Honra (Demesne)
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A honra was an administrative division that existed in the
Kingdom of Portugal The Kingdom of Portugal ( la, Regnum Portugalliae, pt, Reino de Portugal) was a monarchy in the western Iberian Peninsula and the predecessor of the modern Portuguese Republic. Existing to various extents between 1139 and 1910, it was also kno ...
prior to 1834 - a land, or district, whose jurisdiction and income belonged to a Lord or
Fidalgo ''Fidalgo'' (, ), from Galician and Portuguese —equivalent to nobleman, but sometimes literally translated into English as "son of somebody" or "son of some (important family)"—is a traditional title of Portuguese nobility that refers to a m ...
.


History and characteristics

Along with the ''coutos'', the honras were manifestations of medieval manorialism in the
Kingdom of Portugal The Kingdom of Portugal ( la, Regnum Portugalliae, pt, Reino de Portugal) was a monarchy in the western Iberian Peninsula and the predecessor of the modern Portuguese Republic. Existing to various extents between 1139 and 1910, it was also kno ...
. These were forms of property that could belong both to lay Lords (the honras) and to ecclesiastical Lords (the coutos, which in the beginning could belong to either one or the other, but after the Middle Ages in most cases came to be in the hands of the Church). Honras and coutos - made up of one or more parishes, or parts of parishes - had in common the characteristic of
immunity Immunity may refer to: Medicine * Immunity (medical), resistance of an organism to infection or disease * ''Immunity'' (journal), a scientific journal published by Cell Press Biology * Immune system Engineering * Radiofrequence immunity desc ...
, which resulted in the exemption from tax charges before the Crown, the right to administer civil and criminal justice by the respective Lords and the right to prevent the entry of royal officials. The main characteristic that differentiated honras from coutos was the fact that the honras were a form of "spontaneously generated" Lordship. While the coutos were normally created by the "
charter A charter is the grant of authority or rights, stating that the granter formally recognizes the prerogative of the recipient to exercise the rights specified. It is implicit that the granter retains superiority (or sovereignty), and that the rec ...
of the couto", which - as an expression of royal authority - expressly delimited the territory of the couto and specified the scope of the powers that the Lords could exercise, the honras were never originally a royal act. Therefore, they were not gifts bestowed by the power of the King but rather impositions on the crown, made by powerful Feudal Lords. The honras' original constitutions were linked to the so-called "
Reconquista The ' (Spanish, Portuguese and Galician for "reconquest") is a historiographical construction describing the 781-year period in the history of the Iberian Peninsula between the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in 711 and the fall of the Nasrid ...
" movement, during which several Portuguese noble families managed to impose their political and territorial influence independently of royal concessions. This connection to the Reconquista explains the absence of honras in the south of Portugal. They were concentrated mainly in the northern part of the country, where - many centuries later, at the end of the 17th century - provinces such as
Entre Douro e Minho Entre Douro e Minho () is one of the historical provinces of Portugal which encompassed the country's northern Atlantic seaboard between the Douro and Minho rivers. Contemporaries often referred to the province as simply "Minho". It was one of ...
had still a total of 21 honras.{{Cite book , last=Hespanha , first=António Manuel , url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/31952966 , title=As vésperas do leviathan : instituições e poder político : Portugal, séc. XVII , date=1994 , publisher=Livraria Almedina , isbn=972-40-0782-0 , location=Coimbra , page=105 , language=pt , oclc=31952966 The honras thus had their original legitimation in the strength and prestige of a social class (the early-medieval warrior nobility) and the crown's intervention to curtail the powers of that class only appeared in a later period, first by recognizing these pre-existing situations and then by seeking to control them, namely through the
Inquirições Inquirições were the Royal Portuguese commissions. They were put forward by the crown in accomplishing edicts. Afonso II of Portugal, Afonso II instituted (from 1220) inquirições to investigate the nature of holdings and to recover whatever h ...
. During the reign of King Denis, the Inquirições distinguished between the "old" honras, which were recognized, and the "new" honras, which were considered abusive and illegitimate because they were of recent formation. The crown thus recognized acquired rights, at the same time as it sought to limit the expansion of the Lords' powers and influence. The honras continued to exist in Portugal in the
Modern era The term modern period or modern era (sometimes also called modern history or modern times) is the period of history that succeeds the Middle Ages (which ended approximately 1500 AD). This terminology is a historical periodization that is applie ...
(they were extinguished, together with the other territorial domains of the nobility, in 1834). By then, however, they were already subject to the general regime applicable to Lordships (that is, to the provisions of the so-called '' Lei Mental,'' that only allowed the succession of property and lordships, in a noble family, when there was a legitimate male son to inherit them), namely with regard to the process of royal confirmations - either by more or less automatic succession or by express confirmation made by a new King. Royal confirmations were thus a method for making the Lords and donataries of the honras recognize royal authority.


References

Feudalism History of Portugal