or other of these regions. Villeins, or nativi, peasant natives...access to the royal courts; and villeins, who were technically confined...Glanvill, stated that a runaway villein, though legally obliged to...might relocate his landless villeins hundreds of miles from their...
...together with his trousers). The freedom to conclude a civil contract between peasant and landowner paradoxically extended the villein service system. Unlike elsewhere in Europe, in Poland the Code was not a sanction for existing social conditions, but provided...
...and whether any rights were secured to him under the certificates of claim or not, as a tenant at will or even as an unfree villein or scriptus glebae." A year after the Nunan Judgement, the government passed the Native Locations Ordinance (1904) that...


 

newspaper articles on: Villein  - 2 results

 
 
...population was made up of 30 villeins, twelve bordars and one serf - and their families. The term villein was introduced by the Normans...the open fields of a manor. Villeins were able to support themselves...supporting. Both bordars and villeins were unfree peasants but unlike...
...it was necessary to determine, to quote a 12th century jurist, "whether the child was the result of intercourse in the villein tenement or outside it, in a free bed." After the Norman conquest of England, William the Conqueror laid down more severe...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Villein  - 3 results

 
 
...were unspecified, and the villein was, in effect, subject to the whim of the lord. The villein was theoretically distinguished...payment on the marriage of the villeins daughter, payment of tallage...approach a common level. The villein in England was protected by...
...unfree, but there was wide diversity in the status of the villein and serf , and the distinction became blurred. The terms free...building materials, and ironware. The payments made by serf and villein varied with the locality. There were usually fixed dues paid...
...unfree. Unfree, or servile, tenure was generally that of the villein , who performed menial services and was a tenant at the will...rolls (parchment records) of the manorial court, and the villein became a copyhold tenant. The various types of free tenure...


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