[691] D. B. i. 69. But the meaning of reveland is obscure. The most important passages about it are in D. B. i. 57 b (Eseldeborne), 181 (Getune). D. B. i. 83: ‘Hanc tenet Aiulf de Rege quamdiu erit vicecomes.’

[692] D. B. i. 100.

[693] D. B. i. 86, 86 b, 92, 97; so in Devonshire, 117 b: ‘Hoc manerium debet per consuetudinem in Tavetone manerium Regis aut 1 bovem aut 30 denarios.’

[694] D. B. i. 38 b.

[695] D. B. i. 101: ‘Ipsi manerio pertinet tercius denarius de hundredis Nortmoltone et Badentone et Brantone et tercium animal pasturae morarum.’

[696] Above, p. 155.

[697] Chron. ann. 1085.

[698] A sketch of the principal argument of this section was published in Eng. Hist. Rev., xi. 13, as a review of Keutgen’s Untersuchungen über den Ursprung der deutschen Stadtverfassung. The origin of the French and German towns has become the theme of a large and very interesting literature. A good introduction to this will be found in an article by M. Pirenne, L’origine des constitutions urbaines, Revue historique, liii. 52, lvii. 293, and an article by Mr Ashley, Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. x. July, 1896. The continuous survival of Roman municipal institutions even in Gaul seems to be denied by almost all modern students.

[699] Hist. Eng. Law, i. 625.

[700] Stubbs, Const. Hist. iii. 448.