Tenant farming is where a farm owner basically leases out their farm to a "farmer" for a set price per month / year . In exchange for a percentage of the harvest for just plain cash or a combination of both. In many instances these farms may include a home and even farm equipment. These "extras" most likely would effect the overall costs of the lessee.
farmers worked land owned by others
The Melancholy Mad Tenant was created in 2005.
Tenant farmers grew a large variety of crops.
All the types that are practiced in the United States: livestock farming, crop farming, tree farming, fruit and vegetable farming, mixed farming, commercial farming, sustainable farming, hobby farming, corporate farming, ranching, the list goes on.
The tenant of Stade de France is the France national football team.
Tenant Farming also called Sharecropping came about in 1865 in the United States.
Tenant farming is an agricultural production system in which landowners contribute their land and often a measure of operating capital and management
system of farming in which a person rents land to farm from a planter
tenant farming
A tenant farmer
Merchants
sharecropping
tenant farming
British law discouraged tenant farming
Many small-scale farmers, especially in rural areas of the southern United States, practiced subsistence farming, which involves growing crops and raising animals for personal consumption rather than for commercial purposes. These farmers typically grew a variety of crops, such as corn, beans, and vegetables, and raised livestock like chickens and pigs to feed their families. Subsistence farming was common among lower-income families or those living in isolated areas without access to markets or resources for large-scale commercial agriculture.
merchants
Cash rent or tenant farming.