Religious gilds and civic order: the case of Norwich in the late Middle Ages

Speculum 67 (1):69-97 (1992)
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Abstract

The place of gilds in urban politics has recently attracted considerable interest. Scholars have come to view these organizations, especially those associated with the crafts, as powerful vehicles for influencing municipal affairs. No agreement about the nature of this influence has yet emerged; indeed, gilds have been variously interpreted as promoters of political brotherhood, allies of worker interests, and devices used by urban elites to control artisans and laborers. The prevalence of a different sort of influence has gone largely unnoticed, however. In many English towns of the late Middle Ages a single fraternity came to dominate local government

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