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Class 11 History Short Questions with Answers - The Three Orders

Very Short Question  With Answer (1 Mark Each) 
Q.1. Which province of the Roman Empire became France and how?
Ans.
Gaul province of the Roman Empire became France. A German tribe, ‘The Franks’, gave their name to Gaul and made it France.

Q.2. Write down any two privileges enjoyed by the nobles in France.
Ans.
 

(i) The nobles had absolute and permanent control over their property.
(ii) They held their own court of justice.

Q.3. What was Manor?
Ans.
Fertile land was known as Manor. A lord had his own palace within the manor. People living in manor had to survive on the manor land. Lord of the manor lived a life full of leisure but life of peasants was full of sorrows.

Q.4. Why did castles develop in medieval Europe? Why were they made bigger from the thirteenth century?
Ans.
Under the feudal system, in medieval Europe, Castles developed as centres of military power and political administration. From the thirteenth century, they were made bigger for use as a residence for a knight’s family.

Q.5. What was ‘Fief’ under the feudal system?
Ans.
The knight was given a piece of land by the lord. This piece of land was called ‘Fief’. For this land, the knight had to pay his lord a regular fee and a promise to fight for him in war.

Q.6. What role did ministrels play in twelfth century France?
Ans.
In twelfth-century France, ministrels travelled from one manor to another, singing songs which told stories about brave kings and knights. Thus, they encouraged warriors.

Q.7. What was a ‘tithe’?
Ans.
The Church was given the right to take one tenth of the total produce of the peasant over the course of a year. It was called a ‘tithe’.

Q. 8. “Some of the important ceremonies conducted by the Church copied formal customs of the feudal elite.” Explain with examples.
Ans.

(i) While praying, the act of kneeling with hands clasped and head bowed was just an exact replica of the way in which a knight used to conduct while taking vows of loyalty to his lord.
(ii) The use of word ‘Lord’ for the God.

Q. 9. Name two of the more well-known monasteries of Europe.
Ans.
 

(i) St. Benedict Monastery (Italy) established in 529 CE.
(ii) Cluny Monastery (Burgundy) established in 910 CE.

Q. 10. Who were called Friars?
Ans.
From the thirteenth century, some groups of monks decided not to live in a monastery. They moved from one place to another, preaching to the people and living on charity. These monks were known as Friars.

Q. 11. What was ‘taille’? Which people were exempted from this?
Ans.
Taille was a kind of direct tax that kings sometimes imposed on peasants. Priests (clergy) and nobles were exempted from paying this tax.

Q. 12. Who was William I? How did he occupy England?
Ans.
William I was the Duke of Normandy. He crossed the English Channel in the eleventh century, with an army and defeated the Saxon king of England. In this way, he occupied England.

Q. 13. Write two problems related to agriculture in the medieval England.
Ans.
 

(i) There was a wooden plough which was drawn by a pair of oxen. This plough was only able to scratch the earth’s surface. It was not possible for this plough to completely draw out the natural productivity of the soil.
(ii) An ineffective method of crop rotation was in use.

Q. 14. Why did serfs try to run away to towns?
Ans.
Many serfs were running away and hidding in towns to become free men. If any lord was unable to discover his serf for one year and one day then the serf would become a free man.

Q. 15. Discuss two reasons for the development of towns in the medieval age.
Ans.
 

(i) Importance of towns increased in medieval age with the progress in commerce and trade. That is why, many traders settled in towns.
(ii) There was no feudal control in towns. People, living in cities, were free to move from one place to another. This freedom in cities also helped in the development of towns.

Q.16. Which factors had given the first opportunity to kings to increase their control over their powerful and not so powerful subjects?
Ans. 

(i) The dissolution of the feudal system of lordship and vassalage.
(ii) The slow rate of economic growth.

Q.17. Write two features of life of monasteries of medieval Europe.
Ans. 

(i ) Life of monasteries was completely organised. Monks and Nuns living in them had to live in a strict discipline.
(ii)
Monks and Nuns were not allowed to keep property or to marry.

Q.18. What were Cathedral towns?
Ans.
Large Churches, called Cathedrals, were built in France. With the passage of time, towns developed around these churches. These towns were called Cathedral towns.

Q.19. Why did the peasant revolts take place in Europe in the fourteenth century?
Ans.
In the fourteenth century, the lords tried to give up the money-contracts they had entered into with the peasants and revive labour services. The peasants opposed it violentely and began to revolt.

Short Question  With Answer (2 Mark Each) 
Q. 1. What do you mean by ‘Feudalism’? Write its economic features.
Ans.
 

  • The term ‘Feudalism’ is derived from the German word ‘Feud’ which means a ‘piece of land’.
    In this way, feudalism was a system associated with land. It refers to a type of society which developed in medieval France and later in England and in southern Italy.
  • From economic point of view, feudalism refers to a type of agricultural production which was based on the relationship between the lord and peasants.
  • Peasants not only cultivated their own land but of their lord as well. The lord provided military protection to peasants in exchange of their labour service. The lord also had extensive judicial rights over peasents. In this way, feudalism not only affected economic life but to social and political aspects as well.

Q. 2. How did Gaul become France? What was the position of France by the eleventh century?
Ans. 
Gaul was a province of the Roman Empire. It had mountain ranges, extensive coastline, forests, long rivers and large tracts of plains good for agriculture. One Germanic tribe, the Franks, gave their name and made it ‘France’. From the sixth century, this region was ruled by Franckish/French Christian Kings. The French had very strong relations with the Church. These relations were further strengthened when in 800 CE, king Charlemagne was given the title of ‘Holy Roman Emperor’ by the Pope to ensure his support. In eleventh century, a duke from the French province of Normandy, conquered the island of England-Scotland across a narrow channel.

Q. 3. Which was the first order of the medieval western Europe? Discuss its role in the Catholic Church.
Ans.
 

  • The clergy was the first order of the medieval western Europe. It included the Pope, bishops and the clerics. They enjoyed a significant place in the Catholic Church. The Pope was the head of the western Church. He lived in Rome. The bishops and the clerics used to guide the Christians in Europe.
  • Most of the villages had their own Churches. Every Sunday, people assembled in the Church to listen to the sermon by the priest and to pray together.
  • The Church had its own rules. According to these rules, every person could not become a priest. Serfs, physically disabled and women could not become priests. Men, who became priests, could not marry.
  • In religious field, the Bishops were the nobles. The Bishops also had vaste estates like the lords. They lived in splendid palaces. The Church had the right to take one-tenth of the total produce from the peasants. It was known as ‘Tithe’. Another source of income of the Church was the endowments made by the rich for their own welfare and welfare of their deceased relatives in the afterlife.

Q. 4. How did feudalism develop in England?
Ans. 

  • From the eleventh century, feudalism developed in England. In sixth century, the Angels and Saxons had settled in England. Name of the England is a variant of the ‘Angle-land’. In the eleventh century, Saxon king of England was defeated by the Duke of Normandy, William-I, who crossed the English Channel with an army. In this way, he conquered England. He mapped the land and then distributed it into 180 Norman nobles who came with him. These lords became the main tenants of the king.
  • The lords were expected to give the king military help. They also had to supply few knights to the king.
  • That is why lords started to gift some of their own lands to the knights. In exchange they were expected to serve the lord just as they in turn served the king.
  • But they could not use knights for their private warfare. Anglo-Saxon peasants became tenants of different levels of land holders. In this way feudalism developed in England.

Q. 5. Describe the classes that existed in European society during feudalism. Which new classes emerged during the later years of medieval age, and why?
Ans. 

  • There were two classes of social organisation—the ruling class and the ruled class— under the feudal system. The ruling class consisted of big feudal lords (earls), who had been given land by the king. They had distributed this land among knights. So the feudal lords and the knights were included in the ruling class. Peasants and slave peasants fell into the category of the ruled class. The slave peasants worked on land and the feudal class spent their earning on luxurious way of life and mutual battles. No attention was paid towards welfare of the hardworking peasants.
  • New Class. Trade flourished during the later years of the medieval age. Consequently, a new class of traders developed. This class developed due to the following reasons:
    (i) Demand for luxurious goods increased in Europe because of the Crusades. So many people began to trade in these goods. It greatly developed the traders’ class.
    (ii) Peasants began to exchange agricultural goods for non-agricultural goods due to development of agriculture. It also encouraged the development of the traders’ class.

Q. 6. Discuss the condition of peasants under feudalism in Europe.
Or
Which main categories were there in medieval European society? Explain the condition of one of them.
Ans. Medieval European society was mainly divided into two categories, and these were:
(i) Big landlords (ii) Peasants.

Condition of Peasants: 

In medieval age, the feudal life was based on agriculture, but the peasants spent a very hard life. They lived in houses built of mud and grass. They had to work on private land of their masters. They were paid no wages for this work.
They were given only a part of the produce. Their wives and daughters did weaving, spinning, etc., at the feudal lord’s house.
They used the lord’s oven to bake their bread and his mill to grind their flour, but they had to pay for it.
Thus, we see that the condition of peasants in medieval European society was very pitiable.

Q. 7. Describe the relationship among various classes of feudalism in medieval Europe.
Ans. Dukes or earls, barons and knights were various classes of feudalism in medieval Europe.
Besides these feudal lords, there was also a class of peasants. There were two categories of peasants. In the first category came free peasants and the second category consisted serfs. Each lord acknowledged the higher lord as his master and he himself was considered as the master of the lords under him. No feudal lord owned any piece of land. He managed the land on behalf of his master. In time of a war, the king received military aid from the dukes and earls, the earls from the barons and the barons from knights.
Even the king could not establish a direct contact with a baron or knight. Free peasants paid only a tax, but serfs had to do begar.

Q. 8. Discuss the main features of European feudalism.
Ans. Feudalism refers to a kind of agricultural production which is based on the relationship between lords and peasants. The king divided his estates among lords. The lords distributed this land amongst feudal lords. The feudal lord was loyal to his master and gave him military aid and gifts. The feudal lord was given formal rights by his master. In the peasantry feudal hierarchy, peasants were the lowest class. They were of two kinds: free peasants and serfs. The peasants worked as bonded labourers on the piece of land obtained from his master. Thus, there was decentralisation of authority in feudalism. But the king lost any contact with the common man.

Q. 9. Discuss the political and economic significance of feudalism.
Ans. The medieval European society witnessed a large number of political and economic changes due to feudalism. Politically, a new system of government developed. There was no central power and real power was exercised by the feudal lords. Law and justice enjoyed no respect in this system. Economically, people’s life was backward. Serfs were exploited in this age. Trade came to a standstill because there were not many towns. In fact, economic life was mostly rural in the feudal set-up. Peasants worked but a major part of the produce was taken by feudal lords.

Q. 10. Describe the manor-dependent life in feudalism.
Ans.
A fertile tract of land near a village was called a manor. There was a castle of the feudal lord in the middle of the manor. There was also a pasture. People inhabiting the manor made their livelihood from the manor land. Their land was divided into tracts. Each peasant was given some tracts for cultivation.
Peasants led a very hard life. The manor owner could interfere in their social and personal life and led a very luxurious life.

The document Class 11 History Short Questions with Answers - The Three Orders is a part of the Humanities/Arts Course History Class 11.
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FAQs on Class 11 History Short Questions with Answers - The Three Orders

1. What are the three orders in the feudal system?
Ans. The three orders in the feudal system are the clergy (those who pray), the nobility (those who fight), and the peasants (those who work).
2. How did the three orders contribute to society during the medieval period?
Ans. The clergy provided spiritual guidance and education, the nobility protected the land and provided military service, and the peasants worked the land and produced goods for the society.
3. What was the role of the clergy in the feudal system?
Ans. The clergy were responsible for providing spiritual guidance, running churches and monasteries, and educating the population. They were also involved in charitable work and caring for the sick and poor.
4. How did the nobility maintain their power and status in the feudal system?
Ans. The nobility maintained their power and status through land ownership, military prowess, and alliances with other noble families. They also held positions of authority in the feudal hierarchy.
5. What challenges did the peasants face in the feudal system?
Ans. Peasants faced challenges such as heavy taxation, limited rights, and harsh working conditions. They were also at the mercy of the nobility and had little social mobility.
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