Title: Life after Rome: Early Medieval Society
1Life after Rome Early Medieval Society
2Objective
- Understand the manorial system as Europes early
economic system
3What does Europe look like?
4A Different Kind of Change
- Barbarians destroy Roman developments
- Decline in education, art, trade, and cities
- Europe breaks into many small kingdoms
- Agriculture becomes the main source of food in
society - Manorial/Feudalism become the standard social and
economic system
5Manor System
- Manor-large plots of land (estates)
- Owned by wealthy land owners (lords)
- Peasants, or common people, worked the manor
6How did the Manor System Work?
- Manor System- Economic system for exchanging land
use and protection for goods and services - Manor lands divided into sections
- Peasants paid for their use of their land with
goods and services - Peasants depended on the lord for protection
7What would you find on a Manor?
- Manor house-where the lord lived
- Mill-powered by water
- Peasant homes
- Church-center of religious worship and social
gatherings
8Bailiff - A Bailiff was a person of some
importance who undertook the management of manors
Reeve - A Reeve was a manor official appointed
by the lord or elected by the peasants Millar -
Most manors had windmills or watermills. The
right to mill was in the gift of the Lord of The
Manor. Servants - Servants were house peasants
who worked in the lord's manor house, doing the
cooking, cleaning, laundering, and other
household chores Serf - Medieval Serfs were
peasants who worked his lord's land and paid him
certain dues in return for the use of land, the
possession but not the ownership of which was
heritable. Dues were usually in the form of labor
on the lord's land. Medieval Serfs were expected
to work for approximately 3 days each week on the
lord's land. Villein - A peasant or villein was
a low status tenant who worked as an agricultural
worker or laborer. A peasant or villein usually
cultivated 20-40 acres of land Cottager A low
class peasant with a cottage, but with little or
no land who generally worked as a simple laborer
9Interesting notes about the Manor System
- 1/3 of the crops grown go to the lord, 1/3 to the
Church, the rest to the peasants. - Many peasants were serfs. They were part of the
manor property. They also lived with their farm
animals - Large manor house will be replaced by castles
- Manorial system lasts until the 12th century
(1100s)
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15The Feudal System
People believed he was chosen by God
Was given many decorated titles Duke
Earl Baron
Chivalry code of moral, religious, and Social
systems
16The King
- People believed he was chosen by God
- Ruled according to the traditions and customs of
their tribes - Sought help to control his kingdom through the
feudal system.
17King Alfred the Great of England
King Henry V of England
King Henry VIII of England
18The lords
- Answered only to the kingswore an oath to be
faithful to the king and provide military service - Members of the Church were included in this class
- Was given many decorated titles
- Duke
- Earl
- Baron
19John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. Most of the
those in the royal family were given titles like
Duke or Earl. Gaunt became one of the most
powerful Dukes in the history of England.
20The Knights
- Fought for the lords as part of deal with king
- Knights were bound by a code called Chivalry
- Chivalry code of moral, religious, and Social
systems - Doing whats right
- Being religious in the eyes of all
- Stories or legends emerge from the knights
- Arthurian legends
- Quest for Holy Grail
- The Knights Templar
21William Marshall was one of the greatest knights
of the Middle Ages
22Peasants and others
- The majority of the population in early medieval
Europe - Many were serfs who were tied to the land of the
lord (Manor System) - Life was extremely hard
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