Cistercian monasteries of the 12th and 13th acquired vast amounts of land from Norman magnates who were themselves preoccupied with eternal salvation These lands were fragmented and difficult to administer from a central base therefore a system of outlying farms were set up (grangia) staffed by lay brethren After the black death in the 14th century the recruitment of lay brethren became increasingly difficult and local peasant labour dried up The granges became an embarrassment and were liable to be let to local landowners
A farmhouse of a monastery, where the rents and tithes, paid in grain, were deposited
An association of farmers, designed to further their interests, and particularly to bring producers and consumers, farmers and manufacturers, into direct commercial relations, without intervention of middlemen or traders
orig. Harold Grange born June 13, 1903, Forksville, Pa., U.S. died Jan. 28, 1991, Lake Wales, Fla. U.S. gridiron football player. He had an outstanding collegiate career at the University of Illinois, where in 1924 he ran for five touchdowns in a single game against the University of Michigan and earned the nickname "the Galloping Ghost." In 1925 he joined the Chicago Bears and embarked on a barnstorming tour that stimulated public interest in professional football. After suffering a knee injury in 1927, he was never again an effective runner. He retired in 1934 and subsequently worked as a sportscaster