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The nobility, middle class, and peasants or lower class.
Think of two classes; the ruling class (royalty, nobility) and the working class (peasantry) with no class in between. Then there appears a middle class (or merchant class). As the middle class grows, it rises in political importance.
Any class or group in society other than the nobility, the clergy, the middle class, and the press.
Catherine was from neither a rich or poor family but a comfortable middle class.
Mollie
In the Middle Ages, there were sumptuary laws, so the nobility could be distinguished from the merely wealthy middle class.
Lower nobility, some clergy and most knights were considered to be members of the middle class in medieval society during the Middle Ages. Often, these people were richer than those classified as upper class.
a change from the government
If you think about it, there was always a middle class, a class that was neither peasant nor nobility. The middle class included stewards for noblemen, lawyers, physicians, jewelers, and a variety of other people who provided services to the wealthy and important, but who were not members of the nobility itself. Prior to the High Middle Ages, when the crusades happened, the middle class was very small. The emergence of the middle class, as a group with political power, began in such places as Venice, where government was republican from its founding in 697, and other medieval city states and communes. The strength of the middle class spread across Europe with various circumstances and developments, such as the rise of guilds, which possibly began at the beginning of the Middle Ages. The crusades were important, but the rise of the middle class can be traced back further.
Burgoisies The well-to-do and the poor (Apex)
Jesters were middle class people. In order to do their work, they could really not be serfs. But they could also not be members of the nobility. There were quite a few middle class people in the Middle Ages, despite what some people would think. Anyone who was not working as a laborer for hire, and was not a member of the nobility, would have been middle class, and that would have included merchants, craftsmen, bakers, inn keepers, surgeons, attorneys, stewards, and so on. Jesters fit in with them.