No. The closest you can get to it are so-called "living museums," where interpreters (many of whom are historians or students of history) act out the role of people from another era. The actors and actresses at these sites try to emulate the clothing, food, and gender roles of the old days; they even imitate the work that people did back then. There are also Renaissance Fairs which go around the country recreating some aspects of the middle ages and the Renaissance. But other than actual museums where you can see artifacts from medieval times, and other than people who act out what life was like back then, there are currently no communities that still live that way.
Prisoners can starve to death even in modern times if nobody gives them food.
Oh yes, flour was in use during the medieval period. Flour was used even in the ancient world, that preceded the medieval period. It has been in use for thousands of years.
Well obviously not. The technology needed was just not available back then. They didn't even have running water.
The medieval concept of Heaven is much as the modern concept is. The Church has not changed its teachings, and there is really no new information. It is and has been viewed as a place for the departed spirits of good people, who worship God in an attitude of bliss. I think even the harps are included in the medieval ideas on the subject.
Yes. Many forms of torture and even death could be inflicted on anyone questioning God or the church.
Physical geography is essentially unchanged from medieval times to today. Political geography, of course, has changed beyond all recognition. Few political entities of medieval times have even survived to today, and those that have have mostly very different borders or internal boundaries.
Many medieval women had maids. Even the wealthier peasant families had servants in some times and places.
Prisoners can starve to death even in modern times if nobody gives them food.
Oh yes, flour was in use during the medieval period. Flour was used even in the ancient world, that preceded the medieval period. It has been in use for thousands of years.
there are deffently times to lie. i just got in a fight with a friend and i lied to her today. so even i do it. there are deffently times to lie. i just got in a fight with a friend and i lied to her today. so even i do it. there are deffently times to lie. i just got in a fight with a friend and i lied to her today. so even i do it. there are deffently times to lie. i just got in a fight with a friend and i lied to her today. so even i do it. there are deffently times to lie. i just got in a fight with a friend and i lied to her today. so even i do it. there are deffently times to lie. i just got in a fight with a friend and i lied to her today. so even i do it.
Guilds were the equivalent to what unions were today without all of the labor rights incorporated as labor laws were much less prevalent in the medieval times. Guilds were organized groups of people of the same trade where skills were taught and shared. Some guilds even held informal/ prototypical small scale schools with workshops.
Usually queens lived in palaces. Sometimes they lived in castles, or even convents.
Popes in medieval times were treated extremely well. They lived in luxury and were essentially the rulers of Rome. Often, popes became incredibly wealthy, and even had secret lovers or fathered children while they were Pope.
Well obviously not. The technology needed was just not available back then. They didn't even have running water.
In medieval times, I'm sure the Japanese ate sushi. Knights, kings, queens, and those kinds of people, didn't even know sushi existed.
No, that's not normal for modern times. For medieval times it wouldn't be that strange. But for today's standards, i wouldn't share things like that.
In medieval time the marrage was mostly not your chose. The man and the wife would not meet even before they were married. They married for money and not love in that time.