gavelkind การใช้
- Gavelkind was finally abolished by the Law of Property Act in 1925.
- Gavelkind was the practice of partible or equal inheritance, as opposed to primogeniture.
- Somner completed in 1647 a work on gavelkind.
- His brothers became entitled to their father s estates, as heirs in gavelkind.
- Joint tenancy, termed gavelkind, and passed on to the kin group as a whole.
- Borough-English and gavelkind were finally abolished in England and Wales by the Administration of Estates Act 1925
- Partible inheritance ( " gavelkind " ) prevailed in Kent, East Anglia and the Celtic areas.
- Gavelkind was one of the most interesting examples of strip system of farming in open fields was never established in Kent.
- By 15th century gavelkind tenure gave rise to an accentuated dispersal of settlement in Kent and many holdings were split and became uneconomic.
- The Normans gave this Irish inheritance law the name " Gavelkind " due to its apparent similarity to Saxon Gavelkind inheritance in Kent.
- The Normans gave this Irish inheritance law the name " Gavelkind " due to its apparent similarity to Saxon Gavelkind inheritance in Kent.
- During his tenure at Aberdeen Ogilvie was an active educational reformer, helping to sweep aside " a gavelkind system of distributing University honours ".
- It has been observed that " Salic patrimony " is the usual pattern of landholding in most Norman period under the name " Gavelkind ".
- The Tudor conquest of Ireland in the mid-16th century, ending in the Gavelkind, two cornerstones of the Brehon Laws, to be specifically outlawed in 1600.
- However, gavelkind inheritance gave rise to inter-family rivalries, so primogeniture laws arose in some areas of feudal Europe giving preference to the eldest son in order to stem feuding.
- The now mainly obsolete word " gavelkind ", described a system of land tenancy found only in the county of Kent in England, and presided over by a " gaveler ".
- The county-wide " Custumal of Kent ", written in Anglo-French, codified the unique system of gavelkind in Kent that existed for centuries before its enactment in 1293.
- Holding of land in Kent by gavelkind, rather than the feudal-Norman laws of primogeniture, lasted until the early 20th century suggesting that the people of the county did indeed acquire some concessions from the Conqueror.
- Among them was the survival in the Borders of the inheritance system of gavelkind, by which estates were divided equally between all sons on a man's death, so that many people owned insufficient land to maintain themselves.
- On the death of a landowner ( " priodawr " ) his immovable estate ( land ) passed in joint tenancy ( " cytir " ) to his sons, similar to the gavelkind system of Kent.
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