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vill3-第31章
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for the benefit of the lord。(14*) The akermanni or carucarii are the leaders of the unwieldy ploughs of the time;(15*) and they are helped by a set of drivers and boys who have to attend to the oxen or horses。(16*) Shepherds for every kind of cattle are also mentioned;(17*) as well as keepers and warders of the woods and fences。(18*) In the Suffolk manors of Bury St。 Edmund's we find the curious term kurard to designate a person superintending the hay harvest。(19*) By the side of a numerous staff busy with the economic management of the estate; several petty officers are found to be concerned with the political machinery of the manor。 The duty to collect the suitors of the hundred and of the county court is sometimes fulfilled by a special 'turn…bedellus。'(20*) A 'vagiator' (vadiator?) serves writs and distrains goods for rents。(21*) The carrying of letters and orders is very often treated as a service imposed on particular tenements。 It must be noted that sometimes all these duties are intimately connected with those of the husbandry system and imposed on all the officers of the demesne who own horses。(22*) A third category is formed by the house…servants; who divide among themselves the divers duties of keeping accounts; waiting on the lord personally; taking charge of the wardrobe; of the kitchen; etc。 The military system and the lack of safety called forth a numerous retinue of armed followers and guards。 All…in…all a mighty staff of ministeriales; as they were called in Germany; came into being。 In England they are termed sergeants and servants; servientes。 In Glastonbury Abbey there were sixty…six servants besides the workmen and foremen employed on the farm。(23*) Such a number was rendered necessary by the grand hospitality of the monastery; which received and entertained daily throngs of pilgrims。 In Bury St。 Edmund's the whole staff was divided into five departments; and in each department the employments were arranged according to a strict order of precedence。(24*) The material for the formation of this vast and important class was supplied by the subject population of the estates。 The Gloucester manorial instruction enjoins the stewards to collect on certain days the entire grown…up population and to select the necessary servants for the different callings。 It is also enacted that the men should not be left without definite work; that in case of necessity they should be moved from one post to the other;(25*) etc。 The requirements of the manorial administration and of the lord's household opened an important outlet for the village people。 Part of the growing population thus found employment outside the narrow channel of rural arrangements。 The elder or younger brothers; as it might be; took service at the lord's court。 The husbandry treatises of the thirteenth century go further and mention hired labourers as an element commonly found on the estate。 We find; for instance; an elaborate reckoning of the work performed by gangs of such labourers hired for the harvest。(26*) In documents styled 'Minister's Accounts' we may also find proof; that from the thirteenth century downwards the requirements of the lord's estate are sometimes met by hiring outsiders to perform some necessary kind of work。 These phenomena have to be considered as exceptional; however; and in fact as a new departure。 The officers and servants were remunerated in various ways。 Sometimes they were allowed to share in the profits connected with their charges。 The swine…herd of Glastonbury Abbey; for instance; received one sucking…pig a year; the interior parts of the best pig; and the tails of all the others which were slaughtered in the abbey。(27*) The chief scullion (scutellarius) had a right to all remnants of viands; but not of game; to the feathers and the bowels of geese。(28*) Again; all the household and workmen constantly employed had certain quantities of food; drink; and clothing assigned to them。(29*) Of one of the Glastonbury clerks we hear that he received one portion (liberacio) as a monk and a second as a servant; and that by reason of this last he was bound to provide the monastery with a goldsmith。(30*) Those of the foremen and labourers of estates who did not belong to the immediate following of the lord and did not live in his central court received a gratification of another kind。 They were liberated from the labour and payments which they would have otherwise rendered from their tenements。(31*) The performance of the specific duties of administration took the place of the ordinary rural work or rent; and in this way the service of the lord was feudalised on the same principle as the king's service it was indissolubly connected with land…holding。 In manorial extents we come constantly across such exempted tenements conceded without any rural obligations or with the reservation of a very small rent。 It is important to notice; that such exemptions; though temporary and casual at first; were ultimately consolidated by custom and even confirmed by charters。 A whole species of free tenements; and a numerous one; goes back to such privileges and exemptions granted to servants。(32*) And so this class of people; in the formation of which unfree elements are so clearly apparent; became one of the sources in the development of free society。 Such importance and success are to be explained; of course; by the influence of this class in the administration and economic management of the estates belonging to the secular and ecclesiastical aristocracy。 It is very difficult at the present time to realise the responsibility and strength of this element。 We live in a time of free contract; credit; highly mobilised currency; easy means of communication; and powerful political organisation。 There is no necessity for creating a standing class of society for the purpose of mediating between lord and subject; between the military order and the industrial order。 Every feature of the medieval system which tended to disconnect adjoining localities; to cut up the country into a series of isolated units; contributed at the same time to raise a class which acted as a kind of nervous system; connecting the different parts with a common centre and establishing rational intercourse and hierarchical relations。 The libertini had to fu1fil kindred functions in the ancient world; but their importance was hardly so great as that of medieval sergeants or ministeriales。 We may get some notion of what that position was by looking at the personal influence and endowments of the chief servants in a great household of the thirteenth century。 The first cook and the gatekeeper of a celebrated abbey were real magnates who held their offices by hereditary succession; and were enfeoffed with considerable estates。(33*) In Glastonbury five cooks shared in the kitchen…fee。(34*) The head of the cellar; the gatekeeper; and the chief shepherd enter into agreements in regard to extensive plots of land。(35*) They appear as entirely free to dispose of such property; and at every step we find in the cartularies of Glastonbury Abbey proofs of the existence of a numerous and powerful 'sergeant' class。 John of Norwood; Abbot of Bury St。 Edmund's; had to resort to a regula
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