Week 5: Tuesday
Music by Thibaut, count of Champagne and lord of Troyes (1201-53):
Seigneurs, sachiez qui or ne s’en ira (3:46 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-gTUUgZCQo&feature=related
Dame, ensinc est qu’il m’en covient aler (5:02 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPT6TAe2Z7E
Chanson mariale (6:01 min.):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlGIetd0c2U
Music from the Carmina burana (S. German, 12th cent.?):
Ich was ein chint so wolgetan (Maledicantur tilie, 2:50 min.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJaiIG5xPqg
COMMERCE AND TOWNS
Growth of towns in the 11th century and later:
- At or near major seaports (e.g., Lübeck, Bruges, Genoa, Venice, Naples)
- On major rivers (e.g., London, Paris, Toledo, Cologne, Rome) or roads (e.g., Milan)
- Site of major commercial fairs (especially in county of Champagne, e.g., Troyes)
Typical features of medieval towns and cities (but not of villages) included:
- Large population
- Wide range of occupations and incomes
- Densely-packed housing
- Fortifications or other defenses
- More than one church
- One or more courts
- One or more prisons
- One or more markets and fairs
- Monetized economy
- Commercial entertainment (drinking houses, brothels, professional entertainers)
- Problems with sanitation, rubbish-disposal, and traffic
Major medieval urban export industries included:
- Woolen cloth production (spinning and weaving)
- Woolen cloth finishing (fulling, shearing, dyeing)
- Linen cloth production
- Luxury cloth production (silks, velvets, etc.)
- Arms and armor manufacture
- Brewing
- Metalworking (including goldsmithing and minting)
- Wholesale trading in major commodities for export (e.g., grain, timber, minerals, furs, wine, wool, spices)
Beginning in the 12th century, many towns formed communes (sworn self-governance associations) that struggled to obtain a charter granting self-government rights from their lords (king, queen, prince, bishop, etc.). Chartered towns paid a fee-farm (a fixed annual fee) to their lords in return for the right to collect their own taxes and tolls. Other benefits of a charter might include the right for a town to:
- elect its own government
- make and enforce its own laws
- run its own courts
Many towns also established guilds to regulate crafts and trades. Membership in a guild made one a citizen of the town. Only guild masters could keep shops and supervise apprentices (trainees) and journeymen (wage-workers who had completed an apprenticeship but could not afford to open their own shop). Guilds enjoyed commercial monopolies in return for undertaking responsibility for self-regulation.
Main money denominations:
Penny (d.): in Latin, denarius; in French, denier; in Italian, denaro; in German, Pfennig
Shilling (s.): in Latin, solidus; in French, sou or sol; in Italian, soldo (denomination) or grosso (coin); in German, Schilling
Pound (£): In Latin, libra; in French, livre; in Italian, lira; in German, Pfund
12d. = 1s.
20s. = £1
£1 = 20s. = 240d.
The penny could be divided into:
2 halfpennies or ha’pence (each worth 1/2d.), in Latin, 2 oboli (abbreviated ob.)
4 farthings (each worth 1/4d.); in Latin, 4 quadrantes (abbreviated q. or qua.)
Standard fractions of the pound:
Two-thirds of a pound, known as a mark (Latin, marca; abbreviated m.): 13s. 4d. (=160d.)
One-third of a pound, or half a mark: 6s. 8d. (=80d.)
Click for images of an Italian grosso (1s. = 12d.), and English pennies (1d.), halfpennies, (1/2d.), and farthings (1/4d.)
Online readings:
Charter of the shearers of Arras, 1236
[Note on text: the muid of Flanders was a measure of capacity containing 1011 liters]
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1236Weavers5.asp
Two apprenticeship contracts for weavers in Arras and Marseilles, c. 1250
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1250weaversapp.asp
A purchase on credit in Marseille, 1248
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1248roubauds-credit.asp
Regulations of the London Cordwainers’ (shoemakers’) guild, 1375
http://www.personal.utulsa.edu/~marc-carlson/shoe/RESEARCH/DOCS/CHAR1375.HTM
Photograph of two 15th-cent. shops with dwelling above, from Horsham, Sussex
http://gallery.nen.gov.uk/image651506-.html
and
http://www.wealddown.co.uk/buildings/medieval-shop/
Music by Thibaut, comte de Champagne (1201-53):
Dame, merci (4:42 min.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ns6bM31eu44&feature=related
Jews in medieval towns were excluded from citizenship and from trade and craft guilds; many thus entered unregulated occupations, such as moneylending, medicine, schoolteaching (in Jewish schools), and wholesale trading
Steps in woolen and linen textile production:
- Sort and wash raw wool or flax
- Comb (flax or long-stapled wool) or card (short-stapled wool)
- Spin combed or carded fibers into yarn or thread with distaff and spindle or a hand-turned spinning wheel (usually done by women).
- Wind spun yarn or thread into a skein.
- Weave yarn or thread into cloth on a horizontal loom
- Finishing processes for woolen cloth: fulling, tentering, teaseling, dyeing, shearing, pressing
Click here for a reconstruction of the medieval marketplace in Norwich
Town government:
Generally headed by a mayor and council drawn from the wealthiest families, sometimes elected by the masters of the guilds, sometimes by the “better sort” of the citizens, sometimes self-perpetuating, sometimes chosen by the lord
Courts might be held by several authorities:
- by the lord of the town (especially for capital offenses)
- by the municipal government (especially for lesser offenses)
- by the bishop (for matters relating to the church)
In the 12th century, the re-discovery in Western Europe of Justinian’s codification of Roman law (mid 500s) stimulated the development of secular and ecclesiastical (canon) law