Generally, by the beginning of the 19th century, most African societies had attained the communal mode of production. A few were under the slave mode of production, others were under the feudal mode of production, quite a few others were under a mixture of both the feudal and slave mode of productions.
There fore, the modes of productions developed by African societies during pre-colonial era are,
1) Primitive communalism
2) Slavery
3) Feudal mode of production.
i don't k now
The Japanese feudal system put peasants at the bottom, the daimyos or merchant middle class in the middle, and the warrior shoguns at the top.
During the colonial period, two major land systems were the feudal system and the plantation system. The feudal system, prevalent in Europe and some colonies, involved a hierarchy where land was held by lords and worked by vassals or serfs in exchange for protection. In contrast, the plantation system, especially in the Americas, focused on large-scale agricultural production using enslaved labor, primarily for cash crops like tobacco, sugar, and cotton. These systems significantly shaped social, economic, and political structures in the colonies.
Manors were owned by Lords in English or Seigneurs in French and it was a segment of the feudal system that existed in Central and Western Europe during the middle ages
They ate cows and many vegetables. They ate corn and also peas, green beans and many things we didn't even know existed.
i don't k now
In the 1800's the feudal peasant no longer existed.
The Japanese feudal system put peasants at the bottom, the daimyos or merchant middle class in the middle, and the warrior shoguns at the top.
During the colonial period, two major land systems were the feudal system and the plantation system. The feudal system, prevalent in Europe and some colonies, involved a hierarchy where land was held by lords and worked by vassals or serfs in exchange for protection. In contrast, the plantation system, especially in the Americas, focused on large-scale agricultural production using enslaved labor, primarily for cash crops like tobacco, sugar, and cotton. These systems significantly shaped social, economic, and political structures in the colonies.
Manors were owned by Lords in English or Seigneurs in French and it was a segment of the feudal system that existed in Central and Western Europe during the middle ages
Not much to write home about. Little was known in Europe in Marx's day, and he tended to write off pre-colonial societies. Some see an African variant of a stagnant "Asiatic mode of production", others a local feudalism with some slavery thown in, some a slave-based economy developing feudal elements. A few adventurous souls have hypothesised an "African mode of production" based on village organisation modified by long-distance trade.
They ate cows and many vegetables. They ate corn and also peas, green beans and many things we didn't even know existed.
Every estate was self-sufficient and produced or grew everything it needed to function.
A striking feature was the lack of controlling influence by the English government. All colonies, except Georgia, emerged as companies of shareholder or as feudal proprietorship stemming from charters.The colonial governments had power to pass laws and create taxes.
feudal is the answer
The Spanish king or queen granted haciendas to the viceroys they placed in control of various parts of their empire that they had during their span of power in the New World (1521-1898). They also granted haciendas to other nobles of the quasi-feudal system that existed such as grandees, hidalgos, and other small classes that existed within the Spanish feudal system, which was very unique to the French/English one and very similar to the Portuguese one.
Feudal tenants are the folks who rent betterments from a feudal landlord.