The peasants had to get food, farm, and support the Lord / Noble by paying taxes.
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The agricultural estate is called a manor.
there is a lord solders and priest
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.
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.
A serf is a person who has the socio-economic status of unfree peasants under feudalism and it's a condition of modified slavery in the High Middle Ages in Europe. Serfdom was the enforced labor of serfs in fields in return for protection and the right to work on leased fields.