In the
feudal system, 'demesne' (also spelled desmesne; pronounced [dih-MANE] or [dih-MEEN]; via Old French ''demeine'' from Latin ''dominium''
[1] was all the land, not necessarily all contiguous to the castle, that was retained by a lord for his own use - as distinguished from land "alienated" or granted to others (''alieni'') as tenants either in
freehold or
leasehold.
Initially the demesne lands were worked on the lord's behalf by
villeins or by
serfs, in fulfillment of their feudal obligations. As a
money economy returned, region by region, in the later Middle Ages, the serfs' ''
corvée'' came to be commuted to money payments. When demesne lands come to be cultivated by paid laborers, we have arrived at
Early modern Europe. Eventually many of the demesne lands were leased out either on a perpetual, and therefore hereditary, or a temporary, and therefore renewable, basis so that many peasants functioned virtually as free proprietors after having paid their fixed rents. In times of
inflation or debasement of coinage, the rent might come to represent a pittance, reducing the feudal aristocrat to poverty among a prosperous gentry.
This system of
manorial land tenure was conceived in Western Europe, initially in France but exported to areas affected by
Norman expansion during the
Middle Ages, for example the Kingdoms of
Sicily,
Scotland,
Jerusalem, and
England.
Demesne land
In English
Common Law the term ''ancient demesne'', sometimes shortened to demesne, referred to those lands that were held by the crown at the time of the
Domesday Book. The term demesne also referred to the demesne of the crown, or 'royal demesne', which consisted of those lands reserved for the crown at the time of the original distribution of landed property. The royal demesne could be increased, for example, as a result of forfeiture. Demesne lands were managed by stewards of the crown and were not given out in
fief. During the reign of
George III, Parliament appropriated the royal demesne, in exchange for a fixed annual sum, called the
Civil List.
As common-law practice protected the rights of the villein, tenancy at the pleasure of the lord gradually developed into the added security of
copyhold leases.
Since the demesne surrounded the principal seat of the lord, it came to be loosely used of any proprietary territory: "''the works of Shakespeare are this scholar's demesne.''" The ''"s"'' is not pronounced; if the word had survived into modern French it would have become ''"demêne."'' However, the word ''mesnil'', which occurred both in Middle French and Middle English and has the same derivation, survives in France where many small places have this in their name such as
Le Mesnil,
Mesnil-Mauger,
Mesnil-Raoul,
Bosc-Mesnil, etc. The less affected broad modern equivalent of "demesne" is "domain".
Footnotes
See also
★
Mains (Scotland)