The Farmer's Law, 7-8th Centuries
After the attacks by Persians, Arabs and Slavs, there is
some indication that the great landed estates of late antiquity gave way, in the
Byzantine heartland of Anatolia, to a system of free peasant farms. These
peasants paid taxes to the state and enabled a functional local army to operate
throughout the empire. Although this might be overemphasized, the contrast with
western Europe is outstanding. In the west the "state" as a function of society
either disappeared or shrank to insignificant proportions and distinctions
between public and private power were minimal. In Byzantium, by contrast, the
state maintained its distinctive identity. The lives of Byzantine peasants are
not entirely invisible to us: we can see them in hagiographical material, such
as the Life of St. Theodore of Sykeon, as well as in legal sources. Here are
extracts from the 7th-8th century Farmer's Law, which regulated the
behavior of free peasants.
The Farmer who is working his own field must be just and
must not encroach on his neighbor's furrows. If a farmer persists in encroaching
and dock's a neighboring lot - if he did this in plowing time, he loses his
plowing; if it was in sowing time that he made his encroachment, he loses his
seed and his husbandry and his crop - the farmer who encroached.
If a farmer without his landowner's cognizance enters and
plows or sows let him not receive either wages for his plowing or the crop for
his sowing - no, not even the seed that has been cast.
If two farmers agree with the other before two or three
witnesses to exchange lands and they agree for all time, let their determination
and their exchange remain firm and secure and unassailable.
If two farmers, A and B, agree to exchange their lands for
the season of sowing and A draws back, then, if the seed was cast, they may not
draw back; but if the seed was not cast they may draw back; but if A did not
plow while B did, A also shall plow.
If two farmers exchange lands either for a season or for
all time and one plot is found deficient as compared with the other, and this
was not their agreement, let him who has more give an equivalent in land to him
who has less; but if this was their agreement, let them give nothing in
addition.
If a farmer who has a claim on a field enters against the
sower's will and reaps, then, if he had a just claim, let him take nothing from
it; but if his claim was baseless, let him provide twice over the crops that
were reaped.
If two territories contend about a boundary or a field, let
the judges consider it and they shall decide in favor of the territory which had
thee longer possession; but if there is an ancient landmark, let the ancient
determination remain unassailed.
If a division wronged people in their lots or lands, let
them have license to undo the division.
If a farmer on shares reaps without the grantor's consent
and robs him of his sheaves, as a thief shall he be deprived of all his crop.
A share holder's portion is nine bundles, the grantor's
one: he who divides outside these limits is accursed.
If a man takes land from an Indigent farmer and agrees to
plow only and to divide, let their agreement prevail; if they also agreed on
sowing, let it prevail according to their agreement.
If a farmer takes from some indigent farmer, his vineyard
to work on a half share and does not prune it as is filling and dig it and fence
it and dig it over, let him receive nothing from the produce....
If a farmer takes over the farming of a vineyard or piece
of land and agrees with the owner and takes earnest-money and starts and then
draws back and gives it up, let him give the just value of the field and let the
owner have the field.
If a farmer enters and works another farmer's woodland, for
three years he shall take its profits for himself and then give the land back
again to its owner.
If a farmer who is too poor to work his own vineyard takes
flight and goes abroad, let those from whom claims are made by the public
treasury gather in the grapes, and the farmer if he returns shall not be
entitled to mulct them In the wine.
If a farmer who runs away from his own field pays every
year the extraordinary taxes of the public treasury, let those who gather in the
grapes and occupy the field be mulcted twofold.
Concerning Herdsmen. If a neat herd in the morning
receives an ox front a farmer and mixes it with the herd, and it happens that
the ox is destroyed by a wolf, let him explain the accident to its master and he
himself shall go harmless.
If a herdsman who has received an ox loses it and on the
same clay on which the ox was lost does not give notice to the master of the ox
that "I kept sight of the ox up to this or that point, but what is become of it
I do not know," let him not go harmless, but, if he gave notice, let him go
harmless.
If a herdsman receives an ox from a farmer in the morning
and goes off and the ox gets separated front the mass of oxen and goes off and
goes into cultivated plots or vineyards and does harm, let him not lose his
wages, but let him make good the harm done.
If a herdsman in the morning receives all ox from a farmer
arid the ox disappears, let him swear in the Lord's name that he has not himself
played foul and at he had no part in the loss of the ox and let him go harmless.
If a guardian of fruit is found stealing in the place which
he guards, let him lose his wages and be well beaten.
If a hired shepherd is found milking his flock without the
owner's knowledge and selling them, let him be beaten and lose his wages.
If a man is found stealing another's straw, he shall
restore it twice over.
If a man takes an ox or an ass or any beast without its
owner's knowledge and goes off on business, let him give its hire twice over;
and if it dies on the road, he shall give two for one, whatever it may be....
If a man steals all ox or an ass and is convicted, he shall
be whipped and give it twice over and all its gain.
If while a mail is trying to steal one ox from a herd, the
herd is put to flight and eaten by wild beasts, let him be blinded.
If a man finds an ox in a wood and kills it, and takes the
carcass let his hand be cut off.
If a slave kills one ox or ass or ram in a wood, his master
shall make it good
If a slave, while trying to steal by night, drives the
sheep away from the flock in chasing them out of the fold, and they are lost or
eaten by wild beasts, let him be hanged as a murderer.
If a man is found in a granary stealing corn, let him
receive in the first place a hundred lashes, and make good the damage to the
owner; if he is convicted a second time, let him pay twofold damages for his
theft; if a third time, let him be blinded.
If a man at night steals wine front a jar or from a vat or
out of a butt, let him suffer the same penalty as is written in the chapter
above.
If people have a deficient measure of corn and wine arid do
not follow the ancient tradition of their fathers but out of covetousness have
unjust measures contrary to those that are appointed, let them be beaten for
their impiety.
If a man delivers cattle to a slave for pasture without his
master's knowledge and the slave sells them or otherwise damages them, let the
slave and his master go harmless. Where a man destroys another's beast on any
pretense, when he is recognized, let him indemnify its owner.
If a man harvests his lot. before his neighbor's lots have
been harvested and he brings in his beasts and does harm to his neighbors, let
him receive thirty lashes and make good the damage to the party injured.
If a man gathers in the fruits of his vineyard arid while
the fruits of some lots are still ungathered brings in his beasts, let him
receive thirty lashes and make good the damage to the party injured.
If a man lawlessly, when he has a suit with another, cuts
his vines or any other tree, let his hand be cut off.
If a man who is dwelling in a district ascertains that a
piece of common ground is suitable for the erection of a mill and appropriates
it and then, after the completion of the building, if the commonalty of the
district complain of the owner of the building as having appropriated common
ground, let them give him all the expenditure that's due to him for the
completion of the building and let them share it in common with its builder.
If after the land of the district has been divided, a man
finds in his own lot a place which is suitable for the erection of a mill and
sets about it, the farmers of the other lots are not entitled to say anything
about the mill.
If the water which comes to the mill leaves dry cultivated
plots or vineyards, let him make the damage good; if not, let the mill be idle.
If the owners of the cultivated plots are not willing that
the water go through their plots, let them be entitled to prevent it.
No comments:
Post a Comment