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The three field system seems to have been supplanting the older two field system during the time of Charlemagne. The improvement to agriculture of the three field system was very obvious to the farmers of the time, because it increased the amount of land being tilled by about a third, distributed the work of planting into two parts of the year rather than one, and increased the versatility of the farm. The result was that after Charlemagne, nearly all the farms in Western Europe adopted the the three field system, and it was general for tillage.

We should remember that not all farm products are suitable for crop rotation. Those that are not include perennials, such as fruit and nuts from trees or vines. Farms that were mainly orchards, groves, or vineyards might not have used it, even for garden plots.

The next system developed was the four field system, which came after the Middle Ages.

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13y ago

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