⚔️ THE THREE ORDERS
Theme 4 | Themes in World History | Class XI
- Derived from German word 'feud' = a piece of land
- System of economic, legal, political, and social relationships in medieval Europe
- Based on lord–peasant relationship: peasants farmed the lord's land; lords provided military protection
- Features drawn from Roman traditions + German customs
- Emerged as an established system in the 11th century
- Key scholar: Marc Bloch (1886–1944) wrote Feudal Society covering 900–1300 CE
French priests believed society was divided into three groups based on their work. A bishop said: "Here below, some pray, others fight, still others work…"
Social pyramid of medieval feudal society
1st Order: Clergy
Pope, Bishops, Priests, Monks. They prayed and ran the Church.
2nd Order: Nobility
Lords, Knights. They fought wars and controlled land.
3rd Order: Peasants
Free peasants and serfs. They worked the land and fed everyone.
- Vassalage: Big lords were vassals of the king; peasants were vassals of lords
- Seigneur: A senior lord; 'lord' = "one who provided bread"
- A vassal received a written charter / staff / clod of earth as symbol of land grant
- Nobles had absolute control over their property — could raise troops, hold courts, coin money
- Manor: The noble's private house + surrounding estate (self-sufficient unit)
🏡 The Manorial Estate contained:
- Grain fields, blacksmiths, carpenters, stonemasons
- Women spun cloth; children worked in wine-presses
- Extensive woodlands for hunting, pastures for cattle
- A church and a castle for defence
- Only imports: salt, millstones, metalware
- Rose to importance from 9th century due to frequent wars needing professional cavalry
- Received a 'fief' (land, 1000–2000+ acres) from the lord in exchange for military service
- Paid regular fees to the lord; foremost loyalty was to their own lord
- Minstrels entertained at manors singing tales of brave kings and knights
- The Catholic Church had its own laws, owned land, and could levy taxes — independent of the king
- At the head: the Pope in Rome; guided by bishops and clerics
- Bishops = "religious nobility" — owned vast estates, lived in grand palaces
- Church collected 'tithe' = 10% of peasant's annual produce
- Could NOT become priests: serfs, physically challenged, and women
- Church ceremonies copied feudal customs (kneeling like a knight, calling God 'Lord')
- Devout Christians who lived in remote abbeys/monasteries
- Took vows: prayer, study, and manual labour (farming)
- Open to both men (monks) and women (nuns) — separate communities
- Famous: St Benedict's (Italy, 529 CE), Cluny (Burgundy, 910 CE)
- From 13th century: Friars — monks who travelled and preached instead of staying in monasteries
- Monasteries ran schools, hospitals, and developed the arts
| Feature | Free Peasants | Serfs (Unfree) |
|---|---|---|
| Land | Held farms as tenants of lord | Cultivated lord's plots |
| Work | 3 days/week on lord's estate + 40 days military service | All work for lord; no wages |
| Freedom | Had some freedom of movement | Could NOT leave without lord's permission |
| Tax | Paid 'taille' to the king | Also paid taille; used only lord's mill/oven |
| Marriage | Free choice | Lord's approval (+ fee) required |
- 5th–10th century: Cold climate, vast forests, limited agriculture
- From 11th century: Warm phase began — longer growing seasons, less frost
- Forest lines receded → more land opened for cultivation
| Innovation | Impact |
|---|---|
| Iron-tipped ploughs + mould-boards | Dug deeper; better use of soil nutrients |
| Shoulder-harness (replaced neck-harness) | Animals could pull more weight |
| Iron horseshoes | Prevented foot decay in horses |
| Windmills and watermills | Milling grain, pressing grapes efficiently |
| Three-field rotation system | Food production doubled; smaller farms sufficed |
🔄 Three-Field System
Land divided into 3 parts: Field 1 = autumn crops (wheat/rye) | Field 2 = spring crops (peas/beans) | Field 3 = fallow (resting). Rotated each year. Result: 2/3 of land used at any time instead of ½ in the old system.
- Peasant farm size shrank from ~100 acres → 20–30 acres (13th century)
- Freed up peasant time for trade and town activities
- Lords shifted from labour-rent to cash rent → feudal bonds weakened
- Population: 42 million (1000) → 62 million (1200) → 73 million (1300)
- Towns grew around markets, castles, bishop's estates, and large churches
- Famous saying: "Town air makes free" — a serf who hid in a town for 1 year + 1 day became free
- Town economy organised through guilds — controlled quality, price, and sale
- Town merchants became rivals of the nobility in wealth and power
⛪ Cathedral Towns
- From 12th century, large cathedrals built in France — centres of pilgrimage
- Stained glass windows = picture Bible for illiterate people
- Towns grew around completed cathedrals
❄️ Climate Crisis
Cold summers from late 13th century. Crop seasons shortened. Storms and flooding. Famines 1315–17, cattle deaths 1320s.
💰 Silver Shortage
Output from silver mines in Austria and Serbia fell. Governments debased currency by mixing cheaper metals.
🐀 Black Death (1347–50)
Bubonic plague carried by rats on ships. 20% of Europe died (up to 40% in some places). Population: 73M → 45M.
- Massive labour shortage → wages rose by 250% in England
- Agricultural prices fell (fewer people to buy food)
- Lords tried to reimpose labour services → peasant revolts
| Year | Revolt |
|---|---|
| 1323 | Flanders (Belgium) |
| 1358 | France (Jacquerie) |
| 1381 | England (Peasants' Revolt) |
- 15th–16th century kings strengthened central authority, replacing feudal system
- Used professionally trained infantry with guns and artillery (instead of feudal levies)
- Built permanent bureaucracies and imposed national taxes
| Country | New Monarchs | Period |
|---|---|---|
| France | Louis XI | 1461–1559 |
| Spain | Isabella and Ferdinand | 1474–1556 |
| England | Henry VII | 1485–1547 |
🏛️ England vs France
- France: Estates-General (3 orders assembly) met in 1614; then not called again until 1789 (French Revolution). Kings refused to share power. → France became a Republic
- England: Parliament (Lords + Commons) forced kings to consult it. Charles I was executed in 1649 for bypassing Parliament; monarchy restored on condition Parliament is called regularly. → England retained Constitutional Monarchy
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Feudalism | System of social/economic relations based on land ownership and loyalty |
| Vassalage | System where lesser lords owed loyalty and service to greater lords |
| Seigneur | Senior lord who granted land to vassals |
| Manor | A noble's self-sufficient estate with farmland, forests, church, and castle |
| Fief | Land granted to a knight by a lord in exchange for military service |
| Tithe | 10% of peasant's annual produce given to the Church |
| Labour-rent | Work on lord's land as payment (instead of cash) |
| Taille | Direct tax on peasants imposed by kings |
| Guild | Association of craftsmen controlling quality, price, and sale |
| Black Death | Bubonic plague (1347–50) that killed ~20% of Europe |
| Friar | A travelling monk who preached rather than staying in a monastery |
| Minstrel | Travelling singer who entertained nobles at manors |
| New Monarchs | 15th–16th century kings who built centralised states |
| Three-field system | Rotating crops across 3 fields; increased food production |
1. Vassalage: The king granted land to noble lords, who in turn gave land to knights and peasants. Each person owed loyalty and military service to their lord in exchange for protection.
2. Manor system: Nobles controlled large self-sufficient estates (manors) where peasants lived and worked. The lord had absolute control over land and people settled there.
Population growth (1000–1300): Better agriculture → population rose from 42 to 73 million → growth of towns, trade, and guilds; a merchant class emerged alongside the three orders.
Population collapse (1300–1400): Famine and Black Death reduced population to 45 million → labour shortages → wages rose by 250% in England → lords lost income → feudal obligations broke down → peasant revolts ended old feudal privileges.
Rise: From the 9th century, frequent wars required professional cavalry. Peasant-soldiers were ineffective, so lords gave knights land (fiefs) in exchange for military service. They became a distinct social group between lords and peasants.
Decline: In the 15th–16th centuries, new monarchies replaced feudal armies with professionally trained infantry armed with guns and cannon. Knights in armour became obsolete against firearms.
Monasteries served five key functions:
(a) Religious: Monks prayed, studied scripture, and led devout lives
(b) Educational: Attached schools and colleges provided learning
(c) Healthcare: Hospitals treated the sick
(d) Cultural: Preserved and copied manuscripts; developed music and the arts
(e) Economic: Farmed land; grew into large communities of hundreds of people
🔨 A Day in the Life of Pierre, a Blacksmith – 12th century France
Pierre wakes at dawn to church bells. After bread and pottage, he heads to his smithy. As a guild member, he follows fixed rules on quality and prices. He makes iron-tipped ploughs, horseshoes, and tools for nearby peasants.
At noon, he visits the town market, buys cloth for his family, and pays a small tax to the lord who owns the town's land. Unlike a serf, Pierre is free — he can own property and move freely.
In the evening, he attends church prayers and joins the guild-hall feast where minstrels play. Pierre's craft is in high demand as agriculture grows and towns become wealthier. His life, though modest, is free — a dignity the serf on the manor does not fully enjoy.
| Aspect | French Serf | Roman Slave |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Not free, but recognised as a person with some rights | No rights; considered the owner's property |
| Land | Had a plot to cultivate for own use | Had no land; worked entirely for the master |
| Freedom | Could not leave estate without lord's permission | Could not leave; completely controlled by master |
| Work | Worked lord's land + unpaid services; some days for self | Worked entirely for master with no personal time |
| Family | Could maintain family life on the estate | Family ties not legally protected; families could be split |
| Marriage | Could marry; lord's approval (+ fee) required | Could marry but master could separate them |
| Hope of freedom | Could escape to towns; free after 1 year + 1 day | Could be freed only by master's choice (manumission) |
| Key difference | Had a home and land; was part of a community | Had no home or property; fully owned by another |
Conclusion: Both systems were exploitative, but the serf had more stability and community ties compared to the Roman slave who had no legal existence or protection.
| Criteria | Medieval France | Mesopotamia | Roman Empire |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basis of hierarchy | Birth + land ownership | Occupation + religion | Citizenship + wealth |
| Top group | Clergy | Priests + Rulers | Emperor + Senators |
| Bottom group | Serfs | Slaves | Slaves |
| Social mobility | Very limited | Limited | Possible through military/commerce |
| Role of religion | Justified the three orders | Central (temple economy) | Present but not the primary justifier |
In a manor: Peasants bowed to the lord, addressed him respectfully, gave dues, worked his land first. No direct argument or eye contact was expected.
In a palace: Lords knelt before the king and pledged loyalty. The vassalage ceremony — with elaborate rituals and vows on the Bible — enforced hierarchy formally.
In a church: Worshippers knelt with clasped hands (copying a knight's vow of loyalty). The priest spoke; people listened. Seating arrangements reflected social rank.
Special features of medieval European towns: Town square, guild-hall, cathedral/large church at the centre, town walls with guards, weekly markets, governed by guild heads.
Different from other towns:
• Unlike Mesopotamian temple-towns, medieval towns were not built around a single religious centre but grew organically from trade.
• Unlike Roman forum-based cities (planned and centrally administered), medieval towns were loosely organised and controlled by local guilds.
• Unique feature: "Town air makes free" — serfs who hid in a town for 1 year + 1 day became legally free — a concept not seen in ancient cities.
In 1066, William of Normandy conquered England, spreading French-style feudalism across the island. By 1100, great cathedrals were rising in France — symbols of Church power at its peak. But trouble was coming. A great famine devastated Europe in 1315–17, killing thousands of peasants who were already living on the edge. Just three decades later, the Black Death (1347–50) struck — carried by rats on trade ships — wiping out 20% of Europe's population. Meanwhile, the Hundred Years' War (1338–1461) between England and France exhausted both kingdoms. In 1381, peasants in England revolted, demanding an end to feudal exploitation. Though the revolt was crushed, feudalism could not recover. By the 15th–16th centuries, new monarchies in France, Spain, and England replaced feudal lords with centralised states, professional armies, and national taxation — marking the end of the medieval era.
📚 Theme 4: The Three Orders | Themes in World History | Class XI | NCERT
Notes prepared for exam preparation — all answers are short and easy to remember.
