PRIMITIVE PROPERTY,
Translated from the French of
Emile De Laveleye,
Member of the Royal Academies of Belgium, Madrid and
Lisbon,
Corresponding member of the Institute of France, of
the Institute of Geneva,
Of the Academy Del Lincei, Of Rome, etc.
by G.R.L. Marriott, B.A., LL.B.
With an Introduction by
T.E. Cliffe Leslie, LL.B.,
of Lincoln's Inn, Barrister-at-Law
London
Macmillan and Co.
1878.
Contents
- Chapter 1: The Gradual and Universally
Similar Evolution of Property in Land
- Chapter 2: Village Communities
in Russia
- Chapter 3: Economic Results
of the Mir
- Chapter 4: Village Communities
in Java and in India
- Chapter 5: The Allemands of
Switzerland
- Chapter 6: Juristic Features
and Advantages of the Allemand
- Chapter 7: The Germanic Mark
- Chapter 8: The Agrarian System
of the Irish Celts
- Chapter 9: Agrarian Communities
Among the Arabs and other Nations
- Chapter 10: The Golden Age and
Collective Property in Antiquity
- Chapter 11: Property in Greece
- Chapter 12: Property at Rome
- Chapter 13: Family Communities
Succend to Village Communities
- Chapter 14: Family Communities
Among the Southern Slavs
- Chapter 15: Family Communities
in the Middle Ages
- Chapter 16: Family Communities
in Italy, in Germany
- Chapter 17: The Origin of Inequality
in Landed Property
- Chapter 18: History of Landed
Property in England and China
- Chapter 19: Co-operative Cultivation
- Chapter 20: Hereditary Leases
- Chapter 21: The Mark in Holland
- Chapter 22: Common Lands in
France
- Chapter 23: Common Lands in
Belgium
- Chapter 24: The State as Landowner
and Property in India
- Chapter 25: Landed Property
in Egypt and Turkey
- Chapter 26: The Right of Property
and Hereditary Patrimony
- Chapter 27: The Theory of Property