Answer:
They most likely used a fireplace. they used fireplaces and chimneys to heat there houses and cook.
Answer:
Most people in the Middle Ages did not heat their houses with what we would call fireplaces because the chimney was not invented until the 11th or 12th century, and was too expensive for any but the wealthy for a long time after that. Most people dressed heavily and heated their houses with free standing fires on hearths that sat on dirt floors. The smoke was vented through a hole in the roof or high on the walls under the peaks of the roof. Some people had what are called hanging chimneys or smoke canopies to guide the smoke. In the homes of the wealthy, where the floors were likely to be wood or tile, braziers were used, and the holes in the roof were more elaborately set up so rain would not come in.
During the Medieval age people had to build fires to cook and keep warm. In the 21st century people have electricity and furnaces to cook and keep them warm. During the Medieval ages windmills, mechanical clocks, and distilled alcohol were discovered or invented. During the 21st century the AbioCor artificial heart, an artificial liver, and self cleaning windows were all invented.
The Medieval Warm Period was from about 950 to 1250 AD. It was a world wide event. There is a link below to an article on it.
1st Answer:Until modern times it was considered improper for a woman to show her legs or ankles. The only women who showed their bodies were the prostitutes who worked the streets. Doctors couldn't look at a woman's body undressed.2nd Answer:Medieval women wore long dresses partly because it was the fashion; during some parts of the Middle Ages, long dresses had trains that dragged on the floors. We see pictures of these dresses often in medieval pictures of wealthy women. Of course the pictures also show very clean tile floors.In many places they also needed long dresses to keep warm because the methods used at the time for heating were very primitive.The idea that medieval women wore long dresses out of modesty is probably incorrect, for at least part of the time. I went to a related question (linked below) to look at medieval dresses at the source links it has. One piece of Anglo Saxon artwork I came across portrays the Virgin Mary standing in a medieval dress short enough that her feet and ankles were clearly visible. While most of the rest of the artwork does not show women's feet and ankles, several pieces do. An article on the Black Death (linked below) has a contemporary picture of a plague scene used as a Bible illustration; in it, a doctor is tending two plague victims, whose bodies are largely uncovered, the woman from the waste up, the man from thighs down. According to an article on the history of nudity (linked below) medieval people were baptised by immersion nude until the beginning of the 8th century, about a quarter of the way through the Middle Ages. I have seen a number of pictures of men and women bathing together in medieval bath houses, which seem to have been common enough that even some larger villages had them. I came across one medieval picture of the Virgin Mary bathing, in which her body was fully visible from the waiste up. And I see from articles on medieval attitudes that people swam, and were nearly always naked when they did so until the 17th century.
The majority of the population slept on the floor on a pile of straw, perhaps with woollen blankets for warmth.People with more money (wealthy merchants, tradesmen, noblemen and royalty) could afford more furniture, including wooden-framed beds.The writer Alexander Neckham described a typical baron's bedchamber in around 1180. The side frame was of wood fitted with loops of cord or leather to the wooden head a foot pieces; cord or leather straps supported the layers of thin padded mattresses or coutes and the whole bed could be quickly assembled or taken apart to make more space in the chamber. Bolsters were used instead of pillows and coverlets might be of fur or material embroidered with designs.Later medieval beds had four tall posts supporting a frame for a curtain to exclude cold winds.
Quite dirty and ragged clothes, very itchy, for the poor best made out of hay or straw and cheap fabric, but for the rich they wore velvet, thick fabric with lots of coatings to keep warm.
to keep warm and it was classy back then
During the Medieval age people had to build fires to cook and keep warm. In the 21st century people have electricity and furnaces to cook and keep them warm. During the Medieval ages windmills, mechanical clocks, and distilled alcohol were discovered or invented. During the 21st century the AbioCor artificial heart, an artificial liver, and self cleaning windows were all invented.
By fire.
For houses, insulation is needed to keep the house warm in winter.
by eating warm meat
A medieval serf house was typically small and simple, constructed with wood or stone and thatched roofs. They were typically one or two rooms with a central hearth for cooking and warmth. The houses were often cramped and lacked windows, with livestock living on the ground floor to provide additional warmth.
Well you have different ways but one of the most important ones are to keep your windows shut. You can also keep you A/C at a regular temperature.
It traps a layer of air, so the air is an insulator, so is the glass.
Lots of layers help keep bodies warm, and minimizing the time out of doors.
In cold weather, people have made different kinds of boots. They have the warm boots to keep you warm so I suggest you where some warm boots
they were invented to keep people warm
The pueblos lived in homes made out of mud and adobe next to rivers.