Your question doesn't make sense. First we can NOT know what people thought that long ago. We can know what they wore, what they ate, where they lived but not what they thought. The only way in history to know how someone thinks is to read what they wrote ( people in the middle ages were not literate). We can read the thoughts of monks and sometimes kings, but this doesn't tell us a general impression.
Conflict did not exist between the medieval mind and Christianity as most people then understood Christianity. The Christianity of the medieval period followed the thinking of St Augustine. A few Protestants existed like Occum, Abelard, and Wycliffe, but most were Roman Catholics.
The Renaissance spirit embraced the secular literature of ancient Greece and Rome, where as the medieval mind considered it pagan. References to Greco-Roman deities abound in Renaissance literature.
In the 16th century Europeans became less God fearing and more rational and scientific in their outlook. It put an end to the superstitious medieval mind-set
in medieval towns
Medieval castles.
The cast of Inside the Medieval Mind - 2008 includes: Hugh Gilbert as himself
never mind lol
Conflict did not exist between the medieval mind and Christianity as most people then understood Christianity. The Christianity of the medieval period followed the thinking of St Augustine. A few Protestants existed like Occum, Abelard, and Wycliffe, but most were Roman Catholics.
The Renaissance spirit embraced the secular literature of ancient Greece and Rome, where as the medieval mind considered it pagan. References to Greco-Roman deities abound in Renaissance literature.
In the 16th century Europeans became less God fearing and more rational and scientific in their outlook. It put an end to the superstitious medieval mind-set
Many adjectives come to mind - a few are:fundisorganisedscarywilduntidydrunkenrowdy
Some of the women of medieval Europe were among the most culturally influential people of their times. Among those who come to mind, Eleanor of Aquitaine comes to mind as a promoter of the arts. There is a link below to a related question on the things medieval women did, and there is a good deal of information in the answer there, together with source citations.
The Crusades were clashes of the Christian and Muslim religions and they weren't really important because it was just a war between two beliefs (mind you, a BIG war).
The word "jester" (as in "a professional fool or clown, esp. at a medieval court.2.a professional fool or clown esp. at a medieval court." - from www.dictionary.reference.com) comes to mind.
Magna Carta comes to mind; sounds like an essay question but I wasn't in this class.
There were several really great medieval queens. One who comes to mind immediately was Margaret I of Denmark. Ethelfleda of Mercia was another. Another was Eleanor of Aquitaine. There are links below for more information on these.
Be a woman, and speak your mind from time to time and not act as an inanimate object in the presence of men. That would do.