No, people in the middle ages had to be prepared for war at any time. It was a struggle to survive and was a truly bloodthirsty time.
No. The Middle ages lasted from 410 AD to 1400 and Elizabethan England was when Queen Elizabeth I was in power in 1500's.
The middle ages is called the middle ages because its in the middle of two different time periods, or periods of time, in which things were a certain way for a that period of time.
Some people regard the Middle Ages as beginning when the ancient times ended. Others have the ancient times ending in the middle of the 5th century, and the Middle Ages starting in the 11th. According to the first of these, the time between the ancient times and the Middle Ages is called the Early Middle Ages, but the later usage would have it be called the Dark Ages.
The Roman Empire was followed by the Middle Ages: Early Middle Ages (5th to 10th century), High Middle Ages (c. 1001 to 1300) and Late Middle Ages (1300 to 1500).
King Henry VIII had six wives but this was during the time of the Reformation, not the Middle Ages.
No. The Middle ages lasted from 410 AD to 1400 and Elizabethan England was when Queen Elizabeth I was in power in 1500's.
England's traditional friends and allies at the time were Holland and Flanders.
It was the time when many European countries were forged such as England and France.
Before the middle ages was Anquity (Greeks and Romans) and after the middle ages was the Renissance
Henry III from 1216-1272. That is 56 years.
The period of time from 500 AD to 1500 AD is called the Middle Ages.
king henry eight was in the middle ages between 1497 and 1594
Early Middle Ages 400 - 700, High Middle Ages 700 - 1300, Late Middle Ages 1300 -1500.
The middle ages is called the middle ages because its in the middle of two different time periods, or periods of time, in which things were a certain way for a that period of time.
The time!✝
The middle ages wasn't on a continent!! The middle ages was a time period, not an event. : P
410 to 1400 is the middle ages also known as the "dark ages".