The Manor's serf's provided food for the lord of the manor, and the in return gave them gifts of bread or extra vegetables on occasion. The serfs are happy because of the gifts they receive so they continue to farm the lords land which continues to give he lord food. the cycle continues.
Yes, during Medieval Times, almost all items were produced inside the manor by serfs, who were bound to the land. There was a system of mutual obligations between the Lords of the manors and the serfs who worked for them. Lords provided serfs with food, housing, and protection, and sometimes a bit of their own land. In return, serfs worked the lord's land by producing food from the fields, and repairing bridges and roads. Serfs were also required to pay the lord to grind grain and ask his approval in order to marry.
being able to depend on yourself and get what you need. like the feudalism system in the middle ages, most Manors (lords land where serfs or peasants worked) where very self sufficient.
Because all of their products are produced in the manor. They are self sufficient.
Medieval lands owned by a nobleman or lord for whom the serfs labored and owed allegiance were known as manors or feudal estates. These were self-sufficient agricultural areas, usually centered around a manor house or castle, where the lord exercised control over the serfs who worked the land.
Manors achieved what self-sufficiency they possessed by typically combining lords' agricultural land with the peasant labour needed to work it. Manorial self-sufficiency was far from complete, however, reflecting the unit's narrow resource base (averaging 500 acres or so of arable representing the lord's cropland and the holdings of perhaps twenty-odd peasant households) and frequent lack of geographical cohesion. Militarily, the manor might support a knight but the latter was bound to his lord rather than to the locality. Economically, the village (often a jumble of manors or of fragments of different manors) remained important in organising peasant land tenure and production. Manor and villagers both traded in agricultural produce and services (agricultural and other), allowing the growth of a (still small) urban population and of rural crafts. The manor was thus a highly "porous" institution, a cornerstone of the social order but only one element within a diversifying and increasingly complex economy.
Yes, the Medieval manors system were intended to be as self sufficient as possible.
yes
Large, self-sufficient farming estates were called Manors!
Manors
Manors
Yes, during Medieval Times, almost all items were produced inside the manor by serfs, who were bound to the land. There was a system of mutual obligations between the Lords of the manors and the serfs who worked for them. Lords provided serfs with food, housing, and protection, and sometimes a bit of their own land. In return, serfs worked the lord's land by producing food from the fields, and repairing bridges and roads. Serfs were also required to pay the lord to grind grain and ask his approval in order to marry.
by protecting serfs from raiders in return for thier toil and labor
being able to depend on yourself and get what you need. like the feudalism system in the middle ages, most Manors (lords land where serfs or peasants worked) where very self sufficient.
Because all of their products are produced in the manor. They are self sufficient.
by protecting serfs from raiders in return for thier toil and labor
Medieval lands owned by a nobleman or lord for whom the serfs labored and owed allegiance were known as manors or feudal estates. These were self-sufficient agricultural areas, usually centered around a manor house or castle, where the lord exercised control over the serfs who worked the land.
There were serfs, nobility, and clergy. There were other groups too, including the merchants, but they were not so important in the early times when the manors were intended to be self sufficient.