Unit 8: The Late Middle Ages

Chapter 24: Feudal Society

Ø      After the raids of the Vikings there was no strong, central government in W Europe.

Ø      The main leaders were nobles who owned a lot of land and they set up feudalism (government by landowning nobles).

Ø      Feudalism (FE) divided people into 3 different groups.

Ø      1) clergy – help poor/sick and teach Christianity.

Ø      2) nobles – protect, govern, and enforce laws.

Ø      3) peasants/townspeople – support other 2 by farming and doing service.

 

Section 1: Land and Government

Ø     Franks were the first to give fiefs (estates) in exchange for service & loyalty and this became the practice in W Europe.

The Rise of Feudal Territories

Ø     After Charlemagne’s death there was no central authority so nobles became more powerful and kings were weak.

Ø     Some nobles became more powerful than the kings.

Ø     ~1000 AD there were many small feudal territories that were ruled by a noble.

Ø     Noble had power to make and enforce laws.

Ø     Most people were peasants/townspeople but they did not have any power.

Ø     People believed nobles ruled because God wanted it that way.

Lord and Vassal

Ø     Vassals (a noble who served a lord of higher rank) were protected and given a fief by their lord in return for service and loyalty.

Ø     Act of homage (ceremony making an official tie between lord and vassal).

Ø     Vassal had to help their lord in battles, make payments on special occasions, and pay a ransom for the lord if he was captured.

Ø     Vassals also had to entertain the lord when he visited and serve on the lord’s court.

Ø     A vassal’s land could be taken away if he did not do his job.

Ø     When a vassal died the fief went to the oldest son after an act of homage.

 

Section 2: The Nobility

Ø     800-1000 AD had wooden houses with only one room for everything and palisades (wooden fences) for protection.

The Castle

Ø     ~1100 AD nobles lived in stronger stone houses called castles.

Ø     Castles had drawbridges and a portcullis (iron gate) to prevent entry.

Ø     The keep (tall tower with thick walls) was where the important people lived and it could be defended if the rest of the castle fell.

Ø     Castles were set up to be self-sufficient for months in case of a siege.

Ø     Many other people worked in castles including servants and officials.

Castle Life

Ø     Nobles would hold courts, hunt, fish, and played games like chess.

Ø     Ladies (noblewomen) were expected to obey their husbands.

Ø     Marriages were usually arranged to unite powerful families.

Ø     Often women married by 12 and women with large dowries were considered the most desirable.

Ø     Most of the time the women raised the children but if the lord was away they had more say in the way the castle ran.

 

Section 3: Knighthood

Ø      Most nobles had trained to become knights (soldiers on horseback).

Ø     Knights had to follow a code of chivalry (certain rules for knights) that emphasized loyalty, bravery, respect, and compassion to the poor.

Training

Ø     A noble started training as a knight at ~7 years by being a page (person who helped knights’ horses and cleaned his armor).

Ø     After learning by being a page they became a squire (person who aided one knight) at 15 years old.

Ø     If he fought well, he would be made a knight by a ceremony named dubbing.

Tournaments

Ø     Knights trained for fighting in tournaments (special contests that test skill, strength, and endurance) including jousts (battles between knights with lances).

Ø     Tournaments helped to show who were good fighter but sometimes knights got killed so they were expensive.

 

Section 4: The Manor

Ø     Land was very important to feudalism.

Ø     Fief was given to nobles and they established manors

Ø     Peasants, knights, and nobles all lived on manors

Daily Life

Ø     Nobles needed help so had a seneschal (visited each of the nobles fiefs to check on them) & a bailiff (made sure peasants were working hard).

Ø     Manors were isolated (fighting and poor transportation) and had to do most things for themselves.

Ø     Noble lived in nice house/castle and peasant lived in nearby villages in one room houses

Ø     Villages usually had a church, mill, oven, and wine press

Freemen and Serfs

Ø     Freemen – could move around and were not stuck on land but could be thrown off land

Ø     Serfs - were a nobles property along with their kids, had to provide service to the noble but couldn’t be kicked off land

Ø     Serf could become a freemen by escaping to a town and staying there for a year or later could buy freedom.

Ø     Sunday was the only day off

Ø     By 1200’s better farming techniques were available that allowed people to grow more food.