adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
landed aristocracy (= who own a lot of land )
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the landed aristocracy
landed gentry (= gentry who own land )
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a member of the landed gentry
the landowning/landed class (= the people who own land )
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This imposition of taxes angered the landed classes.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
aristocracy
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They expressed the triumph of legal equality and state authority over the privileges of the landed aristocracy .
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This alliance of the monarchs with the army and the landed aristocracy lasted into the twentieth century.
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On the one hand they resented the entrenched power of the landed aristocracy .
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The traditional governing class with deep roots in the landed aristocracy was gradually displaced as the Third Reich consolidated its position.
class
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Traditional leadership of the kind provided by the landed classes had never been significant in antislavery.
estate
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This was the formula whereby the law made provision for the descent of landed estates within a line.
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He had begun building a water-powered factory and consolidating his landed estate by purchase.
family
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In 1617 in Westmorland £710 gross was the income of a substantial landed family .
gentry
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The landed gentry planted for their grandchildren avenues of hardwood that they themselves would never see.
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The King appointed them to high offices of state, which the aristocracy and landed gentry considered to be their prerogative.
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But it certainly suited the dominant landed gentry to interpret him in that way.
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It was built originally by one of the old wool merchants, who wanted to establish his family as landed gentry .
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There were twenty-one knights, but these too were more often lawyers, merchants and colonial administrators rather than landed gentry .
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Parliament remained dominated by the aristocracy and by the landed gentry .
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The landed gentry abandoned the parish, selling off their land to speculative developers.
income
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Professor Stone has estimated that the average landed income of the peerage was £2, 140 in 1559 and £3,020 in 1602.
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Not only was John Barnesley's remuneration as bailiff of Hartlebury omitted, he was credited with no landed income at all.
interest
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The evidence from North Shields and Cramlington suggests that landed interests have acted as fractions of capital.
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The knight speaks for the landed interest , the merchant for international trade, and the capper for the working master craftsman.
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A nice young man, but I gather he spends most of his life playing sport and looking after their landed interests .
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Eberhard and Conrad, leading members of that aristocracy, had each acquired landed interests in more than one of the regna.
nobility
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The landed nobility provided tsarism with a perilously narrow social base.
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For the landed nobility , the impact of Emancipation was deeply disturbing.
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The landed nobility showed no inclination to build bridges with urban property-owners, let alone workers and peasants.
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Elections to the zemstvos, too, demonstrated the intense hostility of the peasantry towards the landed nobility .
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It was, by its very nature, committed first and foremost to the interests of the landed nobility .
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All the efforts of the Ministry of Education could not produce a sufficient flow of educated recruits from the landed nobility .
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The main burden borne by the peasantry remained that of the State and the landed nobility .
property
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Meanwhile I rejoice in the survival of those large, landed properties where life goes on more or less as before.
wealth
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What limited their political weight, however, was the fragile nature of their landed wealth .