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GAVELKIND ,1 a See also: peculiar See also: system of tenure associated chiefly with the county of Kent, but found also in other parts of See also: England
.
In Kent all See also: land is presumed to be holden by this tenure until the contrary is proved, but some lands have been disgavelled by particular statutes
.
It is more correctly described as See also: socage tenure, subject to the See also: custom of gavelkind
.
The chief peculiarities of the custom are the following
.
(I) A See also: tenant can alienate his lands by See also: feoffment at fifteen years of age
.
(2) There is no See also: escheat on attainder for felony, or as it is expressed in the old See also: rhyme
" The See also: father to the bough, The son to the plough."
(3) Generally the tenant could always dispose of his lands by will
.
(4) In See also: case of intestacy the estate descends not to the eldest son but to all the sons (or, in the case of deceased sons, their representatives) in equal shares
.
" Every son is as See also: great a gentleman as the eldest son is." It is to this remarkable peculiarity that gavelkind no doubt owes its See also: local popularity
.
Though
' This word is generally taken to represent in O
.
Eng. gafolgecynd, from gafol, payment, tribute, and gecynd, See also: species, kind, and origin-ally to have meant tenure by payment of See also: rent or non-military services, cf. gafol-land, and thence to have been applied to the particular custom attached to such tenure in Kent
.
Gafol apparently is derived from the Teutonic See also: root seen in " to give ' ; the Med
.
See also: Lat. gabulum, gablum gives the Fr. See also: gabelle, tax
.
See also: females claiming in their own right are postponed to See also: males, yet by See also: representation they may inherit together with them
.
(5) A wife is dowable of one-See also: half, instead of one-third of the land
.
(6) A widower may be tenant by courtesy, without having had any issue, of one-half, but only so long as he remains unmarried
.
An See also: act of 18 ;1, for commuting manorial rights in respect of lands of See also: copyhold and customary tenure, contained a clause specially exempting from the operation of the act " the custom of gavelkind as the same now exists and prevails in the county of Kent." Gavelkind is one of the most interesting examples of the customary See also: law of England; it was, previous to the See also: Conquest, the general custom of the See also: realm, but was then superseded by the feudal law of See also: primogeniture
.
Its survival in this instance in one See also: part of the country is regarded as a concession extorted from the Conqueror by the See also: superior bravery of the men of Kent
.
Irish gavelkind was a species of tribal succession, by which the land, instead of being divided at the See also: death of the holder amongst his sons, was thrown again into the See also: common stock, and redivided among the surviving members of the See also: sept
.
The equal division amongst See also: children of an See also: inheritance in land is of common occurrence outside the See also: United See also: Kingdom and is discussed under Suc-CESSION
.
See INHERITANCE; TENURE
.
Also See also: Robinson, On Gavelkind; Digby, See also: History of the Law of Real See also: Property; See also: Pollock and See also: Maitland, History of See also: English Law; Challis, Real Property
.
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