Definition of Court-baron

Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Court-baron
(n.)
An inferior court of civil jurisdiction, attached to a manor, and held by the steward; a baron's court; -- now fallen into disuse.
  

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Court-baron definition was found in categories: Social Science(1)  Language, Idioms & Slang(1)  Encyclopedia(1)  

Court-baron Definition from Social Science Dictionaries & Glossaries

The Knighthood, Chivalry & Tournaments Arms and Armour Glossary
Court Baron
court of free tenants who determined the fate of other free tenants prior to the 14th century. Also a handbook by the same name, for use by seigniorial lords , containing precedence and guides so that justice might be more evenly administered.
Within the SCA , a court baron is one who is recognized by the Crown for service, it carries with it a patent of arms and admits the honored gentle into the ranks of the nobility without carrying a peerage of knight , laurel or pelican . 


Court-baron Definition from Language, Idioms & Slang Dictionaries & Glossaries

hEnglish - advanced version
court-baron

court-baron
\court"-bar`on\ (-b?r`?n), n. (law) an inferior court of civil jurisdiction, attached to a manor, and held by the steward; a baron's court; -- now fallen into disuse.



Court-baron Definition from Encyclopedia Dictionaries & Glossaries

Wikipedia English - The Free Encyclopedia
Court baron
A Court baron is an English manorial court dating from the Middle Ages and still in existence. It was laid down by Sir Edward Coke that a manor had two courts, "the first by the common law, and is called a court baron," the freeholders ("barons") being its suitors; the other a customary court for the copyholdersStubbs adopted this explanation, but the latest learning, expounded by Professor Maitland, holds that court baron means curia baronis, "la court de seigneur," and that there is no evidence for there being more than one court. The old view that at least two freeholders were required for its composition is also now discarded. Prof. Maitland's conclusion, is that the "court baron" was not even differentiated from the "court leet" at the close of the 13th century, but that there was a distinction of jurisdictional rights, some courts having only feudal rights, while others, had regalities as well. When the court leet was differentiated, the court baron remained with feudal rights alone. These rights he was disposed to trace to a lord's jurisdiction over his men rather than to his possession of the manor, although in practice, from an early date, the court was associated with the manor. Its chief business was to administer the "custom of the manor" and to admit fresh tenants who had acquired copyholds by inheritance or purchase, and had to pay, on so doing, a "fine" to the lord of the manor. It is mainly for the latter purpose that the court is now kept. It is normally presided over by the steward of the lord of the manor, who is a lawyer, and its proceedings are recorded on "the court rolls," of which the older ones are now valuable for genealogical as well as for legal purposes.

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