Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Land and Wealth
Originally posted by assault
Sorry, Galadorn, I have no idea what you are talking about.
You seem to be confusing ownership of land with land being a commodity. These are two entirely different things.
Obviously people owned land. Duh!
And yes, its ownership was transferred. Sometimes money, rather than services, was involved. But not generally.
Land ownership was _generally_ tied up in a web of social interactions and committments. The modern pattern of "hand over the bucks and it's yours and I have no futher claim to it" was a rarity.
Unless you're dealing with diplomatic agreements, of course. Whole countries could be bought or sold in this manner.
True, the acquistion of land was an elaborate set of affairs. Bit I think this begs the point.
It doesn't matter what scale of land exhange and trade we are taling about, nor what the law said, we are talking about the norm in society. And the norm was, to treat land as a commodity, no matter how involved the process was.
Bottom line is land was a commodity, and tended to be used by the owner, however the owner wanted. This is not an all or nothing affair - owning land was part commodity, and part social obligation.
Take care.
Last edited by Galadorn; Feb 23rd, '04 at 01:33 PM.
Medieval History:
Feudalism was the economic system in Medieval Times. According to this legal theory, all property belonged to the nobility.
But, there were black market economies, and "shadow" economies that existed in parallel with feudalism. Freemen where the strongest force in these economies.
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