Lords
Manors were isolated from each other by large tracts of land owned by the Lord. These were little kingdoms within themselves that were very self efficient. Everything that was needed to run the manor was created locally and in many cases defended locally if the manor came under attack for any reason.
The Daimyo were the equivalent of English Lords in the feudal ages. The Daimyo's held large tracts of land and collectively ruled most of the land. They were seconfd only to the Shogun in authority.
yes it is
you answer it too mehhAAThe lowest ranking nobleman and commissioned army officer was the knight on horseback.Instead of being supported by taxes, army officers, who were also the nobility, were supported by owning tracts of land.Since the lowest ranking officer was the knight he owned the smallest estate. The serfs reported directly to him. He collected their taxes.He built a house called The Manor House. England had about 6,000 manor houses.He sent taxes to his overlord. In Europe the Manors were contiguous. When William conquered England he set up a different system. His Lords were over non-contiguous manors. That way no lord could set up his own army.So the manor house came into being with the adoption of the feudal system and the breakdown of the Roman Empire.
Deep Tracts of Hell was created in 1998-07.
Spinal tracts are communication pathways. There are numerous tracts and they carry messages from the body to the brain and from the brain to the body.
Pennsylvania offered large tracts of land :)
Quadrangles is what divides the land into townships and then each township into smaller tracts. The smaller tracts are subdivided into many different ways.
There are far more than three - but three of them are 1) the optic tract, 2) the nigro-striatal tract, and 3) the mesocortico-limbic tract. And one more tract system,, out of many, is the corpus collosal tract system between the two cerebral hemispheres.
There are six important descending, or motor, tracts and their functions in brief are as follows: 1. Lateral corticospinal tracts: voluntary movement, contraction of individual or small groups of muscles, particularly those moving hands, fingers, feet, and toes on opposite side of body 2. Anterior corticospinal tracts: same as preceding except mainly muscles of same side of body 3. Reticulospinal tracts: help maintain posture during skeletal muscle movements 4. Rubrospinal tracts: transmit impulses that coordinate body movements and maintenance of posture 5. Tectospinal tracts: head and neck movement related to visual reflexes 6. Vestibulospinal tracts: coordination of posture and balance
Propriospinal tracts are bundles of nerve fibers located within the spinal cord that connect different segments of the spinal cord to each other. They play a crucial role in coordinating reflexes and motor functions by facilitating communication between spinal levels, particularly during complex movements. These tracts help integrate sensory and motor information, allowing for more refined and coordinated responses to stimuli.
Some animals have relatively short digestive tracts because they are carnivores. Herbivores need longer digestive tracts than carnivores in order to digest cellulose.