Inward ownership
Inward ownership ( mhd. Own = possession) is a specific form of property in connection with serfdom and feudalism .
In the domestic German law of the Middle Ages, the property of the ministerials was referred to as inward ownership , which was only valid within ( inward ) a local delimitation and could be resold to other subjects of the same landlord. One example is the Stephanische Eigen of the Passau Monastery .
Inward ownership can also be viewed as a limited real right, although the restrictions are only understood here spatially and not objectively, as is the case with the classical Roman servitutes .
Web links
- Jan Ulrich Keupp : Service and Merit. The Ministerials Friedrich Barbarossas and Heinrich VI. (= Monographs on the history of the Middle Ages. Vol. 48). Hiersemann, Stuttgart 2002, ISBN 3-7772-0229-0 (also: Bielefeld, University, dissertation, 2002). Review by Wilhelm Störmer sehepunkte.de, Review journal for the historical sciences, 4 (2004), No. 10
- Eva Schlotheuber : Historical Basic Concepts University of Münster, 2008
Individual evidence
- ↑ duden.de
- ↑ Summary of dogmatic examples on the history of private law
- ^ DORIS - Digital Upper Austrian Room Information System, glossary
- ↑ Martin Hofbauer: Education and structure of the rule and ownership of the Hochstift Passau in the 13th and 14th centuries (geographically, economically and socially), presented at the Passauer Urbaren Univ.-Diss., Hamburg 2005