Thrall
A thrall is a historical and cultural term that typically denotes a person, animal, or entity under the control or ownership of another. The word originates from the Old English þræll, which meant "slave" or "servant," and it is cognate with Germanic terms for bondage, such as the German Sklave. In the medieval period, especially in Anglo-Saxon England, a thrall referred to a non-free person who worked for a lord or household. Thralls were often acquired through warfare, tribute, or birth and could be traded or sold, but unlike chattel slavery in later eras they were subject to a set of customs and legal protections specific to feudal society.
The term has also been applied in mythology and folklore. In Norse sagas, a thrall may be
In modern popular culture, the word is invoked in various fantasy and video games, where a thrall
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