Feudal tenants are the folks who rent betterments from a feudal landlord.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agovassal
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoo
a labourer who labours under a feudal system
the feudal system was sustained by the rights and privileges given to the upper classes and in most cases enacted by laws
There is one major error here: the Catholic Church, while structured as a hierarchy, is not an example of the feudal system.The Pope is the Bishop of Rome, and the formal leader of the Catholic Church.
The feudal ceremony in which a vassal received land from a lord was called an investiture. Chivalry was the code of conduct developed by the feudal nobles.
leige
This is a "feudal" title. A "tenant-in-chief" was a person who held his lands under feudal land tenure directly from the king.
A tenant-in-chief in a feudal society is a tenant who holds land granted by the sovereign.
At the very bottom. They had no freedom and no one below them.
Use of old feudal charters to gain all profits that can be extracted from them. Examples would be in mid-18th century America in several colonies but they eventually caused serious problems between landowners and tenants.
A tenant - in - chief was a role in the Feudal System. It was usually Norman barons or bishops. They would provide knights for the king in return for land.
Feudal estates were farmed by peasants. For much of the Middle Ages, the peasants were serfs, which meant that they were bound to the estates and not allowed to move away. There were some places where a lot of them were slaves. There were also places were they were mostly free peasants who were tenants on the estates.
The knights granted land to the peasants and serve in the army. The knights get land from tenants in cheif, and the peasants make payments to the knights. Hope i helped :) KayKayBear!~
Fiefs are a feature of the medieval feudal system, so as you would expect classical Latin has no such word. In medieval or Low Latin the term is feodum, referring to lands held by various tenants for rent.
There are six types of tenants. These are the following: 1. Cash Tenants- tenants who pay cash as rent in the plot that they work on. 2. Share of produce Tenants- tenants who give a part of their product as rent 3. Rent-free Tenants- tenants who don't pay rent and work for free 4. Cash and Fixed Amount of Produced Tenants- tenants who give cash and a fixed quantity as rent on the people they work as tenants 5. Cash and Share of Produced Tenants- tenants who give cash and a share of their product as rent. 6. I dont remember anymore but I hope this will help.
You should title all property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.You should title all property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.You should title all property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.You should title all property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.
The Feudal Society was based upon the oaths of fealty (loyalty) to the King for land. His tenants or vassals would perform this fealty in exchange for plots of land called fiefs. Those holder included Bishops as the church was one of the largest landowners, there were also people lower down the hierarchical scale such as villeins and serfs. Often vassals to the King were also Lords to vassals such as peasants, who they let out a small section of their land to in return for farming. However, there is one important factor you must remember, the fief they were given was only held by them, it belonged to their Lord - The King and they held it for him in return for protection by him. Tenants and vassals who held fiefs for their King were not only supposed to pay fealty to him but also carry out other feudal obligations, if they did not carry out these obligations then this gave the King rights to take or 'escheat' their lands. These feudal obligations included military obligations, the vassal was expected to fight for the King in battle, to give the King a percentage of his farming output and also to attend courts of the King. These feudal obligations and the relationships between the Lord and his vassal became the very basis of the Feudal Society.
feudal is the answer