yes.
It is important for farmers to cultivate their own land because it allows them to have control over the quality of their crops, ensure sustainable farming practices, and have a direct connection to the land they work on. Cultivating their own land also provides farmers with a sense of ownership and stability in their livelihoods.
Not in the US, at least. With the shrinking number of farmers and more efficient farming methods, many farmers (if not most) farm at least some land that they do not live on but they are the tenant.
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.
Uneven land distribution in Palampur is due to historical factors where land holdings were divided and inherited over generations, resulting in unequal land sizes. Additionally, land consolidation efforts have been limited, leading to some farmers owning small plots of land while others own large ones. This uneven distribution affects the productivity and income levels of farmers in Palampur.
The owners of the land tell the tenant farmers that the bank is foreclosing on the property and they must leave. They offer some compensation for the improvements made to the land by the farmers, but it is not nearly enough to cover their losses.
It is important for farmers to cultivate their own land because it allows them to have control over the quality of their crops, ensure sustainable farming practices, and have a direct connection to the land they work on. Cultivating their own land also provides farmers with a sense of ownership and stability in their livelihoods.
To help others
In the United StatesA tenant farmer is one who resides on and farms land owned by a landlord.
It was not their own land
He did it so they can grow there crops
I think you are referring to Tenant Farmers.
yes but mostly farmers so they can plant their crops
Tyranny
sharecroppers were farmers who rented land and paid a share of each years crop as rent; they did not own the land they worked.
lease farming is when farmers rent out there land to other farmers and/or other people to feed there own cattle and sheep and so on
ON their own small plots of land
Not in the US, at least. With the shrinking number of farmers and more efficient farming methods, many farmers (if not most) farm at least some land that they do not live on but they are the tenant.