tallage

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Tallage - Wikipedia
Tallage or talliage (from the French tailler, ie a part cut out of the whole) may have signified at first any tax, but became in England and France a land use ... en.wikipedia.org
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Tallage | Feudalism, Serfs, Lords - Britannica
Tallage, in medieval Europe, a tax imposed by the lord of an estate upon his unfree tenants. In origin, both the amount and the frequency of levies was at the ... www.britannica.com
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TALLAGE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
noun tal· lage ˈta-lij : an impost or due levied by a lord upon his tenants. Word History Etymology Middle English taillage, tallage, from Anglo-French, from ... www.merriam-webster.com
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tallage
▪ I. tallage, n.1 (ˈtælɪdʒ) Forms: α. 3–8 taillage, 4–5 taylage, 4–7 tailage, 5 tayllage (7–8 tailliage). β. 4–5 taliage, 4–6 talage, 4–9 talliage, 5 tal(l)yage, 4– tallage. γ. 6 talenge. [a. OF. taillage (1170 in Godef.), f. tailler, tail v.2: see -age. Hence med.L. talliagium, tallagium (taillagiu... Oxford English Dictionary
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TALLAGE - JewishEncyclopedia.com
A tax arbitrarily imposed upon a community, which was made collectively responsible for the entire sum. This tax was frequently levied on the English Jews. www.jewishencyclopedia.com
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tallage - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
An impost. (UK, law, obsolete or historical) A certain rate or tax paid by barons, knights, and inferior tenants toward the public expenses ... en.wiktionary.org
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Robert Sadington
February 1332, he was placed on the commission of peace for Leicestershire and Rutland, and on 25 June 1332 was a commissioner for the assessment of the tallage wikipedia.org
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tallage, v. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
The earliest known use of the verb tallage is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for tallage is from around 1460, ... www.oed.com
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TALLAGE definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
a compulsory tax levied by the Norman and early Angevin kings of England upon the demesne lands of the crown and upon all royal towns. www.collinsdictionary.com
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TALLAGE Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
noun · Medieval History., a tax paid by peasants to the lord of their manor. · a compulsory tax levied by the Norman and early Angevin kings of England upon the ... www.dictionary.com
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Tallage - Oxford Reference
A tax in medieval Europe that was generally imposed by an estate owner upon his unfree tenantry and its amount and frequency varied. www.oxfordreference.com
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tallagie
† ˈtallagie Obs. [ad. med.L. tallagi-um.] = tallage n.11444 Rolls of Parlt. V. 113/2 Custumes, Subsides, Tallagies. 1488–9 Act 4 Hen. VII, c. 5 Gathryng of dismes taxes tallagies or eny other subsidies. Oxford English Dictionary
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Roger de Bankwell
Roger de Bankwell (c. 1340), judge, perhaps of the same family as John de Bankwell, was one of three commissioners entrusted with the assessment of the tallage wikipedia.org
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talliage
talliage etc., obs. ff. tallage n.1, etc. Oxford English Dictionary
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taillage
taillable, taillage obs. ff. talliable, tallage. Oxford English Dictionary
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