Information AboutApanage |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT APPANAGE | |
| feudal duties | |
| medieval france | |
| ancien régime | |
| monarchy | |
| nobility | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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The system of appanage has greatly influenced the territorial construction of France and explains the Flag of many Provinces Of France . THE ORIGINAL APPANAGE: IN FRANCE History of the French appanage An appanage was a concession of a fief by the sovereign to his youngest sons, while the eldest son became king on the death of his father. Appanages were considered as part of the inheritance transmitted to the puisne (french ''puisné'', 'later born') sons; the word ''Juveigneur'' (from the Latin comparartive ''Iuvenior'', 'younger {Link without Title} '; in Brittany's customary law only the youngest brother) was specifically used for the royal princes holding an ''apanage''. These lands could not be sold, neither hypothetically nor as a dowry, and returned to the royal domain on the extinction of the princely line. Daughters were excluded from the system: a false interpretation of Salic Law generally prohibited daughters from inheriting land and also from acceding to the throne. The appanage system was used to gild the pill of the Primogeniture to avoid civil war among throne contenders or the division of the kingdom among princes of royal blood. It was used in this way in 843 , by the Treaty Of Verdun , when Louis The Pious divided his empire between his sons Lothair and Louis The German . This division was a source of antagonism between France and Germany , less so in France, since the treaty was imposed on Lothair by Louis. Hugh Capet was elected King of France on the death of Louis V in 987 . The royal line of France from 987 to 1328 broke entirely away from the Merovingian and Carolingian custom of dividing the kingdom among all the sons. The eldest son alone became King and received the royal domain except for the appanages. Most of the Capetian s endeavored to add to the royal domain by the incorporation of additional fiefs, large or small, and thus gradually obtained the direct lordship over almost all of France. King confiscated the Bourbonnais , the last appanage of any importance, in 1531 after the treason of the Constable Of Bourbon . The first article of the Edict Of Moulins (1566) declared that the royal domain (defined in the second article as all the land controlled by the crown for more than ten years) could not be alienated, except in two cases: by interlocking, in the case of financial emergency, with a perpetual option to repurchase the land; and to form an appanage, which must return to the crown in its original state on the extinction of the male line. The apanagist (incumbent) therefore could not separate himself from his appanage in any way.
List of French appanages (probably incomplete – no Napoleonic grants?)
WESTERN FEUDAL APPANAGES OUTSIDE FRANCE
In the only Crusader State of equal rank in protocol, the Kingdom Of Jerusalem , the Count Of Jaffa And Ascalon was often granted as an appanage. EQUIVALENTS OUTSIDE EUROPE The practice is certainly not unique to western feudalism
SOURCES AND REFERENCES
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