The rise of secular literature in the Middle Ages can be attributed to the developments in vernacular languages and the growing literacy of the urban population. Writers and poets such as Dante Alighieri, Geoffrey Chaucer, and Marie de France contributed to the flourishing of secular literature by creating works that explored themes beyond religious doctrine. This shift towards secular literature also paralleled the emergence of Humanism and the revival of classical learning during the period.
Yea it's definatly Gregory I
Turkey
False
The flourishing of literature during the Elizabethan Age was influenced by factors such as the stability and prosperity of England under Queen Elizabeth I, the patronage of the arts by the royal court and nobility, the growth of the printing press, and the Renaissance ideas spreading from Italy. This period also saw a renewed interest in classical literature and a growing middle class with access to education, contributing to a wealth of literary output.
dancimg
No.
There was no literature in the middle ages. It takes a printing press to publish literature and that wasn't invented until 1446 in Germany. People couldn't read or write in the middle ages so no one could read literature, if it had existed. Because there was no "new vernacular literature" it did not reflect a national pride. People also didn't have "nationalism" in the middle ages. They owed an allegiance to a king and the nobility.
because of me
Vestibular apparatus from the middle ear is mainly responsible for balance.
Except for Turkey and Israel, almost every Middle Eastern country has adopted a religious or quasi-secular legal code. The country with the strongest religious code is Iran, followed by Saudi Arabia.
The Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ)
Carter F. Hanson has written: 'Emigration, nation, vocation' -- subject(s): History and criticism, History, Class consciousness in literature, Vocation in literature, Immigrants in literature, Immigrants' writings, Canadian, British, English fiction, Middle class in literature, Middle class, Emigration and immigration in literature, National characteristics, English, in literature