Please rewrite. This question doesn't make much sense.
Anything made from iron, steel, or other metals.cupsplateshorsehoesswordsweaponsfarm toolsarmour
In Medieval Times, branding referred to the practice of marking animals, such as livestock, with a unique symbol or mark to indicate ownership. This was done to prevent theft and dispute over ownership. The branding process involved heating a metal iron and applying it to the animal's skin, leaving a permanent mark.
pikestaff
there clothes are made out of iron. by roxey
Iron Maiden
clay,bronze,copper,iron,and wood
A magnet.
magnets is something that sticks to iron a magnet has iron in it so the magnet sticks ontot to other objects
No, iron in your food is good for you. But if you ate iron that sticks to a magnet that could make you very sick.
Anything made from iron, steel, or other metals.cupsplateshorsehoesswordsweaponsfarm toolsarmour
Green colors in glass came from iron. There is a link below.
The iron horseshoe was made during the Middle ages (also called the Medieval times), likely the inventor was somewhere in Europe or England as these were the places most likely to have professional iron workers.
You need to craft it out of Iron Ingot and Sticks.
(I = Iron) (S = Sticks) (N = Nothing) NIN NIN NSN
In Medieval Times, branding referred to the practice of marking animals, such as livestock, with a unique symbol or mark to indicate ownership. This was done to prevent theft and dispute over ownership. The branding process involved heating a metal iron and applying it to the animal's skin, leaving a permanent mark.
Medieval people knew of copper, silver, gold, iron, lead, tin, zinc, mercury, and possibly others. Alloys of these metals, such as brass and bronze, were known. Steel, an iron alloy with a carbon content, was also known, and the blast furnace for steel manufacture was a medieval invention. Antimony might have been known, because there is clear evidence of its use in ancient times, but we have no records of it prior to the Renaissance.
pikestaff