The noble's estate was called a manor. It was the home of a number of peasants who farmed it in exchange for a place to live, fields to farm, and protection. The noble got the income from a part of the crop, and some labor or money as rent.
There was not a name for a farming estate which used slave labour. Slaves worked on large landed estates. These were called fundi (plural of fundus) or latifundia (plural of latifundium, "spacious" + fundus, "farm, estate"). The name remained after these estates stopped using slave labour.
The estate of most feudal lords was called a manor. The manor was a large agricultural property worked by peasants who lived on it, usually in a hamlet or village. It might have had a number of features, including a manor house, for the lord and his family, workshops, barns, woodland, pasture, fields, and often a church.
Acuire Large Amounts Of Land
engineers
this question makes NO SENSE! reword it hun :)
Only middle-class people pay a real estate tax.B.Real estate taxes make up a large part of the expenses of most middle-class people. Middle-class people benefit the most from real estate taxes. There is no good reason -- it is a myth.
Hacienda
Plantation
Large, self-sufficient farming estates were called Manors!
This is called a plantation.
It is called a plantation, I believe.
a large Spanish colonial estate owned by a wealthy family but worked by many peasants called an hacienda
An estate is a property of large extent with a large and elaborate home on it. In more modern developments an estate lot is used to describe an exclusive development of large lots with elaborate homes that are sometimes called McMansions.Estate is also used to describe all the property owned by an individual at death.
a large area of often with a large house on it
The large estate farms in Latin America were called haciendas. Some of there were cattle ranches and some were different types of plantations.
Hacienda is a Spanish estate, which would almost always have a casa grande (large house, mansion).