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Very much so. It may not traditionally be part of the "high" Middle Ages (c.11th-13th centuries), but it's every bit as medieval, a much underrated century without which the 11th wouldn't have happened and the 8th & 9th wouldn't have been nearly so fruitful. It retains an intermediate character, before European expnsion and the stabilisation of the new territorial kingdoms, but with feudalism (however that might be interpreted) on the rise in the west and economy, towns and trade showing signs of growth. It might almost be considered the most medieval century of all, which to those of us who consider the Middle Ages to extend from the fifth century to the fifteenth, it of course logically is.

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11y ago

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