Nobles usually did not live in palaces unless they were there as guests or employees of the king. A palace is nearly always the residence of a king or bishop. There were a couple of counts palatine, who lived in palaces, but the count palatine was not an ordinary count, and was ranked above a duke and just below a king.
Nobles lived in brick homes or luxurious palaces.
they lived in houses with sticks and they lived in stone palaces.
The Mayan's used to live in the buildings (temples and palaces) on top of their pyramids, not to sure about the egyptians. You could build a pyramid and live in it so i would say yes =)
yes, because they were teqnically nobles.
When the Qin government took away the fiefs the nobles had no where to live so the government moved them to Qin Empire's capital
Nobles lived in brick homes or luxurious palaces.
Very well. A good example of this is the palaces of the Medici family in Florence, Italy ( the heart of the Renassiance). They were so wealthy that they built a special passage so they wouldn't have to go into the street to move around.
Palace
In palaces called pharohs.
The three estates divided the social classes of Revolution Era France. There was an estate that had the wealth nobles, there was an estate that had church people in it, such as priests and bishops, and there was an estate that had the common people in it. It was unequal as the nobles lived comfortable lives in their palaces and the common people sometimes had to steal bread just to live.
the one in surrey
they lived in palaces made of coral and gems
Pharoahs live in grand palaces built for them by peasants. The pharoas palaces were very lavish and built on a greater scale than other Egyptian homes.
Your mums house
they lived in houses with sticks and they lived in stone palaces.
No, the Royals usually live in Palaces or Stately homes in the UK. There are none in Blackpool.
Were everyone peasants, there would be no peasants.