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第24章

vill3-第24章

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efore; there are instances in which the free people are not only possessed of equal shares but also are rented in proportion to those shares。 In much the greater number of instances; however ; there is no such proportion。 All may hold virgates; but one will pay more and the other less; one will perform labour duties; and the other not; one will pay in money; and the other bring a chicken; or a pound of pepper; or a flower。 Whatever we may think of the gradual changes which have distorted conditions that were originally meant to be equal; it is impossible to get rid of the fact that; in regard to free tenements; equal shares do not imply equal duties or even duties of one and the same kind。     One of two things; either the shares exist only as a survival of the servile arrangement out of which the free tenements may have grown; or else they exist primarily for the purpose not of assessing duties but of apportioning claims。 In stating these possibilities I must repeat what I said before; that it would be quite wrong to bring all the observed phenomena under one head。 I do not intend in the least to deny that the freer play of economic and legal forces within the range of free ownership must have produced combinations infinitely more varying; irregular and complicated than those which are to be found in villainage。 A large margin must be allowed for such modifications which dispersed and altered the duties that were originally proportioned to shares。 But a few simple questions will serve to show that other elements must be brought into the reckoning。 Why should the disruptive tendency operate so much more against proportionate assessment than against the distribution into shares itself; in other words; why are equal tenements so much commoner than equal rents? If shareholding and equal rents were indissolubly connected as the two sides of one thing; or even as cause and effect; why should one hold its ground when the other had disappeared; and how could the dependent element remain widely active when the principal one had lost its meaning? If the discrepancies between rent and shares had been casual; we might try to explain them entirely by later modifications。 But these discrepancies are a standing feature of the surveys; and it seems to me that we can hardly escape the inference that shareholding has its raison d'etre quite apart from the duties owed to the lord; and in this case we have to look to the communal arrangement of proprietary rights for its explanation; it was a means of giving to every man his due。 If this principle is granted; all the observable facts fall into their right places。 One can easily imagine how free holdings came to exist within the village community in spite of their loose connexion with the manor。 In regard to duties; they were practically outside the community; not so as to proprietary rights and the agricultural arrangements proceeding from them; for example such arrangements as affected the rotation of crops; the use of commons and fallow pasture; the setting up of hedges; the repair of dykes; etc。 There is no real contradiction between the facts; that in relation to the lord every free shareholder was; as it were; bound by a separate and private agreement; while in relation to the village he had to conform to communal rule。     This last remark may require some further development。 The striking differences between the duties of the several freeholders of one manor seem to show that these people were not enfeoffed by the lord at the same time and under the same conditions。 If A is in every respect a fellow of B; and still has to pay twice as much as B; it is clear that his relation to the lord has been settled under different circumstances from those which governed the settlement of B's position。 Now; from the point of view of later law this meant that the two freeholds were created each by a special feoffment。 But this would be a very formal and inadequate way of considering the case。 Very often the differences might be produced by subsequent arrangements which; though not giving rise to new title; destroyed the original uniformity of condition。 Often again we may suspect that the relation between lord and tenant had its origin not really in a gift of land made by the former to the latter but in a submission made by the latter to the former。 I make bold to prefer this view; chiefly on account of those trifling and indeed fictitious duties which are constantly found in the Surveys。(79*) They can only have one meaning  that of 'recognitions'。(80*) Trifling in themselves; they establish the subordinate relation of one owner to the other; and although their imposition must be considered from the formal standpoint of feudal law as the result of a feoffment; it is clear that their real foundation must often have been a submission to patronage。 The subject is a wide one and includes all kinds of free tenure; communal as well as other。 When a knight was enfeoffed by a monastery in consideration of some infinitesimal payment; there might be several reasons for such a transaction。 The abbot may have thought it good policy to acquire the support of a considerable person; he may have been forced to give the land and only glad to obtain some recognition; however trifling; of the gift; or again; he may have made a beneficial feoffment in return for a sum of ready money paid by way of gersuma or fine; but he may also have extended his supremacy over a piece of land which did not belong to him originally at all。 Even in feudal times this could be done by means of a fictitious lawsuit ending in 'a final concord'; or even simply by an instrument of quit claim and feoffment without any suit。(81*) At the time when feudalism was only settling itself; in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries; this must have been a common thing; even if we do not take into account the Saxon practice of 'commendation。' However this may be; the trifling duties imposed on freeholds lead to the inference that the agreement between lord and tenant had been made on the basis of the latter's independent right; and not on that of the lord's will and power。 They testify to a subjection of free people and not to the liberation of serfs。 And as they are found constantly allied with shareholding; we have to say that they imply manorial relations superimposed on a community which; if not entirely free; contained free elements within it。 The manorial duties are more varied and capricious than are the shares just because they are a later growth。     I should not like to leave this intricate inquiry without testing its results by yet another standard。 I have been trying to prove two things : that some of the feudal freeholds are ancient freeholds; not liberated from servitude but originally based on the recognised right of the holders; that such ancient freeholds were included in the communal arrangement of ownership; although the assessment of their duties was not communal。 To what extent are these propositions supported by an analysis of that admittedly ancient tenure; the tenure of the socmen? We must look chiefly to the 'free' socmen; but I may be allowed; on the strength of the chapter on Ancient Demesne; to take the bond socmen also into account。     Let us take the manor of Chesterton; in Cambridgeshire。(82*) It is royal; but let out in feefarm to the Prior of Barnwell; and its men make use of the parvum breve de rec to。 There is one free tenant of eighty…eight acres holding de antiquitate and the Scholars of Merton hold forty…four acres freely。 They have clearly taken the place of some freeman; whether by purchase or by gift I do not know; they are bound to perform ploughings and to carry corn。 Both tenements are worthy of notice because charters are not mentioned and still the holdings are set apart from the rest。 In the one case the tenure is expressly stated to be an ancient one; and presumably the title of the other tenement is of the same kind。 The number of acres is peculiar and points to some agrarian division of which eighty…eight and forty…four were fractions or multiples。 The bulk of the population are described as customers。 They used to hold half…virgates; it is said; but some of them have sold part of their land according to the custom of the manor。 And so their tenements have lost their original regularity of construction; although it seems possible to fix the average holdings at twelve or fifteen acres。 Anyhow; it is impossible to reduce them to fractions of eighty…eight; for some reason or another; the reckoning is made on a different basis。 The duties vary a good deal; and it would be even more difficult to conjecture what the original services may have been than to make out the size of the virgate。     The example is instructive in many ways。 It is a stepping…stone from villainage to socage; or rather to socman's tenure。 There can be no question of differences of feoffment。 The manorial power is fully recognised; and on the other hand the character of ancient demesne is also conspicuous with its protection of the peasantry。 And still the whole fabric is giving way  the holdings get dispersed and the service loses its uniformity。 All these traits are a fair warning to those who argue from the irregularity of free tenements and the inequality of their rents against the possibility of their development out of communal ownership。 Here is a well…attested village community; its members hold by custom and have not changed their condition either for the better or for the worse in point of title。 Later agencies are at work to distort the original arrangement  a few steps more in that direction and it would be impossible to make out even the chief lines of the system。 Stanton; in Cambridgeshire; is a similar case。(83*) I would especially direct the attention of the reader to the capricious way in which the services are assessed。 And still the titles of the tenants are the result not of various grants but of manorial custom applied to the whole community。 I repeat; that irregularity in the size of holdings and in the services that they owe is no proof that these holdings have not formed part of a communal arrangement or that their free character (if they have a free character) must be the result of emancipation; these irregularities are found on the ancient demesne where there has been no enfranchisement or emancipation; and where on the other hand the tenants have all along been sufficiently 'free' to enjoy legal protection in their holdings。     If we have to say so much with regard to ancient demesne and bond socmen; we must not wonder that free socmen are very often placed in conditions which it would be impossible to reduce to a definite plan。 On the fee of Robert le Noreys; in Fordham;(84*) we find some scattered free tenants burdened with entirely irregular rents; four villains holding eighteen acres each and subjected to heavy ploughing work; three socmen of twenty acres each paying a rent of 4s。 2d。 per holding; and obliged to assist at reaping and to bring chicken; one socman of nine acres paying 10d。; one of seven acres also assessed at 10d。; two of eleven acres paying 15d。; etc; it is no cause for wonder that such instances occur at the end of the thirteenth century。 It is much more wonderful that; in a good many cases; we are still well able 

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