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Well, a serf could possibly run away for 366 days, A.K.A. one year and one day. Or they could buy out their own freedom if they had enough money and have their own land and freedom.

Hope that helps! :)

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Q: How and why might a serf become free?
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How could serfs become freemen?

The serf could runaway, but the serf had to runaway for 366 days, which is a year and one day.If he or she could do that they were considered free. But most serfs didn't because if they ran away they would be poor and wouldn't have the lord's protection. They could also buy there freedom but the serfs were really poor so they couldn't really buy their freedom.


Describe two ways a serf could attain freedom during the later middle ages?

If a serf wanted freedom in the late middle ages, then here are two ways that they could escape. Because of the Plague, things were getting more and more difficult for nobility, and, therefore, they had the capacity to just walk off and leave, since so many others were dying, and they'd never be missed. However, most of them just demanded more and more money, instead of leaving. Also: If a serf could escape and live in a city for a day and a year, he would therefore become free.


How are the serfs and freemen similar?

both were born in there social status 2nd answer: Slavery did exist in the middle ages, particularly in the early middle ages, but it steadily decreased over time, primarily due to the influence of the church, which opposed enslaving Christians. It had largely disappeared, at least in Western Europe, by the 13th century. Serfs were not fully free individuals, but they were not chattel slaves. Serfs owed labor to their lord, but they also worked their own lands and animals. If fortunate or shrewd a peasant family could acquire more land and move from subsistence to generating a surplus for cash sale. Some serfs were able to hire other to do their required labor for them. They might also have hired men to assist with their farm work, and in some cases even had household servants. A very few acquired enough land to have tenants of their own, essentially becoming minor gentry landlords. Also, not all peasants were serfs, some were free men. The status of serf or free did not always correlate to wealth. A free man might be a poor cottager, and a serf, despite his unfree status, might have considerable wealth.


Serf living on a manor look to resolve conflict with another serf?

A legal conflict between a serf living on a manor with another serf is resolved by the Lord of the Manor or by a court system of sherriffs and bailiffs. Before this, conflicts were settled through parties beating each other.


Were serfs bound to the land and sold like slaves in the middle ages?

Serfs were bound to the land, but they were not sold like slaves. A serf lived on a manor, and was not permitted to move away from the manor except with the agreement of the lord of that manor. But that was the extent of the serf's lack of freedom. The serf owed a portion of the crop, or the value of it, to the lord, which is how the lord got his income. In exchange for this, the lord provided the serf with a place to live on the manor, land to work, and protection. The lord was really as much bound as the serf was. Not only could he not sell the serf, he could not evict him from his property and was bound to protect him. The serf had a right to be on the property and to farm it. If the lord sold the property, neither he nor the new owner could force the serf off the land. The serf could run away if he wanted to, and many did. If he was gone for a year, he was considered free. The reason more serfs did not run away was not fear of the law or of retribution so much as the loss of the right to live and farm on the land and the security that provided. In the end, the lords went through a phase after the Black Death when many found it necessary to steal serfs from others in order to make up for losses of workers. When this happened, a large number of serfs became free. But also important was the fact that the lords wanted to make more money, and having serfs who had a right to farm limited the flexibility of the lord in management of the property.

Related questions

Why might a serf run away from a manor?

To become free


How could a peasant or serf become a free man?

A peasant or serf could become a free man if: - he married a free woman - he ran away and wasn't found for a year He could also become a lord if he married a lady


How and why might serf become free?

Well, a serf could possibly run away for 366 days, A.K.A. one year and one day. Or they could buy out their own freedom if they had enough money and have their own land and freedom. Hope that helps! :)


How were serfs different from peasants?

A peasant was a small farmer, who might be a serf, a free tenant, or even a yeoman who had his own land. A serf was usually a peasant, but not always. A serf bound to a manor, and was not free to leave it. Aside from being a farmer, serf could also be a laborer of some type. So many peasants were serfs, and most serfs were peasants.


What might a medieval serf's child own?

Riddle answer: a serf board.


What do serf become if they work hard?

In a feudal system, a serf would remain a serf no matter how hard they were to work.


What might a serf gain by escaping a town?

Serfs become fat when they eat pigs because that was all they could afford.


What were two ways a serf could be free?

1) If a serf could run away for a year and one day, it was considered free. 2) if the noble gave the serf permission, it could stop working on the land


How did a serf and nobleman become friends?

facebook im


How could a serf gain his release from being a serf?

Serfs become fat when they eat pigs because that was all they could afford.


How does a serf become a freeman?

he pays his debt to the person he serves


Where did serfs find freedom?

Monasteries