estate system
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Assorted References
- influence on cities
- In city: The medieval city, from fortress to emporium
…communities were restructured into functional estates, each of which owned formal obligations, immunities, and jurisdictions. What remained of the city was comprehended in this manorial order, and the distinction between town and country was largely obscured when secular and ecclesiastical lords ruled over the surrounding counties—often as the vassals of…
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- In city: The medieval city, from fortress to emporium
political development of
- Europe
- In history of Europe: Sovereigns and estates
The orders, as represented in estates or diets, were, first, the clergy; second, the nobility (represented with the lords spiritual in the English House of Lords); and, third, commoners. There were variations: upper and lower nobles were sometimes divided; certain towns represented the Third Estate, as in the Castilian Cortes;…
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- In history of Europe: Sovereigns and estates
- Germany
- In Germany: The empire after Westphalia
…Mecklenburg were exceptions), while territorial estates dwindled in political importance. In each of the empire’s constituent units, estates served mainly to uphold established hierarchies and traditions, as did the empire as a whole. It was an inherently conservative system.
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- In Germany: The empire after Westphalia
- Low Countries
- In history of the Low Countries: Consolidation of territorial states (1384–1567)
…system of representation by three estates (clergy, nobility, and the burghers) did not develop spontaneously. The power of the cities proved so overwhelming that they did not have to share control with the clergy and the nobility. It was the duke of Burgundy who introduced assemblies of three estates from…
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- In history of the Low Countries: Consolidation of territorial states (1384–1567)