(Middle Ages) a person who is bound to the land and owned by the feudal lord.
1Yet their force, including the Tegeans and helots, was fifty-three thousand men.
2Why, just a narrow, jealous race-hatred which makes helots of British men.
3We must not imagine that all the helots had joined in the revolt.
4These strikers were helots, unorganized scum; the regular unions-bycomparison respectable-heldaloof from them.
5The humbled Mexicans sink into the condition of wandering helots.
6Under Pausanias we have seen before that the helots were already ripe for revolt.
7Slaves are never without traitors; and the ephors learned the premeditated revolution from helots themselves.
8He was a helot in the great hunt of helots that the masters were making.
9I think Russia agreed to it because they're having a revolt of the Slavic helots.
10The "deterring" example of the helots had therefore very little effect.
11Forty million helots awaited their liberator the rebel leader.
12In Greece and Rome the righting was done by freemen, the labour by helots and bondsmen.
13Have they forgotten that the held helots?
14The Spartans were able to devote themselves to martial pursuits because they possessed a large number of serfs, called helots.
15Their whole position, if it could not be compared with that of slaves, could be compared with that of helots.
16Are they, in their turn, to become helots, after having vainly striven so long to make helots of the others?