How ladies and young women who live on their manors ought to manage their households and estates.
. . . Because barons and still more commonly knights and squires and
gentlemen travel and go off to the wars, their wives should be wise and
sound administrators and manage their affairs well, because most of the
time they stay at home without their husbands, who are at court or
abroad.
They should have all the responsibility of the administration and know
how to make use of their revenues and possessions. Every lady of such
rank
(if she is sensible) ought to know how much her annual income is and
how
much the revenue of her land is worth.
This wise lady ought to persuade her husband if
she can by kind words and sensible admonitions to agree to discuss
their
finances together and try to keep to such a standard of living as their
income can provide and not so far above it that at the end of the year
they find themselves in debt to their own people or other creditors.
There
is absolutely no shame in living within your income, however small it
may
be, but there is shame if creditors are always coming to your door to
repossess
their goods or if they are obliged to make nuisances of themselves to
your
men or your tenants or if they have to try by hook or by crook to get
their
payment.
It is proper for such a lady or young woman to be
thoroughly knowledgeable about the laws related to fiefs, sub-fiefs,
quit
rents, champarts [in feudal law, field rent paid in kind to the lord],
taxes for various causes, and all those sorts of things that are within
the jurisdiction of the lordship, according to the customs of the
region,
so that no one can deceive her about them. Since there are a great many
administrators of lands and of noblemen's estates who are quite
willing
to deceive their masters, she ought to be well versed in all these
matters
and take care over them. There is nothing dishonourable about making
herself
familiar with the accounts. She will see them often and wish to know
how
they are managed in regard to her vassals so that they are not being
cheated
or incommoded unreasonably, for otherwise it would be a burden on the
souls
of her and her husband until they made amends for it. Towards poor
people
a lady should out of love of God, be more compassionate than strict.
In addition, she will do well to be a very good
manager of the estate and to know all about the work on the land and at
what time and in which season one ought to perform what operations. She
should know which way is the best for the furrows to go according to
the
lay of the land and according to whether it is in a dry or damp region.
She should see that the furrows are straight and well made and of the
right
depth and sown at exactly the right time with such grains as are best
for
the land. And likewise she should know all about the work of the
vineyard
if it is a wine-growing area. She ought to make sure that she has good
workmen and overseers in these duties and not take people who change
masters
every quarter, because that is a bad sign. They should be neither too
old,
for they will be lazy and weak, nor too young, for they will always be
larking about.
She is careful to have them get up early but she
does not depend on anyone for it, if she is a skilful manager of the
estate.
She herself rises and puts on a houppeland (a long loose undergarment)
and busies herself at her window so that she sees them go outside, for
if they are lazy, the laziness will most likely be shown in an
unwillingness
to go out. She should often take time to visit the fields to see how
the
men are getting on with the work, for there are a good many workers who
will gladly abstain from working the land and give it up for the day if
they think no one is keeping an eye on them. Some of them are very
accomplished
at sleeping in the fields in the shade of a tree while letting their
horses
or oxen graze in the meadow, and then they say in the evening that they
have done a day's work. The wise manager of the estate will be on the
lookout
for these things. Furthermore, when the wheat is ripe from the month of
May, she will not wait for an unrealistically high price, but will
harvest
her crop, having it cut by strong and industrious fellows. She will pay
them in cash or in grain, and when the time comes that they are
harvesting
the grain, she will b careful that they do not leave any wheat behind
them
or that they do not try any other tricks not mentioned
before that such people are apt to get up to. The lady must likewise
be attentive to these matters in the other work on the estate.
The lady should get up early in the morning, for
in the establishment where the lady usually lies in bed until late it
is
unlikely that the household will run smoothly. She will busy herself
around
the house; she will find plenty of orders to give. She will have the
animals
brought in at the right time, take care how the shepherd looks after
them
and see that he is in control of them and that he is not cruel, for
shepherds
sometimes kill them in spite of the mistress or master. She sees that
the
animals are kept clean, protected from too hot a sun and from the rain
and prevented from catching mange. If she is wise she will often go in
the evening with one of her women to see how the sheep are being penned
up, and thus the shepherd will be more careful that there is nothing
for
which he may be reproached. She will have him take special care at
lambing
time and look after the lambs well, for they often die for lack of
attention.
The lady will rear the young animals carefully and be present at the
shearing
and
ensure that it is done at the right time of year. In areas where there
are broad plains and grazing lands, she will keep a large herd of
cattle
and grow oats for them to eat, selling a little of it. She will keep
oxen
in the stable, from which she will make a handsome profit when they are
fat. If she has woods, she will keep a breeding stock of horses there,
which is a profitable thing for whoever knows how to break and train
them.
In the winter-time, she will reflect that labour
is cheap, and therefore she will have her men cut her willow or hazel
groves
and make vine props to sell in the season. She will set her young lads
to cutting wood for heating the manor house, but if the weather is too
inclement she will have them thresh in the barn. She will never let
them
be idle, for there is nothing more wasteful in a manor than an idle
staff.
Likewise, she will employ her women and her chambermaids to attend to
the
livestock, to feed the workmen, to seed the courtyards and work in the
herb garden, even getting covered in mud. She and her girls and young
women
will occupy themselves in making clothing. They will select the wool,
putting
the best quality to one side to make fine garments for her and her
husband
or to sell if she needs to do so. She uses the coarse wool for little
children
and for her women and household. She will make heavy table covers from
the wool, and from the scraps she will have the linens trimmed that her
chambermaids will spin and weave on winter evenings. They will also
make
many other things that are too long to list.
In flat, arable country there is a great need to
run an estate well, and the one who is most diligent and careful about
it, however great she may be, is more than wise and ought to be highly
praised for it. This practice of running the household wisely sometimes
renders more profit than the entire income from the land. For example,
the Countess of Eu, mother of the fine young count who died on the way
to Hungary, was very skilled in this. She was a wise estate manager,
who
felt no shame in occupying herself in the perfectly respectable work of
household duties, to the extent that the profit that resulted was worth
more annually than all the income from her land. The praise of the
virtuous
woman recounted in the book of Solomon may be aptly applied to such a
woman
as this.