An animal husbandman is one who takes care of the animal machine or specialist in the science of raising animals. HE tends animals to keep them healthy, produce quality products and reproduce regularly.
A husbandman was a farmer.
no!
Today we would refer to a husbandman as a farmer, gardener, orchardist or similar. It literally means someone who works with the land.
Anthony Yonge has written: 'The husbandman's companion'
Very skilful hand. has written: 'The good husbandman's jewel'
farmer rancher husbandman
Gervase Markham has written: 'The Teares of the Beloued: (1600) and Marie Magdalene's Teares: (1601)' 'Countrey contentments' 'The second booke of the English husbandman'
Yes, "Harris" is a name that is used by people of various backgrounds and religions, including Muslims. It is not exclusive to any particular faith.
No, Abel was a herder of livestock. Cain was a tiller of the ground and if there was a vineyard in Adam's family it would have been Cain's. However the first Husbandman mentioned in the bible was Noah.
The Tilghman surname is first found in Kent (England), where they'd held family seat since very ancient times, dating from prior to the Norman Conquest of 1066. The name means farmer, or husbandman, and is associated with tilemakers.
What period of usage (century) and where? In England, husbandman generally referred to a farmer, orchard owner, or someone handling livestock. Freeman generally referred to whether or not an individually had a legal obligation (as in a subject or serf [Eh??]) to a local lord. You may want to consult the full Oxford Enlish Dictionary (something like 20 volumes, though a two-volume reduced text version is available as well) as it contains the evolution or history of use and meaning of each word word use over the centuries. Many local libraries have it, as do most colleges or universities. in early New England a freeman was a member of the church in good standing who had taken a civil oath called a "Freeman's Oath" and was thus allowed to vote and hold public office. A husbandman was the same usage as in England, he was a farmer The Collins Dictionary of the English Language (1980) says a "freeman" is: 1. a person who is not a slave or in bondage 2. a person who enjoys political and civil liberties; citizen 3. a person who enjoys a privilege or franchise, such as the freedom of a city.
animal