Jump to content

Copyholder: Difference between revisions

From British Culture
mNo edit summary
Pankratz (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
A copyhold is "a form of land tenure, so called because the holder had a copy of the record of his holding in the manorial role. [...] 10 Pound copyholders - those with land worth 10 Pound annually - were given the vote in 1832 and 5 Pound copyholders in 1867." Kenyon, ''Dictionary of British History'', Ware: Wordsworth, 1981, 92.
A copyhold is "a form of land tenure, so called because the holder had a copy of the record of his holding in the manorial role. [...] 10 Pound copyholders - those with land worth 10 Pound annually - were given the vote in 1832 and 5 Pound copyholders in 1867."  
 
 
 
Source:
 
Kenyon, J.P., ''Dictionary of British History'', Ware: Wordsworth, 1981, 92.


[[Category:Stub]]
[[Category:Stub]]

Latest revision as of 14:13, 17 October 2018

A copyhold is "a form of land tenure, so called because the holder had a copy of the record of his holding in the manorial role. [...] 10 Pound copyholders - those with land worth 10 Pound annually - were given the vote in 1832 and 5 Pound copyholders in 1867."


Source:

Kenyon, J.P., Dictionary of British History, Ware: Wordsworth, 1981, 92.