The Counts of Toulouse and their Allies The feudal
system was not well developed in Occitania. The question of just how widespread
it was is still hotly debated. French scholars (presumably victims of their early
schooling) automatically assumed that French style feudalism was common throuout
Europe. Indeed it seemed so obvious that they never really bothered to confirm
it. Occitan scholars on the other hand make much of the small amount of evidence
available, pointing out that practices varied extensively from one area to another,
and that French style feudalism is evidenced only in few arguable cases - and
in areas near to the regions under French control. (A sub-text here is that if
conventional feudalism did not exist in Occitania, then French claims to the area
would be even weaker than they are in any case). Some
have suspected that feudal hommage was avoided in Occitania because it involved
swearing an oath (anathema to Cathars), but the fact seems to be that the feudal
system was never fully developed in the Midi. At least a third of all land was
in private hands outside any form of hierarchical system, and the normal relationship
seems to have been not feudal but based on convientiae. As so often the
Occitan word has no exact counterpart in French or English. In practice it amounted
to a contract or treaty, freely entered into by individuals, for the exchange
of services, guaranteeing rights and promising mutual aid in case of need. In
contrast to liege-hommage the terms of these these contracts seem to have been
individually negotiated rather than standardised and hereditary.
In France the system of primogeniture ensured that large powerful families tended
to become more powerful over time. In Occitania, all sons, or sometimes all children
shared equally in an inheritance, including lordships. Where a siegneurie in France
would be inherited whole from one generation to the next in feudal France, a lordship
in Occitania might be divided into numerous shares after a couple of generations.
A Occitan noble might well own a twelfth, or in some cases a thirtieth, part of
a castle, as did all his cousins. Click on the following
link for more about the Counts' allies
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