The peasant and his family, of course.
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In most places, for most peasants, the house was occupied by an immediate family.
In many parts of Europe, peasant families were able to have servants living with them. These were usually young people who had moved away from their families and had not yet started their own. Calling them servants might make the families they lived with sound to modern people much more important or wealthy than they were. They could have servants and still be rather poor. Possibly the house also had the chickens in it during the winter.
In many places, the peasant houses were what is called long houses. In these, there were often several peasant families living together, often together with other people who were single and not part of families. The long houses were big enough that very often people lived at one end, animals were kept at the other, and there were large storage areas for grain and other foods. The long houses were most common in northern Germany, Holland, and Britain, though oddly, more among British Celts than Anglo Saxons.
There is a link to a related question on what serfs houses were like below.
In historical contexts, manors were typically owned by wealthy landowners or nobility and managed by estate stewards and servants. Various individuals would have worked in a manor, including butlers, maids, gardeners, stable hands, cooks, and other domestic staff to ensure the smooth running of the estate.
The people who lived in the manor houses included the lords and their families, if they happened to be in residence, rather than at some other manor. Also, there were a number of servants typically at the house, which could include the steward, the housekeeper, and a variety of others, depending on the size and importance of the manor.
Less important servants who worked in the manor might or might not have lived there, and these included everyone from cooks to maids to game keepers. If they did not actually live in the manor, they lived in simple homes nearby.
The manor was an estate that included a lord, the lord's family, various servants, and a number of farmers with their families. The farmers had their own cottages, and farmed the land of the manner according to local custom. A manner could include a village, with a group of villagers, who might be of any of the simpler trades and crafts. There was likely to be a church on a manor, of there were enough people to support one, and there might be a priest at the church. Other people, such as guests, lesser knights and ladies, and so on could also be present, depending on how large the manor was.
A person who works in a manor is called a philapenis
the lord, nobelwomen, knights, serfs, any peasants who wanted to work on the manor
The adverb is "hard," as it describes how he worked in clearing the land.
If this is concerning the sarah Jane adventures ep. The eternity trap it was filmed at an estate owned by mick jagger called
In New England, slaves worked primarily as household servants, artisans, and in maritime industries. In the Middle colonies, slaves worked on farms, mines, and in skilled trades such as carpentry and blacksmithing. In the Southern colonies, slaves worked on plantations in agriculture, primarily in tobacco, rice, and indigo production.
Samuel de Champlain worked for France as an explorer and cartographer. He is known for founding the city of Quebec in Canada and playing a significant role in the early exploration and settlement of New France.
Common noun.
The peasants
Some ordinary people rarely left the manor bc manor had housing for all the people who worked for the lord and lady .They were usually powerless & had no money to leave the manor.
They both served a lord and worked on the manor.
Manorailsim is the system in which the lord of the manor exploited tenants and serfs who worked on his land.
They owned it, ran it, and used it. Everyone worked for them and the king.
Serfs.
they worked and they fought to live and earn money
they worked and they fought to live and earn money
The large house at the center of a manor was called the manor house, and it was a home of the lord of the manor. He could live there with his family. Servants who worked in the manor house often lived in it, in simple rooms. At times, a representative of the lord could live there, and if the lord was in financial need, he could rent it out.
The serfs worked for the lords and the lords gave them land and food and protection.
The agricultural estate is called a manor.
People depended on agricultural production - :)