not+feudal

  • 1Feudal society — is a sometimes debated term used to describe the social order in the Western Europe, Central Europe, and sometimes Japan and other regions in the Middle Ages, characterized by the legal subjection of a large part of the peasantry to a hereditary… …

    Wikipedia

  • 2Not George Washington —   1st …

    Wikipedia

  • 3Feudal (game) — Infobox Game subject name = Feudal image link = image caption = Feudal box cover image players = 2 6 setup time = 1 5 minutes playing time = 20 minutes random chance = Concealed setup skills = Strategy Feudal is a chess like board wargame… …

    Wikipedia

  • 4Feudal Japan hierarchy — There were two major classes in the time of Feudal Japan: the Nobles and the peasants. The Nobles included people such as the Emperor and the Samurai. They made up 10% of the population. The Peasants, 90% of the population, included common people …

    Wikipedia

  • 5Feudal Lordship — A feudal lordship is either a Lord of Regality (a gift of The Crown) or a feudal baron, and occasionally both. They are ancient titles of nobility in Scotland. A Lord of Regality ranks above a feudal baron, and below a Lord of Parliament which is …

    Wikipedia

  • 6Feudal levy — The summoning of an army by the king. The *fyrd came together as a result of the king s summons. After the Conquest, servitium debitum answered the king s need for knights; the great lords with their retinues also responded, though they may well… …

    Dictionary of Medieval Terms and Phrases

  • 7feudal — feu|dal [ fjudl ] adjective relating to feudalism: the feudal system a. similar to feudalism because ordinary people do not have many rights …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 8feudal — UK [ˈfjuːd(ə)l] / US [ˈfjud(ə)l] adjective a) relating to feudalism the feudal system b) similar to feudalism because ordinary people do not have many rights …

    English dictionary

  • 9feudal — Pertaining to that kind of land tenure under which the land was held of a superior, as opposed to allodial, where it was not. Pertaining to the feudal system of the medieval period …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 10feudal tenure — That system of land tenure which had as its foundation the principle or fiction that the king is the universal lord and original proprietor of all the lands in his kingdom and that no man possesses or can possess any part of such lands which has… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary