Part 7
We have perhaps taken for granted under the influence of later law that an alienation will not impair the lord's rights, and will but give him a new instead of an old tenant. But it is not of any mere substitution such as this that these men of the eleventh century are thinking. They have it in their minds that the man may wish, may be able, utterly to withdraw his land from the sphere of his lord's rights. Therefore in many cases they note with some care that the man, though he can give or sell his land, can not altogether put an end to such relation as has existed between this land and his lord. He can sell, but some of the lord's rights will 'remain,' in particular the lord's 'soke' over the land (for the present let us say his jurisdiction over the land) will remain[146]. The purchaser will not of necessity become the 'man' of this lord, will not of necessity owe him any _servitium_ or _consuetudo_, but will come under his jurisdiction[147]. Interchanging however with these phrases[148], we have others which seem to point to the same set of distinctions, but to express them in terms of personal freedom. The man can, or else he can not, withdraw from his lord, go away from his lord, withdraw from his lord's manor; he can or he can not withdraw with his land; he can or can not go to another lord, or go wherever he pleases[149]. Some of these phrases will, if taken literally, seem to say that the persons of whom they are used are tied to the soil; they can not leave the land, or the manor, or the soke. Probably in some of these cases the bond between man and lord is a perpetual bond of homage and fealty, and if the man breaks that bond by refusing the due obedience or putting himself under another lord, he is guilty of a wrong[150]. But of pursuing him and capturing him and reducing him to servitude there can be no talk. Many of these persons who 'can not recede' are men of wealth and rank, of high rank that is recognized by law, they are king's thegns or the thegns of the churches, they are 'twelve-hundred men[151].' However, it is not the man's power to leave his lord so much as the power to leave his lord and take his land with him, that these phrases bring to our notice; or rather the assumption is made that no one will want to leave his lord if he must also leave his land behind him. And then this power of taking land from this lord and bringing it under another lord is conceived as an index of personal freedom. Thus we read: 'These men were so free that they could go where they pleased[152],' and again, 'Four sokemen held this land, of whom three were free, while the fourth held one hide but could not give or sell it[153].' Not that no one is called a _liber homo_ unless he has this power of 'receding' from his lord; far from it; all is a matter of degree; but the free man is freer if he can 'go to what lord he pleases,' and often enough the phrases 'X tenuit et liber homo fuit,' 'X tenuit libere,' 'X tenuit ut liber homo' seem to have no other meaning than this, that the occupant of the land enjoyed the liberty of taking it with him whithersoever he would. Therefore there is no tautology in saying that the holder of the land was a thegn and a free man, though of course there is a sense, there are many senses, in which every thegn is free[154]. All this talk of the freedom that consists in choosing a lord and subjecting land to him may well puzzle us, for it puzzled the men of the twelfth century. The chronicler of Abingdon abbey had to explain that in the old days a free man could do strange things[155].
[The scale of freeholding.]
Comparisons may be instituted between the freedom of one free man and that of another:--'Five thegns held this land of Earl Edwin and could go with their land whither they would, and below them they had four soldiers, who were as free as themselves[156].' A high degree of liberty is marked when we are told that, 'The said men were so free that they could sell their land with soke and sake wherever they would[157].' But there are yet higher degrees of liberty. Of Worcestershire it is written, 'When the king goes upon a military expedition, if anyone who is summoned stays at home, then if he is so free a man that he has his sake and soke and can go whither he pleases with his land, he with all his land shall be in the king's mercy[158].' The free man is the freer if he has soke and sake, if he has jurisdiction over other men. Exceptional privileges, immunities from common burdens, are already regarded as 'liberties.' This is no new thing; often enough when the Anglo-Saxon land books speak of freedom they mean privilege.
[Free land.]
The idea of freedom is equally vague and elastic if, instead of applying it to men, we apply it to land or the tenure of land. Two _bordarii_ are now holding a small plot; 'they themselves held it freely in King Edward's day[159].' Here no doubt there has been a fall; but how deep a fall we can not be sure. To say that a man's land is free may imply far more freedom than freehold tenure implies in later times; it may imply that the bond between him and his lord, if indeed he has a lord, is of a purely personal character and hardly gives the lord any hold over the land[160]. But this is not all. Perfect freedom is not attained so long as the land owes any single duty to the state. Often enough--but exactly how often it were no easy task to tell--the _libera terra_ of our record is land that has been exempted even from the danegeld; it is highly privileged land[161]. Let us remember that at the present day, though the definition of free land or freehold land has long ago been fixed, we still speak as though free land might become freer if it were 'free of land-tax and tithe rent-charge.'
[The unfreedom of the villein.]
If now we return to the _villanus_ and deny that he is _liber homo_ and deny also that he is holding freely, we shall be saying little and using the laxest of terms. There are half-a-dozen questions that we would fain ask about him, and there will be no harm in asking them, though Domesday
## Book is taciturn.
[Can the villein be pursued?]
Is he free to quit his lord and his land, or can he be pursued and captured? No one word can be obtained in answer to this question. We can only say that in Henry II.'s day the ordinary peasant was regarded by the royal officials as _ascriptitius_; the land that he occupied was said to be part of his lord's demesne; his chattels were his lord's[162]. But then this was conceived to be, at least in some degree, the result of the Norman Conquest and subsequent rebellions of the peasantry[163]. To this we may add that in one of our sets of Leges, the French Leis of William the Conqueror, there are certain clauses which would be of great importance could we suppose that they had an authoritative origin, and which in any case are remarkable enough. The _nativus_ who flies from the land on which he is born, let none retain him or his chattels; if the lords will not send back these men to their land the king's officers are to do it[164]. On the other hand, the tillers of the soil are not to be worked beyond their proper rent; their lord may not remove them from their land so long as they perform their right services[165]. Whether or no we suppose that in the writer's opinion the ordinary peasant was a _nativus_ (of _nativi_ Domesday Book has nothing to say) we still have law more favourable to the peasant than was the common law of Bracton's age:--a tiller who does his accustomed service is not to be ejected; he is no tenant at will.
[Rarity of flight.]
Hereafter we shall show that the English peasants did suffer by the substitution of French for English lords. But the question that we have asked, so urgent, so fundamental, as it may seem to us, is really one which, as the history of the Roman _coloni_ might prove, can long remain unanswered. Men may become economically so dependent on their lords, on wealthy masters and creditors, that the legal question whether they can quit their service has no interest. Who wishes to leave his all and go forth a beggar into the world? On the whole we can find no evidence whatever that the men of the Confessor's day who were retrospectively called _villani_ were tied to the soil. Certainly in Norman times the tradition was held that according to the old law the _villanus_ might acquire five hides of land and so 'thrive to thegn-right[166].'
[The villein and seignorial justice.]
Our next question should be whether he was subject to seignorial justice. This is part of a much wider question that we must face hereafter, for seignorial justice should be treated as a whole. We must here anticipate a conclusion, the proof of which will come by and by, namely, that the _villanus_ sometimes was and sometimes was not the justiciable of a court in which his lord or his lord's steward presided. All depended on the answer to the question whether his lord had 'sake and soke.' His lord might have justiciary rights over all his tenants, or merely over his _villani_, or he might have no justiciary rights, for as yet 'sake and soke' were in the king's gift, and the mere fact that a lord had 'men' or tenants did not give him a jurisdiction over them.
[The villein and national justice.]
With this question is connected another, namely, whether the _villani_ had a _locus standi_ in the national courts. We have seen six _villani_ together with the priest (undoubtedly a free man) and the reeve of each vill summoned to swear in the great inquest[167]. One of the most famous scenes recorded by our book is that in which William of Chernet claimed a Hampshire manor on behalf of Hugh de Port and produced his witnesses from among the best and eldest men of the county; but Picot, the sheriff of Cambridgeshire, who was in possession, replied with the testimony of villeins and mean folk and reeves, who were willing to support his case by oath or by ordeal[168]. Again, in Norfolk, Roger the sheriff claimed a hundred acres and five _villani_ and a mill as belonging to the royal manor of Branfort, and five _villani_ of the said manor testified in his favour and offered to make whatever proof anyone might adjudge to them, but the half-hundred of Ipswich testified that the land belonged to a certain church of St. Peter that Wihtgar held, and he offered to deraign this[169]. Certainly this does not look as if _villani_ were excluded from the national moots. But a rule which valued the oath of a single thegn as highly as the oath of six ceorls would make the ceorl but a poor witness and tend to keep him out of court[170]. The men who are active in the communal courts, who make the judgments there, are usually men of thegnly rank; but to go to court as a doomsman is one thing, to go as a litigant is another[171].
[The villein and his land.]
We may now approach the question whether, and if so in what sense, the land that the _villanus_ occupies is his land. Throughout Domesday Book a distinction is sedulously maintained between the land of the villeins (_terra villanorum_) and the land that the lord has _in dominio_. Let us notice this phrase. Only the demesne land does the lord hold _in dominio_, in ownership. The delicate shade of difference that Bracton would see between _dominicum_ and _dominium_ is not as yet marked. In later times it became strictly correct to say that the lord held in demesne (_in dominico suo_) not only the lands which he occupied by himself or his servants, but also the lands held of him by villein tenure[172]. This usage appears very plainly in the Dialogue on the Exchequer. 'You shall know,' says the writer, 'that we give the name demesnes (_dominica_) to those lands that a man cultivates at his own cost or by his own labour, and also to those which are possessed in his name by his _ascriptitii_; for by the law of this kingdom not only can these _ascriptitii_ be removed by their lords from the lands that they now possess and transferred to other places, but they may be sold and dispersed at will; so that rightly are both they and the lands which they cultivate for the behalf of their lords accounted to be _dominia_[173].' Far other is the normal, if not invariable, usage of Domesday Book. The _terrae villanorum_, the _silvae villanorum_, the _piscariae villanorum_, the _molini villanorum_--for the villeins have woods and fisheries and mills--these the lord does not hold _in dominio_[174]. Then again the oxen of the villeins are carefully distinguished from the oxen of the demesne, while often enough they are not distinguished from the oxen of those who in every sense are free tenants[175]. Now as regards both the land and the oxen we seem put to the dilemma that either they belong to the lord or else they belong to the villeins. We cannot avoid this dilemma, as we can in later days, by saying that according to the common law the ownership of these things is with the lord, while according to the custom of the manor it is with the villeins, for we believe that a hall-moot, a manorial court, is still a somewhat exceptional institution.
On the whole we can hardly doubt that both in their land and in their oxen the villeins have had rights protected by law. Let us glance once more at the scheme of _bót_ and _wer_ that has been in force. A villein is slain; the _manbót_ payable to his lord is marked off from the much heavier _wergild_ that is payable to his kindred. If all that a villein could have belonged to his lord such a distinction would be idle.
[The villein's land and the geld.]
Still we take it that for one most important purpose the villein's land is the lord's land:--the lord must answer for the geld that is due from it. Not that the burden falls ultimately on the lord. On the contrary, it is not unlikely that he makes his villeins pay the geld that is due from his demesne land; it is one of their services that they must 'defend their lord's inland' against the geld. But over against the state the lord represents as well the land of his villeins as his own demesne land. From the great levy of 1084 the demesne lands of the barons had been exempted[176], but no doubt they had been responsible for the tax assessed on the lands held by their _villani_. We much doubt whether the collectors of the geld went round to the cottages of the villeins and demanded here six pence and there four pence; they presented themselves at the lord's hall and asked for a large sum. Nay, we believe that very often a perfectly free tenant paid his geld to his lord, or through his lord[177]. Hence arrangements by which some hides were made to acquit other hides; such, for example, was the arrangement at Tewkesbury; there were fifty hides which had to acquit the whole ninety-five hides from all geld and royal service[178]. And then it might be that the lord, enjoying a special privilege, was entitled to take the geld from his tenants and yet paid no geld to the king; thus did the canons of St. Petroc in Cornwall[179] and the monks of St. Edmund in Suffolk[180]. But as regards lands occupied by villeins, the king, so it seems to us, looks for his geld to the lord and he does not look behind the lord. This is no detail of a fiscal system. A potent force has thus been set in motion. He who pays for land,--it is but fair that he should be considered the owner of that land. We have a hint of this principle in a law of Cnut:--'He who has "defended" land with the witness of the shire, is to enjoy it without question during his life and on his death may give or sell it to whom he pleases[181].' We have another hint of this principle in a story told by Heming, the monk of Worcester:--in Cnut's time but four days of grace were given to the landowner for the payment of the geld; when these had elapsed, anyone who paid the geld might have the land[182]. It is a principle which, if it is applied to the case of lord and villein, will attribute the ownership of the land to the lord and not to the villein.
[The villein's services.]
And then we would ask: What services do the villeins render? A deep silence answers us, and as will hereafter be shown, there are many reasons why we should not import the information given us by the monastic cartularies, even such early cartularies as the Black Book of Peterborough, into the days of the Confessor. No doubt the villeins usually do some labour upon the lord's demesne lands. In particular they help to plough it. A manor, we can see, is generally so arranged that the ratio borne by the demesne oxen to the demesne land will be smaller than that borne by the villeins' oxen to the villeins' land. Thus, to give one example out of a hundred, in a Somersetshire manor the lord has four hides and three teams, the villeins have two hides and three teams[183]. But then the lord gets some help in his agriculture from those who are undoubtedly free tenants. The teams of the free tenants are often covered by the same phrase that covers the teams of the villeins[184]. Radknights who are _liberi homines_ plough and harrow at the lord's court[185]. The very few entries which tell us of the labour of the villeins are quite insufficient to condemn the whole class to unlimited, or even to very heavy work. On a manor in Herefordshire there are twelve bordiers who work one day in the week[186]. On the enormous manor of Leominster there are 238 _villani_ and 85 _bordarii_. The _villani_ plough and sow with their own seed 140 acres of their lord's land and they pay 11 pounds and 52 pence[187]. On the manor of Marcle, which also is in Herefordshire, there are 36 _villani_ and 10 _bordarii_ with 40 teams. These _villani_ plough and sow with their own seed 80 acres of wheat and 71 of oats[188]. At Kingston, yet another manor in the same county, 'the _villani_ who dwelt there in King Edward's day carried venison to Hereford and did no other service, so says the shire[189].' On one Worcestershire manor of Westminster Abbey 10 villeins and 10 bordiers with 6 teams plough 6 acres and sow them with their own seed; on another 8 villeins and 6 bordiers with 6 teams do the like by 4 acres[190]. This is light work. Casually we are told of burgesses living at Tamworth who have to work like the other villeins of the manor of Drayton to which they are attached[191], and we are told of men on a royal manor who do such works for the king as the reeve may command[192]; but, curiously enough, it is not of any villeins but of the Bishop of Worcester's riding men (_radmanni_) that it is written 'they do whatever is commanded them[193].'
[Money rents paid by villeins.]
With our thirteenth century cartularies before us, we might easily underrate the amount of money that was already being paid as the rent of land at the date of the Conquest. In several counties we come across small groups of _censarii_, _censores_, _gablatores_ who pay for their land in money, of _cervisarii_ and _mellitarii_ who bring beer and honey. Renders in kind, in herrings, eels, salmon are not uncommon, and sometimes they are 'appreciated,' valued in terms of money. The pannage pig or the grass swine, which the villeins give in return for mast and herbage, is often mentioned. Throughout Sussex it seems to be the custom that the lord should have 'for herbage' one pig from every villein who has seven pigs[194]. But money will be taken instead of swine, oxen or fish[195]. The _gersuma_, the _tailla_, the theoretically free gifts of the tenants, are sums of money. But often enough the _villanus_ is paying a substantial money rent. We have seen how at Leominster villeins plough and sow 140 acres for their lord and pay a rent of more than £11[196]. At Lewisham in Kent the Abbot of Gand has a manor valued at £30; of this £2 is due to the profits of the port while two mills with 'the gafol of the rustics' bring in £8. 12_s._[197] Such entries as the following are not uncommon--there is one villein rendering 30_d._[198]--there is one villein rendering 10_s._[199]--46 _cotarii_ with one hide render 30 shillings a year[200]--the villeins give 13_s._ 4_d._ by way of _consuetudo_[201]. No doubt it would be somewhat rare to find a villein discharging all his dues in money--this is suggested when we are told how on the land of St. Augustin one Wadard holds a large piece 'de terra villanorum' and yet renders no service to the abbot save 30_s._ a year[202]. At least in one instance the villeins seem to be holding the manor in farm, that is to say, they are farming the demesne land and paying a rent in money or in provender[203]. We dare not represent the stream of economic history as flowing uninterruptedly from a system of labour services to a system of rents. We must remember that in the Conqueror's reign the lord very often had numerous serfs whose whole time was given to the cultivation of his demesne. In the south-western counties he will often have two, three or more serfs for every team that he has on his demesne, and, while this is so, we can not safely say that his husbandry requires that the villeins should be labouring on his land for three or four days in every week.
[The English for _villanus_.]