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Some Aspects of Early English Apprenticeship

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

The story of apprenticeship is so interwoven with the general and industrial history of England that it is almost impossible to touch upon any portion of it without travelling over ground already well known. There are, however, certain aspects of the subject which can, perhaps, bear further investigation. It is the purpose of this paper to deal mainly with three such aspects of early English appientice-ship, namely, its flexibility, its use as an instrument of monopoly, and lastly, but most important, the continuity between the guild system and the national and compulsory system established by Statute in 1562.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1911

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References

page 193 note 1 Prior to the national system, that is to say from its development at the close of the thirteenth century until 1562.

page 194 note 1 Liber Cus., 78. 536. Word first found in Latin endorsement of a writ, 20 Ed. i.

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page 195 note 2 York, 1415; Northampton, 1430; Exeter, 1450.

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page 196 note 3 Letter Book G.

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page 198 note 1 7 Henry IV, e. 17. Statutory property qualification. 12 Rich. II, c. 5. Children using agriculture until twelve years old not to be apprenticed to a trade. Cf. Dunlop, op. cit. Chap. i. and Chap. ii.

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page 206 note 1 Save in six specified trades. A clothworker, fuller, shearman, tailor, weaver or shoemaker could employ three apprentices only if he had one journeyman in his service. For every apprentice he took above the number of three, he had to engage an additional journeyman. 5 Eliz. c. 4 f. 33.

page 206 note 2 According to which the eldest son, and sometimes daughter, born to a man after he had become a free master, was entitled to the freedom of the father's guild, on reaching the age generally of twenty-one and upon the payment of usually lower fees than those charged to an ex-apprentice.

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page 207 note 3 Ibid.