Different people have different ideas about the date of the end of the Middle Ages. Three of these dates are associated with wars. One of these was the Hundred Years' War, which ended officially in 1453. Another was the Byzantine-Ottoman Wars, which also ended in 1453 with the fall of Constantinople. Another war used as a marker for the end of the Middle Ages was the Wars of the Roses, which ended in 1485.
Depends on your viewpoint, where you live. As the end of the Middle Ages are hard to define. Scholars are still arguing about it. There could be many events. Here in England some class the Battle of Bosworth 22nd August 1485 as the end of the Middle Ages. In other countries other events such as the Capture of Constantinople or the end of the Hundred Years War both 1453 as the end. Others as late as the start of the Reformation in 1517. Both the Protestant Reformation and the Renaissance (the rebirth of art, science and learning) brought an end to the Middle Ages.
The end of the Roman empire up to the Norman invasion of England in 1066 is the period known as the Dark Ages. The end of the Dark Ages is often counted as the beginning of the Middle Ages in British History.
No
longbow, bubonic plague, hundred years' war, the great schism. i think..?
The rise of banking was one of the things that happened as the Middle Ages drew to an end. There were possibly banks in some market places at the end of the Middle Ages, but there certainly would have been none during most of the Middle Ages.
war, then the middle ages
The Middle Ages started in "1100 - 1520"
The Middle Ages began in the 5th century and end in the 15th century.
beacause it was the start of the war of the roses
Depends on your viewpoint, where you live. As the end of the Middle Ages are hard to define. Scholars are still arguing about it. There could be many events. Here in England some class the Battle of Bosworth 22nd August 1485 as the end of the Middle Ages. In other countries other events such as the Capture of Constantinople or the end of the Hundred Years War both 1453 as the end. Others as late as the start of the Reformation in 1517. Both the Protestant Reformation and the Renaissance (the rebirth of art, science and learning) brought an end to the Middle Ages.
Kingdom of Armenia - Middle Ages - ended in 1045.
The end of the Roman empire up to the Norman invasion of England in 1066 is the period known as the Dark Ages. The end of the Dark Ages is often counted as the beginning of the Middle Ages in British History.
I would prefer to have been in England of this time. The Hundred Years' War took up about half of the Late Middle Ages in France. I think things were pretty unsettled there. I think of the War of the Roses as not medieval. I know there are English Historians who date the end of the Middle Ages at the end of the War of the Roses. Maybe I should just admit I don't speak French and let it go at that.
itw as important because in the middle ages there was lots of war and violence
1450s
No
Yes