In
Norman England honours were granted to a
tenant-in-chief of the crown centred on a
caput baroniae - usually a
castle which acted as the honour's administrative hub. These estates could comprise dozens or even hundreds of
manors, with holdings deliberately dispersed to prevent over-concentration of power, with tenants expected to go to the caput even if in a different county although there was usually a reasonably coherent cluster of holdings near the caput. The
court of the honour exercised jurisdiction over all manors within the honour, especially in cases involving tenants owing
knight service, and was a key judicial body until the late 13th century. The term also signified the dignity and status associated with such estates, with "on my honour" implying a willingness to pledge them as surety. In medieval England, an ‘honour’ could also be referred to as a ‘lordship’ or a ‘
barony’, though the terms were not exact equivalents, reflecting overlapping administrative, judicial, and tenurial functions. ==Portugal==