Prezenţe feminine în sistemul domenial medieval bănăţean (1300 – 1450) / Female Presences in the Banat Medieval Domaine (1300 – 1450)   
        1 Ianuarie 2015
     
    
        
          
            Cuvinte cheie:  
              
                
                      real estate ownership
                
                      noble females
                
                      counties
                
                      the Angevine Age
                
                      stăpânire funciară
                
                      femei nobile
                
                      comitate
                
                      epoca Angevină
                
              
             
                     
          
         
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    Abstract 
      The present study intends to highlight the ways in which the noble females made their presence felt in the system 
of real estate ownership, impregnated by the masculine ascendant. The female presences in the Banat medieval 
domain system must be treated with care, given the multiple, different, highlighted situations, derived from the 
fact that the general rule of male ownership was not thorough and unilateral in those times, despite the obvious 
disadvantage female had since their birth. It is clear that the main ways by which the noble females came into 
possession of real estate were: the allotment of the female quarter (quarta puellaris) and of the dowry (dotalitium), 
converted in certain circumstances into real estate. They were joined by royal grants, fatherly wills, as well as the 
procedure of prefectio (the judicial transformation of daughters to suns). Also, we encounter noble females taking 
part in real estate transactions, inheriting lands, not just dowries and grants or going to court for their rights in 
front of the local and central competent bodies. The documentary information’s of the age show that the noble 
females owned in that time agricultural lands, gardens, pastures, houses, coins, serfs, animals, jewels, clothes, 
genuine treasures coming from the dowry of a noble parents, or from life savings, from marriages, from sales and 
purchases or from carried out bonds. Quite often we find stated in documents that certain goods were obtained by 
the noble ladies from their own purses, being mostly acquired during their time as widows.