Various Annual Incomes


There is only fragmentary evidence to go on, as even great lords did not keep comprehensive records. There are some fairly complete figures available for the Spanish Order of Calatrava in the early fiftenth century. There were 300 villages in fief to them, with some 200,000 souls, making for 666-odd [aha!] souls per village. Income from these totalled 1.5 million reales, some 8.5 million ducats. This was enough to keep the order's manpower at 2,000 men-at-arms, not counting peones --spearmen-- and peasant cavalrymen owing feudal service. It also permitted the order to keep in good repair the numerous castles and 75 priories and houses which it ran.

Some other figures:

Duke of Lancaster                                           D 7,200,000                   
(Mid-14th C) Average Earl 1,800,000 Laborer: Florence 1,125 England 1,000* Artisan: Florence 2,250 England 1,500*

*Assumes a 200 day work year

Most people worked the land, in a rotation system leaving 1/3 or 1/2 the fields fallow each year. On average, about one acre was required to support one peasant at the subsistence level (a common state). To buy food for this level of existance required D400-500 a year, but most of the peasantry raised their own.

The impression is that a skilled worker could knock down about D10 a day, which wasn't bad, but that he may only have worked 100-150 days, depending upon type of work and seasonal conditions.

Expenses. "Standards of Living in the Later Middle Ages" suggests some figures for "Room and Board." Playing with the numbers to get an annual figure, the results in ducats are:

Junior level lord                           c. 6,500                                    

Squire                                      3,650                                       

Yeoman                                      2,700                                       

Groom                                       900
                                         

It is unclear as to whether these figures include clothing, upkeep of animals, or servants wages.

Some figures are available for several households, but there is no indication of the size of the family, or of its entourage, or the number of horses which they were keeping. Nevertheless:

RANK                                        DUCATS                                      

Wealthy baron                               785,000                                     

Very rich knight                            150,000                                     

Wealthy esquire                              66,000                                     

Modest esquire                               30,000
                                     

A lord might easily spend as much on the care and feeding of his war horse as an unskilled laborer might make in a year, 1,100 ducats.

Surprisingly, several inventories of peasant's property --excluding animals and foodstuffs on hand-- come to 460 to 1,000 ducats. On the other hand, in 1397 the Duke of Gloucester had 21,760,000 ducats in goods at his home in London and castle at Pleshy, exclusive of horses and some other properties.

Interestingly, the food allowance for a monk in a Hospitalers Commandery in this period was about 750 ducats; that for a cowherd 500.

Cost of Weaponry

Sword: A peasant might get a cheap sword for D15-20. A top of the line sword would go for several hundred ducats

Armor: Easily several hundred ducats for an obsolete outfit, with a decent suit running several thousand, and plate, when it comes in, several times more than that.

Horses, D500-5,000 and up for superior stock and up to D50,000 for a world class "Destier" (heavy war horse).


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