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The Second and Third Orders in Medieval Feudalism: Nobility and Peasantry

July 5, 2024 397 0

Introduction

The Second and Third Orders in feudalism refer to the roles of nobility and peasantry. The Second Order comprises the nobility, including lords and warriors, while the Third Order consists of the peasantry, involved in labor and agriculture. These orders played crucial roles in the hierarchical feudal structure.

The Second Order: The Nobility

Vassalage: During this period, priests positioned themselves in the first order, while nobles occupied the second. The nobility played a pivotal role in society due to their control over land, a system known as ‘vassalage.’

  • In France, as in the traditions of Germanic peoples like the Franks, the kings established connections with their subjects through vassalage
  • The nobles, who were significant landowners, became vassals of the king, while the peasants were vassals of the landowners
  • Mutual Agreements: Vassalage involved a mutual agreement in which the noble, or ‘seigneur,’ pledged protection to the vassal, who, in turn, swore loyalty to the lord
  • Ceremonial Formalization: These commitments were formalized through rituals and the exchange of vows in a church ceremony
  • Symbolic Representation: The vassal received a symbolic representation of the land granted by the lord, such as a written charter, staff, or clod of earth.
  • Noble Privileges: Nobles enjoyed considerable privileges, including absolute control over their land, the ability to raise feudal levies (troops), the establishment of their own courts of justice, and even the authority to mint their currency
  • Manorial Lordship: They held dominion over the people living on their land, which encompassed their residences, private fields, pastures, and the homes and fields of their tenant-peasants. 
  • Manor System: The noble’s residence was called a manor, and their private lands were cultivated by peasants, who also served as foot soldiers in times of battle and worked on their own farms.

The Manorial Estate

Lords in Feudal System: Lords in this feudal system typically had their own manor houses and control over multiple villages, with some overseeing hundreds of them. 

  • A smaller manorial estate might comprise a dozen families, while larger ones could encompass fifty or sixty. 
  • Self-Sustaining Estates: These estates were self-sustaining, with almost everything needed for daily life available on-site.
    • Craftsmanship and Agriculture: Grain was cultivated in the fields, blacksmiths and carpenters maintained the lord’s tools and weapons, while stonemasons cared for buildings. 
    • Roles of Women and Children: Women engaged in spinning and weaving, and children worked in the lord’s wine-presses
    • Woodlands and forests provided hunting grounds, and pastures allowed cattle and horses to graze
  • Castles in the Feudal System: The estate typically included a church and a castle for defense.
    • During the 13th century, some castles were expanded to serve as residences for knightly families.
    • Evolution of Castles in England: Interestingly, in England, castles were relatively rare before the Norman Conquest but became centers of both political administration and military power under the feudal system.
  • External Dependencies: Despite being largely self-sufficient, manors still needed to acquire certain items from external sources, such as salt, millstones, and metalware
    •  Non-local Luxuries: Lords who desired a more luxurious lifestyle and sought to purchase rich furnishings, musical instruments, and ornaments not produced locally had to acquire these goods from elsewhere.

The Knights

Emergence of Knights: From the ninth century, localized conflicts were common in Europe, requiring skilled cavalry instead of amateur peasant-soldiers

  • This gave rise to the importance of knights, who were closely connected to lords, just as lords were linked to the king. 
  • Fief: Lords granted knights a piece of land known as a ‘fief’ and pledged to protect it. 
    • These fiefs, which could be inherited, often comprised large estates including a house for the knight and family, a church, accommodations for dependents, a watermill, and a wine-press. 
  • Feudal Obligations: Peasants cultivated the land within the fief, and in return, knights paid a regular fee to their lord and committed to fighting for them in times of war. 
  • Knights and Loyalty: Knights honed their skills through daily training in fencing and tactics.
    • While a knight might serve multiple lords, their primary loyalty remained with their own lord
  • The Role of Minstrels: In France, minstrels began traveling between manors from the 12th century, singing songs that recounted stories, partly historical and partly fictional, of courageous kings and knights. 
    • This oral tradition was particularly popular at a time when literacy was limited, and manuscripts were scarce. 
    • Many manors had a minstrels’ gallery above the large hall, where singers entertained nobles during meals.
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The Third Order: Peasants, Free and Unfree

The Third Order: First and Second orders were sustained by a third order which included the vast majority of people and cultivators

  • Cultivators were of two kinds: free peasants and serfs (from the verb ‘to serve’).
  • Duties of Free Peasants: In the feudal system, free peasants held their farms as tenants of the lord, and they had specific obligations and duties. 
  • Military Service Requirements: Men among the free peasants were required to provide military service, typically at least forty days per year. 
  • Labor Requirements: Peasant families had to allocate several days each week, often three or more, to work on the lord’s estate
    • The products of this labor, known as labor-rent, went directly to the lord. 
    • Unpaid Services: Additionally, peasants could be compelled to perform various unpaid services such as digging ditches, collecting firewood, constructing fences, and maintaining roads and buildings. 
  • Women and Children: They were also engaged in various tasks like spinning, weaving, candle-making, and wine preparation for the lord’s use.
  • The Taille: There was a single direct tax called the ‘taille’ that kings occasionally imposed on peasants (with the clergy and nobles being exempt). 
  • Serfs in the Feudal System: Serfs had even fewer rights and privileges
    • They cultivated plots of land that belonged to the lord, and a significant portion of the produce had to be given to the lord. 
    • Serfs could not leave the estate without the lord’s permission, received no wages, and were subject to various monopolies imposed by the lord
    • Example: They could only use the lord’s mill, oven, and wine-presses
    • The lord also had control over aspects of a serf’s personal life, including approving or influencing their choice of marriage, often with a fee involved.

Conclusion

The nobility thrived through a system of vassalage, holding vast manors and employing knights. Peasants, both free and unfree, toiled on these lands, fulfilling labor obligations and taxes to support the upper classes. This feudal structure defined medieval European society.

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