First, you buy the Skingrad house Rosethorn Hall in Oblivion. It costs a lot (consider multiplying objects to sell to build up the money) and you need a lot of Fame, so cover this stuff first.
Second, buy all the furniture at the shop. Just follow the compass. You NEED to have the servant's quarters or Eyja won't move in.
Third, find Eyja. This isn't hard- she's usually at Colovian Trader's. Pay 150 gold and she's yours.
You can get a servant called Eyja to work for you if you buy the house in Skingrad, and the Battlehorn Castle comes with a bunch of servants. Or mods.
While there are Slave Quarters in Oblivion in the lord's estates and other similar places, you cannot actually obtain slaves.
Melinda Elder has written: 'Lancaster and the African slave trade'
a slave house was a place where someone who owned slaves kept the slaves at
A household slave was a slave trained and employed in the house of his/her owner. And no it was not better for the slave
house slave ,field slave
yes
i think the third slave is Mr. small
no
barraks
The House of Dies Drear.
In the pre-Civil War American South a house slave worked in the Master's house rather than in the fields. House slaves served as butlers, maids, cooks, nannies, washerwomen, and the like.
Answer: the difference is that a slave is dirty and does not work in a proper house hold, and indentured servant is a clean proper slave that is assigned to one house were the servant gets clean close and a clean approch everyday so the guesst in the house will not be That is the answer.
Yes.