Secular clergy included priests, who mostly inhabited the rectories of their churches, and bishops, who mostly lived in bishops' palaces.
Regular clergy, which included nuns and monks of all sorts, mostly lived in monasteries, convents, and abbeys. Some monks lived alone in cottages, huts, or caves, and some were homeless and dependent on others to house them.
The clergy could administer the sacraments, so everyone who hoped to gain salvation depended on clergy to help them.
The Clergy
The two parts were secular clergy, who lived like any of us, and interacted with people on a regular basis. And the Regular Clergy, who was made up of monks and nuns! === ===
Sleep!
Usually there is a hierarchy within the clergy itself for governance. Ultimately, it is the people who support the denomination or sect that have the power. In medieval times in Europe, it was common for the King/Queen to have final authority over the clergy.
The "common" people was everyone who wasn't clergy or noble and that was about 90% of the population.
with the horses
In "The Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer, the clergy members are the Prioress (head of a convent), the Monk, the Friar, the Parson (humble village priest), and the Summoner. Each of these characters represents different aspects of the clergy in medieval society.
The cook would sleep in the Great Hall with everyone else
There were many people in a royal family in medieval times. These were the king, queen, prince, princess, queen mother, regent, clergy, nobility, and tradesmen and merchants.
Pope Clergy monks Kings Nobles
THE CLERGY WERE THE MOST EDUCATED CLASS IN THE MEDIEVAL TIMEhope i help you with this answer =]