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This chapter examines the economic resources to which local priests had access, drawing in particular from evidence from the region around Trier in the Moselle valley and Freising in Bavaria. It traces the sources of income available to these priests, including tithes and oblations, and investigates how these revenues changed in the course of the tenth and early eleventh centuries. On the one hand, the scope for action that priests themselves had at their disposal becomes clear; at the same time, however, the chapter also shows how the various sources of income that existed at a local church were formalised during the period under investigation and could become the subject of increasingly complex transactions.
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