The word
feudalism was not a medieval term but was coined by sixteenth-century French and English lawyers to describe certain traditional obligations among members of the warrior aristocracy. It did not become widely used until 1748, when
Montesquieu popularized it in ("The Spirit of the Laws"). The term
feudal derives from the ancient
Gothic word , meaning "property"—originally referring to "cattle"—which is cognate with the classical Latin word , meaning "cattle," "money," or "wealth." European feudalism had its roots in the
Roman manorial system, in which workers, known as
coloni, lived on large estates and received protection in exchange for labor. It also developed in the
8th century CE in the
Kingdom of the Franks, where kings granted land as
benefices—temporary land grants—to reward loyal nobles in exchange for service.
Anglo-Saxon feudal structures Following the end of Roman rule in Britain, a form of feudalism emerged during the subsequent
Anglo-Saxon period, though it was not as comprehensive or uniform as the system that developed in the later
Norman era. During the
Heptarchy and the unified English kingdom after King
Athelstan, Anglo-Saxon kings often granted land to their supporters and nobles in exchange for military service. These landholders were typically
thegns, warriors who controlled land and served the king when called upon. Similarly,
ealdormen governed counties or groups of counties and were appointed by the king, providing military support when required. Surviving Anglo-Saxon writs document specific land grants made by monarchs to the nobility across England. Thegns frequently worked alongside ealdormen and
shire reeves to enforce law, maintain order, and collect taxes within their territories. This system, indigenous to the Anglo-Saxons, bore similarities to European feudalism of the time. Armies raised for conflicts were drawn from such arrangements, including the force assembled for
Æthelstan's invasion of Scotland in the 930s. Likewise, the English army at the
Battle of Hastings in 1066 followed a similar structure. However, the Norman victory resulted in the widespread displacement of the native English nobility. A key distinction between Anglo-Saxon and Norman feudalism was that the former relied on traditional Germanic ties between the king and his nobles, rather than the structured, hierarchical model influenced by the Franks and employed by the Normans. By 1066, England consisted of a patchwork of lands owned by
thegns and
ealdormen. However, following the
Norman Conquest, the Anglo-Saxon nobility steadily lost their lands. The
Domesday Book frequently recorded the original English landowners before the Conquest, including native lords and King
Edward the Confessor himself. ==Classic English feudalism==