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Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

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Page 1: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II

Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Page 2: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Creation of Medieval Towns and Cities

• No bigger than modern towns

• Many towns walled in for protection

• Main buildings- Cathedral and Marketplace

Page 3: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Towns and Cities Continued…

• People had everything needed for life inside the walls

• Gave people a sense of unity

• Most food and water were unsanitary

• Trade was strongly discouraged

Page 4: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

The Rise of the middle class

• Social class made by merchants and artisans

- Quickly gained economic and political power

• In regular towns merchants and artisans were considered to be low class

- Many came from wealthy families

• This caused the merchants and artisans to become angry, therefore creating the middle class

Page 5: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

How the Black Death influenced the Rise of The Middle Class

• Many people died during the black death

• This left many jobs open for people that survived- Many of these people came from

middle class families• This made the middle class

extremely powerful

Page 6: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Guilds

• Associations of people who did the same type of work– Shoemakers Guild– Blacksmiths Guild– Weavers Guild– Bakers Guild

• It took a lot of work to be accepted into a guild– At age 7 or 8 you were taken to become an apprentice in your

area of craft– Spent 7 years learning your specific trade– They did not get paid but guild master provided them with

food and housing

Page 7: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

England’s Bakers guild coat of arms

Page 8: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

England’s pewter guild coat of arms

Page 9: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Guilds continued

• Guilds were formed by merchants and artisans- Merchants dominated town life, passing laws and taxes

- Artisan eventually came to resent the merchants

- The artisans then branched of and created there own craft guilds

Page 10: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

Guild Rules

• Guilds made rules to protect the quality of their goods– regulated hours of labor– Set prices–every member of a guild had

to make the same product to prevent competition between other guilds

Page 11: Economic Recovery Sparks Change: Part II Created By: Rebecca Ferdinand, Katiana Castor and Clancy Gray

What Guilds Provided to its Members

• Guilds provided social services

– operated schools and hospitals

– looked after the needs of their members

– provided support to the widows and orphans in the guild