Colloque – Craftsmen and Guilds in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods

The subject of craftsmen and their institutions looks back on two centuries of research tradition, but it has long been caught up in clichés such as the guilds’ supposed backwardness and exclusiveness. In the course of the last years a paradigmatic shift has increasingly emphasised the guilds’ dynamics and social mobility. This has opened the way to a series of new studies and research questions, but currently there is no institutional framework to facilitate a systematic exchange on the subject.
The conference, which is organised by the History Institute of the University of Luxembourg and the research project “Villux”, and which is kindly supported by the Musée d’Histoire de la ville de Luxembourg, wants to provide a dialogue board for young and more experienced researchers to present their approaches to the exploration of guilds and craftsmen on an international level. The conference is particularly interested in emphasising the heterogeneity of guilds and the plural interests and strategies of their members. Making use of a wide set of regional case studies it aims at a synchronic transnational comparison but also at a diachronic exploration of the subject in order to stimulate the exchange between medieval and early modern historians. 
Programme :
Thursday, September 12th 2013
13.45-14.15 – Welcome 
Introduction: Theoretical considerations on guilds 
14.15-14.45 : Rudolf Holbach (University of Oldenburg) – Medieval guilds in the light of economic and socio-scientific theories
Session 1: Migration and Exchange 
14.45-15.15 : Elisabeth Thoß (University of Vienna) – Journeymen’s migration from/to Cracow and Wroclaw from the 16th to the 19th century 
15.15-15.45 : Discussion 
15.45-16.15 : Break 
16.15-16.45: Knut Schulz (FU Berlin) – Migration and technical exchange. The case of gunmasters (Büchsenmeister) 
16.45-17.15 : Reinhold Reith (University of Salzburg) – Labour markets in premodern crafts in Central Europe. A historiographical perspective 
17.15-17.45 : Discussion 
19.00: Dinner
Friday, September 13th 2013
Session 2: Guilds and Women 
09.00-09.30 : Maija Ojala (University of Tampere) – Sex matters? Artisan widows’ and craft trade culture in the North
09.30-10.00 : Muriel Gonzalez (University of Barcelona) – Legal regulations in early modern Cologne. Agencies of female artisans 
10.00-10.30 : Discussion 
10.30-11.00 : Break 
11.00-11.30 : Francois Rivière (EHESS Paris) – Women craft organisations in Rouen (14th-15th century): What role could women play in economic regulation? 
11.30-12.00 : Sabine von Heusinger (University of Cologne) – Medieval families as economic communities 
12.00- 12.30: Discussion 
12.30-14.00: Lunch break
Session 3: regional studies of guilds 
14.00-14.30 : Arie van Steensel (University of Utrecht) – How and why to write a comparative history of medieval occupational guilds? 
14.30-15.00 : Tineke VanGassen (University of Ghent) – The craft guilds of masons and carpenters in late medieval Ghent 
15.00-15.30 : Marion Bernard (Institut national du patrimoine, Paris) – The service of the prince and social ambition: The counter example of the armourers and the sword cutlers of Paris at the end of the Middle Ages 
15.30-16.00 : Discussion 
16.00-16.30: Break
16.30-17.00 : Eleonora Canepari (University of Oxford) – Working for someone else. Apprentices and labourers in the early modern Roman guilds (16th to early 19th century) 
17.00-17.30 : Eva Jullien (University of Luxembourg) – The craftsmen of the town of Luxembourg in the Late Middle Ages. 
17.30-18.00 : Danica Brenner (University of Trier) – Painter’s guilds in the German-speaking regions during the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Early Modern Times 
18.00-18.30 : Discussion 
19.00 Uhr: Dinner
Saturday, September 14th 2013
Session 4: guilds, identity and social strategies 
09.00-09.30 : Jasmine Killburn-Toppin (Royal College of Art, London) – Crafting artisanal identities: rebuilding projects and guild communities in early modern London 
09.30-10.00 : Ricardo Cordoba (University of Cordoba) – Guild Authorities in late medieval Spain 
10.00-10.30: Discussion 
10.30-11.00: Break 
11.00-11.30 : Jennifer Bishop (University of Cambridge) – The Goldsmiths’ Company and the regulation of social relationships in mid-16th century London 
11.30- 12.00 : Katalin Prajda (Central European University of Budapest) – The social network of goldsmiths in early renaissance Florence 
12.00-12.30 : Nicoletta Rolla (University of Milan) – The St. Anne’s company in 18th-century Turin 
12.30-13.00 : Discussion 
13.00-13.15 : Conclusion 
14.30 : Optional activity: guided tour in the „Musée de la Ville de Luxembourg” 
Informations pratiques :
Veranstalter: University of Luxembourg
Datum, Ort: 12.09.2013-14.09.2013, Walferdange, Campus Walferdange, Salle Montessori, Route de Diekirch, 7201 Walferdange
Kontakt: 
Eva Jullien
Université du Luxembourg, Route de Diekirch 
7201 Walferdange 
00352 466644 6746
eva.jullien@uni.lu
Source de l’information : H-Soz-U-Kult

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