That depends on status. A wealthy nobleman or a merchant with a house of stone would have a small room called a garderobe in Anglo-Norman French, which had two functions: as a latrine and as an area for storing clothes and linen. The smell of the ammonia from stale urine was believed to keep away moths, so the combination made sense. The same small area was both a lavatory and a wardrobe.
The 12th century observer and writer Alexander Neckham describes the bedroom of a baron in his manor house, with a horizontal pole for draping expensive fur garments and other clothes.
Poor farming peasants had no such garde-robe, no bedroom and very few clothes, so storage was not a problem for them.
to keep the fire going
The people who owned the land were the Nobility and the Nobility were charged with protection of the country and king. So they were required to serve as a knight for the king to keep the land they were given.
In the Middle Ages, the people used to salt meat to keep it fresh for later, as salt is a preservative and protects against bacteria, fungi, and insects. Therefore, they used to spice their food heavily when they ate it to camoflage the heavy and therefore unpleasant taste of the salt.
For protection. If there was an invading army they could go into the keep and be protected. The men would help fight as well. The castle was the seat of the government for that area. The job of the nobility was to protect the serf's and peasants on their land.
1st Answer The Dark Ages, while still interchangeable with the Middle Ages, is historically different. The Dark Ages are typically more associated, academically speaking, to the Early Middle Ages which spans from the fall of Rome to about 1000 AD. 2nd Answer This question is subjective, so perhaps it should get a subjective answer. Both the terms Middle Ages and Dark Ages are misleading, and personally I think neither should be used. The idea of the Middle Ages came about because the people after the time wanted to compare themselves favorably with ancient Rome, and did so by denigrating the people who had gone before them. The idea of the Dark Ages is that people were ignorant. But a study of the periods that get these names tells me, and other people I know who are educated on the subject, that the Middle Ages were not inferior to the Renaissance and might have been less ignorant. Consider, witch hunts began very late in the Middle Ages and continued to become more common and more deadly through the Renaissance and Reformation. Take a look at art of the middle ages. Admittedly it is less realistic than the art of Michelangelo, but I can hardly buy the idea that it is really all inferior to the art of the Renaissance in any objective way. The Church and civil authorities did not try to regulate science in the Middle Ages, but they did in the Renaissance. We look at the Dark Ages and the Middle Ages through a lens that was strongly colored by the people of the Renaissance, and the effect of this is misunderstanding. Calling the period dark is only a part of this, but it is not helpful. +++ The Dark Ages was never a synonym for the Mediaeval period, but used to be applied to the less-well known, unstable time following the end of the Roman Empire and its relatively high standards of living; and possibly ending with the time of the Saxons.
To bring them luck.
Castles in the Middle Ages were used to keep out enemies.
cows.
to keep the fire going
people used to hide like the eggs and if you found them you would keep them and crack them open!
to keep th eking/queen safe
Avoid living in the Middle Ages Keep a clean house (free of fleas) and do not associate with people suspected of having the Plague.
The same as it is now: a way to control people and keep them in check. They just got away with more back then.
Barns where used for the animals and to keep the food there.
A tower might also have been called a keep.
Medieval kings were people who lived in the middle ages and had the title and powers of a King. What they did was rule their kingdom, and sometimes fight to keep or expand their lands.
Quite dirty and ragged clothes, very itchy, for the poor best made out of hay or straw and cheap fabric, but for the rich they wore velvet, thick fabric with lots of coatings to keep warm.