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  2. Seneschal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneschal

    The word seneschal (/ ˈ s ɛ n ə ʃ əl /) can have several different meanings, all of which reflect certain types of supervising or administering in a historic context.Most commonly, a seneschal was a senior position filled by a court appointment within a royal, ducal, or noble household during the Middle Ages and early Modern period – historically a steward or majordomo of a medieval ...

  3. Seneschal of Anjou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneschal_of_Anjou

    The seneschal came also to act as a business manager, coordinating between the receivers of various landholdings and the chamber, camera or treasury, and the chancellory or chapel. When the counts of Anjou began acquiring large territorial holdings outside of their traditional patrimony, their rule became more and more absentee.

  4. Seneschal of Normandy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneschal_of_Normandy

    The seneschal managed the household, coordinating between the receivers of various landholdings and the chamber, treasury, and the chancellory or chapel. The seneschals of Normandy, like those appointed in Gascony, Poitou, and Anjou had custody of demesne fortresses, the regional treasuries, and presidency of the highest court of regional custom.

  5. Society for Creative Anachronism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_Creative...

    The Society as a whole, each kingdom, and each local group within a kingdom, all have a standard group of officers with titles loosely based on medieval equivalents. [25] Seneschal: The seneschal acts as the administrative head, or president of the group. Every local group is required to have a local seneschal who reports to the kingdom's ...

  6. Felton family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felton_family

    During the period of forfeiture, it is plausible that some lands passed to Sir Roger’s younger brother, Pagan (or Paine), who is recorded as "Pagan of Upper Felton," [8] one of his father’s holdings. In cases of forfeiture, it was customary for land to be redistributed within the family, often to secondary heirs, especially when immediate ...

  7. Dish-bearers and butlers in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dish-bearers_and_butlers...

    [2] The Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources (DMLBS) defines discifer as dish-bearer or sewer, [a] [4] and dapifer as an attendant at meals, a sewer or a steward. [5] Historians often translate discifer as seneschal, [6] but Gautier objects that the word seneschal is not recorded in England before the Norman Conquest. [2]

  8. Justiciar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justiciar

    Justiciar is the English form of the medieval Latin term justiciarius or justitiarius (meaning "judge" or "justice"). [1] [2] The Chief Justiciar was the king's chief minister, roughly equivalent to a modern Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

  9. Seneschal in Scandinavia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneschal_in_Scandinavia

    Seneschal of the Realm (Swedish: riksdrots; Danish: Rigsdrost; Norwegian: Drottsete; Finnish: Valtakunnandrotsi; other plausible translations are Lord High Steward or Lord High Justiciar) is a Danish and Swedish supreme state official, with at least a connotation to administration of judiciary, who in medieval Scandinavia was often a leader in the government.