Chapter 568: Construction 3
With the exception of William's Lord's Villa, all the houses on the four streets were of the same style - square, two-storey wooden houses, five bedrooms and two living rooms, 100 square meters, with balconies, front and back yards.
At the end of each street are public toilets and public baths.
Public toilets and public baths are separate for men and women.
William didn't want his territory to become the same as the history of the Roman Empire because of the bathhouse.
If you count it, there are a hundred houses on each street, and there are four hundred houses on the four streets combined.
William now has only six or seven hundred men under his command.
Four hundred houses are definitely enough to live in, and there is still a lot to spare.
But William didn't open it all to his slaves.
There is no other reason, and you don't know how to cherish what is too easy to get.
In fact, to put it bluntly, these houses will be carrots in William's hands, seducing his slaves to work harder.
Louis is a managerial talent, and he is a knowledgeable scholar himself, and he can get a rough wooden house on his own.
The leader of the Guards can get a rough wooden house on his own.
Each of the more than fifty soldiers of the Guards had a separate small room.
Twenty administrators, two of whom were divided from more than six hundred slaves, were allowed to intercede with Louis if they had a family, provided that the other slave manager who lived with them did not object.
It's the rule.
Many of the slave managers had families, so with each other's family members with them, eight or nine people were crammed into a room.
That is, the room was empty, there was not a single piece of furniture, and everyone was sleeping on the floor, so many people could sleep.
But even this kind of condition is much better than sleeping in a shack outside the house.
Especially now, the weather outside has turned colder, and many people sleep until midnight shivering.
Blacksmiths, carpenters, shoemakers, and tailors, all of whom had a skill and had been verified by Louis, lived in a room for three people.
Of course, they were in the same situation as the slave managers, with many family members crammed into one room.
But even so, there were still hundreds of slaves, unable to live in relatively warm rooms, but only crammed into unsafe and unhygienic shacks, and by this time, there were more than 300 empty houses.
In other words, a few hundred people have only used less than a hundred rooms.
But it's not fixed.
After the wooden house was built in rough billows and some of the "special class" moved into the house, William had Louis gather all the slaves and personal guards, and they formed a loose line of more than twenty in the form of an array, standing in his lord's villa, and listening to him preach the new scheme of incentives and punishments:
From now on, William will select three of the best teams every month from all the teams, and give them corresponding rewards, including a place to live in the room, including better food, and even the possibility of William being exempted from slavery status and becoming a commoner in the village of New Nisse.
The worst team will have its administrator disqualified from living in the room, and the entire team will have their food deducted.
Guards who perform well or poorly will be rewarded and punished accordingly.
As soon as William's plan came out, the slaves were like drops of water dripping into a hot oil pot, and they stirred up in an instant.
And those slave managers, who had just enjoyed preferential treatment for a while, also became nervous all of a sudden, and looked at the "colleagues" next to them with wary eyes.
The original situation of "loving each other" and "cherishing each other" is gone, but faintly hostile.
No slave manager wanted to go back to the shack – with his family.
The other slaves saw hope, the slave managers saw the threat, and as Louis posted a new job, all the slaves began to move like clockwork.
Watering and weeding, cutting trees, cutting trees, cutting branches, carrying water, burning bricks, calcining cement.........
Carpenters are currently the most busy, and they are desperately trying to make all kinds of furniture with a large group of people—wooden tables, wooden chairs, wooden cups, wooden beds, and so on.
There are several styles of wooden beds: deluxe wooden bed, ordinary wooden bed, bunk wooden bed, and triple wooden bed.
The luxurious version of the wooden bed was undoubtedly what Lord William's villa needed, although William did not think that these carpenter slaves could give him much more luxurious wooden bed.
The highlight is the double-decked, three-tiered wooden bed.
In this fairy tale world with backward productivity, there is no such concept as a double-layer wooden bed or a three-layer wooden bed.
When the room is filled with several double-storey and three-layer wooden beds, it will smell like William's previous college dormitory.
At that time, the whole room would not have to be so crowded, and the air would not become so muddy.
Blacksmiths and tailors are useless for the time being, so they can only do the hard work of other slaves.
Some of the guards were responsible for security, while others were sent to hunt, both to drive away predators and perhaps to bring some meat supplements.........
The whole village of New Nisse is like a particularly busy job, and it looks like it is in full swing.
Every day at sunrise, work began under the strict supervision of the slave managers.
When night falls, they line up to go into the public bath to wash.
Every time you take a bath, the clear and transparent water will be washed into a black whining, mixed with a lot of mud and sand.
Their clothes were all taken away for washing, and then they were put on the clothes that had been washed and sent over.
By the way, William is a time-traveler in Huaxia, not India, and like many time-travelers in his predecessors, William can't bear to make his territory a "land".
He built public toilets for one purpose.
William made it mandatory for everyone to go to a public toilet when they were defecating.
If you are in the room at night, you must drain it into a urine bucket, and after dawn, you must empty it into the septic tank of the public toilet.
If he is found to have defecated in the open, he will be severely punished, his food will be deprived of food on the same day, he will be expelled from his room, and no matter how good his work is, if it is serious, he will even be flogged.
This rule was the strictest that William had laid down in the village of Neunese.
After severely punishing a few unlucky ghosts and making an example of chickens and monkeys, no one dared to do such a thing of open defecation.
The environment of the entire village of New Nisse suddenly rose several notches and became clean and tidy.