Any nearby forest would supply all a Middle Agexd town's needs.
a medieval merchant would either live in a seperate house in the same village/town or have his house built into his shop :)
The lord of a village or town would live in a manor house.
No. Blacksmithing is a different skill.
The best place to find materials to build cubicles in Minneapolis would be to search for the nearest Home Depot. There, you will find lots of materials to help you build your cubicles.
Actors would travel from village to village, build a small stage in the village common, or the houses of Royalty, and perform in the open air.
The medieval knights got their names from their possessions. They usually did not have surnames but owned land, so they would use the title of their territory, region, village, or the like as their names.
In medieval times people shopped at open air markets. Every village had its own market to provide locals with the things that they need.
There was no standard position for the church within a medieval village; it could be sited anywhere inside or outside the village boundary. Many English churches are at one end of the medieval village street, which would be mainly occupied by domestic buildings. Others are placed centrally. The "end of the village street" option is clearly seen in the excavations at the abandoned medieval village at Wharram Percy, where the two manor houses and peasant dwellings are ranged around the central road and the church, priest's house and mill are together at the southern end. There was certainly no specific reason for the positioning of the church in relation to other buildings.
Im not sure about this but i heard that almost everybody knew each other so it should be around 100. but, if you are talking about a village outside of a castle then it would be about 700.
If I am trying to build a soundproof room, I would use foam and egg cartons for materials.
There was no fixed number of people in a village. A village was defined in terms of features. A village had no permanent market, had one church, and was surrounded by a green zone, which is to say it could not be adjacent to another village. A permanent market or a second church would turn it into a town. Without a church, it was a hamlet. But clearly, a village could exist with a single family, provided it had a church, and could have 1000 people, provided they all went to the same church and did not build a market. A city, by the way, was a town with a cathedral or a charter.
it would take a whole lod a money you could nae afford it