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The Leading Facts of English History by D.H. (David Henry) Montgomery
page 110 of 712 (15%)
horseback in full armor, with sword, lance, and battle-ax; common
people fought on foot with clubs.

[2] See Shakespeare's "Richard II," Act I, scenes i and iii; also
Scott's "Ivanhoe," Chapter XLIII.

In both cases the combat was in the presence of judges and might last
from sunrise until the stars appeared. Priests and women had the
privilege of being represented by champions, who fought for them.
Trial by Battle was claimed and allowed by the court (though the
combat did not come off) as late as 1817, in the reign of George III.
This custom was finally abolished in 1819.[3]

[3] Trial by Battle might be demanded in cases of chivalry or honor,
in criminal actions, and in civil suits. The last were fought not by
the disputants themselves but by champions.

149. Divisions of Society.

The divisions of society remained after the Conquest very nearly as
before, but the Saxon orders of nobility, with a few very rare
exceptions, were deprived of their rank and their estates given to the
Normans.

It is important to notice here the marked difference between the new
or Norman nobility and that of France.

In England a man was considered a noble because, under William and his
successors, he was a member of the Great or National Council (S80),
or, in the case of an earl, because he represented the King in the
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