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In the distant past, the land was held by the aristocracy, who
generally lived in the city and lived from the proceeds of the
land they owned. However, with the economic decline of this dominant
social class, peasants were able to buy land and thus escape the
almost feudal exploitation to which they had previously been subjected.
Nowadays, the land is mainly divided among small properties, which
were traditionally small family agricultural concerns. This is
a reflection of the social and economic transformations that have
occurred in rural Mallorcan life over recent centuries. Between
the second half of the nineteenth century and the first half of
the twentieth century, great changes in the structure of rural
land ownership came about, as the day labourers gained access
to land possession, and as a consequence of this, a class of land-owning
peasants came into being. The general system for the sale of parcels
of land by the big landowners was the L'establiment a cens (settlement
of ground rent), this involved the purchaser making an initial
down payment, and the rest would be paid back off in instalments,
with the cens functioning as an annual interest payment. This
wasn't just a mortgage loan though, because the original owner
was reserved part ownership of the land of the property under
what were known as alodial rights.
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