grow food for the lord. and not hunt in his woods.
jhkhg
in 2009
Barbro Lord's birth name is Barbro Maria Lord.
Julian Lord's birth name is Julian Recardo Lord.
Michael Lord-Castle was born in 1959.
A villein had to ask permission from his lord to marry and to leave the manor or estate. These requests were necessary because the villein was bound to the land and owed labor services to the lord.
First off it's villein. They would work the Lord of the Manor's land. A villein and his family would have a little bit of land for themselves too. If you were a villein, you were at the bottom of the feudal system; it would be very hard for a villein to move up the system.
They were to work for their lord/lady.
Slaving for the lord
they had to work for their lord 3 days a week
a villein is someone who would have to work for the lord of the manor 40 days for free. but that changed after the plague. mst of the town would have been villeins
5-7 days a week
Yes. He did the work that was needed to get food, to care for the stables or mews, and went to war for the lord when the lord had war.
In the Middle Ages, a villein was a peasant who, under the feudal system of land tenure that prevailed in Europe in the Middle Ages, paid dues and services to a lord in exchange for land. Villeins were not slaves, and were named as freemen and freewomen in medieval documents, however they were not free. They, and their land and possessions belonged to the lord of the manor. They were not free to leave the manor, and they were subject to a very large number of obligations required by the lord, including work on the lord's land two or three days a week, additional work at harvest, and the payment of manorial dues. In lots of places they also had to pay for the right to brew ale, bake bread, and grind corn at the mill, that was probably owned by the lord.
A villein in the medieval times was a step up from slavery, had to do hardworking chores and didn't get paid much.
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.
A villein was a peasant who worked on a lord's estate. Their jobs included farming the land, tending to livestock, maintaining the lord's property, and performing other tasks as required by the lord. Villeins typically had to work a certain number of days on the lord's land in exchange for the right to farm a portion of the land for their own sustenance.