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For most of the middle ages, in most places, most people, men and women, worked their lives through in agriculture. The men plowed and did heavier work, and the women tended the children and the homes, as much as they could, but men and women planted together, weeded together, harvested together, and tended animals together.

Aside from that, women did jobs they could do at home or in housing shared by women. One such house is portrayed in Shakespeare's Henry V. Such employment included making and repairing cloth and garments, working on carpets and tapestries, and so on. Women did not tend to be chefs, but they worked in kitchens. They helped prepare food, clean up, and organize things. They also tended cleaning for higher born people. One job they especially did was to clean and repair the clothes of high born women, and for a job like this they had to be especially trustworthy.

A lot of women went into convents, which represented an alternative to weary work an child bearing. In convents, they provided medicine and healing. They did all the cleaning and cooking they might otherwise have done. They raised crops, but were more likely than serfs to raise such specialty crops as medicinal herbs. They prayed. I see no reason why they would not have transcribed bibles, just as monks did, but they might have thought differently in the middle ages.

Some women were the wives of lords and kings. They needed special education and training because they needed to be able to take over their husband's jobs if times required it. There were a number of women who were sovereign monarchs and there were also a number who were noted tacticians. Margaret I of Denmark was one such woman, and Ethelfleda of Mercia was another.

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15y ago

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