What churches were made out of depended on the time and place. Many, perhaps most, churches were built of stone. In places where there was no stone, churches were often built of brick. Some churches were built of wood with timbered construction, and some of these had the open areas filled with wattle and daub, which is mats woven from reeds and covered with daub.
Gothic people made big churches.
pilgrimage churches, Romanesque style churches built along pilgrimage routes.
they were made of mud bricks and mud mouldings
During the Middle Ages, the churches quite often held all the power, dictating laws to the entire area. The church was also the center of social life. Being rejected by the church was devastating.
There was no explorers in the middle ages. When exploration started that is when the middle ages ended.
Massive stone churches from the Middle Ages, with stained windows, were called catherdrals.
Cathedrals
During the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Europe women worshipped in churches.
cathedrals
Gothic people made big churches.
membranophone
churches
The churches are usually made of stone and that will last through fire, weather, and war. The ones that were wooden didn't last due to all of the reasons above. Plus, the churches you see today have been rebuilt, remodeled, and added to so they really aren't the same church that existed in the middle ages.
In monasteries, churches, and sometimes as tutors for the nobles.
Cathedral.
Schools were set up in the halls of churches.
Everyone in the society was Catholic and required to attend services.