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+-------------------------+ | | | +-------------------+ | | | +-----------+ | | | | | | | | ARIMANNI | | | | MASNADA | | | ALDII | | SERFS | SLAVES The above table, while its divisions must not be taken too literally, will, I think, give some indication of the estimation in which the various classes of society were held. It is too early yet in the development of the feudal system to say that the derivation lines show the course of an absolute feudal tenure, and they are not meant for that purpose, but simply to indicate the succession of the inequalities of rank. Turning now to the territorial divisions of the country at this period, we find them practically unchanged. The _civitas_ still stands as the sectional unit; the territory with its city still represents the administrative division of the state. It is fundamental to a correct understanding of the early development of communal institutions that we should have a thorough knowledge of the meaning of this term _civitas_; of the extent of its application and of its limitations. I used the words "territory with its city" in defining the administrative division of the state, and perhaps this term describes the _civitas_ better than any single word would do. In the Roman municipal system we have the city with its surrounding territory, over which extends the jurisdiction of the _curia_; in the Lombard system we have the territory, the land, in some part of which is located a city, a fortified place. This is to my mind the important point which settles satisfactorily the vexed question of the dominance or the disappearance of Roman influences. The institutions of the Lombards were similar in character to those of the other Germanic races, and the continuance of any overruling municipal influence among them would have done violence alike to their traditions and to the nature of their race. The old municipal predominance as a system disappeared, the old municipal divisions and many of the minor forms and offices as a fact remained. It is these latter which give some color to the arguments of writers like Savigny,[12] who endeavor to maintain the continua
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