slovodefinícia
FEUDA
(bouvier)
FEUDA. In the early feudal times grants were made, in the first place, only
during the pleasure of the grantor, and called muncra; (q.v.) afterwards
for life, called beneficia; (q.v.) and, finally, they were extended to the
vassal and his sons, and then they acquired the name of feudal. Dalr. Feud.
Pr. 199.

podobné slovodefinícia
feudal
(encz)
feudal,feudální adj:
feudal lord
(encz)
feudal lord, n:
feudal system
(encz)
feudal system, n:
feudalism
(encz)
feudalism,feudalismus Zdeněk Brožfeudalism,feudalizmus n:
feudalistic
(encz)
feudalistic,feudální adj:
feudally
(encz)
feudally, adv:
feudatory
(encz)
feudatory,vazalský adj: Zdeněk Brož
feudalismus
(czen)
feudalismus,feudalism Zdeněk Brož
feudalizmus
(czen)
feudalizmus,feudalismn:
Defeudalize
(gcide)
Defeudalize \De*feu"dal*ize\, v. t.
To deprive of the feudal character or form.
[1913 Webster]
feudal
(gcide)
feudal \feu"dal\ (f[=u]"dal), a. [F. f['e]odal, or LL.
feudalis.]
1. Of or pertaining to feuds, fiefs, or fees; as, feudal
rights or services; feudal tenures.
[1913 Webster]

2. Consisting of, or founded upon, feuds or fiefs; embracing
tenures by military services; as, the feudal system.
[1913 Webster]
Feudalism
(gcide)
Feudalism \Feu"dal*ism\ (f[=u]"dal*[i^]z'm), n. [Cf. F.
f['e]odalisme.]
The feudal system; a system by which the holding of estates
in land is made dependent upon an obligation to render
military service to the king or feudal superior; feudal
principles and usages.
[1913 Webster]
feudalist
(gcide)
feudalist \feu"dal*ist\, n.
An upholder of feudalism.
[1913 Webster]
Feudality
(gcide)
Feudality \Feu*dal"i*ty\, n. [Cf. F. f['e]odalit['e].]
The state or quality of being feudal; feudal form or
constitution. --Burke.
[1913 Webster]
Feudalization
(gcide)
Feudalization \Feu`dal*i*za"tion\, n.
The act of reducing to feudal tenure.
[1913 Webster]
Feudalize
(gcide)
Feudalize \Feu"dal*ize\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Feudalized; p.
pr. & vb. n. Feudalizing.]
To reduce to a feudal tenure; to conform to feudalism.
[1913 Webster]
Feudalized
(gcide)
Feudalize \Feu"dal*ize\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Feudalized; p.
pr. & vb. n. Feudalizing.]
To reduce to a feudal tenure; to conform to feudalism.
[1913 Webster]
Feudalizing
(gcide)
Feudalize \Feu"dal*ize\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Feudalized; p.
pr. & vb. n. Feudalizing.]
To reduce to a feudal tenure; to conform to feudalism.
[1913 Webster]
Feudally
(gcide)
Feudally \Feu"dal*ly\, adv.
In a feudal manner.
[1913 Webster]
Feudary
(gcide)
Feudary \Feu"da*ry\, a. [LL. feudarius, fr. feudum. See 2d
Feud.]
Held by, or pertaining to, feudal tenure.
[1913 Webster]Feudary \Feu"da*ry\, n.
1. A tenant who holds his lands by feudal service; a
feudatory. --Foxe.
[1913 Webster]

2. A feodary. See Feodary.
[1913 Webster]
Feudatary
(gcide)
Feudatary \Feu"da*ta*ry\, a. & n. [LL. feudatarius: cf. F.
feudataire.]
See Feudatory.
[1913 Webster]
Feudatories
(gcide)
Feudatory \Feu"da*to*ry\, n.; pl. Feudatories.
A tenant or vassal who held his lands of a superior on
condition of feudal service; the tenant of a feud or fief.
[1913 Webster]

The grantee . . . was styled the feudatory or vassal.
--Blackstone.
[1913 Webster]

[He] had for feudatories great princes. --J. H.
Newman.
[1913 Webster]
Feudatory
(gcide)
Feudatory \Feu"da*to*ry\, n.; pl. Feudatories.
A tenant or vassal who held his lands of a superior on
condition of feudal service; the tenant of a feud or fief.
[1913 Webster]

The grantee . . . was styled the feudatory or vassal.
--Blackstone.
[1913 Webster]

[He] had for feudatories great princes. --J. H.
Newman.
[1913 Webster]Feudatory \Feu"da*to*ry\, a.
Held from another on some conditional tenure; as, a feudatory
title. --Bacon.
Infeudation
(gcide)
Infeudation \In`feu*da"tion\, n. [LL. infeudatio, fr. infeudare
to enfeoff: cf. F. inf['e]odation. See Feud a fief.]
[1913 Webster]
1. (Law) The act of putting one in possession of an estate in
fee. --Sir M. Hale.
[1913 Webster]

2. The granting of tithes to laymen. --Blackstone.
[1913 Webster]
Subinfeudation
(gcide)
Subinfeudation \Sub*in`feu*da"tion\, n. (Law)
(a) The granting of lands by inferior lords to their
dependents, to be held by themselves by feudal tenure.
--Craig.
(b) Subordinate tenancy; undertenancy.
[1913 Webster]

The widow is immediate tenant to the heir, by a
kind of subinfeudation, or undertenancy.
--Blackstone.
[1913 Webster]
Unfeudalize
(gcide)
Unfeudalize \Un*feu"dal*ize\, v. t. [1st pref. un- + feudalize.]
To free from feudal customs or character; to make not feudal.
--Carlyle.
[1913 Webster]
feudal
(wn)
feudal
adj 1: of or relating to or characteristic of feudalism [syn:
feudal, feudalistic]
feudal lord
(wn)
feudal lord
n 1: a man of rank in the ancient regime [syn: feudal lord,
seigneur, seignior]
feudal lordship
(wn)
feudal lordship
n 1: the position and authority of a feudal lord [syn:
seigniory, seigneury, feudal lordship]
feudal system
(wn)
feudal system
n 1: the social system that developed in Europe in the 8th
century; vassals were protected by lords who they had to
serve in war [syn: feudalism, feudal system]
feudalism
(wn)
feudalism
n 1: the social system that developed in Europe in the 8th
century; vassals were protected by lords who they had to
serve in war [syn: feudalism, feudal system]
feudalistic
(wn)
feudalistic
adj 1: of or relating to or characteristic of feudalism [syn:
feudal, feudalistic]
feudalize
(wn)
feudalize
v 1: bring (a country or people) under feudalism
feudally
(wn)
feudally
adv 1: in a feudal manner; "a feudally organized society"
feudatory
(wn)
feudatory
adj 1: of or pertaining to the relation of a feudal vassal to
his lord; "a feudatory relationship"
2: owing feudal allegiance to or being subject to a sovereign;
"it remained feudatory to India until 1365"
n 1: a person holding a fief; a person who owes allegiance and
service to a feudal lord [syn: vassal, liege,
liegeman, liege subject, feudatory]
FEUDAL
(bouvier)
FEUDAL. A term applied to whatever concerned a feud; as feudal law: feudal
rights.

FEUDAL LA
(bouvier)
FEUDAL LAW. By this phrase is understood a political system which placed men
and estates under hierarchical and multiplied distinctions of lords and
vassals. The principal features of this system were the following.
2. The right to all lands was vested in the sovereign. These were,
parcelled out among the great men of the nation by its chief, to be held of
him, so that the king had the Dominum directum, and the grantee or vassal,
had what was called Dominum utile. It was a maxim nulle terre sans seigneur.
These tenants were bound to perform services to the king, generally of a
military character. These great lords again granted parts of the lands. they
thus acquired, to other inferior vassals, who held under them, and were
bound to perform services to the lord.
3. The principles of the feudal law will be found in Littleton's
Tenures Wright's Tenures; 2 Blackstone's Com. c. 5 Dalrymple's History of
Feudal Property; Sullivan's Lectures; Book of Fiefs; Spellman, Treatise of
Feuds and Tenures; Le Grand Coutumier; the Salic Laws; The Capitularies; Les
Establissements de St. Louis; Assizes de Jerusalem; Poth. Des Fiefs. Merl.
Rep. Feodalite; Dalloz, Dict. Feodalit 6; Guizot, Essais sur I'Histoire de
France, Essai 5eme.
4. In the United States the feudal law never was in its full vigor,
though some of its principles are still retained. "Those principles are so
interwoven with every part of our jurisprudence," says Ch. J. Tilghman, 3 S.
& R. 447, "that to attempt to eradicate them would be to destroy the whole.
They are massy stones worked into the foundation of our legal edifice. Most
of the inconveniences attending them, have been removed, and the few that
remain can be easily removed, by acts of the legislature." See 3 Kent, Com.
509, 4th ed.

SUBINFEUDATION
(bouvier)
SUBINFEUDATION, estates, English law. The act of an inferior lord by which
he carved out a part of an estate which he held of a superior, and granted
it to an inferior tenant to be held of himself.
2. It was an indirect mode of transferring the fief, and resorted to as
an artifice to elude the feudal restraint upon alienation: this was
forbidden by the statute of Quia Emptores, 18 Ed. I; 2 Bl. Com. 91; 3 Kent,
Com. 406.

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