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2º ESO/LIFE IN THE MIDDLE AGES: THE SERF - Contenido educativo

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Subido el 3 de noviembre de 2020 por Alicia M.

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Hucker on Hucker. Good. Perfect. 00:00:08
You're good. 00:00:28
Great. Thank you. 00:00:29
Like me, noblewomen in the Middle Ages don't have many legal rights. 00:00:30
We're under the control of... 00:00:33
The Serf in the Middle Ages. 00:00:34
Take one. 00:00:37
Terrific. 00:00:38
We're talking about life in the Middle Ages. 00:00:39
So do I get to cover nobles in their castles? 00:00:41
No. 00:00:44
Do I get to work with a heroic knight in all that armor? 00:00:45
No. 00:00:48
I have to do serfs. 00:00:49
I ask you, name one important thing that serfs did. 00:00:51
That's easy. 00:00:55
The serfs kept those knights and nobles alive during the Middle Ages. 00:00:56
Come again? 00:00:59
The nobles ruled and the knights fought, 00:01:00
but that doesn't put any food on the table, does it? 00:01:03
No. 00:01:05
The serfs were responsible for that. 00:01:06
They farmed the land that the knights fought for, 00:01:08
the land that the nobles ruled. 00:01:11
In the Middle Ages, wealth and power was all about land. 00:01:13
And it was the serfs and other peasants 00:01:17
who made the land valuable by getting food from it. 00:01:19
Okay, stop right there for a second. 00:01:22
You said serfs and peasants. 00:01:25
Aren't they the same thing? 00:01:27
Well, there wasn't much difference in how they looked, 00:01:28
but peasants had their freedom. 00:01:31
Serfs were bound to the land owned by the Lord. 00:01:34
Like slaves, huh? 00:01:37
Like slaves, but with some big differences. 00:01:38
The serfs' main responsibility was to grow food for their Lord, 00:01:41
but they could grow their own crops, too. 00:01:45
serfs could also own their own property and a Lord was supposed to protect them 00:01:47
from raids and robbers and such in fact free peasants sometimes volunteered to 00:01:52
become serfs because they wanted that kind of protection but once they made 00:01:58
the decision to be a serf their children and their children's children were born 00:02:02
serfs and as serfs they had to stay on the Lord's land their entire lives they 00:02:06
were part of the property but when it came to a typical day a free peasant and 00:02:12
a serf lived just about the same life and that was well let's start with the 00:02:19
serf at home there it is home sweet home not so bad for a living room where are 00:02:25
the bedrooms you're looking at them kitchen same bathroom just step out into 00:02:35
the yard. Oh. Inside, one of the first things you'd notice was the air. It was thick with smoke 00:02:43
because a fire was always burning in the middle of the room. The fire was for cooking and for 00:02:53
warming the place. There was an opening in the roof to let the smoke out, but a lot of it still 00:02:58
stayed inside. Folks thought the smoke was good for them, though. Just like smoked meat lasts longer, 00:03:03
a smoked surf was supposed to be a healthy surf. 00:03:09
But seriously, the smoke actually was thought to cure fevers. 00:03:13
Their smoky clothes also helped cover up body odor, 00:03:18
since in those days, there was no deodorant. 00:03:21
Imagine for a minute what it's like living here. 00:03:28
The frame of the house was made of wood, 00:03:31
but the walls were made of nothing more than clay mixed with sticks. 00:03:33
They called it Waddle and Dob. It kept out the wind but not much else. A man could push a spear 00:03:37
right through it. Homes were built with stone too if stone was a resource and the clay mixture 00:03:44
served as cement. The roof was made of thatch. That's a mix of straw, leaves, and grass. Looks 00:03:51
quaint but it was alive with bugs and bats and who knows what else the floor 00:03:58
was just packed dirt with some straw scattered over it chickens would be 00:04:08
wandering in and out of the open doorway along with dogs or cats and maybe even a 00:04:13
pig or two so what was it like eating and sleeping in a home like this let's 00:04:17
ask the serf and his wife. How would you like it? Every day is full of hard work for everyone in my 00:04:24
family. We all rise at the first light of dawn. I collect my tools and head out to the fields where 00:04:35
I spend my day. I work every day except Sunday. We grow grains like rye to bake bread and barley to 00:04:45
brew ale. Growing crops means starting to prepare the fields as early as February. First, 00:04:54
we break up the earth, then plow, plant seeds, pull up the weeds, and finally harvest the 00:05:03
grain. And this is hard work. Imagine harvesting a whole field with one of these. It's very 00:05:10
sharp but it can only cut our crops an armful at a time most fields are divided into strips 00:05:22
some strips grow food for surf families each of which produces just enough food for us to get by 00:05:30
and the harvest from the rest of the fields goes to the lord i work alongside my son 00:05:37
some of the women work in the fields too but they rarely work the plows because of the strength 00:05:45
required besides the women are busy doing other jobs I do all the cooking 00:05:50
gardening weaving and caring for the animals with help from my daughter 00:05:57
everything that we own everything we wear everything we eat we must make 00:06:06
ourselves to make our clothes my daughter and I get wool from the 00:06:14
sheep's coat then we spin it into yarn and weave the tunics and hose for all 00:06:19
the family in winter we make heavier cloaks from the skin of the sheep we prepare our meals from 00:06:23
the vegetables in our gardens like beans and peas and radishes much like the fields the gardens are 00:06:30
laid out in strips one for each of the surf families and the rest for the lord we eat 00:06:36
chicken and fish on certain days only in one season of the year do we have meat to eat and 00:06:49
And that's when winter is drawing near. 00:06:55
In cold weather, we kill and eat most of our cows and pigs. 00:06:57
There isn't enough food to feed them through the winter. 00:07:01
There's hardly enough food for us. 00:07:04
We have our meals on this table, which is basically a board. 00:07:07
When the sun goes down, we put up the shutters 00:07:13
to keep out the cold. 00:07:16
And that makes it darker in here than it is outdoors, 00:07:17
with just the light of a candle and the fire. 00:07:20
So at night, and in winter when it's too cold to go outside, there is little to do but sleep. 00:07:27
And that's not as good as it sounds, because we sleep on a pallet, 00:07:33
a narrow, hard mattress filled with nothing but straw. 00:07:37
But there we would sleep and wait for warmth and daylight to return. 00:07:41
Boy, that was depressing. 00:07:45
Do we really think serfs from the Middle Ages could speak that well? 00:07:48
You know, with good grammar? 00:07:51
Well, I'll let you in on a little secret we really don't know. 00:07:54
Serfs didn't write books, and the rich and educated didn't see much point in writing books about serfs. 00:08:01
We can figure out how they lived, but we really don't know very much about who they were. 00:08:06
There are a few writings that use stories about peasants to teach moral lessons, but that's about it. 00:08:12
There are some paintings of peasants at work during every season of the year. 00:08:18
Some of these paintings come from a prayer book called A Book of Hours. 00:08:22
This book got its name because it contained a prayer for every hour of the day. 00:08:26
Rich families would have artists paint beautiful pictures in their prayer books. 00:08:31
But if it's a prayer book, shouldn't the pictures be about religion? 00:08:36
How come there's all these paintings of serfs working and nobles playing? 00:08:40
Well, a lot of illustrations from these books do show scenes from the Bible or from the lives of the saints, 00:08:44
But the people paying for these pictures wanted to see their own lives reflected in the books. 00:08:49
Nobles at play, serfs at work, to people in the Middle Ages, 00:08:55
it was all a picture of how they thought God had designed the world. 00:08:59
So we heard what it was like for the adults, but what about their children? 00:09:04
Well, that's a good question. 00:09:08
Let's get straight to the point and find out what it was like for the kids. 00:09:10
Kids started working light jobs from about the time that they could walk 00:09:15
There was no school, no choices about what to do when they grew up 00:09:27
Nothing but the same hard work that their parents did 00:09:30
By the time he turned 14, a teenage boy was considered an adult 00:09:33
Taking a full load of duties in the field, like plowing and harvesting 00:09:37
His sister and the other girls focused on spinning wool and weaving it into clothing 00:09:41
Or helping with the cooking 00:09:56
girls also worked as hard as any adult by age 14 their life was to work and 00:09:57
work they did they worked to raise crops for their Lord and tended his livestock 00:10:06
at least they could delegate just one member of the family to work the land 00:10:12
for the Lord that was usually an adult male to ensure the Lord a good harvest 00:10:16
the rest of the family worked to keep food on their own table oh and there's 00:10:20
at least one more job the serf had to do. When his lord went to war, a serf might be 00:10:27
required to fight. But I thought fighting in the Middle Ages was all about knights in 00:10:33
armor. The knights could fight for fame and glory and loot, but someone had to do the 00:10:38
grungy work of storming castles or fighting down on the ground in the mud. So in war, 00:10:43
like in peace, when you needed someone to do the hard, dirty jobs that have to be done, 00:10:49
the serf was your guy. 00:10:55
Knights went to war in armor and on horseback. 00:10:57
But armor and horses were really expensive. 00:11:08
Not many nobles had the money to equip their ordinary soldiers with anything fancy. 00:11:11
So serfs walked to war and fought with little or no protection. 00:11:16
Couldn't they ever get out of this serf thing? 00:11:21
Yes, there were at least three ways. 00:11:23
A man could marry a free woman, and that automatically made him a free man. 00:11:26
He could also buy his own freedom or his family's freedom 00:11:30
with the money he earned by working trades, like being a blacksmith. 00:11:33
Or he could just make a run for it. 00:11:37
If a serf lived away from the lord's lands for one year and one day, 00:11:39
he was considered free. 00:11:43
The thing is, in the Middle Ages, 00:11:45
living as a free peasant was just as hard as being a serf. 00:11:47
Maybe harder. 00:11:50
Hey, I'm seeing a great way to get some action into this story. 00:11:52
Those lords must have always been oppressing those poor serfs and peasants, 00:11:55
keeping extra work on them, taking away their food, driving them harder and harder. 00:11:59
Sorry to rain on your parade, boss, but it usually didn't work that way. 00:12:04
The guys in the castles knew they were nowhere without their serfs in the fields, 00:12:09
so most of them were smart enough not to terrorize their own serfs. 00:12:13
Serfs had to work all day, almost every day, but they could usually work at their own pace. 00:12:17
No taskmasters stood over them with whips. 00:12:22
Even when the lords required extra work, they sometimes rewarded the serfs with an extra bonus. 00:12:25
A dinner of meat or fish with plenty of drink to wash it down. 00:12:33
It's not so much that the nobles were nice guys. 00:12:39
It's just that they got more work out of their serfs if the serfs were reasonably content. 00:12:42
So they left the serfs pretty much alone. 00:12:47
That changed whenever kings or nobles went to war with each other, which happened a lot. 00:12:50
Remember, the serfs were the key to a lord's wealth, 00:12:55
so his enemies could hurt the lord by killing or driving off his serfs. 00:12:58
Listen to this description of what happened during a time of war in the 1200s. 00:13:02
They plundered and burned all the villages, 00:13:07
so that you could easily go a day's journey without ever finding a village inhabited 00:13:10
or a field cultivated. 00:13:15
Grain was costly then, and meat and cheese and butter, for there was none in the land. 00:13:18
Pretty grim, isn't it? 00:13:24
Yes, but if the serfs did all the real work, and if there were way more serfs than there were knights and nobles, 00:13:26
didn't the serfs ever get together and say, we won't take this anymore? 00:13:32
Well, very rarely, but it did happen. 00:13:35
During the 1300s, there were violent uprisings in England, France, and Italy. 00:13:39
Serfs and peasants banded together, attacked and burned manor houses, 00:13:43
and murdered whole families of nobles. 00:13:47
Sometimes they captured and killed churchmen, too. 00:13:50
Why did all this break out during the 1300s? 00:13:53
Well, that was the century of a terrible plague we now call the Black Death. 00:13:58
The plague killed so many people, it changed everything. 00:14:04
There were fewer serfs to do work, 00:14:11
so the ones who survived began to demand better treatment and greater rewards. 00:14:13
There were fewer nobles and churchmen, so the ones who were left tried to impose even stricter rules 00:14:18
so they could keep things under control. It was a bad mix. 00:14:25
But most of these uprisings, called peasant revolts, only lasted a few weeks. 00:14:29
The peasants were too disorganized to hold together for long. 00:14:34
The knights and nobles were always able to defeat them, eventually. 00:14:38
But those peasant revolts were rare exceptions. 00:14:42
Even when life got very tough, most serfs would stick with the old customs and endure. 00:14:45
Okay, but didn't those customs let these people have any fun? 00:14:51
Sure they did. They celebrated holy days. You know, holidays. 00:14:55
We still celebrate our holidays at times and in ways similar to them. 00:15:00
They celebrated a holiday called Candlemas in early February 00:15:04
because that's when they could begin to get back into the fields as winter grew less harsh. 00:15:08
And they watched the weather carefully that day with the saying, 00:15:13
if candle must be fair and bright, winter will have another flight. 00:15:17
If candle must be clouds and rain, winter's gone and won't come back again. 00:15:21
Sound familiar? 00:15:27
No. 00:15:28
Well, you're probably more familiar with a legend about a burrowing animal 00:15:29
that would come from the underground that day to judge the weather. 00:15:33
Groundhog Day. 00:15:37
Bingo. 00:15:38
Another medieval holiday celebrated the first planting of the seeds 00:15:38
and the coming of spring. 00:15:43
To celebrate, people stripped a tree of its branches, 00:15:45
tied ribbons at the top, 00:15:48
and danced around the tree, winding the ribbons around it. 00:15:49
Looks like a maypole, so that must be May Day. 00:15:53
Right again. 00:16:02
They also played a game that looked a little like soccer, 00:16:04
and there were wrestling matches and other contests of strength. 00:16:10
After a harvest, serfs and peasants lit a bonfire 00:16:14
to celebrate the end of their season of hard work in the fields. 00:16:17
just as people in farm communities celebrate the fall harvest today another way serfs and 00:16:21
peasants could have fun was singing songs and telling stories they got the ball rolling on 00:16:27
one story that's still going strong today let's give them the lowdown on robin hood 00:16:32
you know robin hood the guy who steals from the rich and gives to the poor 00:16:37
well his story has changed a lot from when people told it in the middle ages 00:16:47
We're not sure which version came first, but in one of the early stories, Robin was a free peasant who robbed the rich. 00:16:51
He didn't give to the poor, but that was okay with the audience, as long as he was making life tough for the rich nobles. 00:16:57
English peasants were very good at shooting the longbow. You may know it as a bow and arrow. 00:17:03
So it figures that they would create a hero who specializes in the same weapon. 00:17:09
There were a lot of real-life outlaws during the Middle Ages, 00:17:14
and no one has ever been able to prove whether one of them was a model for the legends. 00:17:22
The first writing we have of a Robin Hood story isn't until about 1450, 00:17:26
but there's a lot of evidence that people were telling stories about him as far back as the early 1200s. 00:17:31
Wherever they came from, we know Robin Hood stories were wildly popular with peasants during the Middle Ages. 00:17:36
Then richer classes picked him up, cleaned up his image a little bit, 00:17:42
and made him their hero, eventually making him a knight forced to hide in the forest. 00:17:45
Robin Hood was a kind of folk hero to everyone. 00:17:50
Each class made him what they wanted him to be. 00:17:53
Maybe that's why his legend is still going strong about 800 years later. 00:17:55
The Surf in the Middle Ages, take two. 00:18:00
Okay, let's see if we've got this right. 00:18:03
Surfs lived and worked on the land owned by a lord 00:18:05
and were considered part of the property. 00:18:08
Got it. 00:18:11
The vast majority of people living in the Middle Ages were serfs or peasants. 00:18:11
They raised the food that kept knights and nobles alive. 00:18:16
Okay. 00:18:20
Serfs lived in single-room houses on the Lord's land. 00:18:21
The houses were dark, smoky, and often had people and animals sharing the same roof. 00:18:24
Whew. 00:18:30
Got it. 00:18:31
From sunup to sundown, a serf's life was almost nothing but hard work. 00:18:32
Working to satisfy the demands of the Lord, working to keep food on their own table. 00:18:37
Got it. 00:18:42
So, how do we wrap up this serf thing? 00:18:43
It starts wrapping itself up during the 1300s. 00:18:45
Remember we talked about the Black Death? The disaster that helped set off those peasant revolts? 00:18:49
Well, the revolts failed, but the changes came anyway. 00:18:55
Workers were just too scarce for the nobles to drive too hard a bargain. 00:18:59
Little by little, one manor at a time, serfs were freed from the obligations that bound them and their families to the land. 00:19:03
At about the same time, kings and merchants were trying to make those nobles a little less powerful, 00:19:11
and taking away the serfs was a good way to knock a little stuffing out of the 00:19:16
nobles who depended on their work. Going from serf to a free peasant wasn't 00:19:21
exactly like getting a big promotion. Life was still nothing but hard, hard 00:19:26
work. In fact, some historians think that the serfs in the Middle Ages had it 00:19:31
better than the peasants who came after them. The old ways didn't change overnight. 00:19:36
some countries still had serfs all the way into the 17 and 1800s but for most 00:19:41
of Europe the days when men women and children were nothing more than part of 00:19:48
someone's property ended even before the days of knights and armor okay that's a 00:19:52
wrap 00:19:59
Subido por:
Alicia M.
Licencia:
Dominio público
Visualizaciones:
140
Fecha:
3 de noviembre de 2020 - 18:59
Visibilidad:
Público
Centro:
IES LA SENDA
Duración:
21′ 17″
Relación de aspecto:
4:3 Hasta 2009 fue el estándar utilizado en la televisión PAL; muchas pantallas de ordenador y televisores usan este estándar, erróneamente llamado cuadrado, cuando en la realidad es rectangular o wide.
Resolución:
480x360 píxeles
Tamaño:
202.51 MBytes

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