A noble's estate is commonly referred to as a "manor." This term typically denotes a large house or residence, along with the surrounding lands and farms that were historically part of a feudal system. Manors often served as the administrative center for the local area and were inhabited by the nobility or landed gentry.
A large farming estate where nobles and serfs lived and worked is called a "manor." Manors were central to the feudal system in medieval Europe, with the lord of the manor overseeing the estate and the serfs providing labor in exchange for protection and land use. The manor typically included agricultural fields, a manor house, and various buildings for livestock and storage. This system structured rural life and economy during that period.
Before the Revolution in France : The Estates-General consisted of three estates :the Clergy (about 100,000 people), the Nobles (about 400, 000 people) and all the others (about 96% of the population) belonged to the Third Estate.
Earldom
Memorial, of course.
Plantation
1st estate
The Nobles.
The Nobles were pro Monarchy.
The French Nobles.
The Nobles of the Second Estate. it's First estate for a+
The Nobles.
the nobles received their money from the taxes that the third estate paid.
french second estate was comprised of nobles king and queen
Peasents where the third Estate.
Nobles were called patricians.
boyars
There were various councils of nobles, but the most important were sections of parliaments. In England, this was the House of Lords, and in France this was the Second Estate.