Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Chapter I INTRODUCTION: CONCEPTS OF CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN HISTORY
- Chapter II THE ENVIRONMENT AND THE ECONOMY
- Chapter III INDUSTRY
- Chapter IV POPULATION
- Chapter V PEASANTS
- Chapter VI BUREAUCRACY
- Chapter VII WARFARE
- Chapter VIII REVOLUTION
- Chapter IX THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS
- Chapter X SOCIAL THOUGHT AND SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Chapter XI RELIGION AND SECULARISATION
- Chapter XII ON THE LAST 2,500 YEARS IN WESTERN HISTORY: AND SOME REMARKS ON THE COMING 500
- References
Chapter III - INDUSTRY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Chapter I INTRODUCTION: CONCEPTS OF CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN HISTORY
- Chapter II THE ENVIRONMENT AND THE ECONOMY
- Chapter III INDUSTRY
- Chapter IV POPULATION
- Chapter V PEASANTS
- Chapter VI BUREAUCRACY
- Chapter VII WARFARE
- Chapter VIII REVOLUTION
- Chapter IX THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS
- Chapter X SOCIAL THOUGHT AND SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Chapter XI RELIGION AND SECULARISATION
- Chapter XII ON THE LAST 2,500 YEARS IN WESTERN HISTORY: AND SOME REMARKS ON THE COMING 500
- References
Summary
The forms of late medieval industry
Industrial activity in Europe in the late fifteenth century fell typically into five forms. Two of these were destined to decline over the following several centuries; one was to continue a vigorous life over the whole period covered in this essay, then virtually to disappear; and two, under pressures from changes in technology, were to blend together to create the industrial technique and organisation, larger-scale and continuously dynamic, that we recognise as characteristically modern.
The village industry, descended from the specialised crafts on manorial estates was perhaps the most widespread of these forms. The serf status of the artisan, continued or restored in eastern Europe, had been permanently transmuted in the West to that of free worker owning his tools and materials. But markets were local, pay was often made in kind, and the artisan, particularly if he held a bit of land from a lord or one of his subtenants, was effectively immobilized. The shoemaker, the smith, the carpenter, the thatcher, the mason, the miller, the butcher, the baker, the weaver – all were distributed in local markets over the countryside, drawing upon the locality for most materials and serving the households of village and rural families. Their work was supplemented by the industry of itinerant craftsmen who transported their capital – i.e. their skills and a few tools – from place to place, eating their way through the countryside, sometimes in the training years of an urban apprenticeship, sometimes in a permanently gypsy-like existence.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 43 - 79Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1979
References
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