They showed them there time table for the day, help people if there stuck when there learning something. ;)
Guests would usually be fed and offered a place to sleep. Monasteries, however, often doubled as inns, in which the patrons would pay to sleep there. I'm certain there was a fair share of charity, but a good deal of monasteries were like our modern-day motels. There was no particular model for how guests at these monasteries were treated. That probably depended a lot on the region and the particular order of monks.
Monasteries looked after there guests by helping them with their timetable helping them in learning if they learn anything, they feed them, put them to bed make them drinks. Well its quite hard to say really... Just put it this way, monasteries are like hotels but for monks and they babysit them (basically help them) its really not that hard. ;)
Look like a animals.
During the Middle Ages, religious institutions, especially monasteries, were the center of brewing and winemaking. Monks brewed virtually all of the best beer. Throughout the Middle Ages, the best vineyards were owned by monasteries. And today, of course, monks also drink coffee. OMG, I personally think it would be coffee because if monks drank loads of wine they would be alcoholics and they would get drunk and it might look funny and cool but for the Church it wouldn't be.
bearded
ii did in ways
a shaggy skirt.
a serfs house was plane and old
they were made of bronze and steel and were swords or arrows
lords used to look after the peasants.
To be recognized as strong, brave. That's what I at least think!
Simple with rustic charm of sacred rituals and no artificialities.