Serfs were not forced to have children under the laws and customs of medieval Europe. They were bound to the soil on which they lived, and had to provide work, crops, or rent to the lords of those lands, according to the customs of the time and place. But they were not slaves, they were not bought or sold, and could not even be legally put off the land, in most cases, even if the lord wished it.
Yes. Male and female serfs married, and their children were born into serfdom.
Serfs and peasents don,t run away a lot because the lord owns them
most serfs had no free time. serfs usually planted crops worked on crafts.some were forced to sleep,some had more rights than others.played sports if allowed.some just made clothes.
If a lord gave a knight land with serfs on it the serfs would take care of it and if the knight moved the serfs wouldn't. Once you are a serf you can't go back neither can your family. So your children and their children and their children and so on have to be a serf. So to answer your question: A serf stayed with the land. I also gave you a definition on a serf. And there is a bunch of sentences with serfs in them above.
In general, the children of serfs were also serfs. This was not quite like slavery, however, because bright children could be educated and enter monasteries, and children who were not so bright could often enter monasteries as workers. There were other paths out of serfdom, also, such as just running away, and if a serf ran off to a chartered town or city and stayed away for a year, he or she was considered free.
they were forced to work without pay
Yes. Male and female serfs married, and their children were born into serfdom.
Serfs and peasents don,t run away a lot because the lord owns them
most serfs had no free time. serfs usually planted crops worked on crafts.some were forced to sleep,some had more rights than others.played sports if allowed.some just made clothes.
Most serfs were raised by serf parents who trained them to do the jobs they did. There were possibilities for very bright children to be trained in monasteries.
They didn't choose to, if was forced apon them. They were legally tied to the land they worked on, by the owner of the land.
If a lord gave a knight land with serfs on it the serfs would take care of it and if the knight moved the serfs wouldn't. Once you are a serf you can't go back neither can your family. So your children and their children and their children and so on have to be a serf. So to answer your question: A serf stayed with the land. I also gave you a definition on a serf. And there is a bunch of sentences with serfs in them above.
Noblemen would have serfs or servants fan them with palm leaves, and upper-middle class use ice blocks, but as they were expensive, this was a luxary. Serfs were forced to just bear the heat.
In general, the children of serfs were also serfs. This was not quite like slavery, however, because bright children could be educated and enter monasteries, and children who were not so bright could often enter monasteries as workers. There were other paths out of serfdom, also, such as just running away, and if a serf ran off to a chartered town or city and stayed away for a year, he or she was considered free.
Serfs ate a lot of brown bread and soup. They also had vegetables that they grew. They usually did not have access to much meat or rich foods.
In Medieval Europe, serfs were basically like slaves forced to work for the land. They were peasants without freedom.
The peasants of Russia and Eastern Europe more or less became serfs because they were forced into it. The nobles divided up the land and the people living on it because the serf for that feudal lord. They really didn't have a choice.