King comands everybody below him
the Feudal system was shown as a triangle with the monarchs(kings and queens) on the top then lords, ladies, and noblesthen priests, nuns, knights, and vassals finally there was theserfs and peasants.
the monarchs during the feudal system were the feudal lords they were excepted to keep protection for their vassals
At the very bottom. They had no freedom and no one below them.
the feudal system for serfs was a bad thing because they always had to do work for the kings,lord and/or knights.
The vassals helped by keeping control of the armies and having the Kings reward them with land.
Kings depended on their nobles and vassals to provide knights and soldiers for their armies. These nobles and vassals were granted land in exchange for military service and loyalty to the king.
because there are more peasants than any kings, knights or lords. kings are the least populus.
In feudal Europe, the knights pledged their loyalty to the king. They fought for the king and the kingdom.
Kings in the medieval period typically obtained knights through a feudal system. They would grant land to nobles, known as vassals, who in turn would provide military service and knights to the king. Knights were often born into noble families and trained from a young age to become skilled warriors.
Vassalage is the relationship between the feudal lord and his vassal. Kings had higher lords as vassals, and higher lords had lower lords as vassals. The practice was called subinfeudation.
it wasn't a who , it was magna carta, a feudal document.
All members of the nobility below kings were vassals of the kings. This was not as easy an issue as it might appear. Some nobility at lower levels were independent of any kings, and these could include princes and dukes. Furthermore some kings were vassals of other kings, as Henry II of England was technically a vassal of Louis VII of France because Henry had counties in France. The Kings of Scotland were forced to accept that they were vassals of the Kings of England at one point. There were kings who were vassals of the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, and some of these were had kingdoms that were partly in the empire and partly out, in which case they were vassals for the part in, but not vassals for the part out.