If his Lord sold the land, the serf would be passed onto the new owner.
A vassal was a subject of a monarch who held a fief from that monarch. In other words the vassal was a lord with an estate that consisted of one or more manors. In return for the fief, the vassal had to give an oath swearing to support the monarch as needed, such as to fight for him in wars and provide soldiers from his followers. A serf was a peasant who had no land of his own, but had a relationship with a lord that was in some respects like the relationship between the vassal and the monarch. Just as the vassal got land from the king, the serf was provided with a place to live and fields to farm, though the were not his to own. And just as the vassal supported the monarch with soldiers, the serf supported the lord with food, labor, or money for rent.
They did not have to do anything for them, knights protected their serfs more cause of the profit not because he care of the serf's life.
Oh really! That is a declaratory sentence. A declaratory sentence does not need to be long.
In a sentence such as: "How can remorse be used in a sentence?"
The noble executed the serf.
If his Lord sold the land, the serf would be passed onto the new owner.
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.
Whats serf
antonym for serf: master
The homonym for "serf" is "surf."
Your question is not entirely correct in its premise; a serf is not a slave and does not have an owner. A serf is a subject of a land owner whom the serf would address as lord.
In a feudal system, a serf would remain a serf no matter how hard they were to work.
Saint Serf died in 583.
Saint Serf was born in 500.
Riddle answer: a serf board.
Peasant/serf