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See also: custom prevailing in certain See also: ancient See also: English boroughs, and in districts attached to them (where the lands are held in See also: socage), and also in certain See also: copyhold manors (chiefly in Surrey, Middlesex, See also: Suffolk and See also: Sussex), by which in general lands descend to the youngest son, to the exclusion of all
the other See also: children, of the See also: person dying seised and intestate
.
Descent to the youngest See also: brother to the exclusion of all other collaterals, where there is no issue, is sometimes included in the general definition, but this is really a See also: special custom to be proved from the See also: court-rolls of the See also: manor and from See also: local reputation—a custom which is sometimes extended to the youngest See also: sister, See also: uncle, aunt
.
Generally, however, See also: Borough English, apart from specialties, may be said to differ from See also: gavelkind in not including collaterals
.
It is often found in connexion with the distinct custom that the widow shall take as dower the whole and not merely one-third of her See also: husband's lands
.
The origin of the custom of Borough English has been much disputed
.
Though frequently claimed to be of Saxon origin, there is no See also: direct evidence of such being the See also: case
.
The first mention of the custom in See also: England occurs in Glanvil, without, however, any explanation as to its origin
.
Littleton's explanation, which is the more usually accepted, is that custom casts the See also: inheritance upon the youngest, because after the See also: death of his parents he is least able to support himself, and more likely to be See also: left destitute of any other support
.
See also: Blackstone derived Borough English from the usages of pastoral See also: life, the elder sons migrating and the youngest remaining to look after the See also: household
.
C
.
I
.
See also: Elton claims it to be a survival of pre-See also: Aryan times
.
It was referred to by the See also: Normans as " the custom of the English towns." In the Yearbook of 2 2 See also: Edward IV. fol
.
321) it is described as the custom of Nottingham, which is made clear by the report of a trial in the first See also: year of Edward III. where it was found that in Nottingham there were two districts, the one the Burgh-Fraun4oyes, the other the Burgh-Engloyes, where descent was to the youngest son, from which circumstance the custom has derived its name
.
On the See also: European continent the custom of junior-rights is not unknown, more particularly in See also: Germany, and it has by some been ascribed to the See also: jus primae noctis (q.v.)
.
It is also said to exist amongst the See also: Mongols
.
See also GAVELKIND; INHERITANCE; See also: PRIMOGENITURE; TENURE;
Blackstone's Commentaries; See also: Coke's Institutes; See also: Comyn's See also: Digest of the See also: Law; Elton's Origin of English See also: History; See also: Pollock and See also: Maitland, History of English Law
.
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