The English Village Community / Examined in its Relations to the Manorial and Tribal Systems and to the Common or Open Field System of Husbandry; An Essay in Economic History (Reprinted from the Fourth Edition)
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About This Book
An economic-history study of rural England that analyzes the open-field system, describing narrow arable strips separated by turf balks, their grouping into furlongs or shots, and associated headlands and rights of way. It examines customary landholding, communal obligations, tithing, and the functioning of manorial and tribal institutions that regulated cultivation and tenure, using maps and local examples to trace how these practices developed, persisted, and left physical and legal traces in modern rural landscapes.
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