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Merchant Gilds and Craft Gilds
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MERCHANT GILDS AND CRAFT GILDS
[232] IN the Middle Ages there were gilds, or societies, for
all purposes. There were gilds to mend the walls and
bridges of their home cities and gilds to keep certain
roads in good condition. There were gilds of minstrels
and gilds of ringers of church bells. Indeed, there
were so many varieties of gild that one almost wonders
how a man ventured to light his fire in the morning
without belonging to a gild for the kindling of hearth
fires.
A DRUGGIST
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In the towns, as has been said before, almost every
citizen had something to do with manufactures and with
trade. Perhaps his manufacturing was only making
candles in his own home and selling them from his first
[233] floor; but even then it was an important matter for him
to get his wax as cheaply as the other candlemakers of
the town. He was interested, too, in having his prices
and those of the others of his trade nearly the same;
and he did not wish foreigners or even people from
other towns to come in and spoil his sales. It was for
these reasons that the merchant gilds were formed.
Probably in earlier times all or nearly all of the
citizens of a town belonged to its merchant gild. The
gildsmen called one another brethren, and their rules
bound them to work together and help one another as
much as possible. The first business, then, of the gild
in a town was to look out for the interests of its
merchants and tradesmen. It prevented strangers from
coming into the town to sell any goods unless they paid
tolls; and even then they were allowed to sell only
certain things whose sale would not interfere with the
interests of the gildsmen. In many places, no foreign
merchant was allowed to remain more than forty days,
and during this time he must dispose of all his goods.
If a gildsman became poor or sick, his gild helped him;
if in time of peace he was thrown into prison, his
gild came to his aid; at his death, the gild attended
his funeral and in many cases paid for masses for the
repose of his soul. The member owed various
[234] duties to the gild. He must pay his dues and fines; and
in case of a disagreement between him and another
member, he must submit to the decision of the gild. He
must permit the officers of the gild to examine his
goods; and if they found fault with their quality or
weight or measure, he must obey the gild's orders and
mend his ways.
These merchant gilds often became very wealthy and
powerful. They were able to loan large sums of money;
and, oddly enough, they sometimes loaned it to
themselves. This came about because, although the
gildsmen and the citizens were nearly the same people,
they were, nevertheless, entirely separate bodies; and
when a town wanted to borrow money, it would naturally
appeal to the gild first of all. In many cases, a gild
even made bargains with the king. It would pay the king
the round sum that he demanded from the city in
taxation, and then it was entirely free from him in
money matters and could collect the amount just as the
members thought best.
AN ARMORER
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The merchant gild was of aid to men in manufacturing
goods, as has been said; but there were many matters
of importance to the manufacturers, or craftsmen, which
the merchant gilds did not touch. To begin with, what
the plasterers, for instance, wanted was quite
dif- [235] ferent from what the shoemakers wanted, and in a town where
many trades were represented, of course no one gild
could care for the interests of all. The natural thing,
then, was for the men of each craft to form a gild of
their own. This was not only a natural, but also an
easy and convenient thing to do; for those who
practiced the same craft generally lived on the same
street, or at any rate, in the same quarter of the
town. These newer gilds had two special objects. The
first was to see that every member had work. This was
brought about by
limiting the number of apprentices who were permitted
to learn any one trade. The second object was to make sure
that every member's work was good. Each craftsman was
obliged to allow the gild officers to examine his
materials and his work both in the making and after it
was finished. No one was allowed to labor
[236] on Saturday afternoons, Sundays, or holy days. Working
in the night was strictly forbidden. The chief reason
probably was that it was difficult to inspect night
work, and that with the poor lights then used, few
articles could be well made. But there were often other
reasons given for refusing to allow it. For instance,
in the town of Lincoln, England, the spurriers' gild
forbade its members to work longer than from daylight
to curfew, "by reason that no man can work so neatly by
night as by day." But the decree went on to say
furthermore that if the spurriers were allowed to work
at night, they would idle about all day and get "drunk
and frantic." Then, when night had come, they would
blow up their fires and seize their tools; although the
fires were a peril to the houses and the noise was a
great annoyance to the sick, and so became the cause of
many quarrels.
A SPURRIER
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[237] The craft gilds looked out for the interests of their
members in much the same ways as the merchant gilds;
that is, they cared for them in illness, attended their
funeral services, paid for masses for the repose of
their souls, and helped their widows and orphans. It
was the business of the gild to settle, if possible,
any disputes that might arise between members.
Sometimes there there disputes between gilds. The work
of each craft was strictly marked off. A man who made
shoes must not mend them; and a man whose business it
was to mend shoes was not allowed to make them. A man
who made hats for his trade was forbidden to make caps.
If one craft did any work that another craft claimed as
its own, then there was trouble. For instance, a
disagreement of this sort arose between the farriers
and the blacksmiths of York in England. For many years
"ayther craft trubled other." At length, the
[238] mayor persuaded them to allow the matter to be settled
by four men whom he would appoint from other crafts.
Everything was done to induce the members of a gild to
treat the other members like brothers, and if any one
tried to get the better of the rest in buying material,
especially for things necessary to life, like bread,
before the others could have the same chance, or by
purchasing all that was for sale and then charging a
higher price, he was likely to get into trouble with
his gild officers.
A SHOEMAKER
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Every gild had its feast day once a year or oftener;
and every gild had also its patron saint. On the day
sacred to him all the members put on the gild livery,
or uniform, and marched from their gild hall to the
church for services. Another religious duty of the
craft gilds was the acting of plays, mystery or miracle
plays,
[239] as they were called. Long before the Middle Ages, the
priests in various countries often acted stories from
the Bible, such as that of the birth of Christ, in
order to impress them upon the minds of the people.
These were acted in the church, then on platforms in
the church-yard. But so many came to see them that the
graves were trampled upon, and it was decreed that they
should be acted on other ground.
A BLACKSMITH
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These plays did not always follow the Bible narrative
strictly, but added old legends or any incidents that
it was thought would interest the people. For instance,
in one of the plays of The Garden of Eden, when
Adam took the apple, he apparently tried to swallow it
whole, the play says that it stuck in his throat,
causing the "Adam's apple." In the play of The
Slaughter of the Innocents, an old tradition is
brought in that by mistake Herod's own baby son was
slain. In the play of The Shepherds, the honest
men talk together about how to care for their sheep.
They sit down and eat their supper—bread, butter,
pudding, "onyans, garlicke, and leickes," green cheese,
and a sheep's head soused in oil—"a noble supper," as
one of them calls it. After supper, masters and boys
are wrestling together when a bright star blazes out.
They kneel down and pray to God
[240] to tell them why it is sent. Then the angel Gabriel
appears to them and sings, "Glory to God in the
highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."
This is sung in Latin of course, for it would not have
seemed to a writer of the Middle Ages at all respectful
to represent an angel as singing in English. The
shepherds have a rather hard time with the Latin; but
they make out some of the words. They talk about the
singing. One of them says of the angel, "He hade a
moche better voyce than I have." Then they sing
together "a merye songe." The angel appears again and
tells them that Christ is born in Bethlehem. After they
have gone to find him, the three shepherd boys set out
to follow their masters. They wish that they had
something to carry to the Child, but they have only the
few things that they use themselves. One, therefore,
gives the Child his water bottle, which he says is
good, only it needs a stopper. The second takes off his
own hood for a gift, and the third presents him with a
nuthook "to pull down aples, peares, and plumes."
In almost all of these plays there was considerable
fun-making and "horse-play." Just as the good folk of
the Middle Ages saw no harm in making a pilgrimage a
merry and entertaining little journey, so in the
[241] mystery plays they demanded to be amused as well as
instructed. In the play of The Flood, Noah's
wife is indignant that her husband has worked on the
ark so many years without telling her. She declares
that she will not enter it, and she finally has to be
dragged in by Noah and his sons. Herod struts about the
stage. He boasts how mighty a king he is and how easily
he can destroy the Child who has been born in
Bethlehem. Then there must have been loud guffaws of
laughter from the audience when the Devil rushed in and
carried him off. Satan was the clown, the fun-maker;
and whenever he appeared, the people watched eagerly to
see him fooled and cheated by some good spirit. He
always wore a dress of leather, ending in claws at the
fingers and toes. The souls of the good were dazzling
in their white coats, while the wicked were robed in
black and yellow with sometimes a touch of crimson.
Then Satan and his evil spirits made their appearance,
they came by way of "hell mouth." This was a great pair
of gaping jaws made of painted linen and worked by two
men. A fire was lighted to look as if hell mouth were
full of flame. Some of the items on the old expense
accounts are amusing reading. "For the mending of hell
mouth," for "keeping up the fire at hell
[242] mouth," sound rather alarming. One item was for a
barrel to make an earthquake, another was for a beard
for Saint Peter, and yet another for a quart of wine to
pay for hiring a gown for the wife of Herod.
HELL-MOUTH
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Long before the plays became so elaborate as to demand
so many "properties," they passed into the hands of the
craft gilds. In the early part of the thirteenth
century, most of the gilds fixed upon Corpus Christi
[243] day for their chief celebration. They marched in
procession, carrying sacred pictures and images of the
saints. Often members of the gild took the parts of
Bible characters, and at length whole Bible stories
were acted. These were played in pageants, or great
lumbering wagons two or three stories high. The lower
part was covered by a curtain, and here the actors
dressed. The second floor was the stage upon which the
acting took place. The third floor, if there was one,
represented heaven. An attempt was made to have each
scene as realistic as possible; for instance, the stage
directions for the play of The Creation ordered
that as many animals as could be obtained should be
suddenly let loose.
Each gild had its own special play. One would play
The Three Kings, another The Crucifixion,
another The Murder of Abel, and so on. In
England they were so arranged that the main stories of
the Bible were played in the Bible order, beginning with
The Creation and ending with The Last
Judgment. Early in the morning, the ponderous
pageants were dragged out to the different streets of
the town. Sometimes men of means paid a good price to
have them stop in front of their houses. As soon as a
play had been acted, each one moved on and acted the
same play in another place. This was
[244] usually continued through three days, and a person who
remained in one place could see the whole cycle of
plays; while if he cared to see any one of them
repeated, he had only to follow the pageant to the next
street.
STAGE OF A SELLER OF DRUGS
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The plays were entertaining, and that was reason enough
for bringing together a good audience. Moreover to
attend them was thought to be particularly good for
one's soul; and to do something religious and be
entertained while doing it, was regarded by the good
folk of the Middle Ages as a most excellent
arrangement.
As for the gilds, at first they looked upon presenting
these plays as an honor and also a religious privilege.
They chose the actors from their members, and paid them
in proportion to the length of their speeches and the
amount of stage "business" for which they were
responsible. In the play of St. Peter, in
Coventry, the man who did the crowing was paid
fourpence; but when he also attended to the hanging of
Judas, he received tenpence more. The gild had to pay
these charges, buy costumes and keep them in order, and
provide provisions for the actors at rehearsals. It is
true that collections were taken up in the streets to
help pay expenses, but the burden was still a heavy
one. Then
[246] too, trades changed with the changing fashions.
Sometimes one trade was divided into two. In 1492 the
blacksmiths and bladesmiths in a town separated. This
resulted in two weak gilds instead of one strong one,
and the whole expense of a pageant was a serious tax to
each. As time passed, the gilds made strenuous
objections to keeping up the plays, but now the law
stepped in and in many towns they were required to
produce their pageants or else pay a large fine.
As the craft gilds became more numerous and powerful,
the merchant gilds lost in power and slowly died away.
The craft gilds, too, weakened with changes in methods
of manufacture, and most of these also disappeared. In
London, a number of gilds still exist; but the
procession which takes place whenever a Lord Mayor is
to be inducted into office is the last reminder of the
old trade pageants.
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