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・ Arima Onsen Station
・ Arima Ryōkitsu
・ Arima Velodrome
・ Arima Yoriyuki
・ Arimaa
・ Arimadanapura Palace
・ Arimaddana
・ Arimagawa Station
・ Arimaguchi Station
・ Arimalam
・ Arimalam block
・ Arimalla
・ Arimania
・ Arimanius
・ Arimannia
Arimannus
・ Arimao Formation
・ Arimasa Osawa
・ Arimaspi
・ Arimathea
・ Arimatsu Hideyoshi
・ Arimatsu Station
・ Arimatsu, Aichi
・ Arimbra
・ Arimbra Bapu
・ Arimdzhan
・ Arimilli Radha Krishna
・ Arimine Dam
・ Arimineguchi Station
・ Arimneste


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Arimannus : ウィキペディア英語版
Arimannus
The arimanni (singular ''arimannus'') were a warrior class of freemen in Lombard and later Frankish Italy. In contemporary documents ''arimanni'' are sometimes denominated as ''liberi homines'' (free men) or ''exercitales'' (soldiers).
The ranks of the ''arimanni'' were originally filled by experienced warriors, the descendants of the Lombard freemen who invaded Italy in 569. The position of the ''arimanni'' declined after the Frankish conquest of 774. By the mid-ninth century, many Franks were also ''arimanni'', no longer just Lombards. By the tenth century, the ''arimanni'' had declined to a position barely above that of serfs.
The ''arimanni'' were typically small or medium landowners with a few tenants, or none, beneath them. They formed the basis of the Italian state as they owed it service, specifically ''oste et ponte et placito'': army, bridge, and court services. This service was not mediated by feudal obligations. The ''arimanni'' held public offices at the local level. The Carolingians took a special interest in the obligations and rights of the ''arimanni'' as they were foundational to royal control. Lothair I tried to curb the tide of feudalisation by reasserting the public obligations of the ''arimanni'' even if landless, making these obligations due to the local count. In a conscience continuation of Carolingain policy, both Guy and Lambert in the 890s created legislation asserting the obligations, especially military, of the ''arimanni'' and outlawing the prevalent practice of granting public obligations to vassals as benefices. The concept of ''arimanni'' survived into the eleventh century, when certain Tuscan citizens pleaded that status against the claims of the House of Canossa.
==Sources==

*Wickham, Chris. ''Early Medieval Italy: Central Power and Local Society 400-1000''. MacMillan Press: 1981.
*Tabacco, Giovanni. ''I liberi del re nell'Italia carolingia e postcarolingia''. Spoleto, 1966.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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