Yes, medieval houses had slanted roofs, at least in most or all of Europe. I have and been in a number of them, and have never seen a medieval house that did not have a slanted roof, in person or in photos, except for photos of buildings in desert areas.
Viking houses were one-story buildings with slanted roofs. The roof was covered with shingles or straw. This form that creates a sculptural architecture.
Today as in the middle ages, a thatcher constructed roofs on houses made from thatching material.
Yes. There were roofs on Mohen-Jodaro Houses.
To make them look pretty and so they could make murals on their roofs, advertising that they are rich. Also they're water proof.
Yes, most of them did.
Assam has very heavy rainfall every year. To avoid accumulation of water on the roof tops, houses have sloping roofs
Slanted roofs don't accumulate water during storms.
Viking houses were one-story buildings with slanted roofs. The roof was covered with shingles or straw. This form that creates a sculptural architecture.
In building slanted roofs.
houses have roofs so rain, hail, or other things will not get in houses.
Today as in the middle ages, a thatcher constructed roofs on houses made from thatching material.
Thatchers wove thick bunches of straw, reeds and sticks together to form roofs of village houses.
Yes. There were roofs on Mohen-Jodaro Houses.
Probbably because slanted rooftops are designed to shed rain and snow and there is little of that in their region.
The prepositional phrase is "roofs of houses."
All countries in Europe have sloping roofs on at least some of their houses
houses in hills have sloping roofs so that the rain-water and snow may drain off easily.