lordship - meaning and definition. What is lordship
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What (who) is lordship - definition

TERRITORY OR A FEUDAL LORD IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE
Lordships

lordship         
¦ noun
1. supreme power or rule.
2. archaic the authority or state of being a lord.
historical a piece of land belonging to a lord.
3. (His/Your etc. Lordship) a form of address to a judge, bishop, or titled man.
Lordship         
(Lordships)
You use the expressions Your Lordship, His Lordship, or Their Lordships when you are addressing or referring to a judge, bishop, or male member of the nobility.
My name is Richard Savage, your Lordship...
His Lordship expressed the hope that the Law Commission might look at the subject.
N-VOC; N-PROPER: det-poss N [politeness]
lordship         
n.
1.
Authority, dominion, rule, sway, command, control, government, direction, domination, empire, sovereignty.
2.
Manor, seigniory, domain.

Wikipedia

Lordship

A lordship is a territory held by a lord. It was a landed estate that served as the lowest administrative and judicial unit in rural areas. It originated as a unit under the feudal system during the Middle Ages. In a lordship, the functions of economic and legal management are assigned to a lord, who, at the same time, is not endowed with indispensable rights and duties of the sovereign. Lordship in its essence is clearly different from the fief and, along with the allod, is one of the ways to exercise the right.

Nulle terre sans seigneur ("No land without a lord") was a feudal legal maxim; where no other lord can be discovered, the Crown is lord as lord paramount. The principal incidents of a seignory were a feudal oath of homage and fealty; a "quit" or "chief" rent; a "relief" of one year's quit rent, and the right of escheat. In return for these privileges the lord was liable to forfeit his rights if he neglected to protect and defend the tenant or did anything injurious to the feudal relation.

Every seignory now existing must have been created before the statute Quia Emptores (1290), which forbade the future creation of estates in fee-simple by subinfeudation. The only seignories of any importance at present are the lordships of manors. They are regarded as incorporeal hereditaments, and are either appendant or in gross. A seignory appendant passes with the grant of the manor; a seignory in gross—that is, a seignory which has been severed from the demesne lands of the manor to which it was originally appendant—must be specially conveyed by deed of grant.

Freehold land may be enfranchised by a conveyance of the seignory to the freehold tenant, but it does not extinguish the tenant's right of common (Baring v. Abingdon, 1892, 2 Ch. 374). By s. 3 (ii.) of the Settled Land Act 1882, the tenant for life of a manor is empowered to sell the seignory of any freehold land within the manor, and by s. 21 (v.) the purchase of the seignory of any part of settled land being freehold land, is an authorized application of capital money arising under the act.

Examples of use of lordship
1. The government welcomed people‘s concerns, explained his Lordship.
2. Your lordship is alone responsible for the consequences.
3. Let any institution award "lordship" to whomever it chooses.
4. "May I inform your lordship that there is no requirement for your lordship to attend the House today?" Article continues "Why the devil not, Featherstone?" "Because her ladyship has been delivered of a child, your lordship." "Good God, Featherstone, why was I not told?
5. As so often happens, it was the cover–up that did for his Lordship.