Difference between revisions of "Serfdom" - New World Encyclopedia

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Sometimes, serfs served as soldiers in the event of conflict and could earn freedom or even [[ennoblement]] for valor in combat. In other cases, serfs could purchase their freedom, be [[manumission|manumitted]] by their enlightened or generous owners, or flee to towns or newly-settled land where few questions were asked. Laws varied from country to country: in [[England]] a serf who made his way to a [[charter]]ed town and evaded recapture for a year and a day obtained his freedom.
 
Sometimes, serfs served as soldiers in the event of conflict and could earn freedom or even [[ennoblement]] for valor in combat. In other cases, serfs could purchase their freedom, be [[manumission|manumitted]] by their enlightened or generous owners, or flee to towns or newly-settled land where few questions were asked. Laws varied from country to country: in [[England]] a serf who made his way to a [[charter]]ed town and evaded recapture for a year and a day obtained his freedom.
 
===Russian serfdom===
 
  
 
[[Image:Yuriev day.jpg|275px|thumb|''A Peasant Leaving His Landlord on [[Yuriev Day]]'', painting by [[Sergei V. Ivanov]].]]
 
[[Image:Yuriev day.jpg|275px|thumb|''A Peasant Leaving His Landlord on [[Yuriev Day]]'', painting by [[Sergei V. Ivanov]].]]
The origins of serfdom in [[Russia]] are traced to [[Kievan Rus]] in the eleventh century. Legal documents of the epoch, such as [[Russkaya Pravda]], distinguished several degrees of feudal dependency of peasants. Traditionally, the term for a [[peasant]] of the epoch of [[feudalism]] in [[Imperial Russia]], ''krepostnoi krestyanin'' (крепостной крестьянин), is translated as "serf."
 
 
The legal code of [[Ivan III of Russia]], [[Sudebnik]] (1497), strengthened the dependency of peasants, statewise, and restricted their mobility. The [[Russians]] persistently battled against the successor states of the [[Golden Horde]], chiefly the [[Khanate of Crimea]]. Tens of thousand of noblemen protected the southern borderland—a heavy burden for the state—which slowed its social and economic development and expanded the taxation of peasantry.
 
 
After the passage of laws which further restricted the peasant's right to free movement, the vast majority of the Russian populace was finally bound in full serfdom. Serfs were given estates in the ''Sobornoye Ulozhenie'' (Соборное уложение, "Code of Law") of 1649; and flight was made a criminal offense in 1658. Russian landowners eventually gained almost unlimited ownership over Russian serfs. The landowner could transfer the serf without the land to another landowner while keeping the serf's personal property and family, however the landowner  had no right to kill the serf. As a whole serfdom came to Russia much later than in other European countries.
 
 
There were numerous rebellions against this bondage, most often in conjunction with [[Cossack]] uprisings, such as the uprisings of [[Ivan Bolotnikov]] (1606-1607), [[Stenka Razin]] (1667-1671), [[Kondraty Bulavin]] (1707-1709), and [[Yemelyan Pugachev]] (1773-1775). While the Cossack uprisings benefited from disturbances among the peasants, and they in turn received an impetus from Cossack rebellion, none of the Cossack movements were directed against the institution of serfdom itself. Instead, peasants in Cossack-dominated areas became Cossacks, thus escaping from the peasantry rather than directly organizing peasants against the institution. Between the end of the Pugachev rebellion and the beginning of the nineteenth century, there were hundreds of outbreaks across Russia, and there was never a time when the peasantry was completely quiescent. By the mid-eighteenth century, the serfs composed a majority of the population, according to the [[census]] of 1857 the number of serfs was 23.1 million of the  62.5 million of Russians.
 
 
Russian serfdom depended entirely on the traditional and extensive technology of the peasantry. Yields remained low and stationary throughout most of the nineteenth century. Any increase in income drawn from agriculture was drawn largely through increasing land area and extensive grain raising by means of exploitation of the peasant labor, that is, by burdening the peasant household still further.
 
 
In Russian Baltic provinces (Courland, Estonia, Livonia) serfdom, however, was abolished at the beginning of nineteenth century.
 
 
In 1861 all serfs were freed in a [[Emancipation reform of 1861 in Russia|major agrarian reform]], stimulated by the fear voiced by Tsar [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander II]] that "it is better to liberate the peasants from above" than to wait until they won their freedom by risings "from below." Serfdom was abolished in 1861, but its abolition was achieved on terms unfavorable to the peasants and served to increase revolutionary pressures.
 
 
 
The origins of [[serfdom]] in [[Russia]] (''крепостничество'', or krepostnichestvo) may be traced to the 11th century, however, the most complete form of [[feudalism|feudal]] [[exploitation]] enveloped only certain categories of rural population. In the 12th century, the exploitation of the so-called [[zakup]]s on [[arable land]]s (''ролейные (пашенные) закупы'', or roleyniye (pashenniye) zakupy) and [[corvee]] [[smerd]]s (Russian term for corvee is ''барщина'', or barschina) was the closest to what is now known as serfdom. According to the ''[[Russkaya Pravda]]'', a [[prince]]ly smerd had limited [[property]] and personal rights. His [[escheat]] was given to the prince and his life was equated with that of the [[kholop]], meaning his [[murder]] was punishable by 5 [[grivna]]s.
 
 
In the thirteenth-fifteenth centuries, feudal dependency applied to a significant number of [[peasant]]s, but serfdom as we know it was still not a widespread [[phenomenon]]. In the mid-15th century, the right of certain categories of peasants in some [[votchina]]s to leave their master was limited to a period of one week before and after the so-called [[Yuri's Day]] (November 26). The [[Sudebnik|Sudebnik of 1497]] officially confirmed this time limit as universal for everybody and also established the amount of the "break-away" fee called ''pozhiloye'' ''(пожилое)''. The [[Sudebnik of 1550]] increased the amount of pozhiloye and introduced an additional [[tax]] called ''za povoz'' (''за повоз'' , or transportation fee), in case a peasant refused to bring the [[harvest]] from the fields to his master. A temporary (''Заповедные лета'', or [[Prohibition years]]) and later an open-ended prohibition for peasants to leave their masters was introduced by the [[ukase]] of 1597, which also defined the so-called [[fixed years]] (''Урочные лета'', or urochniye leta), or the 5-year time frame for search of the runaway peasants. In 1607, a new ukase defined [[sanction]]s for hiding and keeping the runaways: the fine had to paid to the state and pozhiloye - to the previous owner of the peasant.
 
 
Most of the [[dvoryane]] were content with the long time frame for search of the runaway peasants. The major [[landowner]]s of the country, however, together with the dvoryane of the south, were interested in a short-term [[persecution]] due to the fact that many runaways would usually flee to the southern parts of Russia. During the first half of the seventeenth century the dvoryane sent their collective [[petition]]s (''челобитные'', or chelobitniye) to the authorities, asking for the extension of the "fixed years." In 1642, the Russian government established a 10-year limit for search of the runaways and 15-year limit for search for peasants, taken away by their new owners.
 
  
The Sobornoye Ulozhenie (''Соборное уложение'', or Code of Law) of 1649 introduced an open-ended search for those on the run, meaning that all of the peasants who had fled from their masters after the census of 1626 or 1646-1647 had to be returned. The government would still introduce new time frames and grounds for search of the runaways after 1649, which applied to the peasants who had fled to the outlying districts of the country, such as regions along the border [[abatis]]es called ''zasechniye linii'' ''(засечные линии)'' (ukases of 1653 and 1656), [[Siberia]] (ukases of 1671, 1683 and 1700), [[River Don, Russia|Don]] (1698) etc. The dvoryane constantly demanded that the search for the runaways be sponsored by the government. The [[legislation]] of the second half of the 17th century paid much attention to the means of punishment of the runaways.
+
In [[Russia]], the legal code of [[Ivan III of Russia]], ''[[Sudebnik]]'' (1497), restricted the mobility of peasants. Their right to leave their master was limited to a period of one week before and after the so-called [[Yuri's Day]] (November 26). A temporary (''Заповедные лета'', or [[Prohibition years]]) and later an open-ended prohibition for peasants to leave their masters was introduced by the ''[[ukase]]'' of 1597, which also defined the so-called [[fixed years]] (''Урочные лета'', or ''urochniye leta''), or the five-year time frame for search of the runaway peasants. This was later extended to ten years.
  
 
==The decline of serfdom==
 
==The decline of serfdom==

Revision as of 19:27, 23 May 2008


Costumes of slaves or serfs, from the sixth to the twelfth centuries, collected by H. de Vielcastel from original documents in European libraries.

Serfdom is the socio-economic status of unfree peasants under feudalism, and specifically relates to Manorialism. It was a condition of bondage or modified slavery which developed primarily during the High Middle Ages in Europe. Serfdom was the enforced labor of serfs on the fields of landowners, in return for protection and the right to work on their leased fields.

Serfdom involved work not only on fields, but various agriculture-related works, like forestry, mining, transportation (both land and river-based), crafts, and even in production. Manors formed the basic unit of society during this period, and both the lord and his serfs were bound legally, economically, and socially. Serfs were laborers who were bound to the land; they formed the lowest social class of the feudal society. Serfs were also defined as people in whose labor landowners held property rights. Before the 1861 abolition of serfdom in Russia, a landowner's estate was often measured by the number of "souls" he owned. Feudalism in Europe evolved from agricultural slavery of the late Roman Empire and spread through Europe around the tenth century; it flourished in Europe during the Middle Ages but lasted until the nineteenth century. The Black Death broke the established social order to some degree and weakened serfdom.

After the Renaissance, serfdom became increasingly rare in most of Western Europe but grew strong in Central and Eastern Europe, where it had previously been less common (this phenomenon was known as "later serfdom"). In England, it lasted legally up to the 1600s and in France until 1789. There were native-born Scottish serfs until 1799, when coal miners previously kept in serfdom gained emancipation. In Eastern Europe the institution persisted until the mid-19th century. It persisted in Austria-Hungary till 1848 and was abolished in Russia only in 1861. Tibet is believed to be the last place to have abolished serfdom, in 1959.

Etymology

The word serf originated from the Middle French "serf," and can be traced farther back to the Latin servus, meaning "slave." In Late Antiquity and most of the Middle Ages, what we now call serfs were usually designated in Latin as coloni (sing. colonus). As slavery gradually disappeared and the legal status of these servi became nearly identical to that of coloni, the term changed meaning into our modern concept of "serf." This meaning fell out of use by the 1700s, but the current meaning was first used in 1611. The term "serfdom" was coined in 1850.

The system of serfdom

Peasants during the winter (Pluckmakers by Mihály Munkácsy, 1871)

The essential characteristic of a manorial society was the near-total subordination of the peasants to the economic authority and jurisdiction of the landlord. However, not all peasants were completely subsumed under serfdom. One has to distinguish between full serfdom of the land, which was a serf cultivating, and the power of the disposition of serf's bodies.

In medieval times in England vast amounts of land belonged to the Church; other land was owned privately. Indispensable for the survival of small landowners was the common land (Allmende in French), which was collective arable and forest land used for cultivation and for feeding livestock.

Landholders consisted of the nobility, the Church, and royalty. Serfs were allowed to work certain plots of land in exchange for a percentage of the product they produced. While most serfs were farmers, some were craftsmen, such as blacksmiths or millers. In most serfdoms, serfs were legally part of the land, and if the land was sold, they were sold with it. Medieval manors consisted of a manor house, where the landlord, knight, or baron lived, and a village consisting of peasant houses. These homes were actually one-bedroom huts made from wooden beams, mud and straw. Windows were rare and a hole was left in the roof to allow smoke from fires to escape. During the winter months, warmth was made by allowing the farm animals (goats, sheep, chickens, geese, and often cattle) to sleep inside. Whole families slept on a simple straw or wool mat, leaving little privacy.

The lives of serfs were very strenuous. The lord needed to maintain his authority in order to maintain the social structure. The priest was the bedrock of village life and all members of the community were dependent on him for their religious instruction and obligations. The priest could “proclaim [a serf’s duties], more for the society than for the ploughman; such total servitude is indeed useful to everyone.”[1] Lords and priests who were able to insist that the serf’s role was indeed essential and important to the survival of the community often perpetuated this system.

History of serfdom

Social institutions similar to serfdom were known in ancient times. The status of the helots in the ancient Greek city-state of Sparta resembled that of the medieval serfs, as did the condition of the peasants working on government lands in ancient Rome. These Roman peasants, known as coloni, or "tenant farmers," are some of the possible precursors of the serfs. The Germanic tribes invading the Roman Empire for the most part displaced wealthy Romans as the landlords but left the economic system itself intact.

However, medieval serfdom really began with the breakup of the Carolingian Empire around the tenth century. The demise of this empire, which had ruled much of the western Europe for more than 200 years, was followed by a long period during which no strong central governments existed in most of Europe.

During this period powerful feudal lords encouraged the establishment of serfdom as a source of agricultural labor. Serfdom, indeed, was an institution that reflected a fairly common practice whereby great landlords were assured that others worked to feed them and were held down, legally and economically, while doing so.

This arrangement provided most of the agricultural labor throughout the Middle Ages. Parts of Europe, including much of Scandinavia, never adopted many feudal institutions, including serfdom.

In the later Middle Ages serfdom began to disappear west of the Rhine even as it spread through eastern Europe. This was one important cause for the deep differences between the societies and economies of eastern and western Europe.

In Western Europe, the rise of powerful monarchs, towns, and an improving economy weakened the manorial system through the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and serfdom was rare following the Renaissance.

Serfdom in Western Europe came largely to an end in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, because of changes in the economy, population, and laws governing lord-tenant relations in Western European nations. The enclosure of manor fields for livestock grazing and for larger arable plots made the economy of serfs’ small strips of land in open fields less attractive to the landowners. Furthermore, the increasing use of money made tenant farming by serfs less profitable; for much less than it cost to support a serf, a lord could now hire workers who were more skilled and pay them in cash. Paid labor was also more flexible since workers could be hired only when they were needed.

At the same time, increasing unrest and uprisings by serfs and peasants, like Tyler’s Rebellion in England in 1381, put pressure on the nobility and the clergy to reform the system. As a result serf and peasant demands were accommodated to some extent by the gradual establishment of new forms of leasing the land and increased personal liberties.

Another important factor in the decline of serfdom was industrial development—especially the Industrial Revolution. With the growing profitability of industry farmers wanted to move to towns to receive higher wages than those they could earn working in the fields, while landowners also invested in the more profitable industry. This also led to the growing process of urbanization.

Grain pays

Serfdom reached Eastern European countries relatively later than Western Europe—it became dominant around the fifteenth century. Before that time, Eastern Europe had been much less populated than Western Europe. Serfdom developed in Eastern Europe after the Black Death epidemics, which not only stopped the migration but depopulated Western Europe.

The resulting large land-to-labor ratio combined with Eastern Europe's vast, sparsely populated areas gave the lords an incentive to bind the remaining peasantry to their land. With increased demand for agricultural products in Western Europe during the later era when Western Europe limited and eventually abolished serfdom, serfdom remained in force throughout Eastern Europe during the seventeenth century so that nobility-owned estates could produce more agricultural products (especially grain) for the profitable export market.

Such Eastern European countries include Prussia (Prussian Ordinances of 1525), Austria, Hungary (laws of late fifteenth, early sixteenth centuries), the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (szlachta privileges of early sixteenth century) and the Russian Empire (laws of late sixteenth/first half of seventeenth century).

Grain doesn't pay. Those two pictures illustrate the notion that agriculture, once extremely profitable to the nobles (szlachta) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, became much less profitable from the second half of seventeenth century onwards

This also led to the slower industry development and urbanization of those regions. Generally, this process, referred to as 'second serfdom' or 'export-led serfdom', which persisted until the mid-19th century, became very repressive and substantially limited serfs' rights.

In many of these countries serfdom was abolished during the Napoleonic invasions of the early nineteenth century. Serfdom remained the practice on the most part of territory of Russia until February 19, 1861, though in Russian Baltic provinces it has been abolished in the beginning of nineteenth century (Russian Serfdom Reforms). Russian serfdom was perhaps the most notable among the Eastern European experiences, as it was never influenced by German law and migrations, and the serfdom and manorialism systems were forced by the crown (Tsar), not the nobility.

Dependency and the lower orders

The serfs had a place in feudal society in much the same fashion as a baron or a knight. A serf's place was that, in return for protection, he would reside upon and work a parcel of land held by his lord. There was thus a degree of reciprocity in the manorial system.

The period rationale was that a serf "worked for all," while a knight or baron "fought for all" and a churchman "prayed for all;" thus everyone had his place. The serf worked harder than the others, and was the worst fed and paid, but at least he had his place and, unlike in slavery, he had his own land and properties.

A manorial lord could not sell his serfs as a Roman might sell his slaves. On the other hand, if he chose to dispose of a parcel of land, the serf or serfs associated with that land went with it to serve their new lord. Further, a serf could not abandon his lands without permission, nor could he sell them.

Becoming a serf

A freeman became a serf usually through force or necessity. Sometimes freeholder or allodial owners were intimidated into dependency by the greater physical and legal force of a local baron. Often a few years of crop failure, a war or brigandage might leave a person unable to make his own way. In such a case a bargain was struck with the lord. In exchange for protection, service was required, in payment and/or with labor. These bargains were formalized in a ceremony known as "bondage" in which a serf placed his head in the seigneur's hands, parallel to the ceremony of "homage" where a vassal placed his hands between those of his lord. These oaths bonded the seigneur to their new serf and outlined the terms of their agreement. [2]Often these bargains were severe. A seventh century Anglo Saxon “Oath of Fealty" states “By the Lord before whom this sanctuary is holy, I will to N. be true and faithful, and love all which he loves and shun all which he shuns, according to the laws of God and the order of the world. Nor will I ever with will or action, through word or deed, do anything which is unpleasing to him, on condition that he will hold to me as I shall deserve it, and that he will perform everything as it was in our agreement when I submitted myself to him and chose his will.” To become a serf was a commitment that invaded all aspects of the serf’s life.

Moreover, serfdom was inherited. By taking on the duties of serfdom, serfs bound not only themselves but all of their future heirs.

Serfdom's class system

The class of peasant was often broken down into smaller categories. The distinctions between these classes were often less clear than would be suggested by the different names encountered for them. Most often, there were two types of peasants - freemen and villeins. However, both half-villeins, cottars or cottagers, and slaves made up a small percentage of workers.

Freemen

Freemen were essentially rent-paying tenant farmers who owed little or no service to the lord. In parts of eleventh-century England these freemen made up only ten percent of the peasant population and in the rest of Europe their numbers were relatively small.

Villeins

A villein was the most common type of serf in the Middle Ages. Villeins had more rights and status than those held as slaves, but were under a number of legal restrictions that differentiated them from the freeman. Villeins generally rented small homes, with or without land. As part of the contract with their landlord, they were expected to use some of their time to farm the lord's fields and the rest of their time was spent farming their own land. Like other types of serfs, they were required to provide other services, possibly in addition to a rent of money or goods. These services could be very onerous. Villeins were tied to the land and could not move away without their lord's consent. However, in other regards, they were free men in the eyes of the law. Villeins were generally able to have their own property, unlike slaves. Villeinage, as opposed to other forms of serfdom, was most common in Western European feudalism, where land ownership had developed from roots in Roman law.

A variety of kinds of villeinage existed in the European Middle Ages. Half-villeins received only half as many strips of land for their own use and owed a full complement of labor to the lord, often forcing them to rent out their services to other serfs to make up for this hardship. Villeinage was not, however, a purely exploitative relationship. In the Middle Ages, land guaranteed sustenance and survival, and being a villein guaranteed access to land. Landlords, even where legally able to, rarely evicted villeins because of the value of their labor. Villeinage was much preferable to being a vagabond, a slave, or an un-landed laborer.

In many medieval countries, a villein could gain freedom by escaping to a city and living there for more than a year; but this avenue involved the loss of land and agricultural livelihood, a prohibitive price unless the landlord was especially tyrannical or conditions in the village were unusually difficult. Villeins newly arrived in the city in some cases took to crime for survival, which gave the alternate spelling "villain" its modern meaning.

Cottagers

Cottars or cottagers, another type of serf, did not possess parcels of land to work. They spent all of their time working the lord’s fields. In return, they were given their hut, gardens, and a small portion of the lord’s harvest.

Slaves

The last type of serf was the slave. Slaves had the fewest rights and benefits from the manor and were also given the least. They owned no land, worked for the lord exclusively and survived on donations from the landlord. It was always in the interest of the lords to prove that a servile arrangement existed, as this provided them with greater rights to fees and taxes. The legal status of a man was a primary issue in many of the manorial court cases of the period.

The serf's duties

The usual serf (not including slaves or cottars) paid his fees and taxes in the form of seasonally appropriate labor. Usually a portion of the week was devoted to plowing his lord's fields (demesne), harvesting crops, digging ditches, repairing fences, and often working in the manor house. The lord’s demesne included more than just fields: it included all grazing rights, forest produce (nuts, fruits, timber, and forest animals), and fish from the stream; the lord had exclusive rights to these things. The rest of the serf’s time was devoted to tending his or her own fields, crops and animals in order to provide for his or her family. Most manorial work was segregated by gender during the regular times of the year; however, during the harvest, the whole family was expected to work the fields.

Corvée, or corvée labor, was a type of annual tax payable as labor to the monarch, vassal, overlord, or lord of the manor. It was used to complete royal projects, to maintain roads and other public facilities, and to provide labor to maintain the feudal estate.

The difficulty of a serf's life derived from the fact that his work for his lord coincided with, and took precedence over, the work he had to perform on his own lands: when the lord's crops were ready to be harvested, so were his own. On the other hand, the serf could look forward to being well fed during his service; it was a poor lord who did not provide a substantial meal for his serfs during the harvest and planting times. In exchange for this work on the lord's property, the serf had certain privileges and rights. They were allowed to gather deadwood from their lord’s forests. For a fee, the serfs were allowed to use the manor’s mills and ovens.

In addition to service, a serf was required to pay certain taxes and fees. Taxes were based on the assessed value of his lands and holdings. Fees were usually paid in the form of foodstuffs rather than cash. The best ration of wheat from the serf’s harvest always went to the landlord. For the most part, hunting on the lord’s property was prohibited for the serfs. On Easter Sunday the peasant family owed an extra dozen eggs, and on Christmas a goose was expected as well. When a family member died, extra taxes were paid to the manor for the cost of that individual's labor. Any young woman who wished to marry a serf outside of her manor was forced to pay a fee for the lost labor. It was also a matter of discussion whether serfs could be required by law in times of war or conflict to fight for their lord's land and property.

The restraints of serfdom on personal and economic choice were enforced through various forms of manorial common law and the manorial administration and court.

Benefits of serfdom

Within his constraints, a serf had some freedom. Though the common wisdom is that a serf owned "only his belly"—even his clothes were the property, in law, of his lord—a serf might still accumulate personal property and wealth, and some serfs became wealthier than their free neighbors, although this was rather an exception to the general rule. A well-to-do serf might even be able to buy his freedom.

Serfs could raise what they saw fit on their lands (within reason—a serf's taxes often had to be paid in wheat, a notoriously difficult crop), and sell the surplus at market. Their heirs were usually guaranteed an inheritance.

The landlord could not dispossess his serfs without cause and was supposed to protect them from the depredations of outlaws or other lords, and he was expected to support them by charity in times of famine.

Variations

Specifics of serfdom varied greatly through time and region. In some places, serfdom was merged with or exchanged for various forms of taxation.

The amount of labor required varied. In Poland, for example, it was few days a year in the thirteenth century; one day per week in the fourteenth century; four days per week in the seventeenth century and six days per week in the eighteenth century. Early serfdom in Poland was most limited on the royal territories (królewszczyzny).

Sometimes, serfs served as soldiers in the event of conflict and could earn freedom or even ennoblement for valor in combat. In other cases, serfs could purchase their freedom, be manumitted by their enlightened or generous owners, or flee to towns or newly-settled land where few questions were asked. Laws varied from country to country: in England a serf who made his way to a chartered town and evaded recapture for a year and a day obtained his freedom.

A Peasant Leaving His Landlord on Yuriev Day, painting by Sergei V. Ivanov.

In Russia, the legal code of Ivan III of Russia, Sudebnik (1497), restricted the mobility of peasants. Their right to leave their master was limited to a period of one week before and after the so-called Yuri's Day (November 26). A temporary (Заповедные лета, or Prohibition years) and later an open-ended prohibition for peasants to leave their masters was introduced by the ukase of 1597, which also defined the so-called fixed years (Урочные лета, or urochniye leta), or the five-year time frame for search of the runaway peasants. This was later extended to ten years.

The decline of serfdom

End of serfdom: a German „Freilassungsbrief“ (Letter for the End of a serfdom) from 1762

Serfdom became progressively less common through the Middle Ages, particularly after the Black Death reduced the rural population and increased the bargaining power of workers. Furthermore, the lords of many manors were willing (for payment) to manumit ("release") their serfs. Serfdom had largely died out in England by 1500 as a personal status, but land held by serf tenure (unless enfranchised) continued to be held by what was henceforth known as a copyhold tenancy, which was not abolished until 1925. During the Late Middle Ages, peasant unrest led to outbreaks of violence against landlords. In May 1381 the English peasants revolted because of the heavy tax placed upon them by Parliament. There were similar occurrences at around the same time in Castille, Germany, northern France, Portugal, and Sweden. Although these peasant revolts were often successful, it usually took a long time before legal systems were changed. In France this occurred on August 11 1789 with the “Decree Abolishing the Feudal System.” This decree abolished the manorial system completely. It included removing the authority manorial courts, outlawing pigeon houses, eliminating and rerouting tithes (set taxes), and it freed those who were enslaved. Fear and hatred of the privileged was the most important idea that emerged as a result of the eventual dismantlement of serfdom. The majority of the population consisted of peasants. This social system was no longer viable. The beginning of the eradication of the feudal system marks an era of rapid change in Europe. The change in status following the enclosure movements beginning in the later eighteenth century, in which various lords abandoned the open field farming of previous centuries in exchange for, essentially, taking all the best land for themselves and "freeing" their serfs, may well have made serfdom a lifestyle desperately to be wished for by many peasant families.

Taxes levied by the state took the place of labor dues levied by the lord. Although serfdom began its decline in Europe in the Middle Ages, it took many hundreds of years to disappear completely. In addition, the struggles of the working class during the Industrial Revolution can often be compared with the struggles of the serfs during the Middle Ages. In parts of the world today, forced labor is still used. Serfdom is an institution that has always been commonplace for human society; however, it has not always been of the same nature.

Emancipation from serfdom was achieved in various countries on the following dates:

  • Wallachia: 1746
  • Moldavia: 1749
  • Savoy: 19 December 1771
  • Austria: 1 November 1781 (first step; second step: 1848)
  • Bohemia: 1 November 1781 (first step; second step: 1848)
  • Baden: 23 July 1783
  • Denmark: 20 June 1788
  • France: 3 November 1789
  • Helvetic Republic: 4 May 1798
  • Schleswig-Holstein: 19 December 1804
  • Swedish Pomerania: 4 July 1806
  • Duchy of Warsaw (Poland): 22 July 1807
  • Prussia: 9 October 1807 (effectively 1811-1823)
  • Mecklenburg: October 1807 (effectively 1820)
  • Bavaria: 31 August 1808
  • Nassau: 1 September 1812
  • Estonia: 23 March 1816
  • Courland: 25 August 1817

  • Württemberg: 18 November 1817
  • Livonia: 26 March 1819
  • Hanover: 1831
  • Saxony: 17 March 1832
  • Hungary: 11 April 1848 (first time), 2 March 1853 (second time)
  • Croatia: 8 May 1848
  • Austrian Empire: 7 September 1848
  • Bulgaria: 1858 (de jure by Ottoman Empire; de facto in 1880)
  • Russian Empire: 19 February 1861
  • Tonga: 1862
  • Poland: 1864[3]
  • Georgia: 1864-1871
  • Kalmykia: 1892
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina: 1918
  • Afghanistan: 1923
  • England: (Copyhold tenure officially abolished 1925)
  • Bhutan: 1956
  • Tibet: around 1959

Notes

  1. Allen J. Frantzen and Douglas Moffat, eds. The World of Work: Servitude, Slavery and Labor in Medieval England. (Glasgow: Cruithne Press, 1994, p. 60).
  2. Marc Bloch "Feudal Society: the growth of the ties of dependence".
  3. Gerhard Rempel, Emancipation of the Serfs Retrieved May 23, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bloch, Marc. Feudal Society, Volume 1: The Growth of Ties of Dependence. L. A. Manyon (Translator) University Of Chicago Press, 1964. ISBN 978-0226059785
  • Dhont, Jan, La Alta Edad Media (Das früche Mittlelatter), Madrid: Siglo XXI. ISBN 84-323-0049-7
  • Backman, Clifford R. The Worlds of Medieval Europe. New York/Oxford: Oxford UP, 2003.
  • Coulborn, Rushton, ed. Feudalism in History. London: Princeton UP, 1956.
  • Freedman (Paul), Bourin (Monique) ed., Forms of Servitude in Northern and Central Europe. Decline, Resistance and Expansion, Brepols, 2005.
  • Frantzen, Allen J., and Douglas Moffat, eds. The World of Work: Servitude, Slavery and Labor in Medieval England. Glasgow: Cruithne Press, 1994. ISBN 978-1873448038
  • Pierre, Bonnassie. From Slavery to Feudalism in South-Western Europe. Trans. Birrell Jean. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1991
  • Strayer, Joseph R. Western Europe in the Middle Ages. Longman Higher Education; 3Rev Ed edition, 1982. ISBN 978-0673160522
  • White, Stephen D. Re-Thinking Kinship and Feudalism in Early Medieval Europe. second ed. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Variorum, 2000

External links

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