THE HISTORY OF LANDHOLDING IN ENGLAND.


By Joseph Fisher, F.R.H.S.



     "Much food is in the tillage of the poor, but there is that      which is destroyed for want of Judgment."—PROV. 13: 23.     "Of all arts, tillage or agriculture is doubtless the most     useful and necessary, as being the source whence the nation     derives its subsistence. The cultivation of the soil causes     it to produce an infinite increase. It forms the surest     resource and the most solid fund of riches and commerce for     a nation that enjoys a happy climate.... The cultivation of     the soil deserves the attention of the Government, not only     on account of the invaluable advantages that flow from it,     but from its being an obligation imposed by nature on     mankind."—VATTEL.






Contents

INTRODUCTION.

I. THE ABORIGINES.

II. THE ROMAN.

III. THE SCANDINAVIANS.

IV. THE NORMANS.

V. THE PLANTAGENETS.

VI. THE TUDORS

VII. THE STUARTS.

VIII. THE HOUSE OF HANOVER.






INTRODUCTION.

This work is an expansion of a paper read at the meeting of the Royal Historical Society in May, 1875, and will be published in the volume of the Transactions of that body. But as it is an expensive work, and only accessible to the Fellows of that Society, and as the subject is one which is now engaging a good deal of public consideration, I have thought it desirable to place it within the reach of those who may not have access to the larger and more expensive work.

I am aware that much might be added to the information it contains, and I possess materials which would have more than doubled its size, but I have endeavored to seize upon the salient points, and to express my views as concisely as possible.

I have also preferred giving the exact words of important Acts of Parliament to any description of their objects.

If this little essay adds any information upon a subject of much public interest, and contributes to the just settlement of a very important question, I shall consider my labor has not been in vain.

JOSEPH FISHER.

WATERFORD, November 3, 1875.






I do not propose to enter upon the system of landholding in Scotland or Ireland, which appears to me to bear the stamp of the Celtic origin of the people, and which was preserved in Ireland long after it had disappeared in other European countries formerly inhabited by the Celts. That ancient race may be regarded as the original settlers of a large portion of the European continent, and its land system possesses a remarkable affinity to that of the Slavonic, the Hindoo, and even the New Zealand races. It was orig

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