Social Structure of Late Medieval Britain:
Feudalism and the Three Estates
"The
Great Chain of Being" dated
back to Aristotle. The concept of the patriarchal family was
even older: father, mother, children, servants.
The patriarch (and his second in command, his wife) was responsible for the
physical, spiritual, and moral well-being of the children and servants. Another depiction of the Great Chain.
Feudalism defined the Great Chain of Being even
further, separating mankind into three "estates," or classes:
- Clergy, responsible
for the nation’s spiritual well-being;
- Aristocracy, for its
military protection;
- Commoners, for the
production of all material goods.
The Three Estates
Note: the population of Britain
was approximately 2.25 million in the late 14th century, and 3.75
million in the early 14th century--for an explanation of the
decrease, see "Laments
and Elegies".
First Estate: Clergy (first since they invented the "estate"
categories). Approx. 1.5% of the population. Set apart
by special clothing (habit) and hairstyle (tonsure and clean-shaven face, if
male).
"Secular" Clergy: those who lived in seculo,
"in the world" (e.g., parish priests, archbishops).
- Rector: the priest entitled
to the revenues of a parish (generally a village)
- Vicar: the priest actually
serving the parish; employed by the rector for as little as 4 pounds a
year plus the harvest from the "glebe," the parson’s share of
the village fields.
- Minor orders: ordained but
not sworn to celibacy; wore a small tonsure and assisted at services.
Included many physicians and university students.
"Regular" Clergy: those who lived by rules and regulations.
- Monks: e.g., Benedictines
(oldest order), Carthusians and Cistercians
(newer orders). In this painting of the
late-14th-century, a Carthusian monk
witnesses the Crucifixion.
- Mendicant orders (friars):
e.g., Dominicans (black friars or friars-preachers) and Franciscans (gray
friars or friars-minor). This is a
Dominican, preaching, from a woodcut of the late 15th
century.
- Nuns belonged to the first
estate but with fewer privileges. An abbess was an important woman, but
unlike an abbot did not have a seat in the House of Lords.
The Second Estate: Aristocracy and the Third Estate: Commoners
were linked in the feudal system
Feudalism: series of contracts regulating the use of land, a system
which developed in an agrarian society with limited coinage and literacy. The
monarch owned all the land; he gave its use ("holdings" or
"manors") to the members of the warrior class ("tenants")
in return for military service. The greater aristocrats granted smaller
holdings or manors to lesser aristocrats, and the lesser aristocrats granted
smaller holdings (not called "manors") to commoners, in exchange for
specified services—working the lord’s land a certain number of days each week,
repairing roads or bridges. Contracts were made by public oath and enforced by
custom.
Livery or Maintenance (called "bastard" feudalism by modern
military historians): By Chaucer’s period (the 14th century),
coins and literacy were more widespread. Military service was usually by
written contract or "indenture," with each lord paying those willing
to fight for him an annual fee (like a retainer), plus additional wages for
each day served. Subordinates were given badges or livery to indicate their
allegiance; essentially, they were subcontractors, and the aristocrats were the
king’s contractors.
Aristocracy: about 1% of the population
- Royal Family
- Nobility or Peerage:
inherited titles, about 50 lords and their families, all related to the
monarch and eligible to serve in Parliament (current House of Lords):
duke/duchess, earl/countess, baron/baroness.
Parliament evolved as the noblemen asserted their traditional rights—the Magna
Carta (which King John was forced to sign in
1215) guaranteed these rights, and somewhat limited the powers of the
monarch. For instance, the monarch couldn’t have a member of the nobility
executed just because he or she felt like it—he or she had at least to
pretend there was just cause.
- Knights: those without
inherited titles, including those of "gentle birth" (descended
from nobility but not of it). About 1000. The most important, who could raise
followers to fight under their banner, were "knights banneret." The others were "knights bachelor."
- Squires: 1) gentle-born
assistants to knights, the original sense; 2) more generally, men of
gentle birth who were not knights. Many were younger sons, or elder sons
waiting to inherit, or had small estates and incomes; these served as
superior servants, bureaucrats, diplomats, military commanders. The majority of men-at-arms (fully armored horsemen) were
squires, and outnumbered knights by 3 to 1 or more in most armies.
The Commons: 97% of the population, and a highly diverse group.
Rural commons: 95% of the population.
- "Freemen" had
"free" holdings—limited services to the lord, and usually
nominal rents. If they had 50 acres or more, they were "franklins"
or "yeomen" (originally the servant below a squire). Between 10
and 50 acres, they were "husbandmen," and below 10 acres they
were "cottars" and usually had to hire themselves out to
survive.
- "Villeins"
or "bondmen" (on the Continent, "serfs") had
"servile" holdings—more services, special taxes, and had to have
permission from the lord to move, marry outside the lord’s estates, or
enter the priesthood.
Townsmen (2% of the population): Less than half were citizens or
"burgesses." Citizenship could be purchased, or acquired by rising
through the hierarchy of a trade (belonging to a "mystery" or guild).
The rest were apprentices, laborers, servants, and "aliens."
Sumptuary Laws, 1363, dictated what each rank could wear, so that wealthy
commoners couldn’t be mistaken for the aristocracy.
Answer to the quiz from The Measly Middle Ages:
eating powdered emeralds (or powdered pearls)--of
course it didn't work, but at least it was healthy for the physician's wallet
The other answers were thought to be cures for the following conditions:
- a stuffy nose
- internal bleeding
- plague, as mentioned above
- gout
For the quiz, see the bottom of the elegies page.
For Further Reading:
- Deary,
Terry. The Measly Middle Ages. New
York: Scholastic, 1996.
- Singman,
Jeffrey L., and Will McLean. Daily Life in Chaucer's England.
Westport, CT:
Greenwood, 1995.
This page,
http://www.tcnj.edu/~graham/estates.html, was last updated
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