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Life on a Manor
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LIFE ON A MANOR
[102] DURING the greater part of the Middle Ages, most of the
land was held by "feudal tenure," that is, on
condition of service. Everybody needed service of some
sort. A king might own vast areas of land; but unless
the nobles would fight for him, he could not keep it
from his enemies. The nobles might hold wide estates,
but they were worthless unless men could be found to
cultivate them. As for the "common people," their first
and foremost need was protection. So it was that the
feudal system grew up. The king would agree to grant
land to a noble provided the noble would become his
"vassal." To do this, the noble was obliged to go to
the king's court and kneel before him. The king then
held the clasped hands of the noble in his own and
asked, "Do you wish to become my man?" The noble
replied, "I do." The king then kissed him in token of
confidence and acceptance, and the noble took a solemn
oath on the Gospels or relics of the saints to be
faithful. This ceremony was called "doing homage."
[103] It bound the king to aid and protect the noble and not
to interfere with his control of the land in his hands.
It bound the noble to be faithful to the king and to
fight for him when fighting was necessary, and to
provide at his own expense a fixed number of followers.
For the king to demand money and for the noble to pay
it would have seemed to both of them somewhat
humiliating; but to follow his king in battle and to be
loyal to him was quite in accordance with the taste and
[104] training of the noble. Even in later times, as the
demand for a military force increased, the king did
not venture to suggest paying wages to knights to fight
for him. Instead of that, "money-fiefs" were invented;
that is, a fixed sum was paid to vassals yearly on
condition of their performing military service. This
was exactly the same as hiring soldiers, but calling
the arrangement a fief, the name given to a grant of
land, saved the pride of the knights, and gave the king
his soldiers.
BELSAY CASTLE
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The military service required of a vassal was generally
limited to forty days in a year. If more was needed,
the king must pay all expenses. If the military service
was to be rendered in a foreign country, the noble was
free to come home at the end of forty days. He must
also help the king by his advice, and must submit in
any lawsuit of his own to the decision of the king and
his fellow vassals, and he must provide entertainment
for the king when on a journey. On three occasions he
was expected to assist the king with money, but this
was never called payment or rent for land, it was
always spoken of as "aid." These occasions were: 1.
When the king's eldest son was made a knight; 2. When
the king's eldest daughter was married; 3. When the
king had been taken prisoner by some foreign power and
it was necessary to ransom him.
[105] In theory, the king had a right to take back the grant
of land; but unless a vassal was unfaithful, it was
seldom to his advantage to do so. If one vassal was
wronged by another, he might appeal to their king; but
it was in most cases a long way to the royal court, it
was dangerous to leave one's castle exposed to an
enemy, and it was more simple and direct for the two
nobles to fight it out. If a vassal died, it was
generally for the gain of both parties that his eldest
son should take the father's place as vassal. The lord
imposed a tax, however, called "heriot," usually the
best beast of the dead man. The son, too, was required
to pay a tax, or "relief," on taking possession of the
land in his father's stead. The accepted belief was
that every fief should supply to the king the service
of a man. If the vassal's son was a child at his
father's death, the king brought him up; but to make
good the loss of a fighting man, he kept the income of
the fief until the boy was old enough to perform a
knight's service. If the vassal left only a widow or a
daughter, she must pay a fine to the king if she did
not wish to marry. If she was willing to marry, the
king had the right to select her husband. This was to
prevent her from choosing a man who might perhaps be an
enemy to the king.
[106] This was the "feudal system," or rather it was the
beginning of it. It is quite probable that in many
countries, at some time in their history, land has been
held by this method. Of course it was not decided upon
and the land divided in a moment in any country, but
the custom grew up gradually. The system was in
reality a perfect network of lords and vassals, for not
only were the nobles vassals of the king, but they
themselves had vassals, and those vassals had others
who had paid homage to them. Indeed, a man might do
homage to a number of men for separate pieces of land.
In that case, however, he owed military duty to but one
of them, and this one was known as his "liege" lord.
The vassal was not looked upon as in any degree
inferior to the lord. A king might rule one country and
yet pay homage to the ruler of another for his fief in
that land. When William the Norman conquered England,
he took possession of the country much as if it had
been his own big farm. He allowed those who yielded to
him to retain their land on payment of large fees. The
rest of it he divided among his followers as fiefs. But
William was Duke of Normandy, and therefore he himself
paid homage to the French king for his Norman land.
This descended from one English ruler to another; but
when
[107] John came to the throne, the French king, Philip II,
declared that he was a disobedient and unfaithful
vassal, and took it away by capturing the Château
Gaillard and his other strongholds.
There were several ways in which smaller amounts of
land came into the hands of the nobles. The Church held
large areas; but the clergy were forbidden to wield the
sword, therefore parts of their holdings were sometimes
let to knights on condition of their providing the
required number of soldiers. Again, this was a time of
fighting and bloodshed, of danger and violence; and
many a man who owned a bit of freehold could not
protect it. In that case he would often "commend"
himself to some powerful man; that is, he would
promise to be faithful to him and be his loyal vassal.
He now had a strong arm to defend him, and he was sure
of food and clothes. The result of all this was that by
the thirteenth century it might almost be said, "No
land without a lord."
But manors were of small value unless they were
cultivated. In these days, if a man owns a large farm,
he hires laborers to work on it; but in the Middle Ages
the cultivation of the land was managed in quite a
different fashion. Nothing has been said as yet of the
"common
[108] folk," the many thousand people who were neither clergy
nor nobles. They were the ones who did the work of the
manors. They were of various ranks. A few were slaves,
and were looked upon as having no more rights than a
horse or a cow. Above these were the villeins. They
could not be sold like slaves, but if a manor passed
from one lord to another, they went with it. Each
villein held a definite amount of land, and was
required to pay for its use partly in money or in
produce and partly in labor. The villeins were divided
into several classes, each having some special rights
or some exemption from undesirable duties which was of
great value to them. Above these were the free tenants.
They paid for the use of their land, sometimes in
service and sometimes entirely in money.
CROWHURST PLACE, SHOWING MOAT
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The buildings on a manor were the manor house, in which
either the lord or his agent lived; the tiny cottages
of the tenants; a church; a windmill; and the various
barns and other outbuildings needed. The manor house
stood a little apart from the others. It was usually of
stone, but its character depended in great degree upon
the location. In England, for instance, the important
houses near the Scottish border were built strong
enough to serve as forts; and, indeed, most of the
larger houses in the more
[110] level parts of the country were surrounded by moats and
had various means of defense. In the simpler houses
there was a hall, and adjoining it a kitchen. On the
other side of the hall and up a flight of stairs was
the "solar." This was the bedroom and parlor of the
lord and his wife. The rest of the household and their
guests slept in the hall or in the stables or in any
other place where they would be under a roof, even one
thatched with reeds from the pond. As time passed,
houses were built with more rooms, often enough to
enclose a courtyard on three sides, while the fourth
was shut in by a wall. Around the whole structure was a
moat with a drawbridge. The windows were small, there
were turrets and other places from which arrows might
be shot in safety; in short, these manor houses were in
many respects almost as well fortified as real castles.
The cottages were ranged along the one street of the
manor, miserable little one-room sheds of clay, the
roofs thatched with straw stubble and having neither
windows nor chimneys.
The land of the manor was cultivated in three large
fields. Usually one produced wheat or barley and one
oats, while the third lay fallow. The second year the
field that had lain fallow was planted, and another
field had a time of rest. This was an extravagant
manner of
[111] farming, for one third of the land was always idle, but
men had not fully learned how to enrich the soil, and
therefore they were forced to allow it to rest. Each
tenant had a larger or smaller share in these fields;
but the land was divided in a peculiar fashion. It was
marked off into long, narrow strips, generally about
forty rods long and four rods wide, separated from one
another by strips of unploughed turf called "balks."
The holdings of the different tenants were scattered
over the manor, and much time must have been wasted in
going from one to another. A man who held thirty acres,
or a virgate, might have to care for land in thirty or
more different places. Even the land which the lord of
the manor reserved for himself was scattered in the
same way. The use of clover and the grasses which can
be cultivated in dry places and stored away for winter
was not known, therefore the meadow land of the manor
was of great value. There was always a common pasture
in which sheep and cattle might range; and there was
woodland, wherein the tenants' pigs might find food for
themselves.
PLAN OF A MANOR
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The tenants were obliged to grind their grain in the
lord's mill, bake their bread in his oven, press their
grapes in his winepress, and of course pay a good price
for the
[112] privileges. They must pay for letting their pigs run in
the forest, for cutting wood, and often for catching
fish, and for the use of their lord's weights and
measures. They paid him a share of what they raised,
and they paid one tenth of their income to the Church
besides fees at every birth, baptism, marriage, and
death. Even what was left of their produce they were
forbidden to sell until the produce of their lord's
land had been sold. This land, or the "demesne," they
were obliged to cultivate, each villein doing an amount
of work in proportion to the area which he held. The
lists of the men and the work required of each were
called "extents." An extent usually stated, first, the
size of the manor and how it was divided, how many
acres of arable land, pasture, meadow, and woodland it
contained, and how often the manor court was accustomed
to meet. Then came the list of the tenants, what rent
they paid, and what work was required of them. On one
of the English manors, for instance, there were seven
free tenants. One of them was the son of a knight. He
held eighteen acres and paid for his land thirty-six
pence a year. Apparently these free tenants were not
obliged to do any work on the demesne. Some of the
villein tenants, however, had to do so many kinds of
work that it is a wonder how they knew when it
[114] was finished. One poor man had to work for his land
three days a week for eleven months of the year, save
for a week at Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, and
find his own food. He must weed, help plough and mow,
carry in hay, reap, and haul grain. It was carefully
stated just when the lord would provide food for him
and how much and what kind. When this man and the other
villeins were mowing, they were allowed three bushels
of wheat, one ram worth eighteen pence, one jar of
butter, and one cheese "next to the best from the dairy
of the lord," and salt and oatmeal for their porridge,
and all the morning milk. They had also several
definite perquisites while they were doing this work;
for instance, at the close of each day every man might
have as much green grass as he could carry on the point
of his scythe; and when the hay was in, he might have a
cartful. At harvest time, each worker might have three
handfuls for every load of grain that he brought in.
Besides the weekly work during the greater part of the
year, there were also "boon-works" in time of
ploughing, planting, and harvest. For these, the
tenant must leave his own land, often when it needed
him most, and give his time to that of his lord. In
short, more than one half of the time of the average
villein had to be given to
[115] the lord of the manor. Just how some of the dues were
paid is a little confusing. One tenant, for instance,
was bound to pay the lord every Christmas "one hen and
a half, the hen being of the price of one and one half
pence." Several women held land on the same terms as
the men. The extent also stated the value of the rents,
the hens given to the lord, the use of the mill, the
right to fish, and all the service performed by the
tenants; and it told where the pillory and
ducking-stool stood. In this case, there was more than
one reason to avoid these instruments of punishment,
for they were placed next to the lord's pigstye.
Legal questions often arose on a manor, land was
transferred from one person to another, fines were to
be imposed, crimes were to be punished, and to decide
these matters a court was held regularly. This was
convenient for the tenants, but it can hardly have
been invariably just, for the lord or his agent was the
judge, and he generally had a personal interest in the
cases. Moreover, the various fines and fees went
straight into his own purse, and that must have made it
a temptation to inflict as heavy ones as would be
borne. In theory, there could be an appeal to the king;
but the king was usually a long way off, travel was not
safe, and in any case the
[116] word of a villein would count little when opposed to
the word of a noble.
A manor did not run itself. It had three chief
officials besides its lord. First, there was the
reeve. He was one of the tenants, and his business was
to carry on the cultivation of the lord's land. Then
there was the bailiff, who took charge of the whole
manor, saw that the work was done and the produce sold.
But a noble often held a number of manors, and so a
steward was also required, who went from one manor to
another to examine the accounts of each, hold court,
and take general charge of the estates. So it was that
the reeve watched the tenants, the bailiff watched the
reeve, the steward watched the bailiff; and finally an
accountant, sometimes a relative of the lord, watched
the steward and collected the money from the different
manors. Over them all was the lord himself. He and his
family and servants went from one manor to another,
partly to use up what they could of produce on the
spot, and partly, it is whispered, because so little
attention was paid to cleanliness that it was the part
of comfort as well as wisdom to allow a house to
"sweeten" after it had been occupied for some weeks.
A manor required far less from the outside world
[117] than any village or city in these days. Food, with the
exception of salt and the delicacies brought for the
use of the lord, grew on the land. Hemp and wool were
raised, spun into yarn, woven, and made into clothes on
the spot. Sandals could be made by any one, and rough
shoes could be put together by the shoemaker of the
manor. There was also a carpenter, who could easily put
up the wattled huts of the tenants. If anything more
elaborate was to be undertaken, like the building of a
church, builders were sent for from away. The
blacksmith mended the tools and farming implements and
often made them. Clumsy, inconvenient things they were.
The scythes were short and straight, and the sickles
small and heavy. The great wooden ploughs were so big
and cumbersome that even with eight oxen to pull them
they cut into the ground only a little way, and a
second ploughing was usually necessary. Enriching the
land and draining the soil were rarely practiced during
the earlier part of the Middle Ages. Crops at best were
small, often not more than one third of what the same
amount of land would produce to-day. Frequently they
failed almost altogether, because so little was known
of agriculture; and even when there was a year of
plenty, it was hardly safe to sell the surplus, for it
[118] might all be needed during the following year. The
tenant had a hard life, but he was sure of as much
protection as his lord could give, of a place to stay
in, and of an opportunity to raise something to eat. He
had no freedom, but in the times when freedom means
danger, one does not grieve so sorely over the loss of
liberty. William Langland, who wrote Piers
Plowman, tells how constantly the women worked.
They must spin and card and comb wool, he says, trying
to earn enough to pay the rent and the cost of milk and
meal to feed their little ones; they must mend and wash
and reel, and peel rushes, so that it is a sad story to
read the sufferings of the women who live in cottages.
But as the years passed, the times changed. The tenants
took little interest in the forced cultivation of their
lord's land, and with all the watching it seldom
brought in as much income as it might, certainly not so
much as the lords desired, for many luxuries were now
imported, people were interested in building, and they
had developed a taste for living comfortably. These
changes had been caused in great degree by the crusades
or military expeditions to rescue the Holy Land from
the Saracens; but, whatever was the cause, the nobles
wanted money.
OLD MANOR HOUSE
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[119] The villeins, on the other hand, wanted to get rid of
forced labor. Buying a release from disagreeable duties
was quite in fashion. Even nobles often bought
themselves free from entertaining the king. In many
cases the peasants were permitted to buy a release from
the services that they especially disliked. In some
instances, where the lord was in pressing need of
money, he insisted upon a tenant's buying his freedom.
If a lord had a good supply of workmen, a tenant was
sometimes allowed to leave the manor on condition of
paying a tax. The Church was the friend of the tenant.
It taught that to free a serf was a deed pleasing to
God; and if the son of the poorest serf showed
intellectual ability
[120] and aptitude for the priesthood, it demanded his
release. It is thought that William Langland was a
villein and became free on entering the Church. A
tenant could sometimes escape to some city and find
friends who would conceal him; and in England there was
a law that if a man could succeed in remaining hidden
for a year and a day, he was forever free. Many of
these runaways knew some trade by which they could
support themselves. There were tanners, carpenters,
saddlers, shoemakers, blacksmiths, and tailors among
them. Early in the fourteenth century the weaving of
fine woolens was introduced into England; and at this
trade especially a man could earn a good support.
Little by little, then, the villeins were discovering
that the lords needed them quite as much as they needed
the lords. If a lord did not treat his laborers well,
he would be likely to lose some of them. As time
passed, more and more of the tenants paid rent instead
of giving service; and the lords could not always get
as much service as they needed. More and more men
became free to go from one manor to another as hired
laborers. Villeinage would probably have slowly
disappeared in any case, but in the fourteenth century
the system received two great shocks. One was the fact
[121] that when England fought France at the battle of Crécy,
the day was won for the English, not by knights in
steel armor, but by yeomen with their bows and arrows.
The other was the terrible Black Death, a pestilence
which swept over Europe. It is thought to have
destroyed nearly one third as many people as there are
in the United States. Then the lords or their heirs
were in difficulties. They received a heriot on the
death of a villein and the usual relief from his heir;
but so many had died that few manors had men enough
left to do the necessary work. The success at Crécy had
shown the common folk that they were able to protect
themselves; and now that laborers were few, they began
to see that they were an important part of the
population. In England occurred an uprising known as
the Peasants' Revolt. The chief demand of these
peasants was to be free from villeinage; and although
the revolters were severely punished, villeinage
rapidly disappeared. France, too, had learned a lesson
from her defeats at Crécy and elsewhere, for she had
found that her knights in all their armor could not
protect their country. People began to question, "If
knights cannot even guard their own land, what is the
use of knighthood?" and both knighthood and the manor
system
[122] gradually disappeared. But although the system has
vanished, it still influences the law; for instance,
the belief of the Middle Ages was that the land of a
country belonged to the king and was granted by him to
his vassals for life; and to-day if a man in England
dies intestate and without heirs, his land goes to the
King; in America it goes to the state. So it is that
people of the twentieth century are affected by the
beliefs and customs of the people who lived on manors
many hundred years ago.
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