第120章
Let us begin by a survey of the different kinds of labour duties performed by the dependent holdings which. clustered round the manorial centre. Foremost stands ploughing and the operations connected with it. The cultivation of the demesne soil of a manor depended largely on the help of the peasantry. By the side of the ploughs and plough-teams owned by the lord himself, the plough-teams of his villains are made to till his land, and manorial extents commonly mention that the demesne portion has to be cultivated by the help of village customs, 'cum consuetudinibus villae.'(1*) The duties of every householder in this respect are reckoned up in different ways. Sometimes every dependent plough has its number of acres assigned to it, and the joint owners of its team are left to settle between themselves the proportions in which they will have to co-operate for the performance of the duty.(2*) In most cases the 'extent' fixes the amount due from each individual holder. For instance, every virgater is to plough one acre in every week. This can only mean that one acre of the lord's land is reckoned on every single virgate in one week, without any reference to the fact that only one part of the team is owned by the peasant. If, for example, there were four virgaters to share in the ownership of the plough, the expression under our notice would mean that every team has to plough four acres in the week.(3*) But the ploughs may be small, or the virgaters exceptionally wealthy, and their compound plough team may have to cultivate only three acres or even less. The lord in this case reckons with labour-weeks and acres, not with teams and days-work. A third possibility would be to base the reckoning on the number of days which a team or a holder has to give to the lord.(4*) A fourth, to lay on the imposition in one lump by requiring a certain number of acres to be tilled, or a certain number of days of ploughing.(5*) It must be added, that the peasants have often to supplement their ploughing work by harrowing, according to one of these various systems of apportionment.(6*)The duties here described present only a variation of the common 'week-work' of the peasant, its application to a certain kind of labour. They could on occasion be replaced by some other work,(7*) or the lord might lose them if the time assigned for them was quite unsuitable for work.(8*) There is another form of ploughing called gafol-earth, which has no reference to any particular time-limits. A patch of the lord's land is assigned to the homage for cultivation, and every tenant gets his share in the work according to the size of his holding. Gafol-earth is not only ploughed but mostly sown by the peasantry.(9*)A third species of ploughing-duty is the so-called averearth.
or grass-earth. This obligation arises when the peasants want more pasture than they are entitled to use by their customary rights of common. The lord may grant the permission to use the pasture reserved for him, and exacts ploughings in return according to the number of heads of cattle sent to the pasturage.(10*) Sometimes the same imposition is levied when more cattle are sent to the commons than a holding has a right to drive on them.(11*) It is not impossible that in some cases the very use of rights of common Was made dependent on the performance of such duties.(12*) A kindred exaction was imposed for the use of the meadows.(13*) Local variations have, of course, to be taken largely into account in all such matters: the distinction between gafol-earth and grass-earth, for instance, though drawn very sharply in most cases, gets somewhat confused in others.
Manorial records mention a fourth variety of ploughing work under the name of ben-earth, precariae carucarum. This is extra work in opposition to the common ploughings described before.(14*) It is assumed that the subject population is ready to help the lord for the tillage of his land, even beyond the customary duties imposed on it. It sends its ploughs three or four times a year 'out of love,' and 'for the asking.' It may be conjectured how agreeable this duty must have been in reality, and indeed by the side of its common denominations, as boon-work and asked-work, we find much rougher terms in the speech of some districts -- it is deemed unlawenearth and godlesebene.(15*) It must be said, however, that the lord generally provided food on these occasions, and even went so far as to pay for such extra work.
Other expressions occur in certain localities, which are sometimes difficult of explanation. Lentenearth,(16*) in the manors of Ely Minster, means evidently an extra ploughing in Lent. The same Ely records exhibit a ploughing called Filstnerthe or Filsingerthe,(17*) which may be identical with the Lentenearth just mentioned: a fastnyngseed (18*) occurs at any rate which seem s connected with the ploughing under discussion. The same extra work in Lent is called Tywe (19*) in the Custumal of Bleadon, Somersetshire. When the ploughing-work is paid for it may receive the name of penyearth.(20*) The Gloucester survey speaks of the extra cultivation of an acre called Radacre, and the Ely surveys of an extra rood 'de Rytnesse.'(21*) I do not venture to suggest an explanation for these last terms; and Ineed not say that it would be easy to collect a much greater number of such terms in local use from the manorial records. It is sufficient for my purpose to mark the chief distinctions.