10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «CULVERTAGE» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
culvertage in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
culvertage im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
The law-dictionary: explaining the rise, progress, and ...
See 4 Comm. 339. CULREACH, A caution given by a lord of regality, to punish a
malefactor, whom he replevied from the sheriff. Scotch Diet. CULTURA, A parcel
of arable land. Blount. CULVERTAGE, culver tagium.^ Is said by some persons ...
Giles Jacob, Sir Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, 1811
2
The Works and Correspondance of the Right Honourable Edmund ...
The King of France, having driven John from all he held on the Continent, gladly
saw religion itself invite him to further conquests. He summoned all his vassals,
under the penalty of felony, and the opprobrious name of culvertage 2, (a name
of ...
3
A History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans
capable of carrying six horses, was collected in the harbour of Portsmouth : and
the sheriffs of each county summoned to the coast of Kent, under the penalty of
culvertage, every man able to bear arms within the limits of their jurisdiction '.
Of these such as had no laud were to serve at the king's expense.— Culvertage
means in plain English the penalty of being a turn-tail. The culprit was liable by
law to the forfeiture of all property, and perpetual servitude, as mentioned before,
...
5
The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke: Volume I: The ...
He summoned all his vassals, under the penalty of felony and the opprobrious
name of Culvertage* (a name of all things dreaded by both nations) to attend in
this expedition; and such force A. D. 1211 had this threat and the hope of plunder
in ...
Edmund Burke, T. O. McLoughlin, Paul Langford, 1997
6
The history of England, from the first invasion by the ...
... the arrayers. 6 Eot. Wall. 11 Ed. I. apud Brad. iii. 3. A.D. 1377.] m horseback,
and accompany him in his expedition. 1 See the indentures and orders for
payment in Bymer, v. 325, 327, 330, 450, 545. 2 Under the penalty of culvertage (
culvert, ...
7
The Works of Edmund Burke
He summoned all his vassals, under the penalty of felony and the opprobrious
name of Culvertage,* (a name of all things dreaded by both nations,) to attend in
this expedition ; and such force had this threat and the hope of plunder in
England, ...
8
The Writings & Speeches of Edmund Burke: Volume VII - ...
He summoned all his vassals, under the penalty of felony, and the opprobrious
name of culvertage,* (a name of all things dreaded by both nations,) to attend in
this expedition ; and such force had this threat, and the hope of plunder in
England ...
9
The Serf, the Knight, and the Historian
SM 43. There is no point in conjectures about colliberts and culvertage.
Collibertus is to servus what feodum is to beneficium: a more "vulgar" equivalent.
In Anjou, between 1 103 and 1110, we see a man first renounce his culvertage,
then ...
Dominique Barthélemy, 2009
10
The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke
He summoned all his vassals, under the penalty of felony, and the opprobrious
name of culvertage,* (a name of all things dreaded by both nations,) to attend in
this expedition ; and such force had this threat, and the hope of plunder in
England ...