There was no first ruler in the Middle Ages. Historians debate over when the Middle Ages started, and the dates I have seen range from 395 to 500. We can be pretty sure that through all that time there was more than one ruler at any one time in the different countries in Europe.
Sex, murder, and farming are all equally important in the middle ages
marriage was a great tradition in the middle ages. Grooms had to be older than brides at all noble weddings.
The Church
See attached link
One thing that remained through the Middle Ages, all over the areas where the Roman Empire had been, was the Church.
There was no ethnicity. The Middle Ages applied all over Europe to all groups of people. It was a time, not a race.
There was no first ruler in the Middle Ages. Historians debate over when the Middle Ages started, and the dates I have seen range from 395 to 500. We can be pretty sure that through all that time there was more than one ruler at any one time in the different countries in Europe.
Sex, murder, and farming are all equally important in the middle ages
not all of them
Jews
The dark ages is an old fashioned term for the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages were a laterhistoricalperiod. It was the period which followed the fall of thewesternpart of the Roman empire. Therefore, there were no Roman rulers in the Middle Ages. Moreover, if by the people of God you are referring to theChristians, by the Late Roman Empire,Christianityhad become theofficialreligion of the Roman Empire. In the Middle Agesthe popes were verypowerfulfigures in the city of Rome and all over western Europe.
marriage was a great tradition in the middle ages. Grooms had to be older than brides at all noble weddings.
For the most part in the middle ages the main religion was Christian, but it all depends on the culture and/ or country you go to.
Islam is an Arabic word that means submission and surrender to God. It is the basis of worship of all God creations in all ages including the Middle ages. Refer to related question below.
Papal supremacy the claim of medieval popes that they held authority over all secular, nonreligious rulers
when the king went all the way from the top of the food chain, all the way to the bottom when the nobles came and took over.