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Footnotes

[52]

In the year 815, cap. i, which is agreeable to the Capitulary of Charles the Bald, in the year 844, arts. 1, 2.

[53]

They were not obliged to furnish any to the count. --Ibid., art. 5.

[54]

The counts are forbidden to deprive them of their horses, ut hostem facere, et debitos paraveredos secundum antequam consuetudinem exsolvere possint. -- "Edict of Pistes," in Baluzius, p. 186.

[55]

"Capitulary of Charlemagne," chap. 1, in the year 812. Edict of Pistes in the year 864, art. 27.

[56]

Quatuor mansos. I fancy that what they called Afansus was a particular portion of land belonging to a farm where there were bondmen; witness the capitulary of the year 853, apud Sylvacum, tit. 14, against those who drove the bondmen from their Mansus.

[57]

See below, chapter 20 of this book.

[58]

In Duchesne, tome ii, p. 287.

[59]

Ibid., p. 89.

[60]

See the Capitulary of the year 858, art. 14.

[61]

They levied also some duties on rivers, where there happened to be a bridge or a passage.