in the middle top
A knight is typically situated below the nobility, which includes barons, counts, and dukes, but above the peasants and serfs. Knights were usually granted land or fiefs in exchange for their military service to their lord or monarch.
knight
The feudal system is described by the Feudal Pyramid, which has four basic elements, the king, the lords, the common vassals, and the serfs. It is called a pyramid because each layer was supported by a much larger group that supported it, down to the serfs. The term vassal is sometimes applied only to those below the lords, but the lords were vassals.
The King or as he was known in Ancient Egypt the Pharaoh
True
true.
They served their kings for the rest of their lives. They protected the manor. Served noble lords in exchange for fiefs. Fought on horeback. Knights were a class in the midieval pyramid, or the Feudal System. If you're father was a knight, you were born a knight and stayed a knight.
they are freemen
that is because the kings do less jobs then the peasants and peasants do more
In "The Canterbury Tales," the Knight and the Squire are part of the feudal system. The Knight represents the noble class as a mounted warrior, while the Squire is his son and serves as his assistant and apprentice. Both characters reflect different aspects of feudal society and its structure.
a way of ranking people in feudal times (medieval europe)
knight
The feudal system is described by the Feudal Pyramid, which has four basic elements, the king, the lords, the common vassals, and the serfs. It is called a pyramid because each layer was supported by a much larger group that supported it, down to the serfs. The term vassal is sometimes applied only to those below the lords, but the lords were vassals.
The King or as he was known in Ancient Egypt the Pharaoh
He told her how pretty she was and how he loved her
Cards like King's knight, Queen's knight, Jack's knight, Dark Magician, etc...
The knights served their King.---
they would challenge the person not the lady to a battle.