Information om | Engelska ordet CAPITE
CAPITE
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Exempel på hur man kan använda CAPITE i en mening
- In Medieval Europe, the term "regiment" denoted any large body of front-line soldiers, recruited or conscripted in one geographical area, by a leader who was often also the feudal lord in capite of the soldiers.
- Linnaeus' primary reference was his earlier Fauna Svecica, whose cumbersome pre-binomial name Parus capite nigro: vertice albo, dorso cinereo, pectore albo ("black-headed tit with white nape, ash-grey back, white breast") became the much simpler yet no less unequivocal Parus ater.
- Catesby used the English name "The larger red-crested Wood-pecker" and the Latin Picus niger maximus capite rubro.
- In 1319, the King granted the Earl of Lancaster the towns of Conisboro and Sandal, along with the manors of Wakefield, Thorne, Hatfield, Sowerby, Braithwell, Fishlake, Dewsbury, and Halifax with their appurtenances, which were held of the King in capite, and which John de Warenne had previously held under Royal Grant.
- Other views of the original aerarii are that they were: artisans and freedmen (Niebuhr); inhabitants of towns united with Rome by a hospitium publicum, who had become domiciled on Roman territory (Lange); only a class of degraded citizens, including neither the cives sine suffragio nor the artisans (according to Johan Nicolai Madvig); identical with the capite censi of the Servian constitution (Belot, Greenidge).
- Later, though, the proletarii were distinguished from the capite censi as having "appreciable property" to the value of 11,000 asses or less.
- In old English law, a capite (from Latin caput, head) was a tenure in subinfeudation, by which either person or land was held immediately of the king, or of his crown, either by knight-service or socage.
- Dacre carried off his bride-to-be, a ward of Edward II, from Warwick Castle where she was in the care of Thomas de Beauchamp; the official record states:
Ranulph de Dacre pardoned for stealing away in the night, out of the King's custodie, from his Castell of Warwick, of Margaret, daughter and heir of Thomas Multon of Gillsland, who held of the King in capite and was within age, whereof the said Ranulph.
- In 107 BC, Gaius Marius enrolled the landless capite censi in his army, a one-off occurrence, as in the following Cimbric War, Marius returned to conscripting from the adsidui.
- Norh'mpton: Feoda militum tenencium de domino rege in capite et tenencium de ipsis tenentibus de domino rege in capite et tenencium de wardis quae sunt in manu domini regis in comitatu Norht' propter scutagium eos quorum vera(?) tulerunt de habendum scutagium suis et propter feoda militum existencium infra balliam abbis burgi.
- In 1556-7, the hereditaments, castles, churches, messuages, lordships, chapels, fisheries of Granard in the Annaly which later became the County Longford are granted to Baron Delvin who is Sir Richard Nugent in capite by knight's service.
- Totum corpus maculatur multiformis lepra nequitiae, et a capite usque ad pedes occupavit illud languor malitiae, Effrenis enim superbia ubique volitat, et omnia, si dici fas est, etiam stellas coeli conculcat.
- In the middle republic, the tumultus emergency levy was the only time that citizens without sufficient property to qualify for military service (the capite censi or proletarii) were enrolled into the military; in 281 BC, responding to the invasion of Pyrrhus, the levied proletarii were also first armed at state expense.
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