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Encyclopedia > Landed estate

Landed property or landed estates is a real estate term that usually refers to a property that generates income for the owner without himself having to do the actual work at the estate. It was a hallmark of feudalism, and freed the owner for other tasks, such as government administration, military service, or religious practices. A landed property typically consisted of a manor, several tenant farms, and some privileged enterprises such as a mill.


In later times, the dominant role of landed estates as a basis of public service faded. Capitalist development of manufacturing and commerce created other means of obtaining income, but ordinarily demanding the attention of the owner; at roughly the same time, governments began imposing taxes to fund government bureaus and the military so that people of talent could perform government services for salaries without need for the proceeds of absentee ownership of farmland. Parts of the United States of America, typically New England and Pennsylvania, never had a landed aristocracy, so their armed forces and government agencies could never be organized on the basis of a landed aristocracy. Exactions through taxation to support armies and navies or government bureaus with a civil service typically proved less onerous than the exactions of absentee landlords who maximized income through the oppression of the peasantry; where the government practiced the separation of church and state, as in America and, later France after the 1789 revolution (and other countries afterwards), churches could survive only through voluntary contributions from the membership.


By 1800, a landed aristocracy became obsolete in most places, and the separation between land ownership and public service became a reality. Capitalist enterprise increasingly created more income (and hence potential tax base) than did traditional agriculture, and professional officers in military service who had no responsibility for securing their own funds but selected through military academies that weeded out gross incompetents, and civil service that earned regular salaries proved generally more competent than those who attained such appointments in the past through family connections, and at lesser cost to the State. Such traditional aristocracies that survived became targets for revolutionary and radical opposition as class privilege often survived without any assumption of social responsibility.


The last large exemplar of the principle of a landed aristocracy as a basis of rule, Russia under the Romanov dynasty, literally died in the Bolshevik Revolution due to the venality and incompetence of the landed aristocracy that had long underpinned the empire.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Transferring an Estate in Land (1594 words)
The person who held the estate in that land would then proceed to transfer possession of a clump of the dirt taken from that land to the transferee.
After the grant from the crown of land, and letters patent issued thereof, every instrument affecting the land or any part thereof shall be adjudged fraudulent and void against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee for valuable consideration without actual notice, unless the instrument is registered before registration under which the subsequent purchaser or mortgagee claims.
At time two A grants an estate in fee simple in that land to C. Like B, C also acquires possession of a document that is a deed evidencing the acquisition of the estate in land.
The K-Zone: Estate in land (321 words)
An `estate in land' is an interest in land that is endowed with certain rights and obligations, and carries a right to occupy or receive the benefit of the land.
There are also proprietary interests that fall short of being estates - mortgages, easements, franchises, etc. It is not always easy to distinguish an estate (particularly a lease) from a lesser form of interest, and courts are often called upon to make rulings in such cases (see: LeaseOrLicence).
Land belonging directly to the Crown is not, technically, a freehold estate in land: the term `freehold' denotes land historically granted by the Crown to a private citizen (see DemesneLandOfTheCrown for the techicalities).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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