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There were no hosiers in the medieval period, since the word did not exist before the late 18th century, to refer to stocking-makers.
China and Korea but mostly china since they were first to exist
The first bicycles were manufactured in Germany in 1816, although it is possible that design drawings had been made earlier (but still after the medieval period had ended). There is no evidence that those earlier designs were ever realised. So the answer is no, they did not have bikes in medieval times. People travelled on foot, in carts, on horseback or on donkeys.
It was no warship and soldiers.The Catholic has only a guard especially in Rome since medieval period.
Sabre-like swords have been used in Eastern Europe since the medieval period. The modern sabre was introduced in Western Europe in the 17th century.
You can't since there are always aftershocks but no reliable way to determine how many there will be and over what period of time before they subside.
nomads are people that live today since the medieval erea
It would be 2020 Actually 2,155 years have passed since the year 146 BC.
Traditionally the Middle Ages in Europe covered the millennium from the 5th-15th centuries (often from 410 or 476 to 1453 or 1492). Some have excluded the less well-documented "Dark Ages" (a term since fallen largely into disuse) of the 5th-8th centuries. A still narrower though now less common usage in English historiography reserves "medieval" for the Norman and Plantagenet dynasties of 1066-1485, considering the 5th-11th centuries "Anglo-Saxon". Some later scholars have proposed also a separate "late Classical" period of transition from Antiquity to Medieval, spanning roughly the 3rd to 7th centuries. Subdivisions widely accepted for the later period include High Middle Ages (11th-13th centuries), a period when medieval society is considered to have risen to its most developed form (though historians have also identified the first signs of its disintegration in the latter part of this period) and Late Middle Ages (14th-15th centuries), generally seen as a time of demographic and socio-economic crisis (though paradoxically also perhaps of rising living standards): adherents of a "long" medieval era in these terms view the 5th-10th centuries as the Early Middle Ages. It should be borne in mind that this periodisation strictly relates only to Europe (and not necessarily its whole), though the label has been applied to sub-Saharan Africa in the centuries before the advent of European trade and the Middle East, Iran and India from the 7th or 8th centuries to the early 16th: the fifth century has little significance as an epochal dividing-line outside Europe and the western Mediterranean, and the centuries-long Ming dynasty gives the period 1368-1644 a distinct unity in Chinese history.
1,200,000 centuries have passed since 12000 BCE, because 1 BC/AC contains 100 centuries. Hence, 12000 * 100 = 1,200,000.
Since 1511, a total of 5 centuries have passed, as the years can be calculated as follows: 1511 to 1611 is 1 century, 1611 to 1711 is 2 centuries, 1711 to 1811 is 3 centuries, 1811 to 1911 is 4 centuries, and 1911 to 2011 is 5 centuries. The current year, 2023, is in the 21st century, but it does not add another full century since 2011.
The Olympic Games were ended by Theodosius I in AD 393 as part of the campaign to impose Christianity as the official religion of the Byzantine Empire, since the games were considered as pagan at this period of time.