Online Encyclopedia

REEVE (O. E. gerefa)

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 976 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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REEVE (O. E. gerefa)  , an
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English official who in early times was entrusted with the administration of a division of the country . He was the chief magistrate of a
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town or
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district,
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REEF-REEVE 975 and is the ancestor of the
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sheriff, the
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shire-reeve . In addition to the sheriff there were several kinds of reeves, and we are told in the
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body of
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laws known as the laws of
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Edward the
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Confessor that it is " multiplex nomen; greve enim dicitur de scira, de wapentagiis, de hundredis, de burgis, de villis." Thus we hear of
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port-reeves,
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burg-reeves, and
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tun-reeves, while the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle mentions high reeves . It was the tun-reeve or reve of the township who with four other men represented the township in the courts of the
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hundred and the shire . In
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free townships he was probably chosen by the inhabitants; in dependent townships by the lord . A little later there were
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manor reeves, these being elected by the villains; according to
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Fleta, their duties were to attend to the cultivation of the
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land, and to see that each villain performed his proper share of service . The reve of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales was doubtless a steward or
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bailiff, something
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equivalent to the grieve in Scotland to-day . In early English the word reeve was sometimes used as a
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translation for the prefect or governor of
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Roman and Jewish times . Some authorities have thought that there is some connexion between the Anglo-Saxon gerefa and the German Graf, but Max Muller (Lectures on the Science of Language, 1885) is inclined to doubt this . J . M . Kemble (
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Saxons in England, 1876), who goes at length into the
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history of the reeve, connects the word with rofan or refan, to call aloud, this making him the
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original of the bannitor, or proclaimer of the court .

At the

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present time the word reeve is sometimes used to describe a foreman or overseer in a
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coal mine . It is also used in
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Canada for the president of a
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village or town council .

End of Article: REEVE (O. E. gerefa)
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CLARA REEVE (1729–1807)

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