Answer:
How did Manorialism and Feudalism come dominate Medieval Europe?
When the Western Roman Empire collapsed because of the Germanic Invasions, Western Europe lost the dominant central power that had ruled for centuries, and instead, became consteted by dozens of warring peoples who each began to rule over specific small areas.
As centuries passed, some forms of political centralization developed, especially in France and England. However, local lords still wielded great power over their corresponding local areas. The central authorities (kings or emperor in the case of the Holy Roman Empire) had to seek the approval of local lords for basic government activities such as collecting taxes or raising armies.
Feudalism was then, a form of descentralized political power that dominated much of Western Europe during most of the Middle Ages.
The activities dominated life on a Manor in Medieval Europe seemed to be
Agriculture was by far the dominant activity in the Manors of Medieval Europe. The vas majority of medieval Europeans were peasants who lived in manors, and worked a plot of land their whole lives in exchange for military protection from the local lord who owned the land and extracted taxes from the peasants.
A minority of people in the manors belonged to the aristocracy and dedicated most of their time to travelling around their land, managing local issues, and doing military training. Many of them spent long periods of their lives in war (for example, the Knights, who were mostly aristocrats).