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Peasants didn't have "wages". They were tenet farmers who worked the land for the Lord or landlord. In exchange they got a place to live and a small patch of ground to grow a few things that they could sell at market. After the plague some were able to move into better economic conditions because of the vacuum left by people who died. Many took over businesses or land that were left and began to improve their lives.

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Q: What were the wages of the peasants after the plague?
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What was the English Statute of Laborers?

Well, the statute of labourers was a law passed by English government/Parliament to prevent the surviving peasants from freedom. The Statute of Labourers was an act passed by the English Parliament under King Edward III to prevent the peasants from obtaining higher wages. Do to the decline in population after the Black Plague the peasants had demanded higher wages, and so to counter, the Landowners asked Parliament to pass the act. This further lead to - indirectly though - peasants being denied their freedom.


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What plague did wages rose and trade declined?

The Black Death caused the death of many peasants so they were in higher demand but there was less supply. The landlords had to pay the peasants more to keep them but eventually the government passed a law, i can't remember the name right now, which stopped peasants being paid more then a certain amount. This caused the peasants revolt. Trade declined after the Black Death as there were less crops, less traders and less peasants. Thanks!


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The peasants ate moldy bread because it was a kind of medicine.


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because before the black death there were lots of peasants to do labour but after the black death since so many of them had died it was harder to get work from the survivng peasants so the lords offered the peasants higher wages


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The short answer is economics. The tremendous loss of population resulted in a severe labor shortage. That caused wages to rise, and hence prices rose. The nobility, who owned most of the land, enacted laws to keep wages low. That meant the peasants were faced with low wages but high prices for basics like food. That pushed them in to desperate straights. Thus they revolted. there were other factors at work which make it more complicated than that, but that is the simple answer.


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Why did the plague caused the system of feudalism collaspe?

The plague killed off many of the peasants who worked the land, leaving s shortage of labour for the Barons who ruled their fiefs. As there were now fewer of them, the peasants, carpenters, and masons could demand higher wages for their hire, and lower rents. Prices fell, and in the new economic climate, the rising survivors found a profit. This included increasing their land holdings that people had once owned and building stone cottages to replace the wood and mud dwellings they had known as children.In 1351, while the plague was still present in England, the King introduced a new law, the Statute of Labourers, in an attempt to fix rates and wages, but market forces pushed them up regardless. Peasantry found a new economic muscle, encouraging the protests that lead to the peasant's revolt of 1381. Thus the plague played a part in hastening a gradual change from feudalism to capitalism.