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The peasant didn't own land. They were tenate farmers for the lord (landlord) and he may have provided a strip of land for a few crops that they could grow for food. They worked for him on the manor in turn for a place to live.

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A peasant who owned land as a freeholder was called a Franklin or yeoman, depending on the time, as both these terms changed meaning with the time. Regardless of what he was called, the peasant farmer who owned land had between 30 and 120 acres, roughly 12 to 50 hectares. As near as I can determine, this could be about any agricultural land, and probably included woods for firewood.

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What does villeins or peasants mean?

Villeins were medieval peasants who worked the land for landlords,some had their own strips of land.


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How were serfs different from peasants?

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