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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TAV-THE |
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THEGN, or THANE , an Anglo-Saxon word meaning an attendant, servant, retainer or official, and cognate with Gr. risvov, a child. From the first, however, it had a military significance, and its usual Latin translation was miles, although minister was often used. J. Bosworth (Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, new ed. by T. N. Toiler) describes a thegn as "one engaged in a king's or a queen's service, whether in the household or in the country," and adds, " the word in this case seems gradually to acquire a technical meaning, and to become a term denoting a class, containing, however, several degrees." The precursor of the thegn was the gesith, the companion of the king or great lord, the member of his comitatus, and the word thegn began to be used to describe a military gesith. It is only used once in the laws before the time of Aethelstan (c. 895940), but more frequently in the charters. H. M. Chadwick (Studies on Anglo-Saxon Institutions, 1905) says that " the sense of subordination must have been inherent in the word from the earliest time," but it has no connexion with the German dienen, to serve. In the course of time it extended its meaning and was more generally used. The thegn became a member of a territorial nobility
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The increase in the number of thegns produced in time a subdivision of the order. There arose a class of king's thegns,743 corresponding to the earlier thegns, and a larger class of inferior thegns, some of them the thegns of bishops or of other thegns. A king's thegn was a person of great importance, the con-temporary idea being shown by the Latin translation of the words as comes. He had certain special
ordinary thegn.But, like all other words of the kind, the word thegn was slowly changing its meaning, and, as Stubbs says (Const. Hist., vol. i.), " the very name, like that of the gesith, has different senses in different ages and kingdoms, but the original
The twelve senior thegns of the hundred play a part, the nature of which is rather doubtful, in the development of the English system of justice. By a law of Aethelred they " seem to have acted as the judicial committee of the court for the purposes of accusation " (W. S. Holdsworth, History of English Law, vol. i. 1903), and thus they have some connexion with the grand jury of modern times. The word thane was used in Scotland until the 15th century, to describe an hereditary non-military tenant
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