The power of the feudal barons to control their landholding was considerably weakened in 1290 by the statute of
Quia Emptores. This prohibited land from being the subject of a feudal grant, and allowed its transfer without the feudal lord's permission. Feudal baronies became perhaps obsolete (but not extinct) on the abolition of feudal tenure during the
Civil War, as confirmed by the
Tenures Abolition Act 1660 passed under the
Restoration which took away knights service and other legal rights. Under the Tenures Abolition Act 1660, many baronies by tenure were converted into
baronies by writ. The rest ceased to exist as feudal baronies by tenure, becoming baronies in
free socage, that is to say under a "free" (hereditable) contract requiring payment of monetary rents. Thus baronies could no longer be held by military service. Parliamentary titles of honour had been limited since the 15th century by the
Modus Tenenda Parliamenta act, and could thenceforth only be created by
writ of summons or
letters patent. Tenure by
knight-service was abolished and discharged and the lands covered by such tenures, including once-feudal baronies, were henceforth held by
socage (i.e. in exchange for monetary rents). The English
Fitzwalter Case in 1670 ruled that barony by tenure had been discontinued for many years and any claims to a
peerage on such basis, meaning a right to sit in the
House of Lords, were not to be revived, nor any right of succession based on them. In the
Berkeley Case in 1861, an attempt was made to claim a seat in the House of Lords by right of a barony by tenure, but the
House of Lords ruled that whatever might have been the case in the past, baronies by tenure no longer existed, meaning that a barony could not be held "by tenure", and confirmed the Tenures Abolition Act 1660. Three Redesdale Committee Reports in the early 19th century reached the same conclusion. There has been at least one legal opinion which asserts the continuing legal existence of the feudal barony in England and Wales, namely that from 1996 of A. W. & C. Barsby, barristers of Grays's Inn. the
Feudal Barony of Otford is the only English feudal barony title registered at the Land Registry.
Geographical survivals Survivals of feudal baronies, in their geographical form, are the
Barony of Westmorland or Appleby, the
Barony of Kendal, the Barony of Arundel and the Barony of Abergavenny. The first two terms now describe areas of the historic county of
Westmorland, in the same way that the word "county" itself has lost its feudal meaning of a land area under the control of a
count or
earl. ==Lists==