Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:34:30.389Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An Approach to Modern Labor: Worker Peasantries in Historic Saxony and the Friuli Region over Three Centuries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Douglas R. Holmes
Affiliation:
University of Houston, Clear Lake
Jean H. Quataert
Affiliation:
University of Houston, Clear Lake

Extract

The spread of manufacture in the European countryside initiated the formation of vital and complex rural laboring groups that defy neat classification. The nature of livelihood in these rural settings furthered an integration of diverse productive involvements rather than the creation of narrow occupational niches. In the course of their labor careers, men and women moved between agrarian and industrial pursuits—weaving linen cloth, spinning silk, raising livestock, digging potatoes, tending vineyards, making bricks, mining coal, casting iron, and forging steel. In this context, livelihood was not merely an individual concern; rather, it was part of a broader household strategy, rooted in a family-based agrarian holding. The maintenance of bonds to peasant agriculture fostered familial solidarity over working-class identity. These laborers saw their destinies in the immediacy of flesh-and-blood relationships among family and kin and not in more abstract social and political identifications.

Type
Peasant Workers
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1986

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Adelmann, Gerhard. 1979. “Die Ländliche Textilgewerbe des Rheinlands vor der Industrialisierung.” Rheinisches Vierteljahresblatt, 43. 260–88.Google Scholar
Aker, Ahmet. 1979. “A Study of Turkish Labour Migration to Germany,” in International Conference on Migrant Workers, Kudat, Ayse and Ozkan, Yilmaz, eds. Berlin: International Institute for Comparative Social Studies of the Science Center.Google Scholar
Ashton, T. S. 1979 [rpt. 1979]. The Industrial Revolution, 1760–1830. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
B.AL (Staatsarchiv Dresden. Aussenstelle Bautzen. Amtshauptmannschaft Löbau). Nr. 1979: Geschüftsberichte (Business reports] 1910).Google Scholar
B.AZ (Staatsarchiv Dresden, Aussenstelle Bautzen, Amtshauptmannschaft Zittau). Nr. 3643–3645: Die Erwerbe-und Nahrungsverhältnisse der arbeitenden Bevölkerung betr. [Survey of living standards and work] 18771880.Google Scholar
Nr. 8208–8241: Invaliditäts-und Alters-Versicherung der Hausgcwerbetrcibenden der Textilindustrie in … [Disability and old age insurance of the self-employed in home textiles in the village of …] 18951914.Google Scholar
Nr. 13821: Handels-und Gewerbekammer in Zittau. Jahresberichte [Yearly reports of the Zittau Chamber of Commerce] 19011904.Google Scholar
B, KB (Staatsarchiv Dresden, Aussenstelle Bautzen, Kreishauptmannschaft Bauzten). Nr. 1979: Einwirkung der beschränkenden Bestimmungen für die Baumwoll-Industrie [The effect of reduced provisions for the cotton industry] 19151916.Google Scholar
Nr. 1979: Die den oberlausitzischen Leinwebern ertheilte Gestaltung zum Hausiren mit ihren Fabricaten (Granting Oberlausitz linenweavers the right to hawk their goods] 18461850).Google Scholar
Battigelli, Franca, n.d. II fenomeno migratorio in un comune delta valli del natisone: Savogna. Udine: Pacini Editore.Google Scholar
Beck, Sam. 1979. “The Emergence of the Peasant-Worker in a Transylvanian Mountain Community.“ Dialectical Anthropology, 1:4, 365–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernard, H. Russell, AND Ashton-Vouyoucalos, Sandy. 1976. “Return Migration to Greece.“ Journal of the Steward Anthropological Society, 8:1, 3151.Google Scholar
Bisselle, Walter C. 1973. “Peasant-Workers in Poland.“ Studies in European Society, 1:1, 7990.Google Scholar
Blum, Jerome. 1978. The End of the Old Order in Europe. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boelcke, Willi. 1979. Bauer und Gutsherr in der Oberlausitz. Ein Beitrag zur Wirtschafts-, Sozial-und Rechtsgeschichte der ostelbischen Gutsherrschaft. 5, Schriftenreihe des Instituts fur sorbische Volksforschung. Bautzen: Domowina- Verlag.Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand. 1981. The Structure of Everyday Life: The Limits of the Possible, Vol. I of Civilization and Capitalism, I5th-I8th Century. New York: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Braun, Rudolf. 1960. Industrialisierung und Volksleben: Die Veränderungen der Lebensformen in einem ländlichen Industriegebiet vor 1800 (Züricher Oberland). Erlenbach-Ziirich and Stuttgart: Eugen Rentsch Verlag.Google Scholar
Braun, Rudolf. 1965. Industrialisierung und Volksleben: Sozialer und Kultureller Wandel in einem Ländlichen Industriegebiet (Züricher Oberland) unter Einwirkung des Maschinen- und Fabrikwesens im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. Erlenbach-Ziirich and Stuttgart: Eugen Rentsch Verlag.Google Scholar
Douglass, William A. 1983. “Migration in Italy,“ in Urban Life in Mediterranean Europe, Kenny, Michael and Kertzer, David I., eds., 162202. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Engels, Friedrich. 1844 [rpt. 1979]. The Condition of the Working Class in England, Henderson, W. O. and Chaloner, W. H., trans, and ed. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Franklin, S. H. 1969. The European Peasantry: The Final Phase. London: Methuen and Company.Google Scholar
Gmelch, George. 1983. “Who Returns and Why: Return Migration Behavior in Two North Atlantic Societies.“ Human Organization, 42:1, 4654.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grigg, David. 1980. Population Growth and Agrarian Change: An Historical Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Grollich, Edmund. 1911. Die Baumwollweberei der sächsischen Oberlausitz und ihre Entwicklung zum Grossbetrieb. Leipzig: n.p.Google Scholar
Hann, C. M. 1976. Tazlar, a Village in Hungary. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hauptmann, Fritz. 1976. Woher wir Kommen. Das Zittauer Land. Marburg: Privatdruck.Google Scholar
Holmes, Douglas R. 1983a. “A Peasant-Worker Model in a Northern Italian Context.“ American Ethnologist, 10:4, 734–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, Douglas R. 1983b. “Peasant-Workers and Social Security in the Friuli Region of Italy.“ Paper presented at the 82nd Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Chicago, Illinois, 1620 November.Google Scholar
Khera, Sigrid. 1972. “An Austrian Peasant Village under Rural Industrialization.“ Behavior Science Notes, 7:1, 2936.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korschelt, G. 1967 [rpt. 1979]. “Beitrage zur Geschichte der Webindustrie in der sächsischen Oberlausitz.“ Oberlausitzer Rundschau, 11:293–94.Google Scholar
Korschelt, G. 1871. Geschichte von Oderwitz. Neu-Gersdorf.Google Scholar
Kriedte, Peter; Medick, Hans; and Schlumbohm, Jürgen. 1977. Industrialisierung vor der Industrialisierung. Gewerbliche Warenproduktion aufdem Land in der Formationsperiode des Kapitalismus. Gottingen: Vandenhoek and RuprechtGoogle Scholar
Kriedte, Peter 1961. “Die Proto-Industrialisierung aufdem Priifstand der historischen Zunft. Antwort auf einiger Kritiker.“ Geschichte und Gesellschaft, 9: 87105.Google Scholar
Kunze, Arno. 1969. “Vom Bauerndorf zum Weberdorf: Zur sozialen und wirtschaftlichen Struktur der Waldhufendorfer der siidlichen Oberlausitz im 16., 17., und 18. Jahrhundert,“ in Oberlausitzer Forschungen: Beiträge zur Landesgeschichte, 165–92. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Leske, Nathanael Gotfried. 1985. Reise durch Sachsen in Riicksicht der Naturgeschichte und Oekonomie. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Levine, David. 1977. Family Formation in an Age of Nascent Capitalism. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Lockwood, William G. 1973. “The Peasant-Worker in Yugoslavia.“ j, 1:1, 91110.Google Scholar
Medick, Hans. 1978. “Haushalt-und Familienstruktur als Momente des Produktionsund Reproduktionsprozess,“ in Seminar. Familie und Gesellschaftsstruktur, Rosenbaum, Heidi, ed. Frankfurt/Main: Fischer Taschenbuch.Google Scholar
Mendels, Franklin F. 1972. “Proto-lndustrialization. The First Phase of the Industrialization Process.“ Journal of Economic History, 32:1, 241–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minge-Kalman, Wanda. 1978. “Household Economy during the Peasant-to-Worker Transition in the Swiss Alps.“ Ethnology, 17:2, 183–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Musiat, Siegmund. 1964. Zur Lebensweise des Landwirtschaftlichen Gesinde in der Oberlausitz. Schriftenreihe des Institutsfur sorbische Volksforschung in Bautzen bei der Deutschen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin. Bautzen: VEB Domowina-Verlag.Google Scholar
Gaetano, Panizzon. 1967. Aspetti demografici friulani del secolo: 1866–1966. Udine: Del Bianco.Google Scholar
Parmeggiani, Nico. 1966. Gli stadi dello sviluppo industriele nellaprovincia di Udine. Udine: Del Bianco.Google Scholar
Pescheck, Christian. 1952. “Geschichte der Industrie und des Handels in der Oberlausitz.“ Neues Lausitzisches Magazin, 29:3-48.Google Scholar
Pollard, Sidney. 1981. Peaceful Conquest: The Industrialization of Europe. 1760–1970. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Quataert, Jean H. 1984. “Social Insurance and the Family Work of Homeweavers in the Saxon Oberlausitz in the Late Nineteenth Century,“ in German Women in the Nineteenth Century: A Social History, Fout, John C., ed., 270–94. New York: Holmes and Meier.Google Scholar
Quataert, Jean H. 1985. “Combining Agrarian and Industrial Livelihoods: Rural Households in the Saxon Oberlausitz in the Nineteenth Century,“ Journal of Family History. 10:2, 145–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quataert, Jean H. 1986. “Teamwork in Saxon Homeweaving Families in the Nineteenth Century: A Preliminary Investigation into the Issue of Gender Work Roles,“ in German Women in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: A Social and Literary History, Maynes, Mary Jo and Joeres, Ruth-Ellen, eds. Bloomington: Indiana University PressGoogle Scholar
Rachel, Hugo. 1931. Das Berliner Wirtschaftsleben im Zeitalter des Fruehkapitalismus. Berlin: Rembrandt Verlag.Google Scholar
Rhoades, Robert E. 1978. “Intra-European Return Migration and Rural Development: Lessons from the Spanish Case.” Human Organization, 37:2, 136–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabel, Charles F. 1982. Work and Politics: The Division of Labor in Industry. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schlumbohm, Jürgen. 1978. “Der saisonale Rhythmus der Leinenproduktion im Osnabriicker Lande während des späten 18. und der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts.” Archiv für Sozialgeschichte, 19:262–98.Google Scholar
Schulte, Regina. 1984. “Life and Work in Peasant Households in Nineteenth-Century Bavaria.“ Paper presented to the “German-American Symposium on Workers and Their Culture in Comparative Perspective,“ April 14–16, Baltimore. Maryland.Google Scholar
Sozan, Michael. 1976. “Sociocultural Transformation in East Central Europe. The Case of the Hungarian Peasant-Worker in Burgenland.“ East Central Europe, 3:2, 195209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
StAD (Staatsarchiv Dresden). Nr. 5630: Den durch die Baumwollenkrisis herbeigefuhrten Nothstand: Generalia [Distress brought about by the cotton crisis: general documents] 18621863. Nr. 5959: Mechanische Webstuhle Mechanical looms] 1877.Google Scholar
Beiträge, Statistische. 1910. Statistische Beiträge zur Bevölkerung-und Wirtschaftsgeographie des Königsreichs Sachsen. Dresden.Google Scholar
Oberlausitz, Südöstliche. 1970. Die Südöstliche Oberlausitz mit Zittau unddem Zittauer Gebirge. Ergebnisse der heimatkundlichen Bestandsaufnahme in den Gebieten Neugersdorf, Zittau, Hirschfelde, und Waltersdorf. Berlin.Google Scholar
Wcingrod, Alex, AND Morin, Emma. 1971. “ ‘Post-Peasants’: The Character of Contemporary Sardinian Society.“ Comparative Studies in Society and History, 13:3:301–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, Eric R. 1982. Europe and the People without History. Berkeley: University of California Press,Google Scholar
von Schiieben, Richard. 1885. “Untersuchungen iiber das Einkommcn und die Lebenshaltung des Handwebers im Bczirke der Amtshauptmannschaft in Zittau.“ Zeitschrift des K. Sächsischen Statistischen Bureaus, 31:156–90.Google Scholar
ZKSSB (Zeitschrift des K. Sächsischen Statistischen Bureaus). 1979. 1905, 1912.Google Scholar