Today’s Libro verde entry (front page, right bottom) has Fernando VI in 1758 undoing various stuff done by Felipe V in 1714, including reëstablishing the right of imperiage. I speculated that “this must be some kind of feudal arrangement governing property and revenue sharing between landowners”, but a description has turned up (thankyou JA) in José Canga Argüelles‘ Spanish tax dictionary, Diccionario de Hacienda con aplicación a España (PDF) (1826):
This word doesn’t turn up in any of the RAE’s dictionaries, but it’s there in Alcover/Moll:
Imperiage/pariatge also turns up–of all places–in Harald Bielfeld’s history of taxation in Magdeburg (Geschichte des Magdeburgischen Steuerwesens von der Reformationszeit bis ins achtzehnte Jahrhundert, 1888), where I think he traces it back to Roman tax systems–the useful content is obscured.
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