Heimaðr
Heimaðr is an Old Norse term that translates to "homesteadsman" or "house-dweller." It referred to a free man who owned and cultivated his own land, distinguishing him from landless laborers or members of the aristocracy. The heimaðr was a fundamental social and economic unit in Viking Age and medieval Scandinavia.
This social class was characterized by their independence and self-sufficiency. They typically lived on their farms,
The heimaðr occupied a middle ground in the social hierarchy, below the jarls (earls) and chieftains, but