No, it did not. The fuedal system was only brought into Britain in Norman times.
The "Abraham man" was a tudor beggar,back in the tudor times.
The daimyos don't exist in modern times, but they were around in feudal Japan. The daimyos were their word for "lords" or "nobles". Basically to say, daimyos today really don't have much power and therefore aren't important. (though they were in feudal times...)
There were no trains in the Tudor times. They had only first come out in 1872
It's a Fishmonger who was alive in Tudor times
Explorers like Rayleigh found spices in Tudor times.
Lords and Ladies
Who are noble in the medieval times
The "Abraham man" was a tudor beggar,back in the tudor times.
TUDOR TIMES
Yes they did. As a matter of fact there is one pub in England that can trace it's beginnings back to 1189AD.
Letters at Tudor times were sealed with wax
The daimyos don't exist in modern times, but they were around in feudal Japan. The daimyos were their word for "lords" or "nobles". Basically to say, daimyos today really don't have much power and therefore aren't important. (though they were in feudal times...)
There were no trains in the Tudor times. They had only first come out in 1872
It's a Fishmonger who was alive in Tudor times
Explorers like Rayleigh found spices in Tudor times.
Serfs, as a distinct social class bound to the land and subject to the authority of a landowner, do not exist in modern times. The feudal system that characterized medieval Europe has long been abolished. However, some forms of servitude and exploitation, such as debt bondage and forced labor, still exist in various parts of the world, but they are not recognized as serfdom in the historical sense.
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