mostly stone and brick.
The upper class were rich, were as the lower were poor.
If you were poor,which most were, then not a lot....no fast food shops then. Probably soup and bread...if you were very rich, more or less what you liked.
they were made of wood and water and hay put together
the rich would go out for dances and party in their rich clothes and drinking wine or beer .^ .^ :)
10
well you do know the rich and the poor difference so think what they will have to know what they meen
there are 200 because they have counted them
mostly stone and brick.
they wore different clothes
The upper class were rich, were as the lower were poor.
The rich lived in villages on the outskirts of the cities, the poor lived in slums or tenements.
They lived freely. Not caring for the not as fortunate people who live on the the streets and eat bread and a very little amount of meat.
If you were poor,which most were, then not a lot....no fast food shops then. Probably soup and bread...if you were very rich, more or less what you liked.
they were made of wood and water and hay put together
Tudors can hardly be called modern, since the last Tudor/Elizabethan monarch died in AD 1603. Henry VIII was rich because his father, Henry VII, had managed to save a lot of money.
Class boundaries were very rigid during Elizabethan times. People remained in the strata of society they were born in for the rest of their lives. The highest level of Elizabethan society were the nobles, whose ranks included Queen Elizabeth herself. Directly following were the gentry. These were usually land rich lords, or gentlemanly tenants who lived on vast country properties. At the bottom of the hierarchy were the peasants. They lacked money and power, and lived in a society where there were no safety nets for the poor.