3 Orders Notes
3 Orders Notes
Revision Notes
Chapter 6: The Three Order
Due to socio-economic and political changes, Western Europe society was divided into three
orders between the ninth and sixteenth centuries. After the fall of the Roman Empire, many
groups of Germanic People occupied the regions of Italy, Spain and France.
The three orders are three social categories: Christian priests, landowning nobles and
peasants.The term 'feudalism' has been used by historians to describe the economic, legal,
political and social relationships that existed in Europe in the medieval era.
First Order
Priests (The Clergy)
- The Catholic Church
- Europe guided by bishops and clerics.
- Pope lived in Rome
- Women could not be become priests
- Monks - The church and Society
Second Order
Nobles
- Vassals of the king
- They enjoyed a privileged status
- Absolute control over property
- Could raise troops
- Even coin his own money
Third Order
- Peasants
- Free peasants and serfs
1. THE CLERGY
Church was a powerful institution. The Pope, the head of the Catholic Church, lived in
Rome. Bishops were religious nobility.
The church played a major role in influencing the Medieval European society.
They collected the tithe, a tax from the peasants.
Church ceremonies copied several formal feudal customs.
Some Christians chose to live in isolation in abbeys. (‘Abbey’ is derived from the
Syriac abba, meaning father. An abbey was governed by an abbot or an abbess)
2. NOBILITY
The word 'Feudalism' is derived from the German word 'feud' which means 'a piece of
land'. Feudalism was a division of society that initially developed in medieval France,
then in England and southern Italy.
It was a kind of agricultural production relationship between lords and peasants.
The nobility had a privileged role in the social process with absolute control over his
land. They raised troops that were called ‘Feudal Levies’. The King of France was
linked to his people through the system of ‘vassalage’. The King was accepted as
Seigneur, i.e. lord. The nobility lived in manor houses.
The cavalry and peasant soldiers were called knights. Minstrels and bards toured
France, singing tales of brave kings and knights.
3. THE PEASANTRY
The Anglo-Saxons had a Great Council, which the king consulted before imposing any tax.
This developed into the Parliament, with the House of Lords (its members - the lords and the
Cathedral - Towns:
From the twelfth century, large churches - called cathedrals - were being built in France.
These belonged to the monasteries. Cathedrals were built of stone. The area around the
cathedrals became more populated and they became centres of pilgrimage. Small towns
developed around them. Stained glass was used for windows of the Cathedrals. During the
day the sunlight would make them radiant and after sunset the light of candles would make
them visible to people outside. The stained glass narrated the stories in the Bible through
pictures.
Two of the more well-known monasteries were those established by St Benedict in Italy in
529 and of Cluny in Burgundy in 910.
1. In Northern Europe, by the end of the thirteenth century the warm summers of the
previous 300 years had given way to bitterly cold summers. Seasons for growing crops
were reduced by a month.
2. Trade was hit by a severe shortage of metal money because of a shortfall in the output of
silver mines in Austria and Serbia. This forced government to reduce the silver content of
the currency and to mix it with cheaper metals.
3. Ships carrying goods from distant countries had started arriving in European ports. The
ships came with rats carrying deadly bubonic plague infection (the Black Death).
Political Changes:
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, European kings strengthened their military
GUILD: The basis of economic organisation was the guild. Each craft or industry was
organised into a guild, an association which controlled the quality of the product, its price
and its sale. The ‘guild-hall’ was a feature of every town; it was a building for ceremonial
functions, and where the heads of all the guilds met formally.
Sources: Hever Castle in England, Salisbury Cathedral in England, Nemours Castle in France,
Canterbury Tales written by Chaucer.
Timeline:
i. Early History of France: refer to Page No. 134 of the text book.
ii. Eleventh to Fourteenth Centuries - refer to Page No. 149 of the text book
iii. The New Monarchy: refer to Page No. 150
Key Words