The most common arrangement would be a latrine built over a cesspit. Chamber pots might also be used and later emptied into the latrine. A few buildings had indoor privies with chutes that emptied into a storage pit. Cesspits had to be periodically mucked out and the waste hauled away for use as fertilizer.
Most medieval cities did not start to build sewer systems until the very end of the period. For example, Paris did not build its first section of sewer until 1370, and even then it covered on a small portion of the city.
There is a common and often repeated belief that waste was simply thrown into the streets or the gutter, but this is not the case. Archaeological study has shown that latrines were the common practice.
Answer: I agree with the second poster. It is a common but false belief that bodily waste was simply tossed in the gutter. It seems that the most common arrangement was a latrine built over a cesspit. Some buildings even had indoor privies with chutes or other apparatus to deliver waste to a storage pit. These pits were periodically mucked out and the contents used for fertilizer
Most commonly in a latrine that was built over a cesspit. Chamber pots were also sometimes used, which where later emptied into the latrine. A few buildings has indoor privies, usually with a chute or similar mechanism to deliver waste to a pit.
These cesspits had to be periodically emptied, a dirty and unpleasant task, but the contents provided an important source of fertilizer. Medieval people recognized the connection between working animal and human waste into the soil and improved corp yields. Villagers would use this material to fertilize their own land. Towns and cities would establish dump sites outside of the town for disposal of waste, and farmers from the surrounding area could cart it away for use. Some cities of the later medieval ages even established regular dung cart services to remove such waste, be it human or animal, and transport it out of the city to such dump sites.
In medieval times, they dumped waste into the street gutters.
they didnt
No they didn't
well we are middle ages people! so how do we live with our animals?
The church had the most power in the middle ages because it was the one thing that united people.
The Middle Ages were also called the Age of Faith.
No one is really sure. Books based in the middle ages with weird narritive, is only a guess of the way people talked back then.
No they didn't
In the Middle Ages, a privy cleaner was a toilet cleaner.
People did not differentiate between disease, infection and illness in the middle ages. They did not know about bacteria and virus. All they new abut was poisons, injury, and curses, any of which could be blamed.
well we are middle ages people! so how do we live with our animals?
People liked pudding and pickles in the middle ages
During the Middle Ages, most people were farmers.
During the Middle Ages, most people were farmers.
answer.
No
In the middle ages, the average range that people would live to was about 30-40.
people in the middle ages used letters or talking to face to face
Banquets, annual parties, and going to theater. The last one occurred later on in the middle ages, but was still in the middle ages. People who were able to read were also able to do that for enjoyment.