If the manor
land was sold or reassigned to a new owner, the serfs stayed with the
land.
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The Middle Ages for Kids - Common People, the Manorial System - 1 views
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A few peasants escaped the hard work on the farm by joining the church. But most lived and died on the manor where they were born.
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To pay the crop tax, some crops went to the lord, and some they kept. To pay the bread tax, some bread they made went to the lord, and some they kept. To pay the coat tax, some of the warm coats they made went to the lord, and some they kept.
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The priest told them who they must marry and when. You had to do everything the priest said if you wanted to get to heaven.
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They were not slaves. These people could not be bought and sold. But they could not leave the manor without permission.
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http://library.thinkquest.org/10949/fief/hicraft.html - 1 views
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Illumination History - 0 views
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During the early Middle Ages most books were used by priests and monks for liturgical purposes. New books appeared most often when a new monastery was founded.
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Most illuminators were humble craftsmen who set up shop. Some were independent, itinerant artists who traveled from place to place looking for commissions. The best held the rank of court artists at the exclusive service of a wealthy patron.
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Illuminators usually belonged either to the painter’s guild or another guild involved in the book trade. Most illuminators remained anonymous until the late Middle Ages
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Medieval education in Europe: Schools & Universities - 0 views
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It is estimated that by 1330, only 5% of the total population of Europe received any sort of education
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Even then education, as we understand it, was not accessible or even desired by everyone. Schools were mostly only accessible to the sons of high lords of the land.
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The very fact that the curriculum was structured by the church gave it the ability to mould the students to follow its doctrine
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Unofficially, education started from a very young age. This sort of early education depended on the feudal class of the child’s parents
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Even the children of serfs would be taught the skills needed to survive by their parents. The boys would be taken out into the fields to observe and to help their parents with easy tasks, while the girls would work with the animals at home, in the vegetable garden with their mothers, or watch them weave.
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Children of craftsmen and merchants were educated from a very young age in the trade of their fathers. Trade secrets rarely left a family and they had to be taught and understood by all male (and unusually, female) heirs, in order to continue the family legacy.
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Young boys of noble birth would learn how to hunt and swing a weapon, while the young ladies of nobility would learn how to cook
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The main subject of study in those schools was Latin (reading and writing). In addition to this, students were also taught rhetoric – the art of public speaking and persuasion – which was a very useful tool for both men of the cloth and nobles alike.
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University education, across the whole of the continent, was a luxury to which only the wealthiest and brightest could ever aspire
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Students attended the Medieval University at different ages, ranging from 14 (if they were attending Oxford or Paris to study the Arts) to their 30s (if they were studying Law in Bologna)
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The dynamic between students and teachers in a medieval university was significantly different from today. In the University of Bologna students hired and fired teachers by consensus. The students also bargained as a collective regarding fees, and threatened teachers with strikes if their demands were not met
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A Master of Arts degree in the medieval education system would have taken six years; a Bachelor of Arts degree would be awarded after completing the third or fourth year. By “Arts” the degree was referring to the seven liberal arts – arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, music theory, grammar, logic, and rhetoric
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Historians today believe that this policy was another way in which authority figures attempted to control the peasants, since an educated peasant/villein might prove to question the way things were done and upset the balance of power which kept the nobles strong.
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Students held the legal status of clerics which, according to the Canon Law, could not be held by women; women were therefore not admitted into universities.
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Black Death burials reveal the diversity of London's medieval population - Medievalists... - 1 views
www.medievalists.net/...of-londons-medieval-population
medieval europe london diverstiy middle ages black death
shared by alove_ on 10 Sep 19
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Their findings reveal that while most of the population would be classified as European, close to thirty percent were found to have some heritage outside of Europe – sometimes cases of dual heritage.
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Many of the African peoples in Europe during this period would have been slaves or at least the descendants of slaves.The authors note that previous research suggests that between they years 1100 and 1400 an average of 5500 people per year were being transported from Africa to Europe through the trans-Saharan slave trade network. Others would have arrived in Europe in various capacities – ambassadors, pilgrims, musicians, soldiers and craftsmen.
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Documentary sources revealed the presence of at least 17,376 individuals of foreign origin were in London between the years 1336 and 1584, as far away as Iceland and India.
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New research on people buried in London during the Black Death suggests that the city’s population was more diverse than currently believed, including the presence of people with African heritage.