Medieval Towns
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Transcript Medieval Towns
Medieval Towns
Middle Ages #4
Towns grow up
Early middle ages – most people lived
on a manor or in religious community
From 1000 – 1450 (high middle ages)
towns started growing near manors
or monasteries along trade routes
centers for trade an industry
Towns surrounded by walls
Visitors entered through gates
Homes and businesses lined the
unpaved streets
Signs with colorful pictures hung over
doors of businesses
Open squares in front of public
buildings and churches were
gathering places
Streets were narrow
Second stories hung over first levelallowed for little light
Squares were crowded with people,
animals
No garbage collection- thrown into
canals, ditches or streets
Reasons for growth
Improved agriculture
Cleared forests
Better farming methods
Surplus crops to sell in towns
Revival of trade
Seaport towns served as trading centers
Goods traveled along water routes
Merchants became permanent
residents
People who practiced various trades
stayed put
Wealthier towns
Specialized in certain goods
Flanders (present day Belgium and
Netherlands) – woolen cloth
Venice – glass
Other towns – banking – helping others
trade more easily
Domain of Towns
In beginning of middle ages -part of a
feudal lord
As towns grew wealthier, town
dwellers became resentful of lord’s
rights and taxes
Felt they didn’t need lord’s protection
or interference
In some places in Northern France
and Italy violence broke out in
struggle to become independent
Other places independence was more
peaceful – England and parts of
France
Became independent by purchasing a
charter – allowed them to govern
themselves – make laws, raise taxes
Free Towns
Governed by a mayor and town
council
Power shifted to merchants and
craftspeople
Guilds
Towns became places where goods
were made
Trade and production of these were
overseen by guilds
Guild – an organization of people in
the same craft or trade
Craft Guilds
Each type of craft had their own guild
cobblers – shoe maker, belts, other
leather goods
Cloth makers
Stonemasons – builders
Guilds purpose
Provided help and protection for
people doing a certain kind of work
Maintained high standards
Controlled hours worked
Set fair prices
Dealt with complaints by customers
Punished members who cheated
Guild dues
Paid dues
Dues paid for construction of guild
halls and guild fairs and festivals
Took care of members families who
were sick and unable to work
Guild membership
At age 12 boy – some girls- became
apprentices
Parents signed an agreement with
master of trade
Master housed, fed, and train the
apprentice
Parents sometimes had to pay the
master
Apprentices rarely got paid
Mastering the trade
At the end of 7 years the apprentice
had to prove himself by creating a
master piece
Guild had to approve of the work
Then the apprentice could set up his
own business – very expensive
Many became journeymen
Journeymen
Comes from the French word journeemeaning day
Found work by day instead of
becoming a master who employed
others
Commerce
Buying and selling of goods
As commerce grew so did towns
At beginning of middle ages trade
was mostly for luxury goods which
only the wealthy could afford
By high middle ages more people
were buying and selling goods
Merchants
Growth of trade – merchants became
more wealthy and powerful
Looked for trading opportunities in
other lands
Guilds dominated business life and
sat on town councils
Markets
Place where local food and goods
were sold
Great merchant fairs – attracted
merchants from other countries
Goods came from all over Europe and
the east
Prejudice
Many towns had a large Jewish
population
Christians in general were hostile
towards Jews
Lords sometimes took their property
Targets of violence
Many became bankers
Church taught that charging money
for loans was sinful
Jewish people performed this
essential service for economy
They were often looked down upon
for doing this
Home and Households
Most homes were made of wood
They were narrow and were
sometimes 4 stories high
As they got older they sometimes
leaned and touched the house across
the street
High risk of fire danger – whole towns
sometimes burnt down
Poor homes
Several families shared the same
home
Family may have only one room to
cook, eat and sleep in
People lived where they worked
Wealthy homes
Large, splendid homes
First level was often a business
Second level living quarters
Third level housed apprentices and
servants
Life in towns
Half of all children die before they
became adults
Began preparing for adult roles at
age 7
Some children attended school
Wealthy children might learn to paint
or play music
Most boys trained to do work of their
fathers
Some girls trained for a craft, but
most married early
Learned cooking
Cloth making and other skills to run a
home and care for a family
Disease and Medical Treatment
Towns were dirty and led to many
diseases
No bathrooms – privies or chamber
pots – emptied into streams or rivers
Garbage tossed into streets or
streams
Bathed only once a week
Rats and fleas common and carried
disease
Leprosy
Prevented and cured today
Spread easily
Lepers had to live isolated from
others
Other diseases
Measles
Cholera
Scarlet fever
Bubonic plague
Lack of knowledge
No one knew how disease was spread
People often accused Jews of
poisoning wells
Hospitals
Invented during the middle ages
Few
Most people were treated by family
members or sometimes a doctor
Doctors used a combination of prayer
and medical treatment
Used herbs
Position of planets and magic
Bleed a patient by opening a vein
Applying a leech
Believed that bloodletting restored
balance and spirit to the body
Crime and Punishment
Towns were unsafe
Pickpockets and thieves were
common
Night was especially dangerous
because of the darkness
Night watchmen patrolled the streets
with candle to deter crime
Accused
Held in dirty crowded jails
Had to rely on family and friends to
bring food or money
Wealthy people sometimes left money
to help prisoners buy food
Trial by Ordeal
Accused had to pass a dangerous test
such as being thrown into a deep well
Those who floated were considered
guilty because he had been rejected
by the water
Trial by Combat
Accused had to fight to prove his
innocence
God would make the right decision
Clergy, women, children or disabled
could name a champion to fight for
them
Punishments
Harsh
Lesser punishment fined or put into
the stocks – wooden frame with hole
for legs an arms – painful and
humiliating
Those found guilty of serious crimes
such as highway robbery, stealing
livestock, treason, or murder
Hanged
Burned at stake
Carried out in public
Power to Prosecute
Important lords and kings
In early 1100s England set a system
of royal courts
Contributed to common law – a body of
rulings by judges that became part of
the legal system
Important safegaurd to individual rights
Leisure and Entertainment
Children played with
wooden dolls and toys
Played minton
Lawn bowling
Blind man’s bluff
Adults
Chess
Checkers
Backgammon
Card games
Betting on dice
dancing
Took time off work on Sundays and
religious feasts
Baiting animals was popular – bear or
bull fastened to a pole – trained dogs
were then let lose to torment the
animal
Fair days
Jugglers
Dancers
Clowns
Minstrels – singers or musicians
Guild members dressed in costumes and
paraded through the streets
Mystery plays – put on by guildsActed out bible stories
Miracle plays – lives of saints
Church eventually disapproved of
both plays