subinfeudation การใช้
- The Statute Quia Emptores, 1290, ended subinfeudation.
- Further estates could be created out of these estates in a process called subinfeudation.
- These grants were in turn subject to subinfeudation.
- The Statute Quia Emptores, 1290 ended all subinfeudation and made all alienation complete.
- This was a process called subinfeudation.
- This was the end of subinfeudation.
- Through subinfeudation, the manorial structure of the Honour shifted over the course of nine centuries.
- Edward I's law Quia Emptores of 1290 changed the legal framework radically by banning subinfeudation.
- In subinfeudation, the new tenant would become a serf owing feudal duties to the person who alienated.
- The Conveyancing ( Scotland ) Act 1874 rendered any clause in a disposition against subinfeudation null and void.
- Others could arise by the principal lord's special grant, approved by the sovereign of subinfeudation.
- The great lords gained by ending the practice of subinfeudation with its consequent depreciation of escheat, wardship and marriage.
- Concerning subinfeudation, he argues that it does no wrong, though it may clearly do damage to the lords on occasion.
- Through subinfeudation,'Fernfields'or'Fernefelde'Manor was created from part of the southwestern part of that manor.
- Pollock and Maitland give the following example : In the case of subinfeudation, the old tenant was liable for services to the lord.
- In essence, lease of land to a tenant is a form of subinfeudation ( unless the lease is granted by the Crown ).
- By virtue of its defining characteristic of subinfeudation, in feudalism it was common practice for Knights Commanders to confer knighthoods upon their finest Occident.
- Subinfeudation by commoners has been illegal since the statute of Quia Emptores in 1290, and the sharecropper's right to land is not a fief.
- By effectively ending the practice of subinfeudation, Quia Emptores hastened the end of feudalism in England, which had already been on the decline for quite some time.
- In spite of this provision, the rights of the lords were continually diminished by subinfeudation until the passing of the Statute of " Quia Emptores ."
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