Serfs in Europe were not allowed to leave the manor which they were tied to unless given permission by their lord. If they were caught leaving they were severely punished. Does this mean none of them traveled at all? Of course not and I'm sure there are instances of escape to freedom. As a whole however, serfs did not really travel. Have they "ever traveled" yeah, of course.
If I could think of an instance of mass travelling serfs, at least widely, I'd think of indentured servants. While these were not serfs, they came to America and essentially became serfs who payed their passage to the Americas by working for seven years. They were pretty much slaves, just like serfs.
'Peasant' is a loose term. villeins and serfs are types of peasants, and villeins are types of serfs. A peasant is simply an agricultural worker. A serf, on the other hand, is a virtual slave, being confined to a plot of land in return for protection and the right to work. Serfs are effectively the property of their lords. Villeins are renters tied to land, but are not slaves, and can leave with their lord's consent.
Serfs in Russia were officially freed in 1861 by Tsar Alexander II through the Emancipation Manifesto. The emancipation was part of a series of reforms aimed at modernizing the country and addressing social issues.
SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES: Serfs were unfree peasants, and peasants are free and unfree. They are alike because they were both grouped together. They both lived on a lord's land. They both paid taxes. Serfs were owned by a lord, and a "free" peasant rented a lord's land, paying in crops. EXTRA (just a little more info): A free peasant usually owned very little. The wealthier peasants owned a few pots and a bedstand. They rented part of a lord's land and usually shared it w/ other families. The homes were cottages w/ one or two rooms in them. Serfs were "owned" by a lord and paid heavy taxes, even though the lord owned them. They tended fields and gave the crops they harvested to the lord. They had a small patch of field for their own crops. BIBLIOGRAPHY (I can't take all of the credit, you know) please see the link below, and History Alive the Medieval World and Beyond
A revolution is equal to 360 degrees. This means that if you were to complete a full circle, you would have traveled 360 degrees.
The three social classes of the feudal system were the nobility (lords and ladies), the clergy (church officials), and the peasantry (serfs and commoners). Nobility held land and power, clergy held spiritual authority, and peasantry provided labor and goods.
In the Middle Ages serfs traveled on foot, by ox drawn carts and boats. If there were lucky they would travel on horses.
Serfs were barely above slaves themselves. I doubt any serfs ever owned slaves.
Yes, have you ever traveled on the Mexican train system?
No. They were serfs and lived very poorly.
no Kesha never traveled to Saudi Arabia.
No.
no but it would b nice
Nobody has ever done that yet.
The correct sentence is: "Have you ever traveled before?"
what is the furthest distance a dog has ever traveld
yes.
yes he africa