Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Butlerage
But′ler-age
,Noun.
(O. Eng. Law)
A duty of two shillings on every tun of wine imported into England by merchant strangers; – so called because paid to the king’s butler for the king.
Blackstone.
Webster 1828 Edition
Butlerage
BUT'LERAGE
,Noun.
Definition 2024
butlerage
butlerage
English
Noun
butlerage (countable and uncountable, plural butlerages)
- (law, archaic) A duty formerly paid to the king's butler on every tun of wine imported into England by foreign merchants.
- 1771, Blackstone, William, Sir, “Of the King's Revenue”, in Commentaries on the Laws of England, volume 1, pages 314–315:
- There is also another very antient hereditary duty belonging to the crown, called the prisage or butlerage of wines; which is considerably older than the customs, being taken notice of in the great roll of the exchequer, 8 Ric. I. still extant. Prisage was a right of taking two tons of wine from every ship importing into England twenty tons or more; which by Edward I. was exchanged into a duty of 2s for every ton imported by merchant-strangers, and called butlerage, because paid to the king's butler.
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