Rustic land

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In the Middle Ages , rustic land was understood to mean farming land, which was cultivated by semi-free farmers. The farmers were only tenants and not owners of the rustic land. In addition to the lease in kind and money, they also had to pay for the robot ( Fron ).

See also

literature

  • Max Weber: Outline of the universal social and economic history. Notes and postscripts 1919/20. In: Wolfgang Schluchter in collaboration with Joachim Schröder (Ed.): Max Weber: Gesamtausgabe. Dept. 3: Lectures and lecture transcripts. Volume 6, Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2011, ISBN 978-3-16-151036-6 , p. 579. (books.google.de)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Max Weber: Outline of the universal social and economic history. Notes and postscripts 1919/20. In: Wolfgang Schluchter in collaboration with Joachim Schröder (Ed.): Max Weber: Gesamtausgabe. Dept. 3: Lectures and lecture transcripts. Volume 6, Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2011, ISBN 978-3-16-151036-6 , p. 579. (books.google.de)
  2. ^ Thomas Olechowski : Legal history. Introduction to the historical foundations of law. 3rd, revised and expanded edition. Facultas.wuv, Vienna 2010, ISBN 978-3-7089-0631-7 , p. 165. (books.google.de)