Paréage
The paréage or pariage is a contract of feudal right of association between two or several lords, ensuring to them an equality of Droit and undivided possession on the same ground. The word paréage is derived from “par” and Latin pariagium . This association is before very economic or commercial and is done between two equal (" pairs"), parents or foreigners, with an aim of managing and of exploiting goods. From a political point of view, the pariage can associate two lords, very often a layman and an ecclesiastic, in order to control a seigniory or a province.
Examples
- First paréage signed in 1278 between the bishop of Urgell (currently in Catalonia), and the count of Foix (currently in France), delimiting their respective rights and capacities on the territory of Andorra
- Second paréage of Andorra signed in 1288 between the same protagonists (Father of Urg, bishop of Urgell, and Roger Bernat III count de Foix)
- Paréage signed in 1307 between Guillaume VI Durand, bishop of Mende, and the king Philippe Beautiful the;
- Paréage intervened in 1308 between the king and the bishop of Pamiers which gave rise to the village of Villeneuve-of-Paréage the in Ariège
- Paréage concluded in 1390 between the king from France Charles VI and the lord of Mirepoix
See too
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