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    • \ ˈkä-tər \

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    [Noun]  | "cot*tar" | \ ˈkä-tər \


    1: a peasant or farm laborer who occupies a cottage and sometimes a small holding of land usually in return for services


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English coter, cotyer "peasant residing on a smallholding and owing labor service or payment to a lord," borrowed from Anglo-French cotere, cotier, borrowed from or formed parallel to Medieval Latin cotārius, from Old English (or early Middle English) cot "dwelling of a rural laborer" + Anglo-French -ere, -ier {see: |-er:2|-er:2} or Latin -ārius {see: |-ary:1|-ary:1} {mat|cot:1|};

      * Note : The status of such a peasant—whether free or bound to the land—is not entirely clear. The cotsetla of Anglo-Saxon law was apparently free (see: entry in Dictionary of Old English), but his successor in the Domesday Book, the cotārius, was apparently not (see: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/domesday/world-of-domesday/order.htm). That the incidence of cotārius/cotier in northern France has been dependent on influence from Germanic speech is demonstrated by Kurt Baldinger in "L'importance de la langue des documents pour l'historie du vocabulaire galloroman (le champ onomasiologique du roturier)," Revue de linguistique romane, tome 26 (1962), pp. 324-25. For the period that England and Normandy were under linked administration, and some time thereafter, cotārius/cotier was in common use in both areas, though the term becomes obsolescent in Normandy by the fourteenth century. Under influence of the Low Countries it reemerges between the Somme valley and the Romance-Germanic linguistic boundary in Flanders in the fourteenth century, continuing through the sixteenth. As a description of a person holding land in a specific way cottar, also cotter ("tenant occupying a cottage with or without attached land") continued in use in Scotland into the nineteenth century, with an Irish variant cottier.;

    [Noun]  | "cottars" 


    1: as in peasants, peons;




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