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Did medieval inns serve food?

Inns provided both food and lodging. A well-to-do person might have the funds to pay for a private room, but most rooms--and beds--were shared.



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Taverns were places of business, where people gathered to drink and eat. An Inn is a tavern which has a license to put up guests as lodgers. Inns were generally establishments or buildings where travelers could seek lodging and, usually (but not necessarily) food and drink.

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The cost of one night for one person could be as low as a half penny, but if one traveled with servants and horses who needed feeding and stables, the cost could rise appreciably. The merchant class was coming into its own in the 14th century, and these merchants lived in town houses of great variety.

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inn, building that affords public lodging, and sometimes meals and entertainment, to travelers. The inn has been largely superseded by hotels and motels, though the term is often still used to suggest traditional hospitality. Inns developed in the ancient world wherever there was traveling for trading purposes.

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They were absolutely real. The bigger ones catered mostly to traveling merchants. They had rooms, halls, and storage areas for goods. They were considered places of ill repute, and preachers of all faiths regularly cautioned the faithful to stay away from the drinking, gambling, and prostitution that occurred there.

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In addition to their functions as accommodation for travelers and as places for eating and drinking, taverns served as places for commerce, informal political discussion, and the spread of news and information.

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Did medieval inns close at night, or were they open all night? They'd close when the owner was ready to go to bed which probably wasn't much after dusk. Most people didn't travel at night so extra customers would be rare. And the staff would have to be up before dawn to light fires and prepare breakfast.

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Inns are generally establishments or buildings where travelers can seek lodging, and usually, food and drink. Inns are typically located in the country or along a highway. Before the advent of motorized transportation, they also provided accommodation for horses.

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