A manor was the agricultural estate of a lord. It included farm land and buildings, housing for the peasant workers, workshops, and a manor house, where the lord might live. The houses of the peasants were usually organized into hamlets or villages, the difference being that the village had a church. An estate usually had one such community, but might have a village and one or more hamlets. In addition to the peasants and the family of the lord, there were other people living on the manor, including servants, manorial officers, such as a steward, quite possibly a priest, people skilled at certain crafts, and so on. The craftsmen usually included a baker, who might also be a miller, but also often included a carpenter, a blacksmith, a potter, spinsters, weavers, or others.
Manors did not normally have towns on them. Since the defining feature of a town was its marketplace, manors nearly never had these.
The manor was intended to be as self sufficient as possible.
The decline in trade made many goods difficult to get. The people who lived on manors had to make do with what they could make themselves. This made them more self sufficient.
The person most commonly met in the Middle ages lived on a manor.
You use your manors with your parents
Most lords lived in manor houses. Some lived in castles. There is a link below to a related question that describes the houses of wealthy people and has source links.
Well, it had peasants [or serfs] that farmed in exchange for protection, and since usually manors were next to rivers and other natural resources, they had water, wood, food, and everything else they might need. Manors also had their own military for protection.
Medieval ladies usually lived in manor houses. Sometimes they lived in castles. Especially in the later part of the Middle Ages, some members of the nobility had town houses in towns or cities, so a few ladies lived in these.
The decline in trade made many goods difficult to get. The people who lived on manors had to make do with what they could make themselves. This made them more self sufficient.
The person most commonly met in the Middle ages lived on a manor.
You use your manors with your parents
The lord in the middle ages lived in the back of a castle !
The manor was more than a house it was an area or county. People were tied to the manor through birth and relationships. ----- The economy of much of the Middle Ages was based very largely on agriculture and the things that could be produced on manors. The manor provided the feudal lord with an income, possibly his only source of income.
The manor house was the house for the lord of the manor. Usually the lord lived in a manor house, but lords often had more than one manor, and some lords had many. The result was that sometimes the only people who lived in the manor house were the household servants. If the lord was not living in the manor house, it was usually kept ready for him to stay in if he showed up. There were many cases of manors being rented out, and in such a case, the person who rented it lived in the manor house. This normally happened only if the lord of the manor was short of money.
Most lords lived in manor houses. Some lived in castles. There is a link below to a related question that describes the houses of wealthy people and has source links.
The medieval manor was a home to some lord, who might have lived there. It was also home to whatever servants and permanent guests the lord might have had there. The servants might have included a steward and household servants, and some of these might have lived in the manor house itself. Also on the manor were a number of people who were laborers, and these would have included tenant farmers and serfs, along with anyone else who might do labor, such as a miller, for example.
Well, it had peasants [or serfs] that farmed in exchange for protection, and since usually manors were next to rivers and other natural resources, they had water, wood, food, and everything else they might need. Manors also had their own military for protection.
they lived in castles on the manor and they ruled the land.
Cities and towns were not normally in manors. Villages could be.