AmazonBests
Craft-guilds of the thirteenth century in Paris cover
History

Craft-guilds of the thirteenth century in Paris

EPUB (Kindle-ready)
$2.97$7.99Instant download
  • ✓ EPUB — works on Kindle (Send to Kindle) and every reader
  • ✓ Download link on screen and in your email
  • ✓ Yours forever — no DRM, re-download anytime

Reading a lot? Get all 4924 books for $19.97

What it's about

Craft-guilds of the thirteenth century in Paris by Fred B. Millett is a historical study written in the early 20th century. The book examines the organization, regulation, and social-economic role of Parisian craft gilds in the later Middle Ages, drawing especially on Étienne Boileau’s Livre des Métiers to portray how trades were structured, policed, and integrated into urban and feudal life. The study defines the gild as an oath-bound industrial body of masters, valets (journeymen), and apprentices, largely non-political and focused on protecting work, standards, and market position. After noting debates on origins and early privileges, it centers on Boileau’s codification of over a hundred crafts, then details apprenticeship contracts, term lengths, fees, family exemptions, discipline of runaways, and the rights and limits of hired workers, including early flashes of labor tension. It traces the path to mastery—skill, capital, purchase of trading rights where required, formal oaths—and the pivotal oversight of jurés, who inspected work, enforced rules, and represented the craft, under the broader authority of royal officers. Work rhythms followed the church calendar, with bans on night work for many trades; strict quality controls governed materials, processes, and measurements, backed by seals, surprise inspections, confiscations, and fines. Selling customs favored markets over hawking and curtailed “foreign” competition; anti-monopoly clauses sought to prevent price-fixing and corners. The book explains fiscal burdens (hauban, tonlieu, coutume), the onerous watch duty with partial exemptions, and the confréries that organized worship, charity, and mutual aid. It closes by weighing benefits—training, quality assurance, social solidarity, and consumer protection—against rigid apprenticeship, restrictive entry to mastery, heavy dues, excessive regulation, and routine-bound production.

This one is part of the wider library — I haven't written a personal review for it yet. It's the same deal as every book here: a clean, complete, Kindle-ready edition for $2.97. The hand-picked shelf has the ones I've reviewed in full.

Sold? The ebook is $2.97.
In your inbox before you finish this sentence.
Quick answers

Will it work on my Kindle?

Yes — Kindle accepts EPUB directly. Email the file to your Kindle address (Send to Kindle) or drag it over USB and it shows up like any other book. The same EPUB works on Kobo, Apple Books, Google Play Books and every reading app.

How do I get the book after paying?

Instantly. After checkout you land on your download page, and the same link is emailed to you so you can re-download anytime, on any device.

Why is Craft-guilds of the thirteenth century in Paris only $2.97?

The book is in the public domain, so the story itself is free to everyone. You're paying for a carefully typeset, proofread edition that looks right on modern readers — and for the curation of picking books actually worth your time.

What if something goes wrong with my download?

Reply to your receipt email and we'll sort it out — resend the files or refund you, whichever you prefer.

More historyAll history