No. Guild members would live in their own house. Often the house was attached or part of the craft that the guild member would make. For instance the leather maker would need an area away from most people because the process to make leather was very stinky and required several ponds or vats to cure the leather. The silversmith may live within the town and do his work within his house. The cobbler would be the same way, so it just depended on the skill of the guild memeber and what guild he would belong to.
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.
Feudalism was already in decline by the time of the Crusades due to factors such as the growth of centralized monarchies and the rise of commerce. The Crusades did contribute to the decline of feudalism by weakening the power of feudal lords and increasing the authority of monarchs. However, it is unlikely that feudalism would have continued indefinitely even without the Crusades due to the broader socio-economic changes taking place in Europe during that time.
During the Middle Ages, artists were mostly independent craftsmen. This put them outside the much talked about structure of medieval social classes, which consisted of peasants, nobles, and clergy. Along with merchants, craftsmen were what we would call middle class, a group most medieval social theorists chose to ignore when they wrote about the structure of feudalism.
Roman Catholic AnswerIf by "feudal Church" you mean the Catholic Church during the time of feudalism, that is sort of an involved topic, I would start with the Catholic Encyclopedia article on Feudalism below:
Good
A system of obligations that bound lords and their subjects in Europe during much of the Middle Ages. In theory, the king owned all or most of the land and gave it to his leading nobles in return for their loyalty and military service. The nobles in turn held land that peasants, including serfs, were allowed to farm in return for the peasants' labor and a portion of their produce. Under feudalism, people were born with a permanent position in society.
Europeans responded to the increased stability caused by feudalism by going to war over inheritance rights to land. Eventually, the Popes encouraged landowners to take part in the Crusades in the Middle East and the Reconquista in Spain, so that they would be too busy for these fratricidal wars.
In the Middle Ages, when someone died at home, their body would typically be prepared for burial by family members or local community members. This involved washing and dressing the body, followed by a wake or vigil where family and friends would come to pay their respects. The body would then be buried in a local churchyard or family plot.
it dosent matter
There are quite a few things that people during the middle ages would eat at a wedding. Meats of all kinds are included.
No not really.
they would get sick