Pardoners were people commissioned to sell indulgences. They were not required to be of a specific rank, though many or most were clergy. They were viewed by many people with a great deal of respect, but others, including some important people in the Church, regarded many of them with suspicion, and sought to keep them under control.
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Properly, in order to be a pardoner, a person had to be a priest. This made him a member of the clergy.
There was no particular class associated with nuns in the Middle Ages. Nuns were not technically members of the clergy, even if they were highly educated. They could have come from backgrounds that were peasant, noble, or even royal. But technically, they had no class. Perhaps this would make them fit some definitions of the middle class, but middle class implies things that do not fit well with what a nun was.
the middle class was the freetowners, it goes POPE KING NOBLES KNIGHTS FREETOWNERS PEASANTS SERFS The Middle Class rose during the Middle Ages in Europe for a variety of reasons. First of these reasons is that the workers became richer in the aftermath of the Black Death. Secondly, education in Europe was greatly improved with the invention of the Printing Press. Thirdly, the formation of banking greatly improved the economy in favour of the Middle Class. Lastly, the formation of medieval republics benefited the Middle Class. The Middle class consisted of Freetowners, people below the knights and nobles but above peasants and serfs... https://sites.google.com/site/seniorschoolstudy/history/rise-of-the-middle-class---middle-ages
well your wording is confusing😕
During the middle ages noble women had no opportunity no learn how to read and write.
During the Middle Ages art was mainly commissioned by The Church.