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The monks did not work the fields themselves; they only helped farm in cases of dire need. There was a tendency to entrust farm tasks to serfs-who were nearly slaves-and to farmers. As of the 10th century the latter were referred to as lay brothers, laymen who joined the monks. The lay brothers, their actions, and their need to work to earn their daily bread, to see to the community’s subsistence, yielded consequences essential to the formation of post- Roman European civilization. Serfs and lay brothers began tilling, irrigating, and draining the land around the monasteries to plant that necessary to their survival. They developed grain farming and zootechnics, cut down woods, and drained marshes, dug canals to irrigate the fields, planted vineyards, and prepared the ground for a type of economy that in the Early Middle Ages would classify as sustainable and perfectly integrated in an equal balance of resources and production capacity. Thus, it was the monks that sparked the development of an economic system, which provided adequate means and resources to organize fairs and markets in certain periods and to control important import-export activities. The profits were then used to purchase sculptures, paintings, gold objects, and precious stones.