Because all of their products are produced in the manor. They are self sufficient.
Yes.
the customs and traditions of the manor
A lord of the manor is the person who is in-charge of the manor. The manor is basically the plot of land which the king gives the lord in return for his loyalty. The lord and his lady run the manor and live in a castle on the manor. The manor also holds serfs, knights, priests, and bishops, though. This is because many manors in the medieval ages could hold up to 2,000 people!
peasant.
The building known as Treneere Manor is not medieval, although it may stand on the site of a former medieval manor house. Treneere is not listed in Domesday Book, so it was not even a village at that time. In fact Treneere Manor was not built until the 18th century. In 1913 Treneere Manor was home to a Mr Polglase, who sold some of his land to be developed as a Girl's Grammar School. Until the 1930s the owners of Treneere Manor were the biggest landholders in the area; it was effectively part of the wider lands of Alverton Manor (which does have medieval history).
Peasants lived in a village outside the manor.
In a manor a very rich manor
The landlord.
everything that people needed was grown or made on the manor
it wasn't.
poop
because of the serfs
serf ownership of property
the customs and traditions of the manor
mud bricks
A lord of the manor is the person who is in-charge of the manor. The manor is basically the plot of land which the king gives the lord in return for his loyalty. The lord and his lady run the manor and live in a castle on the manor. The manor also holds serfs, knights, priests, and bishops, though. This is because many manors in the medieval ages could hold up to 2,000 people!
peasant.
A peasant