The
two brothers probably used this as their country house, for both of
them had their chief occupation elsewhere; but when the bishop died,
in 1288, and they became not quite the important people they had been
before, they sold the Lyng House to another important person, of whom
we shall hear more by-and-by.
The Lyng House, however, was not the great house of Rougham. I am
inclined to think _that_ stood not far from the spot where
Rougham Hall now stands. It was in those days called the Manor House,
or the Manor.
And this brings me to a point where I must needs enter into some
explanations. Six hundred years ago all the land in England was
supposed to belong to the king in the first instance. The king had in
former times parcelled it out into tracts of country, some large and
some small, and made over these tracts to his great lords, or barons,
as they were called. The barons were supposed to hold these tracts,
called fiefs, as _tenants_ of the king, and in return they were
expected to make an acknowledgment to the king in the shape of some
_service_, which, though it was not originally a money payment,
yet became so eventually, and was always a substantial charge upon
the land. These fiefs were often made up of estates in many different
shires; and, because it was impossible for the barons to cultivate
all their estates themselves, they let them out to _subtenants_,
who in their turn were bound to render services to the lord of the
fief.
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