Chapter 6 Daily Life in Feudal Europe
- Feudal Europe
- After the victory at the blood-soaked field of the Battle of ______went to William the Conqueror, life in England changed for many.
- William planned to rule in ______, using the system of ______that was already in place in France.
- Vassals paid ______or showed honor, to their lords. The work homage comes from the French word for “man.” the vassal was to be the lord’s man in body, mind, and spirit.
- In 1066, feudalism was not fully developed in ______and William wanted to change this.
- William ordered a survey to be taken of the______of every bit of land in land. The results of the survey were written in The ______, which became a valuable source of information for the king’s tax agents.
- Then William distributed the land as ______to his Norman followers.
- Life in the Country
- William and his Norman lords built fortified ______on their fiefs all over the island kingdom of England.
- By 1100, several hundred castles had been built throughout the countryside. These Norman ______helped to shape the lives of the kings, lords, and knights who made up the ______.
- Nobles
- For the lord of the fief, a castle might be home. For others who lived on his land, it was both a center for ______and a place of ______during battle.
- A ______castle was usually built at the top of a hill and surrounded by a deep ______, or moat. The Norman castle was build for security not ______.
- Life in a Castle
- The lord and lady of the castle usually slept behind a curtain in the ______. Also sleeping in the hall might be a small mob of knights, guests, servants, and dogs. The floor was covered with herbs to keep down the smell of bones and other refuse.
- Life in a castle was far from ______. The knight was often the ______younger son of a lord’s ______. The lord provided the knight with food, lodging, armor, and a horse in exchange for his services.
- But between wars the castle’s knights fought among ______or bullied the ______unless the lord of the castle kept an eye on them.
- The lady of the castle had very little power, except over female servants. Medieval women were supposed to be ______to their husbands and fathers, just as vassals were subject to their lords.
- When their husbands were at war, women took over the ______, the entire castle and entire estate.
- Peasants
- The lord’s castle might be a cold, ______. But the peasants, or ______, who lived in the village n the lord’s estate, had even less comfortable homes.
- They typically lived with their ______in a hut with a straw roof which helped to ______the hut.
- Peasants worked hard on land they did not own by ______. The women produced food and clothing for her own ______.
- Clergy
- The influence of the clergy- from pope, archbishop and bishops to priests, monks, and nuns-extended to every part of medieval life.
- Most medieval manors included a small ______. From baptism to marriage to burial, the ______of the church guided the lives of medieval men and women.
- People saw their life on earth as a brief ______for the eternal life to come. They believed only a few would spend ______in heaven. Many sinners, people believed, would spend eternity in the flames of hell.
- The power to ______or to forgive sinners made the church a considerable force.
- Many people joined the church to acquire ______and ______.
Draw the Pyramid Below:
- The Monastery
- Thousands of monks, nun, and servants also lived and worked in large stone ______.
- A monastery was a complex ______with many different buildings-granaries, breweries, bakeries, with huge ovens, wineries, and the abbey church and library.
- Inside the library monks copied ______books.
- The ______and ______taught children, fed the poor, cared for the sick, provided shelter to travelers.
- Life in the Towns
- Not all people lived in feudal ______or ______. Peasants seeking freedom, younger sons of nobles seeking a fortune, and scholars seeking new ideas left the country manor or towns.
- Narrow crowed streets with wooden houses showed up against each other with hardly any light that became the center of ______.
- Trade ______and the town’s ______.
- Guilds
- Shoemakers, blacksmiths, tailors, weavers, bakers banded together with others for their trade to form ______.
- A guild was a ______of people who practiced a trade. Guilds for each trade ______the number of people who could practice that trade.
- Discrimination Against Jews
- Many European Jews also lived in towns because they were not allowed to own land. However, they did not become craftspeople, because they were also not allowed to join guilds.
- Many Jews were ______while others were money ______since this was the only trade forbidden to Christians.
- As trade became important, Jews became ______.
- During this period, Jews often suffered at the hands of Christians who ______their wealth and used their ______as an excuse to persecute them.
- The Magna Carta
- Many lords renounced their______to John and in June of 1215 forced his seal on a document-The Magna Carta.
- The Magna Carta focused on the rights of ______. It gave the lords certain rights that a king could not take away.
- This subjected the king to the rule of _____ which will be the basis for future reforms and the Bill of ______.
- The signing of the Magna Carta signaled the beginning of feudalism’s ______.
- The ideas of personal ______and ______were now firmly planted.