Seneschal

The word seneschal (/ˈsɛnəʃəl/) can have several different meanings, all of which reflect certain types of supervising or administering in a historic context. Most commonly, a seneschal was a senior position filled by a court appointment within a royal, ducal, or noble household during the Middle Ages and early Modern period – historically a steward or majordomo of a medieval great house.[1][2] In a medieval royal household, a seneschal was in charge of domestic arrangements and the administration of servants,[3] which, in the medieval period particularly, meant the seneschal might oversee hundreds of laborers, servants and their associated responsibilities, and have a great deal of power in the community, at a time when much of the local economy was often based on the wealth and responsibilities of such a household.

A second meaning is more specific, and concerns the late medieval and early modern nation of France, wherein the seneschal (French: sénéchal) was also a royal officer in charge of justice and control of the administration of certain southern provinces called seneschalties, holding a role equivalent to a northern French bailiff (bailli).

In the United Kingdom the modern meaning of seneschal is primarily as an ecclesiastical term, referring to a cathedral official.[4]

Origin

The Medieval Latin discifer (dish-bearer) was an officer in the household of later Anglo-Saxon kings, and it is sometimes translated by historians as seneschal, although the term was not used in England before the Norman Conquest.[5][6]

The term, first attested in 1350–1400,[7] was borrowed from Anglo-Norman seneschal "steward", from Old Dutch *siniscalc "senior retainer" (attested in Latin siniscalcus (692 AD), Old High German senescalh), a compound of *sini- (cf. Gothic sineigs "old", sinista "oldest") and scalc "servant", ultimately a calque of Late Latin senior scholaris "senior guard".

The scholae in the late Roman Empire referred to the imperial guard, divided into senior (seniores) and junior (juniores) units. The captain of the guard was known as comes scholarum.[8] When Germanic tribes took over the Empire, the scholae were merged or replaced with the Germanic king's warband (cf. Vulgar Latin *dructis, OHG truht, Old English dryht) whose members also had duties in their lord's household like a royal retinue.[9] The king's chief warbandman and retainer (cf. Old Saxon druhting, OHG truhting, truhtigomo OE dryhtguma, dryhtealdor), from the 5th century on, personally attended on the king, as specifically stated in the Codex Theodosianus of 413 (Cod. Theod. VI. 13. 1; known as comes scholae).[10] The warband, once sedentary, became first the king's royal household, and then his great officers of state, and in both cases the seneschal is synonymous with steward.

In France

In late medieval and early modern France, the seneschal was originally a royal steward overseeing the entire country but developed into an agent of the crown charged with administration of a seneschalty (French: sénéchaussée), one of the districts of the crown lands in Gascony, Aquitaine, Languedoc and Normandy. Hallam states that the first seneschals to govern in this manner did so by an 1190 edict of Philip II. The seneschals also served as the chief justice of the royal courts of appeal in their areas and were occasionnally seconded by vice-seneschals.

The equivalent post throughout most of northern France was the bailiff (bailli), who oversaw a bailiwick (bailliage).

Under rulers of England

In Anglo-Saxon England

In Anglo-Saxon England dish-bearers (in Medieval Latin discifer or dapifer) were nobles who served at royal feasts. The term is often translated by historians as "seneschal".[5][16]

In Sark

The Seneschal of Sark presides over the Court of the Seneschal, which hears civil and some criminal cases.[17]

See also

References

Citations

  1. Oxford University Press: Seneschal
  2. Encyclopaedia Perthensis; or Universal Dictionary of the Arts Volume 20 (1816), p. 437
  3. The Free Dictionary: Seneschal.
  4. "seneschal" Via the Free Dictionary. Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 HarperCollins Publishers
  5. Williams, Ann (1982). "Princeps Merciorum Gentis:the Family, Career and Connections of Ælfhere, Ealdorman of Mercia". Anglo-Saxon England. 10: 148 n. 29. doi:10.1017/S0263675100003240. ISSN 0263-6751.
  6. Gautier, Alban (2017). "Butlers and dish-bearers in Anglo-Saxon courts: household officers at the royal table" (PDF). Historical Research: 7.
  7. "Seneschal definition & meaning". merriam-webster.com.
  8. Leo Wiener, Commentary to the Germanic Laws and Mediaeval Documents (Harvard UP, 1915; reprint Union, NJ: Lawbook Exchange, 1999), 33-4.
  9. D. H. Green, Language and history in the early Germanic world (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1998), 110-2.
  10. Wiener, 34.
  11. 1.
  12. T. Stapleton (ed.), De Antiquis Legibus Liber. Cronica Maiorum et Vicecomitum Londiniarum, Camden Society, Series I no. 34 (London 1846), Appendix, pp. 237-38.
  13. Fotheringham, James Gainsborough (1889). "Felton, William (d.1367)" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 311.
  14. Fotheringham, James Gainsborough (1889). "Felton, Thomas (d.1381)" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 309–310.
  15. Lee, Sidney (1887). "Chandos, John" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 10. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 43.
  16. Keynes, Simon (2014). "Thegn". In Lapidge, Michael; Blair, John; Keynes, Simon; Scragg, Donald (eds.). The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England (2nd ed.). Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley Blackwell. p. 460. ISBN 978-0-470-65632-7.
  17. "About the Seneschal's Court". Official Site for The Court of the Seneschal of Sark. Retrieved 23 January 2023.

Bibliography

The dictionary definition of seneschal at Wiktionary

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