Yeomen and tenant farmers differ primarily in land ownership and farming practices. Yeomen typically own their land and operate independently, often growing crops for both subsistence and sale. In contrast, tenant farmers do not own the land they cultivate; instead, they lease it from landowners and pay rent, either in cash or through a share of the crops produced. This distinction impacts their economic stability and farming autonomy.
Blacksmiths usually married the daughters of serfs, tenant farmers, yeomen, merchants who were not wealthy, or other craftsmen. T
Yeomen did not own slaves and were poor while plantation owners were rich and owned many slaves.
Yeoman farmers made up most of the Southern white society in the 1800s. Yeoman farmers owned small farms and sometimes had other farmers working for them.
because they need them to help with there crops
Yes, yeomen farmers in medieval and early modern England typically owned land. They were considered a social class above laborers and below gentry, and their status was often defined by their ownership of a small plot of land that they cultivated for their livelihood.
Her last name was Arden. They were yeomen, wealthy farmers.
Yeomen were small, independent farmers, who were required to serve as archers, as required. To be a yeoman, one had to be of age, which might have meant 18 or 21 years old. There was no specific age of retirement.
For a large group of yeomen, independence and not wealth was important. Yeomen were small farmers who (60% owned their own farms) grew enough vegetables to feed their families,grew enough cotton each year to have little cash. They very high value yeomen placed on freedon grew directly from their own experience as self-sufficient properly owning farmers in small family-based communities, and from absolute, patriarchal control they exercised over their own wives and children.
They were the planters, the small slaveholders, the yeomen (family farmers), and the people of the pine barrens. [came word for word from advanced history book] if u go to connections, the answer is (B) Yeomen
The collective noun is a fellowship of yeomen.
Yeomen of the Guard was created in 1485.
The Yeomen of the Guard was created in 1888.