Guilds of Brussels
The Guilds of Brussels, grouped in the Nine Nations of Brussels (Dutch: Negen Naties van Brussel; French: Neuf Nations de Bruxelles), were associations of craft guilds that dominated the economic life of the city of Brussels in the late medieval and early modern periods. From 1421 onwards, they were represented in the city government alongside the patrician lineages of the Seven Noble Houses of Brussels,[1] and later also in the States of Brabant as members of the Third Estate. Some of their guildhouses can still be seen as part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the Grand Place in Brussels.
Composition
Rather than being limited to a specific craft, each of the nine "nations" grouped a number of trades.
The "nations" were:[2]
- Nation of Our Lady: butchers, salt-fishmongers, greengrocers, sawyers, goldsmiths and silversmiths.
- Nation of St Giles: mercers, victuallers, fruiterers, boatmen, plumbers, fresh-fishmongers.
- Nation of St Lawrence: weavers, bleachers, fullers, hatters, tapestry makers, linen weavers.
- Nation of St Gery: tailors, stockingmakers, haberdashers, furriers, embroiderers, second-hand clothes dealers, barber surgeons.
- Nation of St John: blacksmiths, tinsmiths, farriers, pan smiths, cutlers, locksmiths and watchmakers, painters, goldbeaters and glassmakers, saddlers and harness makers, turners, plasterers and stuccadores, thatchers and basket weavers.
- Nation of St Christopher: dyers, cloth shearers, lacemakers, chairmakers.
- Nation of St James: bakers and pastry bakers, millers, brewers, coopers, cabinetmakers, tilers, vintners and taverners.
- Nation of St Peter: glovers, tanners, belt makers, shoemakers, cobblers.
- Nation of St Nicholas: armourers and swordsmiths, pedlars, spurriers and gilders, gunsmiths, carpenters, and the stonecutters, masons, sculptors and slaters.
Abolition
The guilds in Brussels, and throughout Belgium, were suppressed in 1795, during the French occupation of 1794–1814. The furniture and archives of the Brussels guilds were sold at public auction on the Grand Place in August 1796.
See also
References
- ↑ David M. Nicholas, The Later Medieval City: 1300–1500 (Routledge, 2014), p. 139.
- ↑ A. Graffart, "Register van het schilders-, goudslagers- en glazenmakersambacht van Brussel, 1707–1794", tr. M. Erkens, in Doorheen de nationale geschiedenis (State Archives in Belgium, Brussels, 1980), pp. 270–271.