Lexicographical Neighbors of Subinfeuded
Literary usage of Subinfeuded
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Gentleman's Magazine (1854)
"Boyton, which belonged to the ancestor of the Earls of Salisbury at the Domesday
survey, was subinfeuded at a very early period to the ..."
2. Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge by Charles Knight (1835)
"These persons are frequently called the barons of that earldom ; but the number
of persons thus subinfeuded was usually greater, and the tenancies ..."
3. An Outline of the Law of Tenure and Tenancy: Containing the First Principles by James Ram (1825)
"A tenant of 10 knights'-fees, the greatest part, if not all, subinfeuded by
knight-service, might command the service of 10 horsemen from his tenant, ..."
4. Norfolk Archaeology by Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological Society (1852)
"... we see, into the possession of Roger Bigod, who had subinfeuded Ranulf Fitz
... had passed to Ranulph Peverel, who had subinfeuded a person called ..."
5. Memoirs Illustrative of the History and Antiquities of the County and City (1848)
"... of one carucate of land subinfeuded to William, his vassal, and Odo the
cross-bow-man, a manor of half a carucate, and Age- mund, a Saxon thane ..."
6. Domesday Studies: Being the Papers Read at the Meetings of the Domesday by Patrick Edward Dove (1888)
"... military and household retainers, and they again subinfeuded. Many of these
were relatives of the tenant in capite, and con - stituted a military class. ..."