Town Life in the Fifteenth Century (Complete)

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Town Life in the Fifteenth Century (Complete) by Alice Stopford Green, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Alice Stopford Green ISBN: 9781465610553
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Alice Stopford Green
ISBN: 9781465610553
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
There is nothing in England to-day with which we can compare the life of a fully enfranchised borough of the fifteenth century. Even the revival of our local institutions and our municipal ambition has scarcely stirred any memory of the great tradition of the past, of the large liberties, the high dignities and privileges which our towns claimed in days when the borough was in fact a free self-governing community, a state within the state, boasting of rights derived from immemorial custom and of later privileges assured by law. The town of those earlier days in fact governed itself after the fashion of a little principality. Within the bounds which the mayor and citizens defined with perpetual insistence in their formal perambulation year after year it carried on its isolated self-dependent life. The inhabitants defended their own territory, built and maintained their walls and towers, armed their own soldiers, trained them for service, and held reviews of their forces at appointed times. They elected their own rulers and officials in whatever way they themselves chose to adopt, and distributed among officers and councillors just such powers of legislation and administration as seemed good in their eyes. They drew up formal constitutions for the government of the community, and as time brought new problems and responsibilities, made and re-made and revised again their ordinances with restless and fertile ingenuity, till they had made of their constitution a various medley of fundamental doctrines and general precepts and particular rules, somewhat after the fashion of an American state of modern times. No alien officer of any kind, save only the judges of the High Court, might cross the limits of their liberties; the sheriff of the shire, the bailiff of the hundred, the king’s tax-gatherer or sergeant-at-arms, were alike shut out. The townsfolk themselves assessed their taxes, levied them in their own way, and paid them through their own officers.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
There is nothing in England to-day with which we can compare the life of a fully enfranchised borough of the fifteenth century. Even the revival of our local institutions and our municipal ambition has scarcely stirred any memory of the great tradition of the past, of the large liberties, the high dignities and privileges which our towns claimed in days when the borough was in fact a free self-governing community, a state within the state, boasting of rights derived from immemorial custom and of later privileges assured by law. The town of those earlier days in fact governed itself after the fashion of a little principality. Within the bounds which the mayor and citizens defined with perpetual insistence in their formal perambulation year after year it carried on its isolated self-dependent life. The inhabitants defended their own territory, built and maintained their walls and towers, armed their own soldiers, trained them for service, and held reviews of their forces at appointed times. They elected their own rulers and officials in whatever way they themselves chose to adopt, and distributed among officers and councillors just such powers of legislation and administration as seemed good in their eyes. They drew up formal constitutions for the government of the community, and as time brought new problems and responsibilities, made and re-made and revised again their ordinances with restless and fertile ingenuity, till they had made of their constitution a various medley of fundamental doctrines and general precepts and particular rules, somewhat after the fashion of an American state of modern times. No alien officer of any kind, save only the judges of the High Court, might cross the limits of their liberties; the sheriff of the shire, the bailiff of the hundred, the king’s tax-gatherer or sergeant-at-arms, were alike shut out. The townsfolk themselves assessed their taxes, levied them in their own way, and paid them through their own officers.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Halima And The Scorpions by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Bridge Axioms and Laws by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Frank Merriwell's Alarm: Doing His Best by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Springhaven: A Tale of the Great War by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book The Story of Our Submarines by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Get Next! by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Queen Victoria As I Knew Her by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Little Tora, the Swedish Schoolmistress and Other Stories by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book The Man Who Played to Lose by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Historic Shrines of America: Being The Story of One Hundred and Twenty Historic Buildings and The Pioneers Who Made Them Notable by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book The Rise and Fall of Anarchy in America From its Incipient Stage to the First Bomb Thrown in Chicago by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Chronicles (1 of 6): The Historie of England (6 of 8) the Sixt Booke of the Historie of England by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Fort Amity by Alice Stopford Green
Cover of the book Jim Harrison, Boxeur by Alice Stopford Green
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy