This lesson contains 34 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.
Lesson duration is: 45 min
Items in this lesson
5.3 Powerful lords, semi-free farmers
Time of monks and knights, 500 - 1000
Slide 1 - Slide
In which two ways was Christianity spread in the Middle Ages?
Slide 2 - Open question
What does this image have to do with the spread of Christianity?
Slide 3 - Open question
Success criteria
You can explain:
Why farmers in the agricultural society were semi-free
How agriculture was organised
What the social relationships were
What kind of trade there was
Slide 4 - Slide
Clip: Serfs (horigen)
Slide 5 - Slide
Slide 6 - Video
What? Do assignment 1 to 9 from section 5.3
How? Alone, in your workbook
Time? See the timer
Done? Do assignment 1 to 5 from
page 142 - 144 WB
timer
1:00
Slide 7 - Slide
5.3 Powerful lords, semi-free farmers
Time of monks and knights, 500 - 1000
Slide 8 - Slide
Success criteria
You can explain:
Why farmers in the agricultural society were semi-free
How agriculture was organised
What the social relationships were
What kind of trade there was
Slide 9 - Slide
The Domain
A domain: village with agricultural land that is farmed according to the manorial system.
The area belongs to a nobleman or a monastery
Slide 10 - Slide
Manor
Important building on the domain, in which lived the nobleman or the steward who managed the domain for the nobleman.
Slide 11 - Slide
The manorial system
The land on the estate was divided into 2 parts
One part; fields of the lord (feudal lord)
The other part; 'own' fields of serf farmers.
Slide 12 - Slide
Manorial system
Farmers
Slide 13 - Slide
Manorial system
Hunger
Poverty
Unsafety
Farmers
Slide 14 - Slide
Hofstelsel
Hunger
Poverty
Unsafety
Nobleman
(The lord)
Farmer
Slide 15 - Slide
Hofstelsel
Hunger
Poverty
Unsafety
Nobleman
(The lord)
The lord gives:
Protection
Farmland
In exchange the farmer gives:
Part of the harvest
Did corvée (do work for the lord)
Horigen
Slide 16 - Slide
De edelen
Eignaars van de grond, bestuurden het land, zorgden voor rechtspraak en voerden oorlog
House of the Lord
Often no more than a slightly larger wooden house with a wall. The farmers could take shelter here in case of an attack.
Drawbridge
Can be closed in the event of an attack
Moat
Additional defence during an attack
Simple houses
Inside the walls for the most important people
Orchard
Food was also grown within the walls. All proceeds here were for the lord
Outside the walls
There were two types of farmers:
free farmers: possessed their own land
Serfs::had no property and had to work for the lord
Corvées
Serfs were protected and fed by the lord, but the lord wanted something in return
The lord could ask for lordly services
grain milling
pressing grapes
fighting for the lord
pay grain
maintain roads
dig a ditch
Field
People also worked the land outside the walls. This was done by the serfs.
Meadow
Outside the walls were pastures for the animals
Slide 17 - Slide
A serf:
Belongs to the domain, is bound to the land of the lord. If the lord sells the land or gives it away, the serfs is as well.
A serf is not allowed to:
-Leave the domain without permission. -Marry without approval of the lord.
Slide 18 - Slide
How did you become a serf?
Descendants of slaves from Roman times who had been given their own piece of land to cultivate.
Descendants of free farmers who had given their land to a monastery or nobleman in exchange for food after failed harvests or in exchange for protection.
Slide 19 - Slide
5.3 Powerful lords, semi-free farmers
Time of monks and knights, 500 - 1000
Slide 20 - Slide
Recieves protection
A
Free farmer
B
Serf
C
Lord
Slide 21 - Quiz
Gives protection
A
Free farmer
B
Serf
C
Lord
Slide 22 - Quiz
Has to give part of his harvest away
A
Free farmer
B
Serf
C
Lord
Slide 23 - Quiz
Forced to do corvée
A
Free farmer
B
Serf
C
Lord
Slide 24 - Quiz
Gives a piece of farm-land
A
Free farmer
B
Serf
C
Lord
Slide 25 - Quiz
Doesn't need to ask permission to leave his farm
A
Free farmer
B
Serf
C
Lord
Slide 26 - Quiz
Success criteria
You can explain:
Why farmers in the agricultural society were semi-free
How agriculture was organised
What the social relationships were
What kind of trade there was
Slide 27 - Slide
Differences between manorial system and feudal system
Feudal system
Manorial system
Agreement between important noblemen (kings/dukes)
Appointment between less important people (knight/cleric/farmer)
Covers a large area (provinces of countries)
Covers a small area (a village and its surroundings)
Determines how an area is governed (politics)
Determines how people support themselves and interact with each other (economy/social)
Slide 28 - Slide
Three social groups
Three social groups developed in the Middle Ages.
Clergy: Those who pray.
Nobility: Those who fight.
The rest: Those who work.
The clergy and nobility had certain privileges.
Slide 29 - Slide
6.5 De kruistochten
Leerdoelen
Hoe ontstonden de kruistochten?
Hoe verliep de eerste kruistocht?
Welke contacten waren er tussen kruisvaarders en Arabieren?
Slide 30 - Slide
Gebeurtenissen
1095 Paus Urbanus II roept christelijke Europeanen op tot bevrijding Heilige Land
1096 Eerste kruisvaarders vechten zich door Turks gebied
1187 Sultan Saladin verovert Jeruzalem waardoor derde kruistocht ontstond
1291 Arabieren veroveren Akko, de laatste kruisvaarderstaat
Slide 31 - Slide
Begrippen
Heilige Land = Zo noemden christenen Jeruzalem en zijn omgeving, het gebied waar Jezus gepreekt zou hebben
Kruistochten = Gewapende tochten van christenen om land op niet-christenen te veroveren