Online Encyclopedia

SOCAGE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 300 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SOCAGE  , a

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free tenement held in
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fee
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simple by services of an economic kind, such as the payment of
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rent or the performance of some agricultural
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work, was termed in
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medieval
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English law a socage tenement . In a borough a similar holding was called a burgage tenement . Medieval law books derived the
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term from socus, ploughshare, and took it to denote primarily agricultural work . This is clearly a misconception . The term is derived from O . Eng.
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soc, which means primarily suit, but can also signify jurisdiction and a franchise
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district . Historically two
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principal periods may be distinguished in the
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evolution of the tenure . At the close of the Anglo-Saxon epoch we find a
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group of freemen differentiated from the ordinary ceorls because of their greater independence and better
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personal
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standing . They are classified as sokemen in opposition to the villani in Domesday
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Book, and are chiefly to be found in the Danelaw and in East Anglia . There can hardly be a doubt that previously most of the Saxon ceorls in other parts of England enjoyed a similar condition . In consequence of the Norman
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Conquest and of the formation of the
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common law the tenure was
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developed into the lowest form of
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freehold . Legal
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protection in the public courts for the tenure and services deemed certain, appear as its characteristic feature in contrast to villainage .

Certainty and legal protectiop were so essential that even villain holdings were treated as villain socage when legal protection was obtainable for it, as was actually the

case with the peasants on Ancient demesne who could sue their lords by the little writ of right and the Monstraverunt . The Old English origins of the tenure are still apparent even at this time in the shape of some of its incidents, especially in the absence of feudal wardship and
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marriage . Minors inheriting socage come under the guardianship not of the lord but of the nearest male relative not entitled to succession . An heiress in socage was free to contract marriage without the interference of the lord . Customs of succession were also
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peculiar in many cases of socage tenure, and the feudal
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rule of
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primogeniture was not generally enforced . Commutation, the enfranchisement of copyholds, and the abolition of military tenures in the reign of Charles II. led to a gradual absorption of socage in the general class of freehold tenures . See
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Pollock and Maitland,
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History of English Law, i . 271 ff.; F . W . Maitland, Domesday Book and Beyond, 66 ff . ; P . Vinogradoff, Villainage in England, 113 if., 196 ff.; English Society in the 11th Century, 431 if .

(P .

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