During the Middle Ages, artists were mostly independent craftsmen. This put them outside the much talked about structure of medieval social classes, which consisted of peasants, nobles, and clergy. Along with merchants, craftsmen were what we would call middle class, a group most medieval social theorists chose to ignore when they wrote about the structure of feudalism.
upper class
because he was born into the middle ages
the middle class was the freetowners, it goes POPE KING NOBLES KNIGHTS FREETOWNERS PEASANTS SERFS The Middle Class rose during the Middle Ages in Europe for a variety of reasons. First of these reasons is that the workers became richer in the aftermath of the Black Death. Secondly, education in Europe was greatly improved with the invention of the Printing Press. Thirdly, the formation of banking greatly improved the economy in favour of the Middle Class. Lastly, the formation of medieval republics benefited the Middle Class. The Middle class consisted of Freetowners, people below the knights and nobles but above peasants and serfs... https://sites.google.com/site/seniorschoolstudy/history/rise-of-the-middle-class---middle-ages
ChurchThe centres of Medieval life were the castle or manor of the lord and the church.
2
Labourer's carpenters, blacksmiths, Farrier's silversmiths, soldiers, artists, sailer's butcher's fishermen, to name but a few.
A middle class
Yes they did
because he was born into the middle ages
Middle class
There was no social mobility within the feudal system of the Middle Ages. Whatever class you were born into, you remained in.
no it wasn't easy. but it was easier for the Early Moderns (the TUdors etc. ) to move from one class to the other!
a servant
Most castles in the Middle Ages were built over a span of a decade or more. They were built by masons and carpenters, mostly of stone.
The Plebians were the lowest class The Equestrians were in the middle Then the highest class was the Patrician class.
There was no middle class in Europe in the middle ages. People were either very rich or very poor. Towards the late middle ages a merchant class did develop, but this couldn't be called "middle class". The concept of a middle class is a modern idea and actually began to develop after the industrial revolution.
the answer is not there :(
Lower Class