>>2694339what i am describing is a division of labour. not all people can benefit from an academic education.
>>2694360>scientific laws of history😂😂 care to explain what these scientific laws are?
>Violent slave rebellions dealt severe blows to the political power of the slave owners and hastened the collapse of slavery. While slavery disintegrated, feudal production relations gradually maturedthis is entirely ahistorical. slavery existed in england before the normans (450-1066), but afterwards (1066-1485), feudalism was imposed on the english by the ruling class, not out of class struggle, but out of class domination. in fact, the real class struggle of this time was the nobility versus the royalty, such as with the two "baron wars" stretching across the 13th century, from 1215 to 1270, which gave us legal revolutions such as the magna carta (1215), that entered into english mythology for centuries afterwards. this is where history happened. after this we get the "hundred years war" (1337-1453). in the middle period of this international elite conflict we also had the peasant rebellions of 1381. these peasants we can compare to the burghers more than the serfs, since part of the rebellion were various guilds that terrorised flemish competition in london (a move later continued by henry viii who expelled foreign business in england). after this we get the war of the roses (1455-87) which places the tudors on the throne, from whence we get capitalist conditions. henry vii and henry viii confiscate land in service of the landed gentry, who are by now, formally incorporated into the house of lords (included in the primary act of the magna carta), and by which the lords temporal become a majority following 1540. thus, the class war of the middle ages was not serfs vs lords, it was kings vs nobles, and after this it's lords vs peasants. after this, we get the ascendancy of the bourgeoisie in northern europe, leading to the revolutionary conditions of the 17th century, which sees england become a republic and finally a constitutional monarchy, which gives supremacy to the house of commons. in all these cases, it is the elites contending for power over the masses, not the masses ris
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