People who held religious opinions opposite or against Christians teachings were seen as pagan and evil. The Middle Ages were Monotheistic times and those who did not follow the established religion of Christianity were publicly executed in the most brutal way one human mind can process. Using torture devices, the victims were punished to death. However Christianity was not the established religion in Rome and once seen as a threat to the Roman Empire. It was after the rise of emperor Constantine, Christianity was pushed to later became the new way of life, or what will be forced to be the new lifestyle. When the Roman Empire began to fall in the 5th century, Germanic barbarians tribes took over Rome and established the Christian Catholic church as the sole source of moral authority. And ever seens, the church had as much controlled as the government. Everything revolved around the church and most people followed. Saddly the church was also a business that wanted to conquer and charge the people for their sin, or simply scared the hell out of them for some gold. Infact to be forgiven for a sin one had to payed the pope or leader of the congregation in ordered to be forgiven and enter …show more content…
Because of extremely cold weather conditions during the 14th century in Europe, harvests, plants, and food supplies rarely survived and died off. This cause thousands of people to starve or barely eat. Food is the human major source of energy and keeps us alive. Without the proper diet people started to get sick and die. In the seven years between 1315 and 1322 Western Europe witnessed incredibly heavy rainfall, for up to 150 days at a time. Because of this growing crops was almost impossible and the price of food such as bread began to go skyrocket. Lower class members could not afford or barely purchased food. Saddly this caused many deaths in England during the Middle Age