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cartulary

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
car·tu·lar·y also char·tu·lar·y  (kärch-lr)
n. pl. car·tu·lar·ies also char·tu·lar·ies
A collection of deeds or charters, especially a register of titles to all the property of an estate or a monastery.

[Middle English cartularie, collection of documents, from Medieval Latin cartulrium, from Latin cartula, chartula, document; see charter.]

cartulary [ˈkɑːtjʊlərɪ], chartulary [ˈtʃɑːtjʊlərɪ]
n pl -laries
(Law) Law
a.  a collection of charters or records, esp relating to the title to an estate or monastery
b.  any place where records are kept
[from Medieval Latin cartulārium, from Latin chartula a little paper, from charta paper; see card1]

chartulary, cartulary
1. a book containing charters.
2. the official in charge of such a book.
See also: Books


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These acts of arbitration in the contado differ from such acts in the cartulary of a fifteenth-century Florentine notary studied by Kuehn in which one party was usually an urban resident, generally wealthy Florentines arranging debt collection from groups of many contadini.
Von Schlumberger, Sigillographie De L' Orient Latin (Paris: Geuthner, 1943), and references to Queen Alice' Champagne campaign can be found in, Theodore Evergates, Feudal Society in the Bailliage of Troyes under the Counts of Champagne, 1152-1284 (Baltimore, 1975), Theodore Evergates, Littere Baronum : The Earliest Cartulary of the Counts of Champagne (Toronto, London, 2003).
clergesse 'a learned woman' (Seinte Katerine 1225 and Ancrene Wisse 1230), grateresse 'a female grater' (A cartulary of the Hospital of St.
 
 
 
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