Table of Contents
What did a peasants house look like in the Middle Ages?
Peasants lived in cruck houses. These had a wooden frame onto which was plastered wattle and daub. This was a mixture of mud, straw and manure. The straw added insulation to the wall while the manure was considered good for binding the whole mixture together and giving it strength.
What did houses look like in the 1300s?
ost medieval homes were cold, damp, and dark. Sometimes it was warmer and lighter outside the home than within its walls. For security purposes, windows, when they were present, were very small openings with wooden shutters that were closed at night or in bad weather.
What were most peasant houses made of in medieval England?
The Medieval House in the Early Medieval Period – Peasants Peasants’ houses from this period have not survived because they were made out of sticks, straw and mud. They were one-roomed houses which the family shared with the animals.
What was life like in 13th century England?
Narrator: Most people in medieval England were farming peasants who lived in villages in the countryside. They had a hard life working all day on farms owned by nobles. By the 12th century this was changing. New towns developed around religious buildings, castles or trade routes.
What are some differences between peasant and wealthy homes?
The homes of rich people were fancier than those of the peasants. They had paved floors and tapestries sometimes hung on walls. They made the house warmer. Only the rich people had glass in their windows.
What were houses made of in the 1300s?
Medieval houses had a timber frame. Panels that did not carry loads were filled with wattle and daub. Wattle was made by weaving twigs in and out of uprights. Bricks were also very costly and in the Middle Ages they were only used to build houses for the very rich.
What were people like in the 13th century?
In the early thirteenth century some 90\% of the population worked on the land (the rest were not just the nobility and clergy but also townspeople and those with trades such as blacksmiths) where they eked out a living with varying degrees of success.