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| a person who travels to a holy place for religious reasons |
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| a self-contained community for people, such as monks or nuns, who have taken religious vows. |
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| a person training to become a nun or monk. |
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| an item associated with a saint: thought to have great powers |
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| the Viking word for "slave" |
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| the head of the Roman Catholic Church |
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| anything made by humans to extend our abilities |
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| before the common era (BC) |
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| - knowledge and culture passed down from one generation to another |
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| - the search for ideas, wisdom, knowledge |
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| the art and science of designing buildings |
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| the language of the Romans (During Middle Ages educated people used this language) |
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a fighter who battled at public shows (most were slaves) |
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| one of the European peopleswho spoke a Germanic language (Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Franks, Visigoths,etc.) |
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| originally, a non-Roman person. It later meant an uncultured person, an insult |
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| the holy book of Islam (Qur'an means "reading") |
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| to attack or harass someone for a specific reason (Eg: race, religion or politics) |
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| the official belief of a religion |
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| the first twelve deciples, or followers, of Jesus |
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| the first four books of the New Testament of the Bible |
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| to sprinkle or dip in water as a sign of purification/admission to Christian Church |
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| changing religion or one who has changed religions |
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| someone who a community has rejected |
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| a person tortured or killed because f their religious beliefs |
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| the only Christian church in western Europe til the 16th century |
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| a person trained & authorized to perform religious ceremonies |
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| a collection of written laws |
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| a picture made with many pieces of stone or glass fixed in place |
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| man-money, that is, a person's value in money. |
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| intentionally setting fire to property |
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| a contagious disease that is out of control and kills many people. |
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| omens, occurences that predict future events |
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| the group that one belongs to in a society. Class can be determined by money, parents or role in society. |
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| Charlemange's empire from about 770 to 814 |
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| a rebirth or revival, especially of the arts |
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| a western European culture. The Scottish, Irish, Welsh, Cornish and Bretons are all Celts. |
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| a long poem telling about heroic deeds and events |
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| writing changed from one language into another |
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| a long,narrow, salt-water bay with high cliffs along its sides |
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| a scandinavian poet who recited poems at formal gatherings |
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| a parliament where free adults could give their opinions on important matters. |
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