Table of Contents
What were Tudor jobs like?
Another job that ordinary Tudor people did was being a servant to wealthier people. There were many different types of servants. Women and girls could work as laundresses for a household or do domestic chores as a maid. Men and boys might be a personal servant to the master of the house.
What were poor people called in Tudor times?
Impotent Poor
In Elizabethan times, these people were called the Impotent Poor, and a distinction was made between the Impotent Poor and the Idle Poor, which were people who were poor because they were considered lazy.
What is Tudor money?
The pound was still the unit of currency, but instead of pounds and pence, the Tudors had pounds, sovereigns, crowns, half-crowns, shillings, sixpences, groats and pennies. Their values were: one sovereign = one pound.
Was Tudor England rich or poor?
In Tudor England about a third of the population lived in poverty. Their suffering always increased after bad harvests. A shortage of food resulted in higher prices.
What did rich people do in Tudor times?
Rich people in Tudor times did not have jobs that earned them money. They had land which they owned and would let peasants farm and grow crops on it. The peasants would have to pay the landowner money and some of the crops they grew as Rent.
What kind of diet did the Tudors have?
Rich Tudor’s diets wouldn’t have been all that healthy, what with their excessive meat consumption and disdain for vegetables. Rich people would have looked at vegetables, particularly root vegetables, as being only suitable for the poor.
How did life differ for the rich and poor in Elizabethan times?
Poverty and unemployment increased during Elizabeth’s reign. How did life differ for the rich and poor in Elizabethan times? The rich were keen to show off their wealth and social status. As a result of this wealth and the fact that times were more peaceful, they began to build and live in grand stately homes.
Why did the Tudors have so many windows?
Having many windows was seen as a status symbol as glass was used in homes for the first time in Tudor times. Rich houses would have been lined with oak panelling to keep out draughts. Four-poster beds with heavy curtains would also have been used to protect sleepers from cold.