|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
|
|
ESTATE (through O. Fr. estat, mod. flat, from Lat. status, state, condition, position, stare, to stand) , the state or condition in which a man lives, now chiefly used poetically and in such phrases as " man's estate," or " of high estate "; " state has superseded most of the uses of the word except (I) in property and (2) in constitutional law. DIsestablishment. 1. In the law of property the word is employed in several senses. In the widest sense a man's estate comprises his entire belongings; so much of it as consists of land and certain other interests associated therewith is his " real estate "; the rest is his " personal estate." The word is more particularly applied to interests in land, and in popular and general use " an estate " means the land itself. The strict technical meaning of " an estate " is an interest
Estates in land may be classified according to (I) the quantity of their interest
special
Estates not of freehold or less than freehold are subdivided into (i.) estates for years (often called estates for a term of years, the instrument creating it being termed a lease or demise
According to (2), estates are either in possession or in expectancy. Estates in expectancy are either (a) in remainder, which may be vested or contingent, or (b) in reversion (see REMAINDER, REVERSION). According to (3), estates may be either (i.) in severalty, that is, the holding of an estate by a person in his own right only, without any other person being joined or connected with him in point of interest therein; (ii.) estates in joint tenancy (see JOINT); (iii.) coparcenary (q.v.); and (iv.) tenancy in common, where two or more hold the same land, by several and distinct titles, but with unity of possession. (See also REAL. PROPERTY.) 2. In constitutional law an estate is an order or class having a definite share as such in the body politic, and participating either directly or by its representatives in the government. The system of representation by estates took its rise in western Europe during the 13th century, at a time when the feudal system was being broken up through various causes, notably the growing wealth and power of the towns. In the feudal council the clergy and the territorial nobles had alone had a voice; but the 13th century, to quote Stubbs (Const. Hist. ii.168, ed. 1875), " turns the feudal council into an assembly of estates, and draws the constitution of the third estate from the ancient local machinery which it concentrates." This is, allowing for differences of detail, true of other countries as well as England. To the two estates already existing, clergy and nobles, is added a third, that of the commons (burgesses and knights of the shire) in England, that of the roturiers in France (known as the tiers etat). This division into three estates became the norm, but it was not universal, nor inevitable.' Even in England there was a tendency to create other estates, the king for instance treating with the merchants separately for grants of money to be raised by taxing the general body of merchants in the country; and there was a similar tendency on the part of the lawyers. But for the accident of their sitting and voting together, the burgesses and knights of the shire would also have formed separate estates. In Aragon the cortes contained four estates (brazos or arms), the clergy, the great barons (ricos hombres), the minor barons (knights or infanzones), and the towns. The Swedish diet had also fourclergy, barons, burghers and peasants. The system of estates, based on the medieval conception of society as divided into definite orders, formed the basis of whatever constitutional forms survived in Europe till the French Revolution. In England, of course, it had early become obscured, the House
The phrase " the three estates of the realm " still survives, but to most men it conveys no clear meaning. The erroneous conception early aroseHallam says it was current among the popular lawyers of the 17th centurythat the " three estates" were king, lords and commons, as representing the three great divisions of legislative authority. Such a conception might be possible in Hungary, where the crown of St Stephen symbolizes not so much the royal power as the co-ordination of the powers of all the organs of the state, including the king; but in England the king represents the whole nation and in no sense a separate interest within it, which is the essence of an estate. The phrase " three estates " as applied to the English constitution at present is, in fact, misleading. It is now usually understood of the lords spiritual, the lords temporal, and the commons. The conception of the " three estates of the realm " as the great divisions of legislative authority led in England to the coining of the phrase " fourth estate," to indicate some power of corresponding magnitude in the state distinct from them. Fielding thus spoke of "the mob," and Hazlitt of Cobbett; but the phrase is now usually applied to the press, a usage originating in a speech by Burke (Carlyle, Hero-worship ,Lect. v.).In the constitutional struggles of the European continent, from the Revolution onward, the rival theories of representation by estates and of popular representation have played a great part. The crucial moment of the French Revolution was when the vote according to " order " was rejected and the estates of the clergy and nobles were merged with the tiers Nat, the states-general thus becoming the National Assembly. This was the precedent followed, generally speaking, during the 19th century in the other countries in which constitutional govern- ' In Scotland the three estates were the prelates, the tenants-inchief and the burgesses, the third estate joining the others for the first time about the beginning of the 14th century. In 1428 commissioners of shires, men elected by the minor tenants-in- chief
chief
ment was established. In most of them the medieval estates lingered on in provincial diets (Landtage),' and the famous Article XIII. of the Federal Act (Bundesakte) of Vienna decreed that " assemblies of estates " should be set up, wherever not already existing, in the German states. The efforts of Metternich and the statesmen of his school were directed, not so much to abolishing the constitutional model, as to establishing it, if need were, on traditional and conservative lines. This is what was meant by the famous reply of the emperor Francis I. to the Magyar deputation: " All the world is playing the fool and demanding fanciful constitutions." When the need for making constitutional concessions became urgent, the attempt was accordingly made to base them on the system of estates. But the central diet convoked in 1847 by Frederick William IV. to Berlin, technically a concentration of provincial estates, quickly converted itself as Metternich had prophesiedinto a national assembly; and precisely the same thing happened in the case of the first Austrian parliament in 1848. In Hungary the revolution was in some respects more conservative in character. The March Laws of 1848 preserved the general character of the House
chivalry (Rittergutsbesitzer), whether noble or non-noble, have a voice, and the Landschaft, which consists of the chief magistrates of the towns. The former is taken as representative of the peasant proprietors and copy-holders (Hintersassen), the latter of the burghers.The plural form ESTATES or STATES (Fr. eta's, Ger. Stdnde) is the name commonly given to an assembly of estates (assemblee des eats, Stdndeversammlung). When such an assembly is not merely local or provincial it is called the estates-general or states-general (ads generaux), e.g. in France the assembly of the deputies of the three estates of the realm as distinct from the provincial estates which met periodically in the so-called pays d'etats. For further details about the estates in England and elsewhere see W. Stubbs, Constitutional History, vol. ii. (1896); H. Hallam, The Middle Ages (1855); F. W. Maitland, Constitutional History of England (1908); A. Luchaire, Histoire des institutions monarchiques de la France (1883-1885); G. Waitz, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte (Kiel, 1865-1878); and A. S. Rait, The Scottish Parliament (1901). See also REPRESENTATION. End of Article: ESTATE (through O. Fr. estat, mod. flat, from Lat. status, state, condition, position, stare, to stand) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/EMS_EUD/ESTATE_through_O_Fr_estat_mod_.html"> ESTATE (through O. Fr. estat, mod. flat, from L... </a> |
|
|
(Previous) ESTAING, CHARLES HECTOR, COMTE |
(Next) ESTATE AND HOUSE AGENTS |
|
Sponsored Advertisements