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Labouring Colon

Labouring Colon.png Walter of Hamuntesham attacked by a MobThumbnailsFacsimile of Leonardo da Vinci's drawings on artificial wingsWalter of Hamuntesham attacked by a MobThumbnailsFacsimile of Leonardo da Vinci's drawings on artificial wingsWalter of Hamuntesham attacked by a MobThumbnailsFacsimile of Leonardo da Vinci's drawings on artificial wingsWalter of Hamuntesham attacked by a MobThumbnailsFacsimile of Leonardo da Vinci's drawings on artificial wings
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Labouring Colons (Twelfth Century), after a Miniature in a Manuscript of the Ste. Chapelle, of the National Library of Paris.

At the onset, the slave only possessed his life, and this was but imperfectly guaranteed to him by the laws of charity; laws which, however, year by year became of greater power. He afterwards became colon, or labourer, working for himself under certain conditions and tenures, paying fines, or services, which, it is true, were often very extortionate.

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manners, Custom and Dress During the Middle Ages and During the Renaissance Period, by Paul Lacroix
Dimensions
554*518
Keywords
Peasant
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