GloryofGreece wrote:What do you think of Ian Mortimer's books? Good/accurate as far you can tell?Speaker to Animals wrote:Martin Hash wrote:When somebody gets lost in the woods, after 10 days they’re assumed dead.
In the medieval period, it was very easy for the typical serf to survive in the woods. They were tougher than the toughest rednecks in their own way. Most of them ran off to the cities, though. That's how the cities grew so fast in the medieval period, and the Prince-Bishop that ruled over the city probably didn't care about Baron TazorFace's escaped serfs. It would be pretty easy for a guy like you to escape serfdom.
The real issue is that, in England at least, the life of a serf was actually pretty good. To make it in the cities, you had to compete, and be smart. It was a lot of work and only the best managed to secure better qualities of life than they had. In the forest, you don't have many comforts to go with your freedom. Lots of people were quite happy living as serfs. They had better lives, normalized for technological and scientific progress, than the average American worker today. Lots more time with their families. Lots more free time, and they kept a solid portion of their yield.
Shit was a bit different on the continent and as you traveled eastward.
England was special.
So as far as you know life was generally worse for serfs the further east you went through Europe?
Off topic, but do you know why the Spanish didn't conquer Granada until the end of the 15th century? From what I've read the Christens had control of all the rest of Spain by the 12th century. So why'd it take 300 more years to take a city...in fighting between Spanish Lords and Granada was really well defended?
I never read those Time Traveler books. Almost bought one once.
The life of serfs outside England was much worse, but they could still escape to cities in most places. I think the HRE eventually stopped the practice. The lives of serfs in Eastern Europe was awful.
In general, royalty wanted large cities and the only way to populate them was from stealing serfs from manners of their vassals. This was especially true after periodic plague outbreaks in those cities. The rise of urbanization resulted in the decline of mannorialism.
Not sure about Granada.