<Li> In some cases, a park around the principal house, the manor house </Li> <Li> Common waste--rough pasture land (effectively everything not in the previous categories) </Li> <P> Note that at this time field meant only the unenclosed and open arable land; most of what would now be called' fields' would then have been called closes . The only boundaries would be those separating the various types of land, and around the closes . </P> <P> In each of the two waves of enclosure, two different processes were used . One was the division of the large open fields and meadows into privately controlled plots of land, usually hedged and known at the time as severals . In the course of enclosure, the large fields and meadows were divided and common access restricted . Most open - field manors in England were enclosed in this manner, with the notable exception of Laxton, Nottinghamshire and parts of the Isle of Axholme in North Lincolnshire . </P>

What is the significance of the enclosure movement