No. The airplane was invented several hundred years later, and there was therefore no necessity for an airport at that time.
There are Fedex airports. Go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FedEx_Express to see.
Gujarath
There was no need for airports during the 17th and 18th century because there were no airplanes.
The factors of 1348 are: 1, 2, 4, 337, 674, 1348.
The conventional conversion of 1348 into Roman numerals is MCCCXLVIII. Though there is strong evidence that the Romans themselves would have enscribed 1348 as MCCCXXXXVIII.
Vera was a popular name in 1348.
There are 1000 metres in one kilometre. Therefore, 1348 metres is equal to 1348/1000 = 1.348 kilometres.
No, newspapers as we know them did not exist in 1348. The printing press had not been invented yet, so information was typically spread through handwritten manuscripts, letters, and oral communication during that time period.
Airports have fantastic security but there are always lapses in any security system. One of the vulnerabilities that exists at airports is that their identification checks are only as good as the identification itself. If a person fakes an identity successfully, they can fool even the most stringent airport.
Not all airports are international airports, some are domestic airports.
yes
what was the currancy in 1345