THE CHARM OF
OLD CRAFTS
IN KREMNICA
The charter of 1328 gave Kremnica
economic and legal privileges, which guaranteed the town’s development and
economic prosperity. Apart from the main working activities of mining and coin
production, part of the population devoted itself to crafts, which were to
some extent dependent on the production of gold and silver. Nonetheless,
crafts played an important part in development of the town. In the 15th
century, we already find developed organizations of craftsmen-guilds.
Kremnica had an array of crafts to
satisfy the basic needs of the inhabitants of the town. These were the food
supply, construction, clothing, metal, wood, and leatherworking crafts.
According to a tax roll of the population from 1442-43, most numerous were the
butchers and smiths (14), carpenters (12), shoe-makers (10), goldsmiths and
tailors (9), bakers (6), masons (4), belt-makers, cart wrights, millers,
coopers (3), armoire's and locksmiths (2), while saddling, sword-making,
fur-production, belt, making, brewing, joinery, tanning, knife and
file-making, glass production, pouch, gun and rope making were represented by
one each. Many of these craftsmen were enterprising and well to do, so they
got onto the town council. For example, in the 14th century, we already find a
tailor, a goldsmith, and a cartwright, and mayors from the 14th and 15th
centuries include a goldsmith, cartwright, butcher and joiner. In the 14th
century, houses on the town square were owned or inhabited by the
so-called 11 "ring burgers," among them goldsmith, carpenter, smith,
belt-maker, cooper, tailor, shingle maker, joiner and cartwright.
Only the statutes of the shoe-making
journeymen from 1465, the shoe-makers from 1508, the tailors from 1531, the
bakers and millers from 1554, the belt-makers from 1571 and the coopers
from 1582 are preserved from the 15th and 16th centuries, but we know of other
guilds. In 1481, the guild of butchers insisted on written on privileges it
had already been granted. Statutes of the smiths are mentioned in 1555, and
regulations of a joint guild of stonemasons, builders, and carpenters are
mentioned in 1570. The statutes of the furriers were renewed in 1575, and in
1579, the locksmiths, belt-makers, joiners, coppersmiths, tinsmiths,
gun-makers, knife-makers, glaziers, and cartwrights formed a joint guild. In
1582, the sources mention a certain Georg as a Kremnica clock-maker,
Eight guilds were formed in the 17th
century: the locksmiths in 1610, joiners in 1641, boot-makers in 1650,
rope-makers in 1650, clothiers in 1666, button-makers in 1667, hatters in
1697, and in 1689, coopers renewed their guild. In the 16th and
17th centuries, there were about 150 to 200 craft workshops in the town, and
by the end of the 18th century about 250.
A list from 1777 mentions 194
craftsmen, active in 43 crafts. The largest groups were the boot makers (29),
tailors (20), shoe-makers (15), butchers (12) and cord waivers (10), followed
by cloth-makers and potters (9 each), furriers and joiners (7 each), coopers
(5), gold-smiths and bakers (4 each), barbers, tanners, smiths, builders,
button-makers, rope-makers, weavers (3 each), honey biscuit-makers,
chimneysweepers, bell-founders, book-binders, glass-makers, armor makers (2
each), a clock-maker, brewer, glove-maker, tinsmith, cartwright, gun, wig and
knife makers, a saddler, comb maker, soap maker, paver, dyer (one of
each).
The guilds included three levels of
craftsmen: apprentice, journeyman and master. On the first level was the
apprentice, who was learning the craft, on the second was the
journeyman, who perfected his skill by completing an obligatory study journey
and master's year and producing a masterpiece. Then he was recognized
as a master and full member of the guild-he had reached the third
level. A master, who was elected by the members, headed the guild.
The outward signs of the professional
community were the guild symbols, which symbolized the craft. They appeared on
objects that formed the prized possessions of every guild, that is the seal,
notices, guild flag, shields, drinking vessels used at guild meeting. The most
important object was the chest in which the statutes were kept. These were a
set of rules, regulating the economic and public life of the guild. The
statutes set out the rights and duties of the members. The chest was kept in
the house of the guild-master, and its opening indicated the beginning of a
meeting.
The centuries of guild-history in
Kremnica culminated in the 18th century, in both the quantitative and
qualitative senses. However, the 19th century already brought the twilight of
the guilds. Many crafts were not able to keep up with industrial production.
The guilds being obsolete became a hindrance to the introduction of new
technology. In 1872, law abolished them.
The guild-masters, in the case they
did not continue entirely with old customs, submitted their written records to
the town archives, and when the museum was established in 1890, submitted the
symbolic objects as well.
The following crafts existed in Kremnica:
Food production: butchers, bakers, and
honey-biscuit-makers
Metalworking: goldsmiths, tinsmiths, clock-makers, smiths, locksmiths,
gun-makers, and coppersmiths
Clothing: shoemakers, boot-makers, tailors, hatters, button-makers, and
furriers
Textiles: rope-makers, clothiers
Woodworking: cooper, joiners
Leather-working: tanners, belt-makers
Construction: builders and stonemasons
Others: potters.
GO
BACK TO OLD CRAFTS
Reprinted from: The Charm of Old Crafts,
PhDr.
Ludmila Nemeskurthiova
Published by © National Bank of Slovakia-Museum
of Coins and Medals Kremnica 1998
Published in the
Slovak Heritage Live newsletter Volume 7, No. 2, Summer 1999
3804 Yale
Street, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5C 1P6
The above article and photographs may not be copied, reproduced,
republished, or redistributed by any means including electronic, without
the express written permission of Vladimir
Linder. All rights reserved.
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