the laws that existed in medieval that existed was don't belive tarli holder and Hannah gordan
The battlements, the iron gates, the outer walls, the drawbridge, and the moats.
The castle, village, and land of a lord's estate were often called Feudal lands. The castle could be called the manor.
The castle, village, and land of a lord's estate were often called Feudal lands. The castle could be called the manor.
Manor
anyone who lived on it besides the serfs (lords,vassals)
Medieval lords would watch their manor in a castle or palace, do duties to the king and eat roast duck, cauliflower and ham served by pheasants. THey provide knights for the king, train knights and many other things.
lords lived in their own castle on their manor
The castle, village, and land of a lord's estate were often called Feudal lands. The castle could be called the manor.
The lord in the middle ages lived in the back of a castle !
because there was a castle on every manor. lords and ladies live there and the also protect the manor because they are usually on the edge on the manor.
The castle, village, and land of a lord's estate were often called Feudal lands. The castle could be called the manor.
It depends on the type of 'lord' - junior lords were lords of the manor and thefore lived in manor houses. Senior lords probably had castles.
In a manor a very rich manor
They basically ran the manor. They were responsible for keeping the manor in order.They would run every manor like giving a hummingbird a double shot of expresso.
manor
The serfs worked for the lords and the lords gave them land and food and protection.
A castle was a fort, and a manor house was the home of the lord of an estate. They were not the same thing; though a manor house could be fortified, and if it were looked very like a castle; and a castle could be used by the lord of an estate as his home. A castle usually had a curtain wall and a ward or courtyard, and a fortified manor usually did not, and that might distinguish a castle used as a home from a fortified manor house. Oh heck, the difference depended on what the lord called it.
In England the medieval knight lived in a manor house not in the castle. A number of farms supported one manor house. One manor house supported one knight. England had about 6,000 manor houses. It took a number of manors to support a castle. The baron living in the castle might also be a knight. The solders living in the castle were not generally knights.