Australia was unknown in the fourteenth century. However, the only method of transport by which one could have reached the continent was via boats,
They both became wealthy and popular as a result of trade.
The Islamic world in the 14th-century was a time of great scientific learning. :)
one with pretty flowers
Yes. The way to remember is that the 1st century was years 1 to 100 inclusive, the 2nd century is 101 to 200 (the 100s), 3rd century is the 200s and so on. So the name of the century is always one more than the "hundreds" would imply.
It would take a pilgrim about one to two weeks to walk from London to Canterbury in the 14th century, depending on their pace and rest stops. The journey was approximately 60-70 miles by foot.
If you mean by "chronicler" a writer of history books on the subject it would probably be Barbara Tuchman, whose book "A distant mirror" focuses on this century and was a massive bestseller back in the eighties. If you mean a chronicler who lived in that century, Geoffrey Chaucer, writer of the Canterbury Tales, would be the one.
The century for the year 1348 would be, the 14th century. To find this out, if the year is above 99 then you take the numbers in both the thousands place and the hundreds place. The will then form a number between 1 and 20, then you add one to that number. This is to account for the first century (years 0 to 99).
Masamune was a legendary swordsmith who lived around the late 13th to early 14th century. Several of his weapons share his name, 'a Masamune' would refer to one of his weapons.
It can be. If you are talking about one century as a length of time, ie. one hundred years. It is not. One hundred years ago... One century ago... It's not capitalized. If you are talking about life in the 14th Century, then it is capitalized because you are speaking of a specific set of one hundred years.
It was not invented intill the 14th century but no one knows who invented it people say latin.
Born on February 14th, one would be born under the sign of Aquarius.
The Peasant's Revolt - the Gunpowder Plot was the 17th Century, and Waterloo the 19th