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  2. Landed property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landed_property

    Landed property. In real estate, a landed property or landed estate is a property that generates income for the owner (typically a member of the gentry) without the owner having to do the actual work of the estate. In medieval Western Europe, there were two competing systems of landed property; manorialism, inherited from the Roman villa system ...

  3. List of medieval land terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_medieval_land_terms

    These medieval land terms include the following: a hide: the hide, from the Anglo-Saxon word meaning "family", was, in the early medieval period, a land-holding that was considered sufficient to support a family. This was equivalent to 60 to 120 acres depending on the quality of the land. The hide was the basis for the assessment of taxes.

  4. Feudal land tenure in England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudal_land_tenure_in_England

    Under the English feudal system several different forms of land tenure existed, each effectively a contract with differing rights and duties attached thereto. Such tenures could be either free-hold if they were hereditable or perpetual or non-free if they terminated on the tenant's death or at an earlier specified period.

  5. Taxation in medieval England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_medieval_England

    Taxation in medieval England was the system of raising money for royal and governmental expenses. During the Anglo-Saxon period, the main forms of taxation were land taxes, although custom duties and fees to mint coins were also imposed. The most important tax of the late Anglo-Saxon period was the geld, a land tax first regularly collected in ...

  6. Gentry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gentry

    Strictly speaking, anybody with officially matriculated English or Scottish arms is a gentleman and thus noble. The term landed gentry, although originally used to mean nobility, came to be used for the lesser nobility in England around 1540. Once identical, these terms eventually became complementary.

  7. Landed gentry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landed_gentry

    t. e. The landed gentry, or the gentry (sometimes collectively known as the squirearchy ), is a largely historical British social class of landowners who could live entirely from rental income, or at least had a country estate. It is the British element of the wider European class of gentry. While part of the British aristocracy, and usually ...

  8. Landed nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landed_nobility

    Landed nobility. Landed nobility or landed aristocracy is a category of nobility in the history of various countries, for which landownership was part of their noble privileges. Their character depends on the country. The notion of landed gentry in the United Kingdom and Ireland varied over time. [ 1]

  9. Collective ownership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_ownership

    Collective ownership is the ownership of property by all members of a group. [1] [2] The breadth or narrowness of the group can range from a whole society to a set of coworkers in a particular enterprise (such as one collective farm ). In the latter (narrower) sense the term is distinguished from common ownership and the commons, which implies ...