During the Middle Ages, kings often rewarded their favorite nobles with land grants, known as fiefs, which provided them with income and power. They might also bestow titles of nobility, privileges, or key positions in the royal court or military. In addition, kings sometimes granted their favored nobles the right to collect taxes from certain regions, further enhancing their wealth and influence. These rewards helped to secure loyalty and maintain a stable hierarchy within the feudal system.
Nobles were against the creation of guilds and allowing serfs to pay with goods rather than labor.
No. Nobles were kings so that makes your question false.
Magna carta
During the Middle Ages, kings granted large sections of land to nobles and lords in exchange for loyalty, military service, and support. This system, known as feudalism, created a hierarchy where the king was at the top, followed by powerful nobles who managed the land and provided protection to the peasants who worked it. These arrangements helped maintain order and stability in a time of frequent conflict and fragmentation. In return, the nobles were responsible for governing their lands and upholding the king's laws.
In the 1200' kings excluded Nobles from important issues and only used them to approve taxes, leading to the creation of parliment
Often land
Kings and Popes... I believe. (:
the kings and nobles would eat suger.
Nobles were against the creation of guilds and allowing serfs to pay with goods rather than labor.
by being the kings favorite
They help the kings...
Kings got nobles to support them by giving or promising something, usually land.
They didn't have a middle class in the middle ages. There were some scribes and lawyers, but much of the offical work done was by other nobles who were part of the court.
No. Nobles were kings so that makes your question false.
the king or nobles and knights and the servants plus family of the nobles and kings
the king or nobles and knights and the servants plus family of the nobles and kings
Unlike the massively powerful kings of the early modern era (ie: Louis XIV), Medieval kings were usually quite limited in authority. Nobles held much of the wealth and owned the most land. The Magna Carta is a classic example of the nobles successfully limiting the powers of the king in England, and while it is viewed as a triumph today for the limitation of power it served as an impediment to centralization and progress in its own time. Nobles and Kings (along with the church) represented the only powerful classes of Europe during the Middle Ages, naturally putting them at odds with one another.