Anagramas & Información sobre | Palabra Inglés MESNE
MESNE
Número de letras
5
Es palíndromo
No
Ejemplos de uso de MESNE en una oración
- The legal owner of the manor land remained the mesne lord, who was legally the copyholder, according to the titles and customs written down in the manorial roll.
- An overlord was a person from whom a landholding or a manor was held by a mesne lord or vassal under various forms of feudal land tenure.
- Newent is near a National Birds of Prey Centre, just east of the neighbouring village of Cliffords Mesne, and a vineyard, the Three Choirs.
- This was held from a superior overlord, (a mesne lord), or from the crown itself in which case the holder was termed a tenant-in-chief, upon some manner of service under one of a variety of feudal land tenures.
- Within the Holy Roman Empire, mesne fiefs were known as Afterlehen, which became inheritable over time and could have up to five "stations" between the actual holder of the fief and the overarching liege lord.
- Mesne lords continued to exist after the abolition of any further subinfeudation by the statute of Quia Emptores (1290).
- This process could be carried further till there was a chain of mesne lords between the tenant-in-chief and the actual occupier of the land.
- When Fogg died in September 1630, the holding had increased to twenty messuages, a water mill and moiety of two fulling mills along with other land in Darcy Lever In 1632 the mesne tenure had changed and Ellis Crompton after two post mortem inquisitions about John Crompton (his father), held Darcy Lever directly.
- Dragomir Ljubinac, 30 godina Mesne zajednice "7 juli" u Novom Sadu 1974-2004, monograph, Novi Sad, 2004.
- Mesne lordships were held by the lords of Middleham (8 carucates) and in the 13th century by Robert de Musters (1 carucate).
- If the township of Shepley was subinfeudated before 1166, Shepley's mesne tenancy would have been held by William de Neville, husband of Amabel, daughter of Adam, son of Sveinn.
- In around 1250 Joice de Tockholes released his tenement to His Lord Elias de Pleasington and at some point during the early reign of Edward I, A William de Livesey was mesne tenant here and was granted the feudal rights and services due from Geoffrey de Sutton.
- The castle may have been founded in the 12th century as a motte and bailey by one of the Hoptons as a mesne lord of the Says of Clun Castle.
- Abolished the last legal statutes relating to Copyhold, a successor to the feudal system of villeinage where a tenant was obligated to provide special duties and services to mesne lord in return for manorial land.
- The complaint alleged a conveyance by Bicknell to one Bennett, the subsequent transfer to the defendant by sundry mesne conveyances, valuable improvements on the premises made by Bennett and his grantees, and a failure of title in Bicknell, when the deed was made by reason of a superior title in the State of Iowa under a land grant.
- There might be any number of infeudations and subinfeudations to mesne lords, but the chain of seigniory was complete, depending in the last resort upon the king as lord paramount.
- The success of the book allowed the Foleys to move from Huntley and buy a house at Cliffords Mesne, near Newent, Gloucestershire.
- In 1213 Robert de St Valery gave the mesne lordship of Mixbury to the Augustinian Osney Abbey, and the Purcels and their successors had to pay the abbey rent until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1536.
- It had jurisdiction over the mesne manors of the Wapentake of Blackburn and within the Borough of Clitheroe, but not within the demesne manors, such as Slaidburn in the Forest of Bowland, which convened their own halmote (manorial) courts.
- At the next tier of feudalism, holding land from the vassal was a mesne tenant (generally a knight, sometimes a baron, including tenants-in-chief in their capacity as holders of other fiefs) who in turn held parcels of land when sub-enfeoffed by the tenant-in-chief.
- The Limitation Act 1623 also applied to the personal remedy on a simple contract debt which was charged on land, where there was no convenient way to pay; to a simple contract debt which was recited in a deed, unless there was in the deed an express or implied contract to pay it; to a warrant of attorney to confess judgment for the amount of a simple contract debt; to an action for mesne profits; to an action against the equitable assignee of leaseholds in possession, grounded on his liability to perform the covenants in the lease; to a set-off or counterclaim; to an action founded on a foreign judgment; and to an Admiralty action for seamen's wages.
- Also visible is a continuous exposure to the Clifford's Mesne Sandstone of the Downtonian through the Longhope Beds.
- Hugh Turberville, who held Crickhowell Castle from 1273, not as tenant-in-chief but as mesne lord, also held the position of Seneschal of Gascony.
- In the Anglo-Norman shires and liberties, the cantred was originally a unit of subinfeudation; a magnate or tenant-in-chief who received a grant from the King of England as Lord of Ireland would typically grant a cantred or half-cantred to a baron as mesne lord, who would hold the chief manor and grant sub-manors to his tenants.
- Flohere was also the mesne tenant of the manor of Sutton in the parish of Halberton, Devon, which he held from a certain Aiulf, one of the minor Devon Domesday Book tenants-in-chief of King William the Conqueror.
Buscar MESNE en:
Wikipedia
(Español) Wiktionary
(Español) Wikipedia
(Inglés) Wiktionary
(Inglés) Google Answers
(Inglés) Britannica
(Inglés)
(Español) Wiktionary
(Español) Wikipedia
(Inglés) Wiktionary
(Inglés) Google Answers
(Inglés) Britannica
(Inglés)
La preparación de la página tomó: 407,97 ms.