quiz 3: the high middle ages, true
false
It is true that a fief is the troops of knight that was granted to the vassal.
True
fief or feoff
A vassal was a person, and a fief was land. A vassal swore allegiance and support to a king, and the king gave the vassal fief to live on.
(A fief, or land held in trust, was given to a lower vassal or serf in the feudal system. The word fee developed from the share, tribute, or rent paid to the lord, hence landlord)"The son inherited his father's fief, and had many serfs who farmed the land.""Under feudalism, a noble could not sell his fief to another."
no it can not fore a fief is the way that a vassel makes money
fief
It is true that a fief is the troops of knight that was granted to the vassal.
True
It is somewhat true and somewhat false, lords granted fiefs to peoples they trusted who then would become vassals to the lord. The lord might have given him the land for serving in the army, but that might not have always been the case.
fief or feoff
A fief.
Surviving fief
A vassal was a person, and a fief was land. A vassal swore allegiance and support to a king, and the king gave the vassal fief to live on.
Vassals agree to fight for the lord, and after an agreement is made the vassal is given a fief in the agreement.
Fief is not a word in English. Perhaps you mean "fife"?
The word fief is descended from the old Anglo-French meaning fee or something that is owed. All who lived in a fiefdom owed duty to the fief holder in the form of taxes and service. There are now two sentences above, each using the word fief.