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  2. Agrarian system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrarian_system

    The Ottoman agrarian system was based around the tapu, which involved a permanent lease of state-owned arable land to a peasant family. In Haiti there was a social system based on collective labor teams, called kounbit, where farms were run by nuclear families and exchanges.

  3. Agrarian structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrarian_structure

    Agrarian structure is the pattern of land (area group) distribution among landholders (agricultural households). [1] [2] References This page was last edited on 2 ...

  4. Agrarian society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrarian_society

    An agrarian society, or agricultural society, is any community whose economy is based on producing and maintaining crops and farmland. Another way to define an agrarian society is by seeing how much of a nation's total production is in agriculture. In agrarian society, cultivating the land is the primary source of wealth. Such a society may ...

  5. Agrarianism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrarianism

    Agrarianism is a social and political philosophy that advocates for rural development and a rural agricultural lifestyle, family farming, widespread property ownership, and political decentralization.

  6. Agrarian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrarian

    Agrarian means pertaining to agriculture, farmland, or rural areas. Agrarian may refer to: ... Agrarian society; Agrarian structure; Agrarian system; See also

  7. Agricultural commune - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_commune

    In his 1881 letter to Vera Zasulich, Karl Marx wrote that historically the "agricultural commune" is the most recent type of archaic forms of societies. Marx wrote that the following features distinguish the agricultural commune from more archaic forms of commune.

  8. Agricultural geography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_geography

    Agricultural patterns of crop production in Kansas Cultivated terraces at Pisacu, Peru. Agricultural geography is a sub-discipline of human geography concerned with the spatial relationships found between agriculture and humans.

  9. Open-field system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-Field_System

    A four-ox-team plough, circa 1330. The ploughman is using a mouldboard plough to cut through the heavy soils. A team could plough about one acre (0.4 ha) per day. The typical planting scheme in a three-field system was that barley, oats, or legumes would be planted in one field in spring, wheat or rye in the second field in the fall and the third field would be left fallow.