Book contents
- Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe
- Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction: Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe
- 1 The Economics of Apprenticeship
- 2 Artisan Apprenticeship in Early Modern Madrid
- 3 A Large ‘Umbrella’: Patterns of Apprenticeship in Eighteenth-Century Turin
- 4 Apprenticeship in Early Modern Venice
- 5 Actors and Practices of German Apprenticeship, Fifteenth–Nineteenth Centuries
- 6 Rural Artisans’ Apprenticeship Practices in Early Modern Finland (1700–1850)
- 7 Apprenticeships with and without Guilds: The Northern Netherlands
- 8 Apprenticeship in the Southern Netherlands, c. 1400–c. 1800
- 9 Apprenticeship in England
- 10 Surviving the End of the Guilds: Apprenticeship in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century France
- Conclusion: Apprenticeship in Europe – A Survey
- Index
Conclusion: Apprenticeship in Europe – A Survey
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 October 2019
- Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe
- Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction: Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe
- 1 The Economics of Apprenticeship
- 2 Artisan Apprenticeship in Early Modern Madrid
- 3 A Large ‘Umbrella’: Patterns of Apprenticeship in Eighteenth-Century Turin
- 4 Apprenticeship in Early Modern Venice
- 5 Actors and Practices of German Apprenticeship, Fifteenth–Nineteenth Centuries
- 6 Rural Artisans’ Apprenticeship Practices in Early Modern Finland (1700–1850)
- 7 Apprenticeships with and without Guilds: The Northern Netherlands
- 8 Apprenticeship in the Southern Netherlands, c. 1400–c. 1800
- 9 Apprenticeship in England
- 10 Surviving the End of the Guilds: Apprenticeship in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century France
- Conclusion: Apprenticeship in Europe – A Survey
- Index
Summary
All European countries had apprenticeship systems, which were normally regulated and implemented locally. This involved three institutional actors: guilds providing a regulatory framework, notaries registering the contracts between individual masters and apprentices, and urban courts overseeing the practical implementation of these rules and arrangements. The guilds’ role has been often overstated, the urban authorities’ impact underestimated. Large percentages of pre-modern teenagers were educated, socially and technically, by this system. Most of them were males, who normally received their training from someone outside their immediate family circle. Apprenticeship was a mechanism for social, geographic and occupational mobility across Europe, but only a minority of apprentices could reasonably expect to become masters themselves. In the absence of a viable alternative, the pre-modern apprenticeship system continued in many countries after the abolition of the guilds, and even into the early twentieth century.
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- Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe , pp. 309 - 316Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019