Burgage
{{Short description|Medieval land term; a town rental property}}
File:Tron Kirk surroundings.JPG's Royal Mile follow the lines of the old burgage plots]]
Burgage is a medieval land term used in Great Britain and Ireland, well established by the 13th century.
A burgage was a town ("borough" or "burgh") rental property (to use modern terms), owned by a king or lord. The property ("burgage tenement") usually, and distinctly, consisted of a house on a long and narrow plot of land ({{Langx|sco|toft}}), with a narrow street frontage. Rental payment ("tenure") was usually in the form of money, but each "burgage tenure" arrangement was unique and could include services.
As populations grew "burgage plots" could be split into smaller additional units. (Amalgamation was not so common until the second half of the 19th century.T. R. Slater, The Analysis of Burgage Patterns in Medieval Towns)
Burgage tenures were usually money-based, in contrast to rural tenures, which were usually services-based. In Saxon times the rent was called a landgable or hawgable.
File:Rothe House model.png and modern surroundings illustrating its burgage plot, with buildings in grey and garden in green]]
Burgage grants were also common in Ireland; for example, when the town of Wexford received its royal charter in 1418, English settlers were encouraged into the town and were given burgage plots at a rent of one shilling per year.{{cite web |url=http://irishwalledtownsnetwork.ie/page/wexford/wexford-info |title=Wexford Info - Irish Walled Towns Network |website=irishwalledtownsnetwork.ie |access-date=13 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208110510/http://irishwalledtownsnetwork.ie/page/wexford/wexford-info |archive-date=8 December 2015 |url-status=dead}} The term was translated into Irish as {{lang|ga|buiríos}}, and the element "Borris" survives in many Irish place names. Rothe House in Kilkenny is an exceptionally well-preserved medieval burgage.{{cite web|title=Welcome To Rothe House Kilkenny |url= http://www.rothehouse.com/|work=rothehouse.com|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160303130559/http://rothehouse.com/ | archive-date= 3 March 2016 | quote = Rothe House & Garden, a historic house in Kilkenny [...] is the only example of an early 17th century merchant’s townhouse in Ireland.}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20050404115544/http://the-orb.net/encyclop/culture/towns/glossary.html Medieval English Towns - Glossary]
- The Local Historian's Encyclopedia by John Richardson - {{ISBN|0-9503656-7-X}}
Further reading
{{EB1911 poster|Burgage}}
- {{Cite book
| publisher = Adamant Media Corporation
| isbn = 1-4021-4052-5
| last = Hemmeon
| first = Morley de Wolf
| title = Burgage Tenure in Mediaeval England
| date = 2004-07-09
}}
- T.R. Slater, The Analysis of Burgage Patterns in Medieval Towns, Area, Vol. 13, no. 3, 1981
Category:History of agriculture in the United Kingdom
Category:Feudalism in the British Isles
Category:Real estate in the United Kingdom