Online Encyclopedia

LAMMAS (0. Eng. hlammaesse, hlafmaess...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 130 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LAMMAS (0. Eng. hlammaesse, hlafmaesse, from hlaf,
See also:
loaf, and maesse, mass, "loaf-mass")
  , originally in England the festival of the wheat harvest celebrated on the 1st of August, O.S . It was one of the old quarter-days, being
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equivalent to midsummer, the others being Martinmas, equivalent to Michaelmas, Candlemas (Christmas) and Whitsuntide (
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Easter) . Some rents are still payable in England at Lammastide, and in Scotland it is generally observed, but on the 12th of August, since the alteration of the
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calendar in George II.'s reign . Its name was in allusion to the custom that each worshipper should
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present in the church a
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loaf made of the new wheat as an offering of the first-fruits . A relic of the old " open-field "
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system of agriculture survives in the so-called " Lammas Lands." These were lands enclosed and held in severalty during the growing of corn and grass and thrown open to pasturage during the rest of the
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year for those who had
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common rights . These commoners might be the several owners, the inhabitants of a parish, freemen of a borough, tenants of a
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manor, &c . The opening of the fields by throwing down the fences took place on Lammas Day (12th of August) for corn-lands and on Old Midsummer Day (6th of
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July) for grass . They remained open until the following Lady Day . Thus, in law, " Lammas lands " belong to the several owners in
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fee-
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simple subject for
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half the year to the rights of pasturage of other
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people (Baylis v . Tyssen-Amherst, 1877, 6 Ch . D., 50) . See further F .

Seebohm, The

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English
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Village Community; C . I . Elton,
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Commons and Waste Lands; P . Vinogradoff, Villainage in England .

End of Article: LAMMAS (0. Eng. hlammaesse, hlafmaesse, from hlaf, loaf, and maesse, mass, "loaf-mass")
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