- for the town, see Heriot, Scotland
Heriot came in many varieties. G. G. Coulton reports a curious case of heriot in modern times:
- "In the later 19th Century Lord Rothschild bought an estate of which part was copyhold under New College, Oxford. The Warden and Fellows, therefore, were in that respect his lords, and he had to redeem the freehold in all haste lest, at his death, these overlords should claim as a heriot his best beast which, in the case of so distinguished a racing man as Rothschild, might have been worth twenty thousand pounds or more."
Heriot is one of the many curious laws from feudal times that started because of a logical need between two parties, but because of the custom of noble rights, where whatever rights a lord had before continue on by way of custom, even if the original reason for it no longer existed. This law and many others, such as the noble right not to pay taxes, have a long contentious history in Europe.
For the manorial law relating to heriots, see copyhold.
Word origin: Old English. Heriot, by derivation the arms and equipment (geatwa) of a soldier or army (here); the Old English word is thus here-geatwa.
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Last updated on Wednesday May 21, 2008 at 12:37:18 PDT (GMT -0700)
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