Social Mobility and the Worsted Weavers of Norwich, c.1450-1530

DURKEE, DANA ANN (2017) Social Mobility and the Worsted Weavers of Norwich, c.1450-1530. Doctoral thesis, Durham University.
Copy

This thesis explores the question of social mobility in late medieval English towns, using the worsted weavers of Norwich as a case study. Social stratification is a key topic in medieval urban history, and the question of rising oligarchy and class conflict have influenced the way historians understand the institutional and constitutional development of late medieval English towns. This study employs a dual approach to the question of whether commercial success created an urban environment conducive to social and occupational mobility for craftsmen. It first considers the development of Norfolk’s native worsted cloth industry in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. It then uses a prosopographical analysis of the worsted weavers to consider whether the commercial success of worsted cloth was creating the opportunity for social mobility among urban artisans. This study finds that opportunities for social mobility were indeed increasing in the late fifteenth century. The thesis has been divided into two parts. The first part examines the economic and institutional context for the fifteenth-century commercial revival of worsted cloths in overseas trade. It also considers the way that the regional production of worsteds became regulated by the Guild of Worsted Weavers in Norwich. It then considers the constitutional development of craft guilds in Norwich in the fifteenth century, and their integration as public institutions. The second part of the thesis examines the lives of Norwich’s worsted weavers between c.1450 and 1530. It uses the framework of an 'artisanal cursus honorum' to consider the various ways in which the worsted weavers, both individually and as a group, advanced professionally, socially, and economically.


picture_as_pdf
Durkee-THESIS-corrected.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial Share Alike 3.0 (CC BY-NC-SA)

View Download

EndNote Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core Data Cite XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span ASCII Citation HTML Citation MODS MPEG-21 DIDL METS OpenURL ContextObject
Export