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Old 27-11-2018, 09:23 PM
BrokenCrown BrokenCrown is offline
Newbie ;)
Join Date: May 2018
Posts: 8
 
....Good point. In the 8th century middle ages, an area in Salzburg saw 237 FREE peasant holding be absorbed into 50 greater estates. The jaunty church people, lords and Dukes were pleased into this absorption.
.....This process continued with venerable self infliction from hierarchies in other areas. Where people were, as you said, BOUND to their lords, basically owing their dues. Paying a levy and living in a culture (which pdizzle mentioned as a social construct which creates institutions). Right, culture, something created through ART (art, meaning a means to manipulate in this case).

1.Skip some years. The 13th century. Agriculture began to stagnate, with this the FREE peasants position, not so free anymore.
2.Strangely, English nobility were basically the first to turn agriculture into INDUSTRY. Think Merchents.
3.Weird? Possible this 'nobility' hand contributed to the stagnation, allowing them to lend their voice about the importance of 'nobility' to take over and save the day.
4. The term sheep is applied. basically the middle man in todays lingo.
5. Another weird face. East and West split, Byzantium (East) and English nobility ( "West" wink). In the 12th century, diplomatic contacts began between Byzantium and England.
6. Did they both have interest agriculture? What does the modern world corporate structure look like to ya? Lots of agriculture I believe.
7. What types of rights do we have in corporate structured economies?

I ponder....
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