Fueros concejiles y Régimen señorial en el Reino de Leóninstrumento foral, conflictos y proceso de territorialización de una renta feudal, siglos XV-XIX

  1. Rubio Pérez, Laureano M.
Journal:
Chronica nova: Revista de historia moderna de la Universidad de Granada

ISSN: 0210-9611

Year of publication: 2005

Issue Title: Hacienda y Fiscalidad en el Reino de Granada

Issue: 31

Pages: 427-470

Type: Article

More publications in: Chronica nova: Revista de historia moderna de la Universidad de Granada

Abstract

The development and implementation of the feudal regime in the territory of the kingdom of Leon during the Middle Age was conditioned by several factors, based on the process of repopulation and the charters granted by the kings, which shaped and adapted this process to the existing established structures. In that context, the new power of feudal lords had to adapt to a territory which was completely delimited and distributed and to rural communities that were fully identified with the council (concejo) system and enjoyed full legal capacity for their own administration and management of their economic resources. However, feudal aristocracy tried to modify the situation and impose the full weight of their jurisdictional power, specially increasing their rule on land and other production means. In the context of the struggle between village councils (concejos) and jurisdictional lords, is where we find the "fueros concejiles leoneses "( charters of council from Leon) that is to say, the feudal rent that several councils had to pay jointly to a lord as an acknowledgement of his rule as lord, as well as of his alleged rule on land and territory. This rent, that taxed men as vassals, was exercised on a territory or land that did not belong to the lord, therefore, it was considered a censo de frutos (payment in kind) and later as a "foro enfitéutico" (tenancy rights) by which a given community had to pay the lord one fourth or one fifth of the annual cereal harvest of their land. However, the contradiction and nature of this feudal burden was constantly contested in court by the councils, even though in most cases judges found for the lords.