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Which best describes peasant life in fifteenth-century russia?

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Serfdom in Russia continued after it had died out in western Europe, and most peasants were serfs who were legally bound to the land and led miserable lives.
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User Auerbachb
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Answer:

Serfdom in Russia continued after it had died out in western Europe, and most peasants were serfs who were legally bound to the land and led miserable lives.

Step-by-step explanation:

Unlike West Europe, Serfs in Russia continued to live slavery alike conditions. They were the widest and mayor social class present in Russia. Nobles profited from the serfdom in central and south Russia with support of the harsh Tsarist rule.

Serfs lacked all sorts of liberty and they were bond to their land. Feudalism in Russia was a system that came late and end late. With millions of serfs at disposal of nobles, the conditions of living were precarious, often leading to rapid deaths given little food and unable to get through harsh winters.

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User Chriskirknielsen
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