$0/moFreeHiddenPatron count not public
$1/moSerfHiddenMuch like an agricultural laborer bound under the feudal system to work on his lord's estate, there really is not much to see here. I appreciate the support as every dollar counts. Hey an army of serfs can crush knights by sheer numbers. Thank you patron
$5/moPeasantHiddenA peasant is poor farmer of low social status who owns or rents a small piece of land for cultivation (chiefly in historical use or with reference to subsistence farming in poorer countries). And much like a peasant you are the backbone on which this page is based.
$10/moKnightHiddenA knight is a man who served his sovereign or lord as a mounted soldier in armor. And you sir or madam are a fighter for the cause of history. Thank you for your support. We raise your name and shout it out
$25/moBaronHiddenA member of the lowest order of the British nobility. The term “Baron” is not used as a form of address in Britain, barons usually being referred to as “Lord.”
$50/moCountHiddenEuropean title of nobility, equivalent to a British earl, ranking in modern times after a marquess or, in countries without marquesses, a duke. The Roman comes was originally a household companion of the emperor, while under the Franks he was a local commander and judge. The counts were later slowly incorporated into the feudal structure, some becoming subordinate to dukes, although a few counties (or countships), such as those of Flanders, Toulouse, and Barcelona, were as great as duchies. The reassertion of royal authority over the feudatories, which took place at different times in the different kingdoms and led to the formation of centralized states of the modern type, meant that most counts lost their political authority, though they retained their privileges as members of the nobility.