5.3 feudal system and manorial system

5. The Time of Monks and Knights
                  Manorial system
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This lesson contains 35 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

5. The Time of Monks and Knights
                  Manorial system

Slide 1 - Slide

What was last lesson about?

Slide 2 - Open question

What was last lesson about?

Slide 3 - Open question

What was the lesson of two weeks ago about?

Slide 4 - Open question

What was the lesson a month ago about?

Slide 5 - Open question

Flashcards

Slide 6 - Slide

Step 1
Open your textbook on the page with the important terms of the chapter.

Slide 7 - Slide

Step 2
Choose a term and write it down on a sheet in your notebook.
Close your textbook.

Slide 8 - Slide

Step 3
Hand over the term you wrote to your classmate.

Slide 9 - Slide

Step 4
Give a clear example of this concept

Slide 10 - Slide

Step 5
Give also an opposite of the concept

Slide 11 - Slide

Step 6
Why is this concept important in this series of lessons?

Slide 12 - Slide

Step 7
In which period is this concept mainly situated? do you know others?

Slide 13 - Slide

Domain

Slide 14 - Mind map

Slide 15 - Slide

What you will learn in 
this lesson

  • Explain how the feudal system worked
  • How a king could rule his kingdom with the feudal system

Slide 16 - Slide

Living in a domain
(the manorial system)
When the Romans left, the farmers were no longer protected against robbers and plunderers. They had to find protection from a rich and powerful farmer nearby. He could build a big, fortified farm (a farmhouse or small castle) and employ soldiers. In exchange for protection the farmers were no longer owners of their land. That is how the mighty farmer acquired quite a lot of land. He became the lord of the domain. Actually, the domain, like all the land, belonged to the king, but the lords managed and ruled it.

A domain usually consisted of two parts. One part of the land, the manor farm, was kept by the lord. All the produce from the fields, grasslands and orchards within this farm went to the lord, while all the work was done by the farmers. 


a manor farm, part of a domain
a serf peasant

Slide 17 - Slide

manor farm
The place where the lord lived and from where he ruled the village. 
Many times the manor was fortified by walls. Sometimes the manor was built on top of a small hill and surrounded by a palissade. 
The manor farm consisted of the manor (= fortified farmhouse / castle) + some land with orchards, farming fields and work places around it. 

mill
The mill was where people grounded wheat and grain. 
It was owned by the lord.
Serf peasants could use the mill to grind their grain, but of course they had to pay the lord for this. The payment was not money, but a percentage of the produce of the peasant.
farm
The houses the peasants (= farmers) lived in were not as nice as the manor house. They were thatched roofed
The palissade surrounds the manor farm. If the domain is attacked the peasants can find shelter within the walls of the manor farm.
Peasants worked on farm land for the lord in exchange for protection and land.
church
The church is where holy events took place (weddings, sermons, funerals). The church is also where the sick would be taken care of.
Sometimes the lord used this place to speak justice. He could hand out punishments to criminals.
A Shepard worked with the livestock in the fields. This would help produce food and cloth for the village
orchard
the manor's orchard. 
servile duties
This meant that serfs needed to work for the lord two or three days a week. They worked the lord's fields, or built and repaired his palissade.
Domain

Slide 18 - Slide

The other part of the domain was divided into smaller pieces of land. They had to be cultivated by the farmers, but they remained the lord's "property". The lord even remained boss of common land, swamps and woods. Usually the occupants were allowed to keep their pigs, sheep and goats on the land.
The farmer families lived together with their cattle in small farms made of mud, thatch and wood. The farmers had 
become serfs. They were not allowed to leave the domain without the lord's permission. So they were no longer free. 
In exchange for protection, serfs had to give part of their produce to the lord. That was their rent. For example, they would give the lord eggs, butter and corn.The serfs had to do all kinds of jobs for the lord: servile duties. They would have to work on the land the lord had kept for himself, one or two days a week. 
They also had to look after the lord's farmstead. 
The land usually produced only just enough to live on. If the harvest failed, the farmers would starve. There was hardly any trade in the early Middle Ages. That is why each domain tried to achieve autarchy. This meant that everything that was necessary in the domain had to be produced by the people who lived there. For instance, they made tools and clothes in small workplaces. The people working there would be given the lord's protection in exchange for their work. The whole system of lords, serfs and servile duties was called the manorial system. It was called that way because everything revolved round the lord's manor.
 



source 1
serf farmers doing servile duties, a painting from the 8th century

Slide 19 - Slide

Slide 20 - Slide

The Feudal System.
The lord of the manor was the most powerful person in the region. He protected his serf peasants in return for a part of their produce.
He lived in a manor and had soldiers in his service. 
So the lord ruled the region, but who ruled the kingdom?
The king of course.
And around AD 800 kings used a clever system to contol the lords and keep all the power. This system is called: the Feudal System. This is how it worked:
We learned that the domains belonged to lords. But that is not completely true. Actually all the land belonged to the king! But he could not rule alone. So he gave parts of his land (domains) to loyal lords to manage and rule.They could keep this land as long as they were loyal to the king, and give him soldiers and advise if he needed it.


Slide 21 - Slide

11. Who really owned all the land in the kingdom?
A
the king
B
the lords

Slide 22 - Quiz

12. The lords seemed to own their domain, but it actually belonged to the king, who could take it from the lord if the lord was disloyal to him
A
true
B
false

Slide 23 - Quiz

13. What were the advantages of the feudal system for the king?

Slide 24 - Open question

14. What were the advantages of the feudal system for the lords?

Slide 25 - Open question

The Feudal System
King of the Franks, Charlemagne, was one of many kings who used the feudal system. As king he owned all the land of his Frankish kingdom.
When he gave parts of this lands to his lords they were called the king's vassals. They not only received the land, but also the serf farmers who lived on that land. The vassal could live off the produce of the awarded land and keep himself busy with military training, warfare and jurisdiction.
The group of vassals together formed the rich nobility or aristocracy.
With titles as count, duke or baron, they ruled parts of the land owned by the king. Sometimes vassals gave parts of "their" land to lower vassals: knights, in return for protection and military service.
Study the overview in the next slide.

Slide 26 - Slide

15. What are vassals?
A
lords who gave their land to knights became the knights' vassals
B
lords who were granted a domain by the king became the king's vassals
C
vassals are kings who give parts of their land as a loan to loyal lords
D
vassals is just another word for aristocrats

Slide 27 - Quiz

16. Aristocrats and nobles are wo different groups of people
A
true
B
false

Slide 28 - Quiz

17. Which of these statements is NOT correct?
A
the lords were vassals to the king
B
the king gave land in loan to the lords, who became his vassals
C
the vassals together formed a group that we call nobility or aristocracy
D
the king and his family did not belong to the nobility

Slide 29 - Quiz

A
A

Slide 30 - Slide

Slide 31 - Slide

Slide 32 - Slide

Word Duty


Early Middle Ages 2


lord
domain
manor
serf
servile duties
autarchy
manorial system
feudal system
vassals
aristocracy
nobility
knights



use the m.c. questions to make the correct definition

From now on it is no longer mandatory to do "word duty" in your notebook, as long as you realise that these words must be learned for any quiz / test.

Slide 33 - Slide

Summary


Use the main questions to make your own summary
From now on it is no longer mandatory to write a summary in your notebook, although it is still advised to do so.
It is your own responsibility.
  1. how a rich farmer became lord of a domain
  2. why peasants gave up their land and freedom to become serfs
  3. what a manor is
  4. what a domain is
  5. why a domain tried to achieve autarchy
  6. what servile duties are
  7. explain how the feudal system worked
  8. how a king could rule his kingdom with the feudal system

Slide 34 - Slide

congratulations

Slide 35 - Slide