Everything about Peasant totally explained
A hi ben is an
agricultural worker who subsists by working a small plot of ground. The word is derived from
15th century French païsant meaning one from the
pays, or
countryside. The term peasant today is sometimes used in a pejorative sense for impoverished
farmers.
There were free and unfree peasants. Free peasants could leave the manor as they wished. Unfree peasants had to buy their way out of the manor by paying their lord.
Peasants typically make up the majority of the
agricultural labour force in a
Pre-industrial society, depending on the
cultivation of their land: without stockpiles of provisions they thrive or
starve according to the most recent
harvest. Pre-industrial societies have diminished with the advent of
globalization and as such there are considerably fewer peasants to be found in
rural areas throughout the world.
Though "peasant" is a word of loose application, once a
market economy has taken root the term
peasant proprietors is frequently used to describe the traditional rural population in countries where the land is chiefly held by
smallholders.
Communities
In the great majority of pre-industrial societies, peasants constitute the bulk of the population. Peasant societies generally have very well developed social support networks. Especially in harder
climates, members of the community who have a poor
harvest or suffer some form of hardship will be taken care of by the rest of the community.
Peasant societies can often have very
stratified social hierarchies within them as well. A rural peasant population differs enormously in its values and economic behavior from urbanites and tends to be more
conservative. Peasants are often very loyal to inherited power structures that define their rights and privileges and protect them from interlopers, despite their low status within those power structures.
Fernand Braudel devoted the first volume–called
The Structures of Everyday Life.–of his major work,
Civilization and Capitalism 15th–18th Century to the largely silent and invisible world that existed below the market economy.
Since it was the literate classes who left the most records, and these tended to dismiss peasants as figures of coarse appetite and rustic comedy, the term "peasant" may have a pejorative rather than descriptive connotation in historical memory. Society was theorized as being organized in three “estates”: those who work, those who pray, and those who fight.
In a
barter economy, peasants characteristically have a different attitude to work than people in a
money economy would.
Medieval European peasants
The relative position of
Western European peasants was greatly improved after the
Black Death unsettled
medieval Europe, granting far greater economic and political power to those peasants fortunate enough to survive the cataclysm.
In the wake of this disruption to the established hierarchy, later centuries saw the invention of the original
printing presses, widespread
literacy and the enormous social and intellectual changes of the
Enlightenment.
This evolution of ideas in an environment of relatively widespread
literacy laid the groundwork for the
Industrial Revolution, which enabled mechanically and chemically augmented agricultural production while simultaneously increasing the demand for
factory workers in
cities. These factory workers with their low skill and large numbers quickly came to occupy the same socio-economic stratum as the original medieval peasants.
This was especially pronounced in
Eastern Europe. Lacking any
catalysts for change in the
14th century, Eastern European peasants largely continued upon the original medieval path until the
18th and
19th centuries. The
Tsars then began to notice that the West had made enormous strides they'd not, responding by forcing the largely
illiterate peasant populations under their control to embark upon a
Westernization and
industrialization campaign.
Peter the Great initiated a half-successful attempt to force more than 500 years' worth of social change in the space of a few generations. Modernization of agriculture in Eastern Europe and Russia wasn't achieved until after the
October Revolution.
Further Information
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