Dictionary Definition
demesne
Noun
1 extensive landed property (especially in the
country) retained by the owner for his own use; "the family owned a
large estate on Long Island" [syn: estate, land, landed
estate, acres]
2 territory over which rule or control is
exercised; "his domain extended into Europe"; "he made it the law
of the land" [syn: domain, land]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
demeine, demain, rule, demeine, demaine, demeigne, domaine, power, domaine domain, from dominium property, right of ownership, from dominus master, proprietor, owner. See dame, and confer demain, domain, danger, dungeon.Pronunciation
- 1: /ˌdɪˈmeɪn/
- 2: /ˌdɪˈmiːn/
Noun
Quotations
- 1816, John Keats,
On First Looking into Chapman's Homer, lines 5-6
- Oft of one wide expanse had I been told
- That deep-brow'd Homer ruled as his demesne;
- Oft of one wide expanse had I been told
References
Extensive Definition
In the feudal system, demesne (also
spelled desmesne; pronounced /dəmeɪn/
[dih-MANE] or /dəmiːn/ [dih-MEEN]; via
Old French demeine from Latin dominium) was all the land, not
necessarily all contiguous to the manor house,
that was retained by a lord for his own use - as distinguished from
land "alienated" or granted to others (alieni) as freehold
tenants.
Initially the demesne lands were worked on the
lord's behalf by villeins or by serfs, in fulfillment of their
feudal obligations. As a money
economy returned, region by region, in the later Middle Ages,
the serfs' corvée came to
be commuted to money payments. With the advent of the Early
modern period, demesne lands came to be cultivated by paid
laborers. Eventually many of the demesne lands were leased out
either on a perpetual (i.e. hereditary) or a temporary, renewable
basis so that many peasants functioned virtually as free
proprietors after having paid their fixed rents. In times of
inflation or
debasement of coinage, the rent might come to represent a pittance,
reducing the feudal aristocrat to poverty among a prosperous
gentry. Demesne lands that were leased out for a term of years
remained demesne lands, though no longer in the occupation of the
lord of the manor (see, for example, Musgrave v Inclosure
Commissioners (1874) LR 9 QB 162, a case in which the three judges
of the Queen's Bench Divisional Court and everyone else concerned
assumed without argument that farms which were let by the lord of
the manor were part of the lord’s demesne land).
This system of manorial land tenure was
conceived in Western Europe, initially in France but exported to
areas affected by Norman expansion
during the Middle Ages,
for example the Kingdoms of Sicily,
Scotland,
Jerusalem,
and England.
Demesne land
In English Common Law the
term ancient demesne, sometimes shortened to demesne, referred to
those lands that were held by the crown at the time of the Domesday
Book. The term demesne also referred to the demesne of the
crown, or royal demesne, which consisted of those lands reserved
for the crown at the time of the original distribution of landed
property. The royal demesne could be increased, for example, as a
result of forfeiture. Demesne lands were managed by stewards of the
crown and were not given out in fief. During the reign of
George III, Parliament appropriated the royal demesne, in
exchange for a fixed annual sum, called the Civil
List.
As common-law practice protected the rights of
the villein, tenancy at the pleasure of the lord gradually
developed into the added security of copyhold leases.
Since the demesne surrounded the principal seat
of the lord, it came to be loosely used of any proprietary
territory: "the works of Shakespeare are this scholar's demesne."
The "s" is not pronounced; if the word had survived into modern
French it would have become "demêne." However, the word mesnil,
which occurred both in Middle French and Middle English and has the
same derivation, survives in France where many small places have
this in their name such as Le Mesnil,
Mesnil-Mauger,
Mesnil-Raoul,
Bosc-Mesnil,
etc. The less affected broad modern equivalent of "demesne" is
"domain".
demesne in Swedish: Domän
(historiskt-ekonomiskt)
demesne in Turkish: Demesne
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
acres,
ambit, arable land,
area, arena, bailiwick, barnyard, barton, beat, border, borderland, cattle ranch,
champaign, chattels
real, chicken farm, circle, circuit, collective farm, cotton
plantation, croft, dairy
farm, demesne farm, department, discipline, domain, dominion, dry farm, dude ranch,
factory farm, fallow,
farm, farmery, farmhold, farmland, farmplace, farmstead, farmyard, field, fruit farm, fur farm, grain
farm, grange, grassland, grounds, hacienda, hemisphere, homecroft, homefarm, homestead, honor, judicial circuit, jurisdiction, kibbutz, kolkhoz, land, landed property, lands, location, lot, lots, mains, manor, manor farm, march, messuage, orb, orbit, orchard, pale, parcel, pasture, pen, plantation, plat, plot, poultry farm, praedium, precinct, property, province, quadrat, ranch, rancheria, rancho, real estate, real
property, realm, realty, round, sheep farm, sphere, station, steading, stock farm, subdiscipline, tenements, terrain, territory, toft, truck farm, walk