Feudalism
https://youtu.be/Gd4lopIPObA
The rules and laws of feudalism govern the world of King
Arthur Pendragon. The following sections deal with
facts and beliefs that were prevalent in the Middle Ages,
but which are unknown to most people today.
However, note that the rules and laws of King Arthur
Pendragon are generally based on the considerably more well-known
laws of Europe in the 12th and 13th centuries, not those of
6th-century Britain. Still, they are historical facts — the reality of
a brutal and violent world. Players must be at least vaguely familiar
with these factors in order to understand their characters fully.
Feudalism begins with the fact that everything belongs to
the king, the highest lord of the land. All rights derive from the
king, who has distributed some of his rights and responsibilities
among his lords, they, in turn, distribute some of these rights and
responsibilities to their knights. All obligations are personal, dependent
upon the relationship between a lord and his followers.
The followers swear fealty to the lord, and afterwards are known
as vassals of that lord.
The lord ensures the loyalty of his favored followers by
giving them land, the single most valuable and permanent commodity
in the realm. To receive gold is a slightly dubious honor,
since even a peasant can be bribed with gold. However, a transfer
of land is sacred. Two types of land transfer are common:
• A gift is given for the duration of the recipient’s life but
upon death reverts to the lord.
• A grant is given for the life of the recipient and his heirs.
A vassal does not really own the land he is given, but he does
own all the granted benefits collected from that land. The vassal
receives his grant in return for loyalty and services. As long as
the knight’s obligations are satisfied, the benefits are legally his
and cannot be justly taken away. Typically, a knight’s obligations
are to serve loyally in his lord’s military campaigns and to advise
his lord on important matters. In return, the lord owes his vassal
protection, sustenance, and livelihood. Thus, there is a nonequal
but reciprocal agreement between lord and vassal.
Obligations may be changed only if both parties agree.
Usually, they are only changed when one person has done something significant for the other. If the vassal rescued the king
on the battlefield, he might receive his former gift as a permanent
grant. If the knight violates his loyalty, he can lose the land
he has of the lord. Typical reasons for land to revert to the lord
include treason, failure to support the lord, or the lack of an heir
when the grant holder dies. Daughters may inherit their father’s
grants only if there are no male heirs.
Ranks of feudal vassalage begin with those closest to the king,
both in friendship and in wealth. In King Arthur Pendragon these
are the British kings, lords, and office holders. In turn, these men
appoint their own vassals. Knights (and squires, as knights-in-training)
are the lowest class of noble vassals. They may hold land from
the king, an earl, a lower lord, or even from another knight; in some
rare cases, a knight may become a vassal without a gift or grant of
land. Church officials and monasteries also rely upon land grants
to knightly vassals in return for loyal service. Monasteries often became
powerful landowners with their own knights to protect them.
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