A feudal town is a settlement that developed during the medieval feudal system, characterized by a hierarchical structure where land was owned by lords and worked by serfs or peasants. These towns often served as centers for trade, governance, and craftsmanship, emerging around castles or manorial estates. The economy was typically agrarian, with local markets facilitating the exchange of goods. Feudal towns played a crucial role in the social and economic life of the period, reflecting the power dynamics between different social classes.
feudal is the answer
Chivalry was an outgrowth of the feudal system
No, the feudal system was a medieval system.
how is feudal japanese society structured
In a feudal society, serfs had to pay lords with crops
A monastery or feudal lord.
a monastery or feudal lord
I don't know I need similarities not differences.
feudal is the answer
No, burghers were the town people, who were mostly free laborers and middle class.
Feudal tenants are the folks who rent betterments from a feudal landlord.
During the Middle Ages, the growth of towns weakened the feudal system in several crucial ways. For one thing, it shifted the focus-point for communities from the feudal manor to the local town itself, which was becoming more and more important. For another thing, the wealth of the small but growing "middle class" gave them more and more power with which to use as a new, independent force in the governance of lands once solely governed by the feudal lords.
a labourer who labours under a feudal system
Feudal is the correct spelling in English :)
Chivalry was an outgrowth of the feudal system
No, the feudal system was a medieval system.
The manor was the estate of a feudal lord.