Commoners
Commoners is a term used to describe members of society who do not possess noble titles or privileged status. Historically, in feudal Europe, commoners were everyone outside the clergy and nobility: peasants, serfs, freemen, artisans, merchants, and townspeople. Their legal and economic obligations often involved paying rents or taxes to landholders, performing corvée labor, or serving in local militias. Although some freemen could acquire land and wealth, political power typically favored the nobility and ruling classes. In early modern Europe the concept of the Third Estate formalized the broader body of commoners within the Estates-General and other assemblies.
In other regions and periods, similar distinctions existed between elites and non-elites, with variations in rights
In contemporary use, commoners generally refers to ordinary people, or to those without a hereditary or official