France changed and evolved (just like everything else) over the very long medieval period. Similarly the names for the country were different in different languages.
In Anglo-Norman French, France was variously known as France, Franche, Franse, Fraunsse, Fraunce, Fraunche, Frauncze.
In Middle English the terms Franks, Fransh and Frensh were used.
For much of the medieval period France was not the same as the country we know today; in 1154 it consisted of a very small area around Paris and Orleans while Henry II of England owned a much greater area consisting of Normandy, Maine, Anjou, Touraine, Poitou, Berry, Angouleme, Aquitaine, Limousin, Perigord and as far south as Gascony (this was all therefore English territory); Brittany, Burgundy, Toulouse and Flanders were all independent kingdoms unconnected to the kings of France or England.
I believe that the French term for the Middle Ages is, "Le Moyen Âge."
France, though some of today's France wasn't yet part of France.
France, though some of today's France wasn't yet part of France.
England
well your wording is confusing😕
During the Middle Ages art was mainly commissioned by The Church.
During the middle ages noble women had no opportunity no learn how to read and write.
Yes, Thomas Aquinas lived from 1225 to 1275, during the period of the Middle Ages called the High Middle Ages.
France in the Middle Ages was created in 843.
A person who lived in the Middle Ages is called medieval.
During the middle ages, heresy trials were called inquisitions.
England
gothic
Food is very popular
france england portugal and scottland
No or it wouldn't be called "Elizabethan" it would have been called the middle ages. Two different time periods.
buthead
If you were kind an polite, you might be called chivalrous.
The king
The third period of the Middle Ages was the Late Middle Ages. The first is called the Early Middle Ages or the Dark Age. The second period was the High Middle Ages.