Free peasants have their own farmland. But they must pay taxes to their lord
Serfs are not-free peasants. They are bound to the manor and they must work for the lord in exchange for protection
Slide 18 - Slide
A
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Feudal System
Manor System
Slide 19 - Slide
First make a note in your notebook.
The Manor System:
= a deal between the serfs and their lord.
The manor = the land on which the lord and the serfs lived.
In short: the serfs used the lord's land and worked for him in exchange for protection
Slide 20 - Slide
manor house
The place where the lord lived and from where he ruled the village.
Many times the manor was fortified by walls. Sometimes the manor was built on top of a small hill and surrounded by a palissade.
The manor farm consisted of the manor (= fortified farmhouse / castle) + some land with orchards, farming fields and work places around it.
mill
The mill was where people grounded wheat and grain.
It was owned by the lord.
Serf peasants could use the mill to grind their grain, but of course they had to pay the lord for this. The payment was not money, but a percentage of the produce of the peasant.
farm
The houses the peasants (= farmers) lived in were not as nice as the manor house. They were thatched roofed
The palissade surrounds the manor farm. If the domain is attacked the peasants can find shelter within the walls of the manor farm.
Peasants worked on farm land for the lord in exchange for protection and land.
church
The church is where holy events took place (weddings, sermons, funerals). The church is also where the sick would be taken care of.
Sometimes the lord used this place to speak justice. He could hand out punishments to criminals.
A Shepard worked with the livestock in the fields. This would help produce food and cloth for the village
orchard
the manor's orchard.
servile duties
This meant that serfs needed to work for the lord two or three days a week. They worked the lord's fields, or built and repaired his palissade.
The Manor
A. where the lord lives
B. Domain: where the peasants live
Slide 21 - Slide
The manor system:
a deal between the lord and his serfs
Slide 22 - Slide
Self-sufficient
In many cases a manor was self-sufficient = Produces everything it needs by itself.
Trade took place on a very small scale > Farmers offered their surpluses on local markets. They exchanged them for tools or other objects.
Beyond the manor, there were places where free farmers lived.
Free farmers could do their work without much involvement from a lord = More on livestock than on arable farming.
Slide 23 - Slide
Famine
Agricultural surpluses were not self-evident.
Heavy weather and war violence > crop failure > greedy lords still demand rent > food shortage > famine
Charlemagne issued laws to prevent emergency situations:
His vassals were obliged to help the poor.
They had to distribute grain.
Food had to be sold at ordinary prices
People who lent money were not allowed to demand high interest on the loans of farmers
3.2.1
Some Bedouins today make their living by giving desert tours [Wojtek Arciszewski/Al Jazeera]