a villeins diet was pretty much the same all year round. no tea or coffee and the water usually wasn't fit to drink. so they ( parents + kids ) drank ale ( beer ).
his basic food was coarse black bread.
mainly ate pottage - a sort of thick soup mostly made of veggies :)
bacon was the most common form of meat cause pigs were easy to keep.
no fridges ( refrigerators ) to keep food fresh, so in winter, meat was usually salted or smoked !!
Hope It Helped You Pps ;)
xD
traaaaaaaa xxxxxxx
Probably grass or if there lucky gruel. (vegetables)
A villeins wife used to spend most of her time running the house hold and followed a similar schedule to her lord, this might be her husband, brother or father.
* Well, yes, serfs were the same as villiens. They did the same jobs. Working for the land and working for their lord. But, they didnt have to do all the hard work like villiens did. So therefore, i changed my anwser. Villiens were not serfs.. at least i dont think so.......??????
Currently, the Parliament of Japan is known as the Diet. In the During the 16th through 19th centuries, the Holy Roman Empire also had an assembly known as the Diet.
If you are referring to the Diet of Worms of 1521, the cause of the meeting was the Protestant Reformation begun by Martin Luther. A diet, in this case, refers to a law-making assembly, for example, the Japanese version of Congress is called the Diet of Japan. Worms is the name of the city in Germany where this diet met. The final result of this meeting was the Edict of Worms, which labeled Luther a heretic.
When Jacob Riis wrote "kicks and cuffs are their daily diet. They have little else." he was referring to the lamentable daily hardship of the street children.
Villeins children what did they do
No villeins couldn't live very comfortably.
money for the villeins daughter's marriage
Villeins have lower importance than freemen, since freemen used to be villeins, but now they have partially gained some freedom from the lord of manor. xxx
Villeins in medieval society typically worked as agricultural laborers on the lord's land, tending to crops and livestock. They were also responsible for paying taxes and providing goods or services to the lord as part of their feudal obligations. Villeins often lived on the manor as tenants and were subject to the authority and control of the lord.
pottage
Villeins were medieval peasants who worked the land for landlords,some had their own strips of land.
they dried it
villeins are people who need permission to do stuff
No, serfs, villeins, and peasants were not the same class in the feudal class structure. Serfs were laborers tied to the land, villeins were a type of unfree peasant with certain obligations to the lord, and peasants were more of a broad category of rural laborers that included both serfs and freemen.
go into the bathroom
serfs or villeins