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    A feudal manor gave its kingdom the military might that it required through the bribery of soldiers and the desperation for a strong army. Manors provided a relatively stable‚ and reliable army for the country. Since a manor had the peasant class busy with work‚ and was in excellent economic shape‚ not every social class needed to work. This gave knights the time to train properly and fight when needed (A. Smith 1). Knights were also sometimes given large pieces of land‚ and peasant workers‚ as incentive

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    Although peasants were at the bottom of the chain‚ they still gave things in turn for other things. Peasants gave labor in turn for land. Peasants were at the bottom of the rank and worked on farms to provide food for everyone in the manor. Most worked for a lord who let them have a bit of land to farm for themselves in turn for labor (Langley 8-9). Being in feudal society gave peasants things to help their family survive‚ although it was in small amounts. Some people might think that being a

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    A Comparison of Feudal Europe and Japan Feudalism was a type of regulated government consisting of multiple relationships between many classes in a society. It consisted of many strict military as well as legal customs and flourished in the 15th century. Feudalism was present and thriving in Japan and Europe prior to 1500. The feudal systems in Europe and Japan were similar as a result of their synonymous systems of mutual obligation‚ their corresponding social class organization‚ and their powerless

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    AP Euro Power shift

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    Take-Home Essay #1 After about 1450‚ the advent of completely sovereign rulers started a shift from divided feudal governments to cohesive countrywide monarchies. The characteristics of the feudal system did not disappear‚ but merely molded into the shape of the new monarchies. Territorial rulers still existed and representative organizations even grew in influence. Throughout 1450 to 1550‚ a reformation of the governments of Western Europe created “new monarchies”. These new monarchies contained

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    The Feudal system is a pyramid of social classes and every person was in a certain level of the pyramid. The feudal system divided the people into four groups‚ on top was the king‚ then lord‚ Knights and lastly peasants. It also included having a chivalry and it was a code of behavior for the knights. Feudalism was based on the exchange of land for military service and it was in both Japan and Europe. Feudalism’s goals were to accomplish economic growth and to unify the government. The other goals

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    Absolutism in Europe

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    Absolutism affected the power + status of the European nobility depending on the country in which they lived. In England the power of the nobility increases due to a victory in the English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution of 1658. However‚ in France‚ Louis XIV¡¯s absolutist regime decreased the powers of the noble but heightened their material status. In Russia and in Prussia‚ the absolutist leaders of those countries modernized their nations + the nobility underwent a change‚ but it retained

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    Social Organization of the Tainos The Tainos were a gentle and humble people with a very strong social organization. They would settle relatively close to the coast‚ as to be hidden but to also see incoming people. A Taino settlement could be a small or as complex chiefdom; it was constructed in such a way that the cacique’s (the chief’s) residence was situated at the centre‚ with the general population around it. His house consisted of his entire family. The houses of the general population also

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    Since Henry VIIs reign started on the 22nd August 1485 he adapted many different techniques and ideas so keep his nobility from gaining too much power. Some of these ideas became successful however some didn’t achieve the goal and some even made it worse leaving the nobility with more power. He followed through with new ideas until his death and therefore the end of his reign on the 21st April 1509. Henry VII was very keen to limit the power of his nobility because he saw the great and powerful

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    Feudalism discusses the medieval European political system that is composed of legal and military obligations. It was made up of three groups‚ lords‚ vassals‚ and fiefs. On the other hand‚ manorialism was the organizing principle of rural economy and society widely practiced in medieval western and parts of central Europe. The lodging of legal and economic power in a lordly portrayed manorialism. These obligations could be payable in labor productivity or‚ on rare occasions‚ money. The root of Feudalism

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    Medieval Nobles

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    In the medieval period the most powerful people in the Western Europe were the great nobles kings‚ lords and the lesser nobles. They were at the top of the feudal system.Nobles had control over the knights and peasants. Kings and queens found it difficult to rule without the help of the nobles for three main reasons. Firstly they needed the force of fighting men (knights) on call if their power was threatened‚ Secondly they needed someone to travel their messages it was hard for rulers to make their

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