Lexicographical Neighbors of Subinfeud
Literary usage of Subinfeud
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Outline of the Law of Tenure and Tenancy: Containing the First Principles by James Ram (1825)
"A., tenant in fee-simple, might subinfeud to B., in fee-simple. ... A., tenant
to him and his heirs general, had the power to subinfeud to B. and B.'s heirs ..."
2. The Gentleman's Magazine (1824)
"... although they would not allow their vassals, to subinfeud, yet when they sold
their own lands they would not suffer the Crown to appropriate the tenure, ..."
3. Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge by Charles Knight (1835)
"... that they were enabled to exhibit a miniature representation of the state and
court of their chief: they affected to subinfeud ; to have their tenants ..."
4. Political Dictionary: Forming a Work of Universal Reference, Both (1845)
"... that they were enabled to exhibit a miniature representation of the state and
court of their chief: they affected to subinfeud; to have their tenants ..."
5. Political Dictionary: Forming a Work of Universal Reference, Both (1845)
"... that they were enabled to exhibit a miniature representation of the state and
court of their chief : they affected to subinfeud ; to have their tenants ..."
6. A Treatise on the Law of Landlord and Tenant by Charles Harcourt Chambers, William David Evans (1823)
"... the lord by escheat, it is said, cannot avoid the term, which seems to l'ea
relaxation of the feudal tenure. In the same waya subinfeud- ..."