Pay close attention.......... I do not know! BP
The manor system protects serfs and merchants, that live in manor. Knights allowed peasants to farm land on their large estates. In return the peasants had to give the knights food, goods or other payment.
In general, the members of the nobility had to be free to do other things than the day to day operation of running the manor. They had special servants to do this. A steward was responsible for keeping their property and wealth. There was a reeve, usually a peasant, and sometimes elected by the peasants, who was the go between for nobles and peasants. Various special operations, such as keeping the woods or the hunting animals, were done by specialized servants, who sometimes where told what to do by the nobles, but were often managed by the steward.
Peasants lived in a village outside the manor.
The peasants
There was no similarity in their lives. Nobles lived in Manor houses or castles, owned land, prevented people from poaching on their lands, had food, warmth, and money. Peasants had nothing but a wattle hut with a dirt floor, a 3 legged stool to sit on, taxes to pay, to die an early death fighting a war for the nobility or disease, and very little warmth in the winter wet months.
Nobles and peasants.
The manor system is when knights allowed peasants to farm land on their large estates. In return, the peasants had to give the knights food or other payment.
The manor system protects serfs and merchants, that live in manor. Knights allowed peasants to farm land on their large estates. In return the peasants had to give the knights food, goods or other payment.
In general, the members of the nobility had to be free to do other things than the day to day operation of running the manor. They had special servants to do this. A steward was responsible for keeping their property and wealth. There was a reeve, usually a peasant, and sometimes elected by the peasants, who was the go between for nobles and peasants. Various special operations, such as keeping the woods or the hunting animals, were done by specialized servants, who sometimes where told what to do by the nobles, but were often managed by the steward.
The answer depends somewhat on how specific or particular you want to be. A fief is the land granted to a vassal under feudalism. A manor is an isolated, self-contained village of sorts that is the entire (or less) land of a fief. A manor is typically 1000 acres and approximately 200 people. It is built around a manor house. Technically, there could be many manors on a single fief. So while a fief is the land granted by a lord to a vassal, the manor is the specific economic system of the manor-centric living system of the peasants and nobles in the middle ages.
the nobles need food from them
Peasants who were bound to a manor were known as serfs or villeins. They were required to work the land and pay dues to the lord of the manor in exchange for protection and the right to live on the land. Serfs were not free to leave the manor without the lord's permission.
Peasants lived in a village outside the manor.
Nobles lived good, and peasants lived bad. :( tss .. daa that is not a good answer.... Both had hard lives, they were affected by injures an disease however nobles had more money than peasants. peasants worked on a manor ... primarily on farming. nobles lived in castles, women made clothing and food while girls were sent to a Lady's house to learn how to manage a large household and boys were sen at the age of 8 to learn how to use a sword, an ax, a lance and learn knightly manners.
Because serfs and Peasants were paid more for work and therefor could in some occastions even overthrow a lord of a manor.
The peasants
to take care of them