HISTORY 221: THE MEDIEVAL LEGACY



  READING GUIDE 11: Peasants and Lordship

A. A French Customal (for Méron), 1080-1082
1. What were the sorts of “taxes” or customs that peasants had to pay to their lords?
2. Why were animals so important to the peasants?
3. From this list, can we gain an idea why lords (in this case an abbot) were so jealous of their lordly privileges?

B. An English Manorial Court, 1246-1249
The previous text described what ought to happen on a typical manor.  In this text, we learn about what happened when those customs were not obeyed.  Remember that this is not a royal court; it is a manorial court.  Each lord had the right to hold a court in his lands.  Thus the peasants in these cases would have had their complaints and problems heard by the lord (or, more probably, his flunky). Notes: to be “in mercy” is to owe a fine.  “To be at one’s law” is to be impleaded, or accused; “to make one’s law” is to demonstrate you were in the right. “Heriot” is a death-duty (a tax that someone’s heirs had to pay out of the deceased’s goods).
1. What sorts of things brought peasants to court?
2. What were the offenses that were most heavily punished?
3. From these cases (ie., what does appear in the lord’s court and what doesn’t appear in the lord’s court), can we learn what were the competencies of a manorial court? Ie., does it seem like the lord didn’t have the right to hear and judge certain cases? If so, what were they?
4. What does it mean to “raise the hue”?  Other documents tell us that to not “raise the hue and cry” was almost as serious an offense as the initial crime.  What does this tell us about “police” procedures in these types of manors?
5. Can we learn anything about social status and the family structure of peasants from these sources?

C. Royal Texts on Peasant Servitude in the Region around Paris, 1108-1140
a. Louis VI Rules that Serfs can Testify Against Free Men
Recall that serfs are unfree peasants, who owe significant obligations to their aristocratic lord and who do not own their own property.  Technically, because they were unfree, they also had no legal status, but by 1108 this was proving to be a problem in court.  King Louis VI (whose power and jurisdiction did not extend much beyond Paris itself) sought to alter this.
    1. What motivated Louis to allow serfs to testify in court? Humanitarian interests? Or something else?
    2. What problem did Louis identify? How did he plan to identify this?
    3. Notice the limited extent of Louis’ ruling - which serfs does it affect? Which serfs does it not affect? What does this say about serfdom? About Louis’ royal
        power? About local secular lords’ power?
    4. What legal rights will serfs have in court after this ruling? What was to happen if someone refused to accept a serf’s testimony? What penalties would befall
        such a person?
b. Louis VI Rules on the Marriage of Serfs, 1124
    1. Can serfs be married? Why is this important?
    2. What happens if a free woman marries a serf? What happens to her status? To that of her kids?
    3. Notice, again, that this ruling was directed to a very narrow group of individuals. Which women seem to be the ones in question? Which lord is losing the
        servitude of these women? Who is gaining by Louis’ ruling? How? Why?
c. Louis VI Rules on the Status of Henry of Lorraine, 1112
    1. How did the accusation that Henry was a serf reach Louis’ ears? What specifically did it say?
    2. How did Louis respond? Are you surprised at his reaction, given the flimsiness of the accusation? What does this say about the serious nature of serfdom?
    3. What motives does the king have? Is he in a win-win situation? Why?
    4. How did Henry respond to the accusation?
    5. How did the court proceed? Did it examine the facts of the case or make a decision based on procedure?
    6. Why was it important that Louis’ judgment read “a charter not of the donation of freedom but of the proof of freedom”?  Of what was Henry afraid?
d. Louis VII Rules on the Division of the Offspring of Serfs 1139-1140
    1. Note that this act is actually a confirmation of a ruling made earlier by Louis VI.
    2. Explain the case of Guoinus and Sehes. Why was the church of St Magloire upset?
    3. What sorts of problems might have ensued from the couple’s union?
    4. How did Louis resolve the dilemma? What does this say about serfs’ rights (or lack thereof)?


back to my homepage