6.the Three Orders Medieval European Society - Akg
6.the Three Orders Medieval European Society - Akg
6.the Three Orders Medieval European Society - Akg
Photo source:
www.historyguide.org
Those who Fight
THOSE WHO FIGHT
European society from the 12th century on was
aristocratic
It continued until the 20th century
Nobles had rights and responsibilities:
he could raise troops and command them
he held his own courts of justice
The nobility was an estate of warriors – those who fight
His function was to protect the weak and the poor
Chivalry was a code of conduct created by the clergy to
curb the brutality of knights
Participation in the medieval tournament
The noble had to look after his own land and appointed
stewards to maintain the estate, and collect taxes and
rents
He also tried to obtain status by fighting while serving the
court of his lord
The Feudal Power Relationship
Monarch
Nobles
Lesser Nobles/Knights
Peasants
The second order : Nobility
Priests placed themselves in the first order,
and nobles in the second.
The nobility had a central role in social
processes because they controlled land. This
control was the outcome of a practice called
„Vassalage‟.
The noble enjoyed a privileged status.
He had absolute control over his property.
He could raise troops called feudal lavies
lavies..
He held his own court of justice & could even
coin his own money.
The Manor
He was the lord of all the people settled
on his land. He owned vast tracts of land
which contained his own dwellings, his
private fields and pastures and the homes
and fields of his tenant-
tenant-peasants.
His house was called a manor.
manor.
His private lands were cultivated by
peasants, who were also expected to act
as foot-
foot-soldiers in battle when required, in
addition to working on their own farms.
The Demense : The manorial Estate
The demense was the lord's land which was worked by the
peasants
The other part was held by the peasants but their plot could
be cultivated after the demense
Manor was divided into long strips
One serf would have to work a number of strips
Manor required cooperation among serfs because horses and
plows were limited
Some manors had tracts of forest or hunting, ponds for
fishing, and open meadows for grazing, church on the estate
& castle for defence
defence..
It was from the forest and meadow that the serf could
practice gleaning
Most serfs never traveled beyond the manor
Strong sense of family and community
People knew what to expect from life.
The manorial state
Serfs at work
The Manorial System
A Manor was a self-
self-sufficient agricultural
estate run by a lord and worked by
peasants and serfs.
Many peasants at this time became serfs. A serf
was a peasant who was bound to the land and
didn‟t really own any land of their own.
As the population of Europe increased during this
time there was less land to go around. Many
peasants lost their holdings and became serfs.
Serfs could not leave the manor, they had to work to
pay rent, and had to pay fines and fees for various
services on the manor. Serfs also could not marry
without the Lord‟s permission.
In exchange for their labor, the lords of the
Manors did owe the serfs protection in the event
of invasion.
They also were able to keep a percentage of the
crops they produced on the manor for their own
families.
Daily Life of Peasants
Peasants lived a hard-
hard-working simple life.
They lived in houses which had thatched
roofs resting on timber framework with
the spaces filled with mud and straw.
There were few, if any windows.
Many houses only had one to two rooms,
there was little privacy.
The hearth in the main room was used to
both heat the house and cook the food.
The smoke from the fire crept out through
the roof.
Hygiene
It is a common misconception that people did not bathe
during the Middle Ages.
The public baths which were popular during the time of
Rome fell out of favor, but people did continue to bathe.
There is evidence of public baths in Medieval cities. Many
of these public baths were shut down after the break out
of the Black Death between 1347-
1347-1351.
Baths were more common for the wealthy who could
afford to bathe in tubs filled with hot water as well as
scented oils and perfumes.
The poor would bathe in wooden basins or barrels filled
with cold water. Although they didn‟t bathe as often as
we do today, they did take a bath more than once a year.
Soap was made of sheep fat with ashes and soda mixed
in. Teeth could be cleaned by scraping them with a hazel
twig and rubbing them with a woolen cloth.
The Cycle of Labor
For peasants there were different jobs to be
done throughout the year. The job
depended on the growing season and
what could be produced during the time.
Different Seasons
October was the beginning of the cycle of labor,
during that time peasants prepared to plant the
winter crops
KING
FEUDALISM: MANORIALISM:
POLITICAL SYSTEM ECONOMIC SYSTEM
Fief and Peasants Agriculture the basis for
Decentralized, local
government wealth
Loyalty Military Aid Lands divided up into
Dependent upon the
relationship between LORDS (VASSALS TO KING) self-sufficient manors
members of the nobility Peasants (serfs) worked
Lord and his vassals the land and paid rent In
administered justice exchange for protection
and were the highest Barter the usual form of
authority in their land exchange
Farm Farm
Farm Fallow
Fallow
Guild Hall
Commercial Monopoly:
Controlled membership
apprentice journeyman master craftsman
Controlled quality of the product [masterpiece].
Controlled prices
Medieval Guilds: A Goldsmith’s Shop
Crest of a Cooper’s Guild
Cities has been around since Roman times, and
many of the old Roman cities began to reemerge
as trade centers.
There were also new trading centers.
Some of these cities included:
Venice in Northern Italy was a center with ties to the
Byzantine Empire and the Middle East.
Flanders in Northern France was famous for its wool
industry.
Trade also helped Europe culturally, the Crusades
introduced Middle Eastern good into European
markets. Europeans also learned about the
cultivation of oranges, sugar, and rice as well as
techniques for irrigation, papermaking and how to
use a compass.
Trade Fairs
Fairs were large markets where
merchants got together to
exchange their goods.
As trade increased, there was a
demand for gold and silver instead
of bartered goods. This led to the
development of a money economy
based on the exchange of coins for
goods.
This increase in trade led to
commercial capitalism, an
economic system in which people
invest in trade and goods in order
to make profits.
The Growth of Cities
Increased trade led to merchants settling
in old Roman cities, they were later joined
by craftspeople and artisans. This influx of
people revitalized these old cities.
There were also new cities founded by the
same groups. Merchants would build near
and castle or along a trade route where a
lord offered them protection, if things
went well a wall was built around the new
city to offer protection.
Bourgeoisie
Residents of the cities were called burghers
or bourgeoisie, from the German word
burg, meaning a walled enclosure.
Medieval Cities
Medieval cities were
smaller than other
ancient cities. They
were limited by the
wall which surrounded
them.
Medieval London had a
population of around
40,000.
Residents of these cities would attempt to
gain independence for the lords of the
manor near them so they would have
more control over their money and
trade.