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" A manor, manerium, a manendo, because the usual residence of the owner, seems to have been a district of ground, held by lords or great personages; who kept in their own hands so much land as was necessary for the use of their families, which were called... "
The History of Pontefract, in Yorkshire - Página 11
por George Fox - 1827 - 366 páginas
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A New Dictionary of the English Language ...

Charles Richardson - 1856 - 952 páginas
...mantnda, because the usual residence of the owner, scemi tj have been a district of ground, held b; lords or great personages ; who kept in their own hands so much land as was nec« sary for the use of their families, w/iudi were called terra-dominicalu, or deme5n< lands, being...
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Books 1 & 2

William Blackstone, George Sharswood - 1860 - 874 páginas
...to our ancestors, even before the Norman conquest. A manor,, manerium, a manendo,a because the usual residence of the owner, seems to have been a district...lords or great personages; who kept in their own hands во much land as was necessary for the use of their families, which were called terra: dominicales,...
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The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Wimbledon, Surrey: With ...

William Abraham Bartlett - 1865 - 264 páginas
...circumstances, from those that exist at this day. A manor, manerium, d, manendo, because the usual residence of the owner, seems to have been a district...necessary for the use of their families, which were called terrce dominicales or demesne lands, being occupied by the lord or dominus manerii, and his servants....
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The Student's Blackstone: Commentaries on the Laws of England, in Four Books

William Blackstone - 1865 - 642 páginas
...in substance as ancient as the Saxon constitution. A manor, manerium, a manendo, because the usual residence of the owner, seems to have been a district of ground, held by great personages, who kept in their own hands so much land as was necessary for the use of their families,...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England: In Four Books, Volumen1

William Blackstone, George Sharswood - 1867 - 926 páginas
...conquest, f A minoj-, manerium, a muñendo (13), because the usual residence of the owner, «eemï to have been a district of ground, held by lords or great person(•) I In -I 73. i lint. 15, CO, ЙТ. (jf | Co. Cop. s. Ï & 10. (/•) Wright. 210. (11) See...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England: In Four Books, Volumen1

William Blackstone - 1872 - 776 páginas
...oar ancestors, even before the Norman conquest. A manor, manerium, a manendo, (7) because the usual residence of the owner seems to have been a district...necessary for the use of their families, which were called ierrœ dominicales or demesne lands; being occupied by the lord, or dominus manerii, and his servants....
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Blackstone Economized: Being a Compendium of the Laws of England to the ...

David Mitchell Aird - 1873 - 366 páginas
...Manors, and how Copyholds arose out of Manors. A MANOR, manerium—so called because it was the usual residence of the owner — seems to have been a district of ground held by a lord or great personage, who kept so much of the lands in his own hands as was necessary for the...
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Institutes of Common and Statute Law, Volumen2

John Barbee Minor - 1877 - 1140 páginas
...Bac. Abr. Copyhold.) 2*. Nature and Origin of Mnnors. A manor, manerium (a manendo), because the usual residence of the owner, seems to have been a district of ground held by lords or great personages, (whence it is also styled a barony, or lordship) ; who were accustomed to keep in their own hands so...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England Applicable to Real Property

William Blackstone, Alexander Leith, James Frederick Smith - 1880 - 650 páginas
...known to our ancestors even before the Norman conquest. A manor, manerium, manendo, because the usual residence of the owner, seems to have been a district...necessary for the use of their families, which were called terras dominicales or demesne lands ; being occupied by the lord, or dominus manerii, and his servants....
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The Antiquary: A Magazine Devoted to the Study of the Past, Volumen12

1885 - 310 páginas
...sure that Sir William Blackstone was hopelessly wrong when he informed his readers that a manor was " a district of ground, held by lords or great personages,...land as was necessary for the use of their families .... [and] the other, or tenemental lands they distributed among their tenants."t That the English...
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