Privies or privy, chambers, royal chamber.
The age of faith
1st answer:Dark ages or middle ages. No "age of"2nd answer:There are those who call the Middle Ages the Age of FaithThe Middle Ages are sometimes called the Age of Darkness, which I believe is a poor name for the period.Within the Middle Ages was a period sometimes called the Age of Chivalry, and another age, with somewhat different connotations but possibly similar dates, called the Age of the Mounted Knight.Also within the Middle Ages were several ages called renaissances. Among these were the Carolingian Renaissance, the Islamic Renaissance, the Ottonian Renaissance, the Macedonian Renaissance, the Renaissance of the 12th Century, and the first half or so of the European Renaissance. In fact nearly all of the time after about 700 AD fell into one or more of these periods.I have heard the Late Middle Ages (1300-1453) called the Age of the Longbow.Depending on how you define the Middle Ages, they included all or important parts of the Age of Migrations (about 300 to 700 AD).
That 1000 years is called the Middle Ages, medieval period, or even Age of Faith.
The duration of Middle Age Spread is 1.63 hours.
The Renaissance
Toilets are known as latrines.
There were no indoor toilets; they had to go outside; although there may possibly have been outhouses.
The Middle Stone Age is also called the Mesolithic Age or Mesolithic Era.
There wasn't toilets on the ships.
it is in middle age
it is in middle age
it is in middle age
The Middle Stone Age is also called the Middle Paleolithic or Mesolithic Ages. There are two different systems of naming. One has Paleolithic and Neolithic Ages, with the Middle Stone Age being equivalent of the Middle Paleolithic Age. The other divides the Stone Age into the Old Stone Age, or Paleolithic, the Middle Stone Age or Mesolithic, and the New Stone age or Neolithic.
mola your but
Dolphininae
Roman toilets were not called baths, they were called foricae. Baths were called thermae and they were social centers in addition to being places to bathe. All the thermae (baths) had foricae (toilets).
middle-age