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vill3-第46部分
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y to be found in manors with a particularly archaic constitution。 They occur very often on ancient demesne。 And I need hardly say that they point to a still imperfect development of the ministerial class。 The village is already set to work for the lord; but it manages this work as much as possible by itself; with hardly any interference from foreign overseers。 One part of the village population is altogether outside the manorial labour intercourse between village and demesne。 The freeholders may perform some labour…services; but the home…farm could never depend on them; and when such services are mentioned; they are merely considered as a supplement to the regular duties of the servile holders。 At the same time; the free tenants are members of the village community; engrained in it by their participation in all the eventualities of open field life; by their holdings in the arable; by their use of the commons。 This shows; again; that the manorial element is superimposed on the communal; and not the foundation of it。 I shall not revert to my positive arguments in favour of the existence of ancient freehold by the side of tenements that have become freehold by exemption from servile duties。 But I may be allowed to point out in this place; that negatively the appearance of free elements among the peasantry presents a most powerful check to the theory of a servile origin of the community: it throws the burden of proof on those who contend for such an origin as against the theory of a free village feudalized in process of time。 In a sense the partizans of the servile community are in the same awkward position in respect to the manorial court。 Its body of suitors may have consisted to a great extent of serfs; but surely it must have contained a powerful free admixture also; because out of serfdom could hardly have arisen all the privileges and rights which make it a constitutional establishment by the side of the lord。 The suitors are the judges in litigation; the conveyancing practice proceeds from the principle of communal testimony; and in matters of husbandry; custom and self…government prevail against any capricious change or unprecedented exaction。 And it has to be noticed that the will and influence of the lord is much more distinct and overbearing in the documents of the later thirteenth and of the fourteenth century; than in the earlier records; one more hint; that the feudal conception of society took some time to push back older notions; which implied a greater liberty of the folk in regard to their rulers。 Whichever way we may look; one and the same observation is forced upon us: the communal organisation of the peasantry is more ancient and more deeply laid than the manorial order。 Even the feudal period that has formed the immediate subject of our study shows everywhere traces of a peasant class living and working in economically self…dependent communities under the loose authority of a lord; whose claims may proceed from political sources and affect the semblance of ownership; but do not give rise to the manorial connexion between estate and village。
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