OK Mr. Scholar, here is your proof, taken at random, that most were illiterate in the Middle Ages. By the way, this agrees with the history I learned in Junior High and College and I’m sure that many others in this thread learned in their school also.
In the Middle Ages most people were illiterate….
Localhistories.org
The Churches were for centuries the patrons of art, music, and architecture as towering Romanesque churches announced the centrality of an all-powerful God and the Old and New testament could be taught to a predominately illiterate population
molloy.edu/sophia/med_ren/med_text.htm
The buildings were covered with sculptures and frescoes for the edification of illiterate pilgrims.
beyondbooks.com/art11/2e.asp
With the fall of the western Roman Empire, however, Europe had become largely illiterate and this produced a major obstacle to the spread of Christian culture.
wsu.edu:8080/~dee/MA/FRENCH.HTM
Although women in the Middle Ages were as illiterate as their husbands and fathers,
YESNet | Yukon Education Student Network
It is highly possible that even the nobles were illiterate.
library.thinkquest.org/27927/Medieval_Main.html
and her instructions for creating a craftsman’s sign help to show how people communicated in an essentially illiterate society.
renaissancemagazine.com/books/hands.html
(the majority of Rome’s population were always illiterate)
articles.gourt.com/en/Middle%20Ages
Most of the literature from the
period in question reflects the work of the literate “elite”, and may or may not reflect the culture of the
largely illiterate “average person”
stonge.intheway.org/documents/Popular%20Culture%20Medieval%20and%20Present.pdf
The Illiterate Anglo-Saxon: And Other Essays on Education, Medieval and Modern (1946,
britannica.com/eb/article-47749/education
We do know that from the Lombards in northern Italy to the Franks, Saxons and Scandinavians in the north of Europe, the majority of the populace was illiterate.
medievalwriting.50megs.com/literacy/reading.htm
the Church was virtually the only institution of what we would call “higher education,” keeping alive the knowledge of Latin and of classical literature.
camden.rutgers.edu/dept-pages/german/medglossary2a.html