Despite the recent expansion in studies of medieval women, uncertainty surrounds their married lives due to the social and legal constraints that existed at that time. Here it is argued that feet of fines provide a lens, albeit partial, on the activities of married women who were effectively managing the disposal and inheritance of their landed estates. At the same time the importance to the purchaser of ensuring the lawful acquisition of the property is also observed. As a result, greater insights into married women and their property in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries are obtained
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Women in the medieval English law courts have too often been regarded as passive objects of legal re...
This thesis is a detailed analysis of women's property rights in early Irish law, and their extended...
This chapter offers an analysis of the land that was held by spinsters in England from the mid-sixte...
There has been a tendency in scholarship on premodern women and the law to see married women as hidd...
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998. Published version reproduced with the permission of the...
This article provides time series data on the medieval market in freehold land, including the changi...
The research targets women in court – those who were frequently recorded in legal documents managing...
Research into twelfth-century English women has largely focused on royal and comital society and thr...
Although ownership of real property was crucial to the economic opportunities of medieval urban wome...
This thesis provides the first detailed examination of married women’s legal status and property rig...
This chapter explores the relations between women, land, property and the law. The first part of th...
This thesis is not available on this repository until the author agrees to make it public. If you ar...
This thesis explores aristocratic female inheritance and property holding in the thirteenth century,...
The aim of this work is to complete property tenure of Czech princesses and queens until the beginni...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Women in the medieval English law courts have too often been regarded as passive objects of legal re...
This thesis is a detailed analysis of women's property rights in early Irish law, and their extended...
This chapter offers an analysis of the land that was held by spinsters in England from the mid-sixte...
There has been a tendency in scholarship on premodern women and the law to see married women as hidd...
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998. Published version reproduced with the permission of the...
This article provides time series data on the medieval market in freehold land, including the changi...
The research targets women in court – those who were frequently recorded in legal documents managing...
Research into twelfth-century English women has largely focused on royal and comital society and thr...
Although ownership of real property was crucial to the economic opportunities of medieval urban wome...
This thesis provides the first detailed examination of married women’s legal status and property rig...
This chapter explores the relations between women, land, property and the law. The first part of th...
This thesis is not available on this repository until the author agrees to make it public. If you ar...
This thesis explores aristocratic female inheritance and property holding in the thirteenth century,...
The aim of this work is to complete property tenure of Czech princesses and queens until the beginni...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Women in the medieval English law courts have too often been regarded as passive objects of legal re...
This thesis is a detailed analysis of women's property rights in early Irish law, and their extended...