In the Crusader states in the Levant (1098–1291), the
casale was the basic unit of rural settlement. There were about 600 in the
Kingdom of Jerusalem, almost all of them bearing names of local origin. Most probably corresponded to previously existing divisions. In the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the
curtile, an isolated farmstead, was rare. The
casalia could have European, local Christian or Muslim inhabitants, and at least one is recorded as being inhabited by
Samaritans. The smallest had just a few houses, while the largest were practically towns, although they lacked municipal institutions. Each had a
manor house and a church, while most possessed common
mills, ovens,
cisterns,
dovecotes,
threshing floors,
crofts and
pastures. Some were associated with
vineyards,
springs,
Bedouins and even defensive towers. The inhabitants were called
villeins (
villani or
rustici) and each possessed a house and one or two
carrucae, the basic unit of arable land. In the Levant, villeins were typically free (i.e. non-
servile). In practice, native villeins were tied to the land could not leave, and all villeins were required to use the communal installations, which belonged to the lord. Each
casale had a
headman, called a
raʾīs in Arabic (
raicius in Latin), elected by the families (
ḥamāyil, singular
ḥamūla). There was sometimes more than one
raʾīs. He was an intermediary, representing the villeins to their usually absentee landlord and representing the lord to his fellow villeins. All administration was in the hands of the
raʾīs, who supervised farming, collected taxes, administered justice and mediated disputes. He may have been assisted by a
dragoman (which office was often hereditary) and sometimes a
scribe (
scribanus). ==Notes==