Because people didn't travel too far back then, there were many more local languages and dialects. So there was no single language that "most" people spoke. The educated classes - priests, scribes, and the like - generally spoke Latin or Greek or both.
The common English people spoke English. In the Early Middle Ages, it was Old English, and in the Late Middle Ages it was Middle English. Other languages were also spoken by other peoples in England, including Welsh, in Wales, Cornish, in Cornwall and Devonshire, and some Danish, in the area called the Danelaw.
English was commonly spoken only in England. In France, most people spoke French, and in the scattered states and provinces that would later become Italy, the people spoke various derivations of Latin.
The educated elite of most of Europe generally spoke Latin and/or Greek in addition to their local language.
In much of Europe in the Middle Ages the educated people (mainly cclergymen) could use Latin as well as their local languages.
That depended entirely on what country they lived in.
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The Church of England did not exist during the Middle Ages. It was formed after the Dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII at the beginning of the modern era.
Dental
Japan and Western Europe Had Your Mom In Common During The Middle Ages... If You Would Like The Real Answer, Please... Try To Use Google. Hope I Helped.!
The most common religion in the Middle East is Islam (though that can be broken down to Sunni and Shi'ite forms). The major language is Arabic (though note, there are many different dialects).
There are one main characteristics of England. The main thing was the common language making the pope as powerful.
Chaucer wrote "The Canterbury Tales" in Middle English because it was the common language spoken by the people in England at that time. He wanted to appeal to a wider audience and make his stories accessible to a broader readership. Middle English was also the language of the court and literature during the 14th century.
Arabic is the most common language spoken in the middle east.
In Chaucer's time, Middle English was the language spoken in England. It was a transitioning period between Old English and Modern English, and during this time, English was heavily influenced by French due to the Norman Conquest.
Geoffrey Chaucer wrote "The Canterbury Tales" in Middle English, which was the common spoken and written language in England during the late 14th century. Middle English is distinct from older forms of the language like Old English and from the modern form of English that we use today.
The common language for medieval French was known as Old French. It evolved from Latin and was spoken from the 9th to the 14th century. Old French was the main language of literature and legal documents during that time period.
The most common language in the Middle East is Arabic. It is spoken in Saudia Arabia, Jordan, Palestine, Syria, Iraq....
elizabeth blackwell does not have a middle name. very common in Britain to only have a first and last name.
The most common language in the middle east is Arabic. It is spoken in Saudia Arabia, Jordan, Palestine, Syria, Iraq....
Latin was used as a common language all over Western Europe. Greek was used similarly, to a degree, in the East.
In England during the Middle Ages
did the queen of England, Victoria rule during the middle ages?