There were many markets that sold lots of different things so no one knows how many markets there was but there was alot in a place called the bazaar that's where all the main markets were
Medieval Baghdad was famous for many things such as trade (cloth, spices books silk, and etc ), philosophers, artists and etc but it was most famous for the great library present in it - The House of Wisdom.
Many regions are considered to have had a medieval period. The region most commonly thought of in that regard is Europe, but India and Japan are also considered to have had medieval periods
It is impossible to answer this because the number can't be known.
Many but mostly mine workers and factory workers
Medieval people did not need permission to have a business. The market we read about that needed a charter was not an individual business, but what we might call a market place, a large area with stalls and shops for many merchants. Markets differed from fairs. Fairs were temporary, but markets were permanent places where many merchants did business. Originally, cities had markets, and the countryside was served by temporary fairs. There were parts of the countryside that were rather far from cities, and the kings encouraged economic growth in these areas by designating certain villages to have markets, issuing decrees that they were market towns. The people who worked in markets were not interested in having competition from other nearby markets. Kings also wanted the markets to be economically healthy, and were easily persuaded to limit the numbers of markets, so they were not too near each other. So a market required a royal charter, to protect the existing markets.
Medieval Baghdad was famous for many things such as trade (cloth, spices books silk, and etc ), philosophers, artists and etc but it was most famous for the great library present in it - The House of Wisdom.
Baghdad was the capital of the ABBASSID CALIPHATE and was one of the centers of the Islamic Golden Age. It was most notable for its massive library called Beit al-Hikma (بيت الحكمة) or the House of Wisdom. After the Mongols razed Baghdad in 1258, the city lost most of its importance.
as many as u want
kill people in many effective and particularly unpleasant ways.
3
There were 9 Crusades
There are two rivers in Baghdad.
Thieves of Baghdad has 320 pages.
They Came to Baghdad has 256 pages.
Nearly all merchants lived in towns or cities. Villages did not have permanent markets, so they were not attractive as places to live for people who worked in markets. Permanent markets were among the things that distinguished towns from villages. Some merchants spent a lot of their time travelling, but they had homes, and usually also had shops and warehouses.
There is no exact number as to how many medieval dungeons there were in the world. almost every castle had a dungeon in the medieval times. The dungeons were sometimes used to house prisoners.
There are many reports of games that resembled football (soccer) during medieval times and before.