Serfs worked for the king or lord three days a week. In return the lord gave them a peice of land. The other three days serfs worked on their land providing for their families. Sundays were God's day. Serfs usually attended church and then had the rest of the day to themselves.
idl
Monks
Medieval men were what they were raised to be. They were taught by fathers and they were taught by mothers also. Men and women accepted the ideas that they were given from antiquity without the types of questioning consideration we have seen since the nineteenth century. They believed their attitudes were right and proper and did not see a reason to change. There is a link below to a question about women's rights in the middle ages.
In the middle ages there were men called "stariosis" men that worked day and night making weapons for the knights that fought in battles. The Starosis use to get paid 70 coins a day for all their hard work. The Starosis were also very close friends with the king and one of the Starosis called Jarodd Reester was claimed king of England in 1567. When Reester ruled England he paid all the stariosis men 150 coins a day.
Nobles in the Middle Ages are like managers now a day. Taking care of their land and managing their household or land. Noble men were forced to go and fight in war though and while they were away their wife took control of the land. So they had the overall power until their husband returned.
Chemists of the Middle Ages were called alchemists.
idl
In the Middle Ages Times. :)
Because in the middle ages, and indeed to this day in many countries, it was considered more fitting for the men to go to war and for the women to sit at home barefoot and pregnant.
Killing Cave Men
asdfve2v2qrv
Men made the wars, ran the government, and did everything.
no some were women
90% of Europe farmed
Monks
One prominent figure who served as a bridge between scholastic thought of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance was Thomas Aquinas. Aquinas combined Aristotelian philosophy with Christian theology, setting the stage for the intellectual development of the Renaissance period. His works influenced thinkers of both eras and helped pave the way for a new approach to incorporating classical learning into Christian thought.
I wear my house all the time.