Dates for the Middle Ages are given variously as starting with dates ranging from 395 AD and 510 AD, and ending with dates ranging from 1400 AD to 1517 AD. In the UK, the dates given are often given as 1000 AD or 1066 AD to 1500 AD or thereabouts; this usage makes the dates of 400 AD to 1000 AD in the Dark Ages. I am using the broader definition. because it answers the narrower as well.
What education medieval people received depended greatly on their social status and where they lived.
In Eastern Europe, the East Roman Empire ran a system of primary schools with a view to seeing all soldiers be literate. The implication is that education was generally available to anyone who might become a soldier, and this included nearly all peasants. Primary schools operated at the village level and were available for people of both sexes. The system founded in 425 AD and continued to operate until the Byzantine Empire fell in 1453. (see link below for the history and development of schools)
The East Roman Empire also founded a university at Constantinople in 425, along with universities in other cities. These also remained open while they were under Byzantine control. They do not normally appear in lists of medieval universities because they did not grant the same degrees as western universities. (see the link below on the University of Constantinople)
I cannot speak to education in Eastern Europe outside the Byzantine Empire.
In Western Europe, there were also schools open throughout the Middle Ages. There is little history of this because they did not usually survive the thousand year period and the five hundred years since that time. Nevertheless, we know that a school in Llantwit Major, in Wales, called Cor Tewdws, or Theodosius' College, was opened by Roman Emperor Theodosius, before the Middle Ages started, and closed by the English King Henry VIII, after the Middle Ages ended. So there was at least one school that existed throughout the entire period (though there was a period from 446 to 508 when Cor Tewdws might or might not have been temporarily closed). (see link below for Cor Tewdws)
There were schools throughout Europe in the Middle Ages, and there are over seventy primary and secondary schools still running today that were opened during the time. The oldest still extant is King's School in Canterbury, which has been operating since 597. Beverley Grammar School was opened as a state run school in Northumbria in 700, and remains open today, and it clearly remained open during the decades when the government of the area was controlled by Vikings, who therefore must have continued to support it, or at least condone is existence. Other schools I personally find interesting are Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík, which opened in Iceland in 1056, at the end of the Viking Age, and Riga State Gymnasium No. 1, which originally opened in Riga, Latvia, in 1211, when Riga was a twelve year old village, and whose opening points out the value placed on education among people of a small town. We have no way of knowing how many primary and secondary schools there were in Europe, but with more than seventy remaining from over 500 years ago, there were clearly hundreds open at the time, and more probably thousands. (see link below for the list of the oldest schools in the world)
Western universities began to open with the University of Bologna in 1088, Some universities were opened by the Church, an example being the University of Paris; some by governments, and Oxford and Cambridge were of this type; and some by other types of organizations, such as the University of Bologna, which was organized by the students themselves, who therefore had a position of some authority over the teachers. The education depended on the nature of the founding organizations, and while universities under Church control may have stressed theology, the others included such things as music and language as important parts of the education from the beginnings. The universities were founded from earlier institutions that were only less formally constituted, and these earlier schools go back to the sixth centuries. By the end of the Middle Ages, there were over seventy universities in Europe. (see the link below for medieval universities)
Other institutions of higher learning also operated in Western Europe. The Medical School of Salerno is descended from earlier schools at Velia that moved to Salerno during the early part of the Age of Migrations. The school in Velia had been open under the Roman Empire. The school at Salerno was considered among the best medical schools in the West during the Middle Ages. It survived as a medical school, and was chartered as a university in the 20th century. (see the link on the University of Salerno)
In the High Middle Ages, the introduction of Arabic numerals meant that business people had to be educated in the new systems of mathematics. The schools opened for this purpose, called abacus schools, taught literacy in the vernacular along with arithmetic and geometry. Some of them were open to both boys and girls. (see the link on abacus schools)
Educational opportunities varied by class.
Serfs of Western Europe did not generally get education beyond learning farming or other work from their parents.
Freemen were peasants also, and also farmed. They were also not generally educated in most times and places of Western Europe. Nevertheless, we do know that some of these people were educated. King Alfred the Great advocated for education for everyone of the status of freeman and above who was able to learn. This education, interestingly, was to be done in English, not Latin, and King Alfred also sponsored translations of great literature into English to make the books available for his subjects in general. (see link below for King Alfred's position on religion and culture)
Clergy were mostly educated in monasteries. The education became improved with time. Early in the Middle Ages, there were concerns recorded in history that some priests did not have any ability to read, and were operating on the basis of memorization of the Mass and sections of the Bible. By the 13th century, however, nearly half of all of the men in the highest church offices, at the level of abbot or archbishop and above, had masters degrees, as did a third of those at the next lower levels. (see the link for universities)
Lawyers and clerks of the Middle Ages had always been educated in those areas where Roman law was retained, as it was written rather than memorized. As kingdoms one after another codified laws in written form, during the fifth through eighth centuries, it became more and more important for commoners working in the courts to be educated. These people, like the clergy, were from the middle class or were younger sons of the nobility, and they were given the benefit of clergy, even when they were not ordained and living entirely secular lives. They were educated primarily in monasteries or schools. (see link on Universities)
Members of the nobility were sometimes uneducated in the Early Middle Ages, but remained so at their peril, because stewards and mayors of the palaces had a tendency to marginalize and replace those over whom they could get control. More than one king fostered literacy among his vassals. Of these, Charlemagne is perhaps the best known. It is recorded of Charlemagne that he could speak Latin, understood Greek better than he could speak it, and had a little Arabic, all in addition to his native tongue. He was clearly an educated man, though an inability to write well is recorded. He made certain that his children were all educated, and promoted education among the nobility. He had schools founded, and founded at least one himself, the Gymnasium Carolinum in Osnabrück, Germany, which remains open to this day. (see links on Charlemagne and the list of the oldest schools in the world, below)
For women of the nobility, as well as the noblemen themselves, education was important in some places. King Alfred insisted that his daughters be educated, a policy that paid off as his daughter, Ethelfleda, ruled Mercia on behalf of a husband who was unable to do the job himself. Indeed, when her husband died, she continued to rule, and was considered a formidable military leader. Other medieval women also, while attractive to marry for political reasons, received educations so they could rule in their husbands' steads when they were away or sick, or as regents, as required. Empress Matilda is an example of such a woman, as her education is recorded. These women benefited from special educations, beyond what was available in schools, and were usually tutored. Nevertheless, we know that Matilda of Scotland (also called Edith), who was the queen of the English King Henry I, was educated in a convent. (see links below on Alfred the Great, Ethelfleda, Empress Matilda, and Matilda of Scotland)
Some ethnic groups had their own educational systems.Among these were Jews who lived in many places, and Muslims, who were in Spain in large numbers through most of the Middle Ages, and in a number of other places, such as Sicily, southern Italy, and the Balkans. For both of these groups, education was a matter of religious policy. Formal education for Jews was established in the 1st century and continued since. (see link for Jewish education below)
they weren't.
they really were educated, they were just educated privately or homeschooled.
Witchcraft was not a common activity for women in the late Middle Ages.
THE CLERGY WERE THE MOST EDUCATED CLASS IN THE MEDIEVAL TIMEhope i help you with this answer =]
Monks
Monastaries
No one. They were not educated. Only the nobles.
There were many uncommon roles for women during the Middle Ages. They include, but are not limited to:PriestsMonarchsSoldiersKnightsScholarsMillersSummonersPardonersParsonsSquiresFriarsReevesLawyersClerksMerchantsPhysiciansYeomenManciplesFranklinsSailorsMonks
yes a woman did travel in the middle ages
During the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Europe women worshipped in churches.
During the middle ages noble women had no opportunity no learn how to read and write.
because they didn't have jobs and they wasn't educated