Yes, it is the same.
Most people who talk of Roman times are referring to the period of the Roman Empire ending with the fall of the West Roman Empire in the 5th century. This happened before the Middle Ages began. The word medieval means the same as Middle Ages, so the early medieval times are the same as the Early Middle Ages, but that is only part of the Middle Ages.
They were the same thing. Medieval means of the Middle Ages.
The Middle Ages and medieval times are the same thing. The word medieval is defined as the adjectival form for Middle Ages, and comes from Latin words meaning middle ages. One thing to remember, however, is that while a given historian usually does not distinguish between the meanings of the two terms, historians disagree with each other about the dates of the period. So one historian might say the terms Middle Ages and medieval times both refer to the times from 476 to 1453, and another might say they both terms refer to the times from from 1066 to 1485. There is a link below to an article on the Middle Ages.
The terms medieval and Middle Ages refer to the same time and place, which was Europe of the time between when the West Roman Empire was active and the Renaissance. The terms are used for other times in other places by analogy when they had similar characteristics, such as a feudal pyramid and decentralized authority.
Medieval Japanese clothing and medieval clothing (without geographic modifier) are two very different things. When we speak of the middle ages, or the medieval period, without saying where it was, we are referring to Europe of the period of 476 to 1453 AD. The term medieval first applied to this time and place. The terms medieval and middle ages have been applied to other cultures that had at least some attributes similar to those of the European middle ages, usually a hierarchical political structure with a weak central government. The two usages do not refer to the same time, when they do not refer to the same place. The dates for medieval Japan are perhaps from 1185 AD to the second half of the nineteenth century, a period much later than the vaguely similar European middle ages.
Middle ages and medieval are the same, just different terms for the same time frame. Yes, the long bow was used.
Yes, definitely.
Yes exactly the same time. Just different name for the same time.
Middle ages started in 410 AD with the fall of Rome and ended in the 1400's with the age of exploration. It was a 1,000 years of "darkness" and superstition. Run by the Church it taught people they were born in sin and would die in sin if they didn't follow the dictates of the church. It was a time of chaos and war, when government was gone, and when people were slaves to the Nobility. The dates given are approximate as there is no exact definition - and different dates are sometimes given for different countries. ~Jponbac Gunna
They are both adjectives and have same meaning and application to define middle ages.
First of all medieval and middle ages is the same time. Second, no. They had a construction problem and couldn't fix it.
The Mediaeval period is reckoned from the fifth to the fifteenth century. Arthur's time was in the sixth century, at the very beginning of the Middle Ages.