Rustic good
With Rustikalgut , also called Rustic country or Rusticale, was until 1918 in the Habsburg Monarchy of the land registry called a farmer registered individually owned. The opposite term to this is Dominikalgut .
In a manorial rule, rustic land is land that was given to farmers for interest or for services. In Austria, a distinction was made between the unpurchased rustic land, whose manager was in the legal position of a Lassite , and the purchased rustic land . The rusticist, that is, the farmer cultivating the land, had acquired almost unlimited power over the land through a gradual payment. In 1848 the basic burdens for farmers in Austria were lifted, at that time there was almost only purchased rustic land in Austria. After 1848 the farmers owned the property as rustic property.
See also
literature
- Georg Grüll : Castles and palaces in Upper Austria. Volume 1: Mühlviertel. Birken-Verlag, Vienna 1962.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ignaz Zibermayr : Upper Austrian State Archives. 32nd annual report (1928). In: Yearbook of the Upper Austrian Museum Association. Volume 83, Linz 1930, ISSN 0379-0819 , pp. 45–56, here p. 47 ( digitized on ZOBODAT ).
- ↑ Eugen Haberkern, Joseph Friedrich Wallach: auxiliary dictionary for historians. Middle Ages and Modern Times. Volume 2: L - Z (= UTB . 120). 5th edition. Francke, Munich 1977, ISBN 3-7720-1273-6 , p. 543.