serfs and manor house owners
Peasants lived in a village outside the manor.
The manor's house is apart from everything and the village. They have a big home. The people who owned were those who were at or near the top of the feudal system. For the lord and his family they lived comfortable.
He lived in the manor house.
The castle, village, and land of a lord's estate were often called Feudal lands. The castle could be called the manor.
A lord's estate was called a manor. It had a manor house for the lord and his family, a number of cottages for the serfs who lived and worked on the manor, farm buildings, farm land, woods, and fields. Usually, the serfs' cottages were grouped into one or more hamlets and quite possibly a village with a church.
Peasants lived in a village outside the manor.
Nuns usually lived in convents, which had their own grounds and were not part of a manor or village
The manor was bigger that the village so you can imagine what it was like
Answer 1Manors were agricultural estates, given to lords, usually by a king, in exchange for military and political support. Labor was provided by peasants who lived on the manors, in exchange for a place to live, fields to farm, and protection. A manor had a manor house, where the lord might live, though many lords had more than one manor. A manor usually included a small community, at least a hamlet, but more often a village, where the peasants and other laborers lived. If there was a village, the village had a church. There was usually a bakery, or at least someone, such as a miller, who baked bread. In addition, there could be other craftsmen on a manor, such as spinsters, weavers, potters, carpenters, and so on.A permanent market place was the distinguishing feature of a town. A manor never or nearly never had a permanent market.Answer 2Peasants lived in a village outside the manor
The manor's house is apart from everything and the village. They have a big home. The people who owned were those who were at or near the top of the feudal system. For the lord and his family they lived comfortable.
Almost by definition, a manor had a manor house, where its lord lived with his family, when he was on the manor. A manor had fields where various crops were grown and animals grazed. There were fields devoted to things grown for the lord, for the serfs in common, and assigned for the individual serf families. There might also be land peasants rented for their own use. There were usually woods, and these supplied the wood that was used on the manor for various purposes. Most manors had a village or hamlet. If the manor had a village, then it also had a church. Serfs lived in the village, though there may have been individual cottages or a secondary hamlet. There were barns and outbuildings of all sorts. There were often workshops of one sort or another. Many manors had carpenters, blacksmiths, millers, or other craftsmen. There is a link below.
He lived in the manor house.
They lived in manors ("castles") on land given to them in exchange for military strength to the King. Typically the manor was the focal point of a town or village. All the village fell under the lord's protection.
Philipses
The estate of most feudal lords was called a manor. The manor was a large agricultural property worked by peasants who lived on it, usually in a hamlet or village. It might have had a number of features, including a manor house, for the lord and his family, workshops, barns, woodland, pasture, fields, and often a church.
Farmland, forests, the lord's house or castle, and a peasant village The manor was made up of the castle, the church, the village, and the surrounding farmland.
The castle, village, and land of a lord's estate were often called Feudal lands. The castle could be called the manor.