In very rare cases, a man of humble birth might be rewarded for armed service by being knighted.
An interesting thought is that William the Conqueror was himself of rather unremarkable origins: his mother was a village girl named Herleve, the daughter of a tanner. He presumably spent his childhood with her. His father, Robert II of Normandy, was probably only around 21 years of age when he had the affair with Herleve; he never legitimized William the Bastard by marrying her. The man who went on to become King of England and Duke of Normandy, started life as a humble country-boy, the illegitimate product of a juvenile affair, who would have had no standing at court or rank in society.
However, in 1034, Robert II unexpectedly legitimized William, declaring the child his heir so he, Robert, could go on a dangerous (but very fashionable) pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Robert died on the way, and William became Duke, aged no more than seven years old.
MoreKing Henry VII is an interesting example. His grandfather, Owen Tudor, was a commoner, though he had some connections with the royal family. He became the steward for the household of Queen Catherine of Valois, the wife of King Henry V. When Henry V died, Owen Tudor entered into a relationship with Queen Catherine, which was described as marriage, though there is no record of a ceremony, and the marriage of a dowager queen without permission of the reigning monarch would have been illegal. Nonetheless, their children were half siblings of King Henry VI, who made one of them, Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond. A son of Edmund Tudor became King Henry VII of England, as a compromise between warring factions in the Wars of the Roses. So the Tudor family went from being commoners in Wales to being the royal family of England in two generations, and in so doing, established the Tudor dynasty.Also, we have the example of Ivaylo the Cabbage, a peasant who lead a revolt and became king of Bulgaria. He was more successful as a peasant rebel than king, and in a short time lost support and was murdered by a foreign chieftain he was asking for support.
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A peasant can become a vassal by entering into a formal agreement with a lord, typically through a process known as "homage." This often involves the peasant pledging loyalty and service to the lord in exchange for protection and the right to work on a portion of the land. In some cases, this transition may occur through the acquisition of land or property that elevates the peasant's status, allowing them to fulfill the obligations of a vassal. Ultimately, the relationship is defined by mutual obligations and feudal ties.
As a vassal, you didn't have to worry about all of the people of the place that you were ruling, you didn't have to worry about the land (as much), you got help with technology advancements from the lord, and if you are a vassal, unlike a king, if a serf or a peasant goes into battle, you don't have to worry about fighting in it, where as the lord is obligated to serve the serf's on that occasion in that respect.
a vassal owed aleigance to his lord
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The set of unwritten rules that determines the relationship between a lord and his vassal is that the vassal must protect the lord and the lord must provide protection for the vassal. This was a rule that most vassals and lords lived by.
Peasant
As a vassal, you didn't have to worry about all of the people of the place that you were ruling, you didn't have to worry about the land (as much), you got help with technology advancements from the lord, and if you are a vassal, unlike a king, if a serf or a peasant goes into battle, you don't have to worry about fighting in it, where as the lord is obligated to serve the serf's on that occasion in that respect.
A vassal was a subject of a monarch who held a fief from that monarch. In other words the vassal was a lord with an estate that consisted of one or more manors. In return for the fief, the vassal had to give an oath swearing to support the monarch as needed, such as to fight for him in wars and provide soldiers from his followers. A serf was a peasant who had no land of his own, but had a relationship with a lord that was in some respects like the relationship between the vassal and the monarch. Just as the vassal got land from the king, the serf was provided with a place to live and fields to farm, though the were not his to own. And just as the vassal supported the monarch with soldiers, the serf supported the lord with food, labor, or money for rent.
a vassal owed aleigance to his lord
a vassal owed aleigance to his lord
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The relationship between the lord and vassal, is that the lord gives a portion of his land to a vassal which is a knight; to provide military support and protection, before doing his duty the vassal swears an oath to be loyal to a particular lord and in turn the lord grant the vassal a portion of his land and riches. If a vassal manages to serve two lords who happened to wage a battle then the vassal must continue to serve both by sending half of his men to battle for the rival lord and the other half of his men to the other opposing lord. Disloyalty results in death.
The lord gave land to the vassal, the vassal promised his loyalty and service.
it is a vassal
The set of unwritten rules that determines the relationship between a lord and his vassal is that the vassal must protect the lord and the lord must provide protection for the vassal. This was a rule that most vassals and lords lived by.
Wahat were the duties and rights of the lord vassal to each other?
A vassal is a person who pledges loyalty and service to a lord in exchange for protection and land. This bond is known as feudalism, where the lord provides resources and security to the vassal, who in turn offers military and other services to the lord.