The most populated group in feudal society were the peasants. They were not part of the feudal relationship between lord and vassal. However, when the peasants did their jobs, which was working the land, they supported the kings, nobles, and knights. The work accomplished by these peasants was insanely valuable as they allowed the lords and knights to spend time preparing for battles and wars. The peasants found new ways to farm that greatly improved the amount of food produced. Instead of growing food by rotating crops on two fields, the peasants rotated crops on three fields. As a result of their new findings, more crops could be grown resulting in a greater food production allowing the population to expand. In addition to the peasants’ roles in European feudal society, the climate of Europe forced the peasants to work year round. In August and September, they harvested grain. And in …show more content…
The first type was the free peasants who rented land to farm and owed only their rent to the lord. They had the ability to own small businesses and small parts of land which greatly differed them from the serfs. The serfs were another type of peasant in feudal society. They were unfree peasants who farmed the lord’s fields and could not leave their lord’s manor. Serfs received their own small plot of land to farm in return for their labor. They were similar to slaves but could not be bought or sold and could not leave their lands without permission. Possible jobs that a serf could have on a manor were carpenters, farmers, or tax collectors. Serfs had the ability to buy back their freedom with money which was very rare because they were extremely poor causing their chances to be very rare. In conclusion, the peasants being the largest class in the feudal structure, helped protect and sustain their kingdoms by playing pivotal roles which were mainly working the fields and making food for
Although the feudal system presented a mutually beneficial relationship at first, over time many burdens were placed on the vassals. A serf was bound to the land, thus resulting in a fixed income. Since he was unable to move to another lord, he was reliant on only what was originally agreed upon to provide monetary support. [Support was generally in kind, or in labor.] With no “right” to adjust the support needed for survival, the serf and his family experiences tremendous hardships.
Peasants were members of the lowest class, those who work. They were the most common class. They were the millers, blacksmiths, butchers, carpenters, farmers, and other trades people. Peasant women in particular, spent much of their time taking care of children, making clothes, and cooking meals. They also tended gardens, took care of animals by tending chicken, shearing sheep, and milking cows (Cels 16). Within peasants, there were two main groups of people, the serfs and the freemen. Both were employed by the lords. And serfs were people that paid more fees, and had less rights. Freemen on the other hand paid less fees and had more rights than serfs (Noiret). While freemen could leave the manor when at whim, serfs were not allowed to leave
Document 1) A: The Feudalism provided protection and military services for their families. Nobles agreed to give their loyalty to the king. As the peasants worked the land for the knights and nobles and which they gave to them was protection and a portion of the harvest to feed their families. Document 2)
The population losses among the previously overpopulated peasant class, who at this time were underemployed due to this overpopulation, were able to haggle for higher wages and better terms when it came to working, renting, and owning land. At the same time, the sudden loss in population meant the nobles could not demand high prices for product which weakened their power of wealth. This coupled with the higher earning wages of the peasant class meant they could move up in the social order to become farmers themselves or merchants of equal social standing. This period of social mobility didn’t last long, but it allowed for the end of feudalism as it was known during the Middle Ages. The end of feudalism meant the end of kings and nobles being able to give land in return for anything they could ever need including food and protection from knights. While it was still an important part of social class, land was no longer in the very center controlling every decision. In the years before the Black Death, it was the peasants who gave food and work to the knights. The knights then gave protection to nobles which gave money and the knights’ protection to the kings. In return, the king passed down land throughout the social classes. Although, the lower classes had the opportunity to accumulate land for the services they provided, in the end
During the Middle Ages social class much different than modern day. In a feudal society “nobles were granted the use of land that legally belonged to the king,” (Doc. 1). The nobles, in return, would give the lord loyalty and military services (Doc. 1). As peasants or serfs worked for nobles and knights they received protection and a portion of the harvest to feed their families (Doc. 1).
In manorial villages the lords of the land would have vassals and serfs. A vassal was a voluntary obligation taken so the vassal would be cared for. Although once one became a vassal this obligation would follow through all the generations of the family. Serfs on the other hand
The Middle Ages, or Dark Ages, of the 15th century, established a policy regarding the practice of agriculture that later became known as feudalism. The monarchy bestowed vast tracts of land and an ennobling title to individuals who were tasked with keeping a functioning economy in their lands and maintaining a private militia for the protection of the realm and fiefdom they owned. These aristocrats allocated parcels of land to the serfs, or peasants, in exchange for complete rustic servitude and the privilege being allowed to live on that lord's land. Any crops or animals that were cultivated belonged to the realm and peasants were only permitted to keep a meager portion of their efforts. This archaic practice, established during the era
What if you had to serve a specific lord in battle, provide shelter, and supply food in exchange for a small piece of land (OI)? This is what life and feudalism was like for nobles during the Middle Ages in the Roman Empire. The Middle Ages, or Medieval period, was a period that lasted from about 500 to 1500 AD. Created in the Middle Ages, feudalism was a system of laws for kings, nobles, knights, and serfs (Doc. 1). Feudalism was a social, economic, and political hierarchy during the Medieval period for many reasons.
Serfs created a steady food supply for their Manor.Peasants mostly farmed wheat and rye because that was a main source of food for people in the middle ages. They made wheat by scattering grain seeds in plowed soil then when it was golden, they collected it. They used the stems for multiple things and they put the grains in a granary to let it dry and protect it from mice. After it dried, it was beaten with wooden sticks to get the kernels out (Cels 11). This supplied villages with wheat and rye and created a lot of food to eat.Women serfs often had the job to carry the grain in bags to the lord's mill. Peasants made the grain into flour by putting it in between 2 flat stones in the lords mill.The wind powered the mill to make the dough. Once the grain became flower the peasants took it back but had to pay a fee in flour to the lord. If a peasant were to make there own dough in a hand powered mill, they would be fined (Cels 14). Peasants sometimes brought the dough or flour to the manor to make bread to sell. Same as the mill, they had to give the lord some of their bread. They could also be fined if they were caught baking bread at their house (Cels 14).This also created a steady food supply.
During the Middle Ages a peasant’s life was, indeed, very rough, there were anywhere from ten to sixty families living in a single village; they lived in rough huts on dirt floors, with no chimneys, or windows. Usually one end of the hut was given over to storing livestock. Furnishings were quite sparse; three legged stools, a trestle table, beds softened with straw or leaves and placed on the floor; the peasant diet was mainly porridge, cheese, black bread, and a few homegrown vegetables. Peasants had a hard life, yet they did not work on Sundays, and they could travel to nearby fairs and markets. The basic diet of a lord consisted of meat, fish, pastries, cabbage, turnips, onions, carrots, beans, and peas, as well as fresh bread, cheese, and fruit. This is by no means equivalent to the meals the peasants ate, a lord might even feast on boar, swan, or peacock as well.
The upper class had high demands for serfs. Rebellions occurred because lords in the feudal system tried to continue impose the feudalism structure, which lead to the Peasant’s revolt. Through this, the laborers were able to demand better working conditions since the upper class was desperate for people to grow their crops. Those who were slaves gained power. Those who had their rights abused were able to stand up. “The peasants became slightly more empowered, and revolted when the aristocracy attempted to resist the changes brought about by the plague” (“1320: Section...”). The Peasant’s Revolt foreshadowed future labor unions. They wanted to have fairness and better treatment which started the end of feudalism. “This set Western Europe along the path of diverging classes” (“1320:
6. Peasants: Farmworkers who lived in small villages encompassed by fields farmed by different families working together. In 1550, most Europeans were peasants. Peasants turned into serfs in an exchange between the labor on the lord’s estate and farming rights.
Monarchs owned the land and he would divide the land that he did not need up between the men who were called lords in return for loyalty to him in times of war. The lords enlisted soldiers who were called knights to be the fighting force in these wars. The lowest people in the feudal system were called peasants; these people farmed the land to provide food and provided other services for the kingdom in exchange for protection.
Life as a serf or peasant was not easy. Serfs were bound to their lord's land and required to do services for him. Although they could not be sold like slaves, they had no freedom (Ellis and Esler 219-244). Peasants farmed for the goods that the lord and his manor needed. They went through difficult hardship because of this. Peasants were heavily taxed and had to provide for themselves the goods that they needed (“The Middle Ages”). According to the medieval law, the peasants were not considered to 'belong to' themselves (“The Middle Ages”). Although serfs were peasants and had relatively the same duties and similar rights, what differentiated a peasant from a serf was that a peasant was not bound to the land (“The Middle Ages”). Peasants had no schooling and no knowledge of the outside world (Ellis and Esler 219-244). They rarely traveled more than a couple miles outside of their villages. All members of a peasant family, including children, tended crops, farmed, and did some sort of work to help out (Ellis and Esler 224). Very few peasants lived past the age of 35 because of hunger in the winter and the easy development and transmission of disease (Ellis and Esler 224).
The feudal system of the time operated on the premise of peasants or serfs, and thanes, or lords. The lords owned the land, and the peasants worked on it. In turn, they received the protection