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There is no direct medieval equivalent of a "vegetable patch", which is a purely American English idea.

In England, a peasant cottage was built in its own very small plot of land (the toft), with a larger plot (the croft) behind this and joined to it. What people chose to grow on these two "home" areas was entirely up to personal choice - they might keep a dairy cow, hens or geese, or some pigs, or goats (for the milk), or they might have fruit trees, herbs, vegetables or use the croft entirely for corn (in the English sense: wheat, oats, barley, rye).

As well as the croft and toft, each peasant had a number of farming plots in strips of land, distributed around the neighbouring fields. These were used for growing corn, peas, field beans or other crops, while some might be left fallow, used to grow grass for hay, or used to graze sheep or other animals.

As well as cultivating the croft and toft and their own strips of land, each manorial peasant was required to work of the demesne lands for a part of each week - those strips belonging to the lord of the manor.

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12y ago
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11y ago

"Manor" is a very loose term referring to an area of land held by a knight or a senior churchman - and he might hold many of these manors in different parts of the country. A manor might include one, two, three or more villages, or none at all - and in some cases a village might be split between two or more manors.

The workforce would either live in the villages scattered around the manorial estate, or they would live in the complex around the manor house itself. There was no rule about where the workforce lived and every manorial estate was different.

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14y ago

As tenate farmers they were given strips of land in various places on the manor. The land was not connected to where they lived, but it was for their use.

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11y ago

Their houses were located around the manor of their lord

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Q: Where did peasants live on a medieval manor?
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Where did peasants live in the medieval era A.Peasants lived in the dungeon of the manor. B.Peasants lived in a village outside the manor. C.Peasants lived in the patronage.?

Peasants lived in a village outside the manor.


What were the laws for peasants in Medieval Times?

Pretty much whatever the lord of the manor said they were.


What does medieval lords live in?

In a manor a very rich manor


What was the daily life of a medieval bailiff of the manor like?

The bailiff was appointed by the lord to collect rent from tenants on the manor. he supervised the services due to the lord from his tenants. he also represented the peasants to the lord. he helped oversee the peasants work, and managed the day-to-day profits and expenses of the manor


Why were peasants of the middle ages willing to live on manor?

Peasants were bound to the manor. They farmed and did other work so that the knights would protect them from Viking raids and other invasions.


How did the manor system operate?

The manor system protects serfs and merchants, that live in manor. Knights allowed peasants to farm land on their large estates. In return the peasants had to give the knights food, goods or other payment.


Were did a Medieval lord live?

The lord of a village or town would live in a manor house.


Did medieval nuns live in a manor or village?

Nuns usually lived in convents, which had their own grounds and were not part of a manor or village


Where does a medieval bailiff live?

The medieval bailiff often resided in the manor house. These people were responsible for the running of the manor, the control of the peasants and any other details the lord of the manor assigned to them. Bailiffs sometimes came from the families of lesser nobility.


Why were castles a symbol of the medieval time period?

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.


Who lived on the manor?

Nobles and peasants.


Peasents who were bound to a manor?

Peasants who were bound to a manor were known as serfs or villeins. They were required to work the land and pay dues to the lord of the manor in exchange for protection and the right to live on the land. Serfs were not free to leave the manor without the lord's permission.