adjective
- relating to or denoting land held in absolute ownership, free from feudal obligations or the rights of a superior landlord
Usage: archaic; legal/historical; also spelled allodial
Examples
- In medieval Europe, alodial land was rare because most property was held under feudal tenure.
- The king granted alodial rights to the monastery, freeing it from vassalage.
- Unlike feudal estates, alodial property could be freely bought and sold without the lord's consent.
- Some Germanic tribes practiced alodial ownership long before the feudal system emerged.
- The distinction between alodial and feudal land was crucial to understanding medieval property law.