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THEGN, or THANE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 743 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THEGN, or THANE  , an Anglo-Saxon word meaning an attendant, servant, retainer or official, and cognate with Gr. risvov, a child . From the first, however, it had a military significance, and its usual Latin
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translation was miles, although minister was often used . J . Bosworth (Anglo-Saxon
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Dictionary, new ed. by T . N . Toiler) describes a thegn as "one engaged in a king's or a queen's service, whether in the household or in the country," and adds, " the word in this case seems gradually to acquire a technical meaning, and to become a
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term denoting a class, containing, however, several degrees." The precursor of the thegn was the gesith, the companion of the king or
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great lord, the member of his comitatus, and the word thegn began to be used to describe a military gesith . It is only used once in the
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laws before the time of Aethelstan (c . 895–940), but more frequently in the charters . H . M . Chadwick (Studies on Anglo-Saxon Institutions, 1905) says that " the sense of subordination must have been inherent in the word from the earliest time," but it has no connexion with the German dienen, to serve . In the course of time it extended its meaning and was more generally used .

The thegn became a member of a territorial

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nobility, and the dignity of thegnhood was attainable by those who fulfilled certain conditions . Thus from a document of uncertain date, possibly about the time of
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Alfred the Great, and translated by Stubbs (Select Charters) as " Of
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people's ranks and laws," we learn:--" And if a ceorl throve, so that he had fully five hides of his own
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land, church and kitchen, bell-house and burh-
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gate-seat, and
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special duty in the king's hall, then was he thenceforth of thegn-right worthy." And again—" And if a merchant throve, so that he fared thrice over the wide sea by his own means, then was he thenceforth of thegn-right worthy." In like manner a successful thegn might hope to become an
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earl . In addition to the thegns there were others who were thegns on account of their birth, and thus thegnhood was partly inherited and partly acquired . The thegn was inferior to the aethel, the member of a kingly
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family, but he was
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superior to the ceorl, and, says Chadwick," from the time of Aethelstan the distinction between thegn and ceorl was the broad
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line of demarcation between the classes of society." His status is shown by his wergild . Over a large
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part of England this was fixed at 1200 shillings, or six times that of the ceorl . He was the twelfhynde man of the laws, sharply divided from the twyhynde man or ceorl . The increase in the number of thegns produced in time a subdivision of the order . There arose a class of king's thegns,743 corresponding to the earlier thegns, and a larger class of inferior thegns, some of them the thegns of bishops or of other thegns . A king's thegn was a person of great importance, the
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con-temporary idea being shown by the Latin translation of the words as comes . He had certain special privileges . No one save the king had the right of jurisdiction over him, while by a law of Canute we learn that he paid a larger heriot than an ordinary thegn . But, like all other words of the kind, the word thegn was slowly changing its meaning, and, as Stubbs says (Const .

Hist., vol. i.), " the very name, like that of the gesith, has different senses in different ages and kingdoms, but the

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original idea of military service runs through all the meanings of thegn, as that of
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personal association is traceable in all the applications of gesith." After the Norman
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Conquest the thegns appear to have been merged in the class of knights . The twelve senior thegns of the
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hundred
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play a part, the nature of which is rather doubtful, in the development of the
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English
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system of justice . By a law of Aethelred they " seem to have acted as the judicial committee of the court for the purposes of accusation " (W . S . Holdsworth,
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History of English Law, vol. i . 1903), and thus they have some connexion with the
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grand
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jury of
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modern times . The word thane was used in Scotland until the 15th century, to describe an hereditary non-military tenant of the
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crown . (A . W .

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