If you are talking about the seigneurial system of the Middle Ages, they are the same. There was also a seigneurial system of the French colony in Canada, which was different.
In New France, the seigneurial system was the model by which land was allotted, cleared, and farmed by habitants. (farmers) It was the basis upon which a year round food supply became available a population expansion could occur. The three main roles of the seigneurial system were the king, the seigneur, and the habitant.
The seigneurial system was an institutional form of land distribution established in New France in 1627 and officially abolished in 1854.
The seigneurial system was abolished in Canada in 1854 with the passage of the Seigneurial Abolition Act. This act sought to end the feudal system of land tenure and introduce a more modern system of land ownership.
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seigneurial system
The senatorial system was narrow because haters were determined to continue hating
The old system of New France where seigneurs, or lords were granted parcels of land by France.
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To be used as government. Like to create laws sort of
The seigneurial system originated in medieval France during the Middle Ages as a way to organize land ownership and production. It was brought to North America by the French and implemented in New France (Canada) as a means of governing and developing the colony.
The seigneurial system was a social and economic arrangement in colonial New France where the land was divided into long, narrow strips called seigneuries. The seigneurs owned the land and rented it to habitants who farmed the land. The system also included the payment of feudal dues, such as rent and tithes, to the seigneur.