the answer is your moms sucking my dick
Under the feudal system no lords owned any land; they simply held it legally from the king or from the Church (the only two landowners). In return they owed military service and financial debts.Naturally nobles did not wish to farm the land themselves so they gave the peasant workforce the right to hold certain sections of it in return for working on the lord's own farmland (known as the demesne). But legally the lord/knight/nobleman/abbot (or whoever the landholder was) had absolute power over all the lands, villages, peasants and produce on the lands he held.A landholder would hold many manors, scattered around the country; together these holdings were called an honour.
Manorialism
Serfs were required to work the lord's land for food, as well as taxes and manor labor. The lord was a general governor of his people, set to protect the serfs and settle disputes between them.
they probably owed them debt or helped them out of debt.
He owed money, and was beheaded along with four of his friends.
a vassal owed aleigance to his lord
a vassal owed aleigance to his lord
liege lord
No. A vassal was a person (a concrete noun): someone who owed allegiance to a lord or other figure in authority. The position or state was vassalage.
Yes. A vassal was a person ( a concrete noun): someone who owed allegiance to a lord or other figure in authority. The position or state was vassalage.Yes, the noun 'vassal' is a concrete noun as a word for a person.
A liege is a feudal lord or monarch to whom allegiance and loyalty are owed by vassals or subjects. It can also refer to a superior to whom one owes loyalty or service.
The relationship between the lord and vassal, is that the lord gives a portion of his land to a vassal which is a knight; to provide military support and protection, before doing his duty the vassal swears an oath to be loyal to a particular lord and in turn the lord grant the vassal a portion of his land and riches. If a vassal manages to serve two lords who happened to wage a battle then the vassal must continue to serve both by sending half of his men to battle for the rival lord and the other half of his men to the other opposing lord. Disloyalty results in death.
A vassal was usually a knight that had been given land by his king or overlord. The vassel owed the lord time as a knight. If there was a war he had to give 2 months time, no war he gave time for training and duty to the estate.
because the treaties could have been broken
He did not in his later life find the feudal system interesting and did not care about who owed what
Medieval lands owned by a nobleman or lord for whom the serfs labored and owed allegiance were known as manors or feudal estates. These were self-sufficient agricultural areas, usually centered around a manor house or castle, where the lord exercised control over the serfs who worked the land.
They owed the Lord (landlord) their labor, taxes, and lives. They were a tenant on the land and not the owner of land so what they grew belonged to the landlord. Everything they did they owed to the landlord. They had to get permission to marry, pay a tax when dead, and if they wanted to hunt had to get permission.