Repartition

Repartition

Repartition ( _ru. передел, "peredel") was a practice in the Russian Empire of the periodic redistribution of the peasant's arable land by the village community.

The traditional household did not permanently hold a particular allotment in the open fields. What the household had was the "right", so long as it remained within the village community (`mir'), to a holding commensurate with its size. The mir's assembly, the "skhod", periodically redistributed the arable land to allow for changes in the size of households, and for new (or extinguished) households.

History

Repartition was the concomitant of Tsarist tax policies; it ensured that every peasant family had the wherewithal to meet its tax obligations. It was almost unknown before the later 17th century, but thereafter became widespread. The introduction of the soul tax, Peter the Great's heavy equal poll tax on adult males, in 1724, encouraged its spread. In 1829 a decree required miry on State lands henceforth to carry out a general egalitarian repartition ("chernyi peredel") following each new tax assessment or `revision'. By the mid-9th century repartition was, formally, almost universal in Slavonic Russia (the exception was the far west). After this time the law no longer required repartition, but by then it had become absorbed into peasant culture as a steak of egalitarianism. [Jerome Blum, "Lord and Peasant in Russia From the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century" (Princeton University Press, 1961), p.512; W. S. Vucinich, ed., "The Peasant in Nineteenth-Century History" (Stanford University Press, California, 1968), p.138.]

A law of 1893 sought to restrict repartition to every twelfth year, i.e. every four crop-rotations under the traditional `three-field', i.e. three-course, crop-rotation. The Bolshevik Land Code of 1922 specified nine years (three crop-cycles). But some miry preferred to divide the land more frequently, such as every six years, and even annual repartition was not unknown. Meadows were often divided annually prior to mowing. Partial repartitions ("skidka-nakidka") could be carried out in the intervening intervals to take account of population changes. Some communities preferred such continual adjustments as less drastic than general repartition. [Vucinich, ed., "The Peasant", p.141; *; Blum, "Lord and Peasant", pp.525; ...*]

Bases and methods

Land was awarded on the basis of the number of `economic units' a household contained. This unit could be variously the `tyaglo' (usually a man-and-wife unit), the `soul' (adult male), the worker (adult male or female), or the `eater' (mouth-to-feed, household member of any age). Before 1861 the tyaglo method tended to be used on private estates, the `soul' on State lands; these methods tended to continue on these former lands after the freeing of the serfs. [Blum, "Lord and Peasant", p.526.] But since an adult male was counted as "two" souls, [Vucinich, ed., "The Peasant", p.144.] these methods amounted to much the same thing. (Thus a man was compelled to marry to obtain a work-partner, not only to cope with agricultural work, but to fulfil his fiscal obligations as well.)

Repartition was usually carried out on the fallow land only, to avoid disrupting land under cultivation. Thus, under the 'three-field' system, a complete repartition would take three years. Actual measuring-out was done by pacing - there were few trained surveyors available for more sophisticated methods! The fields were broken up into blocks ("yarusy") and strips made as nearly equal as possible with respect to quality (fertility, evenĮess of land etc), and graded according to variations in these qualities and distance from the households. Allocation of plots was carried out by lot. Strips were allotted to each household so as to give them a weighted equality of land.

Notes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • répartition — [ repartisjɔ̃ ] n. f. • XVIIe; « distribution » 1389; de répartir 1 ♦ Opération qui consiste à répartir qqch. ⇒ distribution, partage. Répartition des vivres en période de pénurie. ⇒ contingentement, rationnement. Répartition des tâches entre… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Repartition — Répartition Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom …   Wikipédia en Français

  • repartition — Repartition. s. f. Subdivision. Faire la repartition des tailles …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • repartition — [rē΄pär tish′ən] n. 1. the act of partitioning; distribution 2. the act of partitioning again; redistribution vt. to effect a repartition of …   English World dictionary

  • repartition — index dispensation (act of dispensing), distribution (apportionment), reapportion, redistribute Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • RÉPARTITION — n. f. Partage, division, distribution. La répartition des bénéfices. La répartition des effets, des biens d’une succession. La répartition de l’actif mobilier entre les créanciers d’un failli. Répartition des rôles dans une affaire, des besognes… …   Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 8eme edition (1935)

  • Répartition — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sur les autres projets Wikimedia : « Répartition », sur le Wiktionnaire (dictionnaire universel) D une manière générale, le mot répartition …   Wikipédia en Français

  • RÉPARTITION — s. f. Partage, division, distribution. Faire la répartition des troupes pour les quartiers d hiver. La répartition des effets, des biens d une succession. La répartition d une somme. Faire la répartition des contributions duns un département.… …   Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)

  • répartition — (ré par ti sion) s. f. Partage, distribution. •   Il est vrai qu on [Colbert et Louis XIV] aurait pu mettre, à quelques égards, plus de discernement et de lumières dans cette répartition de grâces, et ne pas confondre avec les talents éminents… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • Repartition — Re|par|ti|ti|on 〈f. 20; veraltet〉 das Repartieren [<frz. répartition „Aufteilung, Verteilung“] * * * Re|par|ti|ti|on, die; , en [frz. répartition, zu: répartir, ↑repartieren] (Börsenw.): das Repartieren …   Universal-Lexikon

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”