Barley soups and rye bread.
what kind of question are you saying to answer!?.
Corn meal, oatmeal, ham, water, bread, ir nothing at all.
There really isn't a "typical" American breakfast as many Americans have vastly varying habits and tastes, but American breakfasts most often consist of some kind of a cereal based dish or an egg-based dish. The most popular breakfast beverage is coffee.
The middle ages lasted a thousand years and happened across a continent. There were a lot of kings; each was an individual, and each could do pretty much what he wanted. It was kind of like the joke, "Where does the elephant sit? Anywhere he wants." That said, however, it seems kings might usually have had no breakfast, or, if you prefer, a noon time dinner for breakfast. Working people needed to have calories in them to work, so they ate breakfast. People who did not labor avoided breakfast because not having it was a sign of status. The Church was against gluttony, so it advocated not eating unnecessary meal. There is a link below to the section on meals in a Wikipedia article on medieval cuisine.
Thatch hut
If you mean monarch butterfly's then no. But if you mean the kind of monarch that ruled in medieval Europe then no again. Next time remember to clarify. Hope this helped you. :)
no one cares about the medieval times!
Some were kind and some were not.
Cheese, bread, wine, perhaps some sliced beef and a piece of fruit.
puftees
crumpets and tea
Marketing? The idea of eating an actual meal for breakfast... including, usually, meat and eggs... is uncommon in most of Europe, where the typical breakfast is the "continental breakfast": coffee or tea, fruit juice, and bread or a pastry. Places that offer bacon, sausage, eggs, potatoes, pancakes, etc. advertise it as an "English breakfast" to make it clear that it's not just coffee and a biscuit. The US (and most other former portions of the British Empire) usually tend to think of "breakfast" as involving a hot meal. In the US many hotels offer a complimentary breakfast to guests; this may be a "continental breakfast" as described above, or it may be a full breakfast, in which case it will usually be called an "American breakfast" to avoid confusing anyone who might think that an "English breakfast" was, say, tea and crumpets or some kind of disgusting "pudding" made out of blood.