Life Under the Normans Flashcards
(65 cards)
Lord
Anyone who has other people dependent on them for land
Anglo-Saxon feudal system hierachy
- slaves
- peasants - villeins
- peasants - coerls
- thegns
- earls
- king
Anglo-Saxon slaves
- fewest rights
- agricultural work in return for shelter and food
- property of coerls
Anglo-Saxon villeins
- few rights
- property of thegns
Anglo-Saxon coerls
- worked on thegn’s land 2/3 days a week
- paid thegn taxes - pig in return for right to keep their herd in a forest
Anglo-Saxon thegns
- looked after land for earls
- helped run local courts
- could be called upon for army for 40 days a year
- granted land to coerls
- over 4000
Anglo-Saxon earls
- controlled land (earldoms) owned by king in return for loyalty to king
- shared land among thegns
- 6 major earldoms by 1066
Anglo-Saxon king
- ruled kingdom
- richest person in kingdom
- owned most the land (some owned by church)
- responsible for protecting country from invaders
- oversaw running of country as head of government
Norman feudal system order
- slaves
- peasants - villeins
- peasants - freemen
- knights
- tenants in chief
- king
What happened to slaves after 1066
Numbers constantly decreased as church didn’t approve of slavery
Norman knights
- looked after land for tenants in chief + paid them tax
- could be called upon to serve in army
- swore fealty to king
- about 5000
Norman tenants in chief
- held land directly from king
- swore fealty to king
- provided King with knights
- shared income from land with King
- granted some land to followers
- archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, barons
Marches
- areas in between England + Wales
- always under attack
Marcher lords
- 3 most trusted barons given land on marches (became marshes)
- could make laws, raise army, build castles without asking king
Vassalic bonds
King + lords gave land to subjects (vassals) in return for loyalty - how feudal system worked
Homage
Public demonstration of loyalty - tenants-in-chief knelt before the king
How did William’s 1070 tactic change affect nobility
- William systematically replaced Anglo-Saxon nobles with Normans
- almost all replaced by 1086
How did William change estates
Divided larger areas of controlled land into smaller estates to maintain control
How did Norman primogeniture affect land
- Anglo-Saxon England - land divided equally between landholder’s children when died
- Norman England - land went to eldest son, if there wasn’t one, land went to lord
- limited landholding
- made money king + lords - eldest son had to pay for inherited land or seized (payment was called relief)
What was land of tenant-in-chief divided into
Shires
Who governed shires
Shire-reeves (became Sheriffs)
What were shires divided ino
‘Hundreds’ made up of multiple villages
Who controlled hundreds
Sheriffs and deputies
Role of sheriffs
- supervising collection of fines + taxes
- judging civil/criminal cases in local courts
- organising/leading military forces
- managing royal demesne (Norman