I have been thinking about this and I think granite would be the strongest mineral used in this time.
The third period of the Middle Ages was the Late Middle Ages. The first is called the Early Middle Ages or the Dark Age. The second period was the High Middle Ages.
middle ages
There was no nylon in the Middle Ages. Nylon was invented in the 20th century; the Middle Ages ended in the 15th.
The Roman Empire was followed by the Middle Ages: Early Middle Ages (5th to 10th century), High Middle Ages (c. 1001 to 1300) and Late Middle Ages (1300 to 1500).
where did merchants work in the middle ages
The strongest civilizing force in Europe during the early Middle Ages was the Church.
At the end if the Middle Ages, the strongest countries in Western Europe were probably England, France, and Spain. In Eastern Europe, the strongest was the Ottoman Empire, though much of it was in Asia.
Innocent III
Vikings
There wasn't a "winning group" in the middle ages. The strongest took the power, as they always do, and everyone falls into place.
Diamond is considered the strongest mineral because of its hardness on the Mohs scale, which is a 10 out of 10. This means that it is extremely resistant to scratching or abrasion.
kingdom of the Franks
No, maybe for elements but not for minerals, the strongest mineral is diamond.
Diamonds are the hardest mineral, but not the 'strongest'.
The period of time from 500 AD to 1500 AD is called the Middle Ages.
In the middle ages, Harrogate was the site of a pair of very small villages, not particularly distinguished from hundreds of other villages in England. It was not until the mineral springs were found that Harrowgate has much history.
There was no explorers in the middle ages. When exploration started that is when the middle ages ended.