Advertisement
Advertisement
villein
[ vil-uhn, -eyn, vi-leyn ]
noun
- a member of a class of partially free persons under the feudal system, who were serfs with respect to their lord but had the rights and privileges of freemen with respect to others.
villein
/ ˈ±¹Éª±ôÉ™²Ô /
noun
- (in medieval Europe) a peasant personally bound to his lord, to whom he paid dues and services, sometimes commuted to rents, in return for his land
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of villein1
Example Sentences
But the arms, shoulders and heads would be those of villeins, and the blows which rang, without removing many limbs, would be exchanged by the iron nobility.
When you think about the matter, it’s as good as any sermon, For the villeins feed the miller, and the miller feeds the vermin.
The farm was cultivated partly by the work of these hired servants, partly by the services owed by the villeins.
At the latter date besides seventy-three villeins, bordars and serfs there were forty cervisarii, a species of unfree tenants who rendered their custom in the form of beer.
Not in free and common socage, but in this amphibious subordinate class of villein socage.
Advertisement
Related ˜yÐÄvlogs
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse