It is unlikely. Although the treatment and legal status of Jews varied by place and time, in many cases access to trades was restricted. Once the guild system was established in the High and Late Middle Ages Jews were often denied guild membership, and thus the ability to practice a craft was limited. Most commonly, Jews in medieval Europe lived in Urban areas and made their living as merchants and traders, or in professions that served the Jewish community.
No or it wouldn't be called "Elizabethan" it would have been called the middle ages. Two different time periods.
The rise of banking was one of the things that happened as the Middle Ages drew to an end. There were possibly banks in some market places at the end of the Middle Ages, but there certainly would have been none during most of the Middle Ages.
Nearly all the histories I have read say that the Renaissance began before the Middle Ages ended, so there was some overlap. I think possibly all of them would have put 1454 into the Renaissance. The dates I have seen for the end of the Middle Ages range from 1400 to 1517. Most of them have been 1453, but a few have been 1492 or 1400. So some, but possibly not most, historians would put 1454 in the Middle Ages.
I have been thinking about this and I think granite would be the strongest mineral used in this time.
Actually in the Middle Ages, hospitals and surgery were very primitive. Their doctors were not certified, and they had no anesthetics, not even ether. It would have been important if they really had hospitals and surgery. Mostly, as far as I have heard, they would do a lot of bloodletting.
People in the middle ages would have seen the same constellations that we do. Just like people who know the skies now can point out Orion, people of the middle ages who knew the skies would have been able to point out Orion.
Since the middle ages where preoccupied with the plague, we have no way to know how the Middle Ages would have been without the plague.
The bubonic plague
No or it wouldn't be called "Elizabethan" it would have been called the middle ages. Two different time periods.
No, not at all. A blacksmith would have been a smart and industrious person.
I think a blacksmith would have been paid in wood.
No castles have been built since the middle ages
The rise of banking was one of the things that happened as the Middle Ages drew to an end. There were possibly banks in some market places at the end of the Middle Ages, but there certainly would have been none during most of the Middle Ages.
Nearly all the histories I have read say that the Renaissance began before the Middle Ages ended, so there was some overlap. I think possibly all of them would have put 1454 into the Renaissance. The dates I have seen for the end of the Middle Ages range from 1400 to 1517. Most of them have been 1453, but a few have been 1492 or 1400. So some, but possibly not most, historians would put 1454 in the Middle Ages.
Yes
Sweets were not generally available in the middle-ages. Any that were available would have been based on dried fruits and honey.
I have been thinking about this and I think granite would be the strongest mineral used in this time.