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Guilds, Immigration, and Immigrant Economic Organization: Alien Goldsmiths in London, 1480–1540
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 May 2021
Abstract
Immigration was essential to trades reliant on fashion and high skill in London around the turn of the sixteenth century. This article explores the patterns of migration to the city by continental goldsmiths between 1480 and 1540 and the structure of the communities they formed. It argues that attitudes to migration within the London Goldsmiths’ Company, which governed the trade, were complex and shifted in response to evolving national legislation. A social network analysis of the relationships between alien masters and servants indicates how the alien community changed and adapted. Taking a view across the traditional late medieval and early modern period boundary allows for a deeper understanding of how attitudes to migration and to migrant communities changed as London's population began to grow.
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References
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143 WACM, Bk. A, vol. 2, p. 415, GC.
144 WACM, Bk. C, p. 162, GC; WACM, Bk. A, vol. 2, pp. 497, GC.
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147 WACM, Bk. A, vol. 2, pp. 311, 354, GC.
148 WACM, Bk. A, vol. 2, p. 412, 354, GC.
149 WACM, Bk. F, pp. 41–2, 44, GC.
150 WACM, Bk. F, p. 73, GC.
151 Challis, Tudor Coinage, 36.
152 WACM, Bk. C, pp. 89, 164, GC; WACM, Bk. D, p. 42, GC.
153 WACM, Bk. D, p. 117, GC.
154 Luu, Immigrants and the Industries of London, 234–35.
155 Brussell and Hayes are discussed above. John Arnold, Henry Baase (or Baace) and John van Delf were suppliers to Henry VII featured in his Chamber Accounts; see TNA, E 101/415/3; TNA, E 36/214; British Library, Add. MS 21481. This material can be accessed via The Chamber Books of Henry VII and Henry VIII, 1485–1521, ed. M. M. Condon et al., accessed 23 April 2019, https://www.dhi.ac.uk/chamber-books/manuscripts.
156 WACM, Bk. B, p. 408, GC.
157 TNA, E 36/214, fols. 63, 74v; BL, Add. MS 7099, fol. 65. Both references were accessed through The Chamber Books of Henry VII and Henry VIII, http://www.dhi.ac.uk/chamber-books/manuscripts.
158 There is little direct evidence for this in the immigrant community, but similar practices were apparent among English artisan and mercantile women. Hanawalt, Barbara A., The Wealth of Wives: Women, Law, and Economy in Late Medieval London (Oxford, 2007), chap. 8Google Scholar.
159 Wethers rode to meet Queen Anne of Cleves as one of the king's servants in 1540. WACM, Bk. F, pp. 165–66, GC. Trappes supplied the crown in the mid-1530s. “The King's New Year's Gifts, 20 January 1533/4,” Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic of the Reign of Henry VIII, vol. 7, ed. James Gairdner (London, 1883), no. 91; “The King's Debts, 1536,” no. 1419, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic of the Reign of Henry VIII, vol. 11, ed. James Gairdner (London, 1888).
160 Reddaway and Walker, Early History of the Goldsmiths, 211.
161 WACM, Bk. A, vol. 2, p. 415, GC; WACM, Bk. D, pp. 198, 262, 264, 266, GC; WACM, Bk. F, p. 141, GC.
162 Luu, Immigrants and the Industries of London, 236.
163 “Robert Amadas's Accounts, 2 March 1528/9,” no. 5341, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic of the Reign of Henry VIII, vol. 4, ed. J. S. Brewer (London, 1875).
164 WACM, Bk. C, pp. 184, 200, GC; WACM, Bk. D, pp. 10, 47, 82, 114, 138, 198, 210, 270, GC.
165 For example, see “Thomas Cromwell's Accounts, 28 June 1534,” no. 717, and “Payments, 29 October 1533,” no. 1367, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic of the Reign of Henry VIII, vol. 6, ed. James Gairdner (London, 1882); “The King's New Year's Gifts, 20 January 1533/4,” no. 91, and “Diets of Ambassadors, 31 January 1533/4,” no. 137, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic of the Reign of Henry VIII.
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168 WACM, Bk. A, vol. 2, p. 408, GC.
169 WACM, Bk. E, p. 79, GC.
170 WACM, Bk. F, p. 43, GC.
171 WACM, Bk. F, pp. 140, 142, GC.
172 WACM, Bk. F, p. 141, GC.
173 WACM, Bk. G, pp. 30–33, GC.
174 Ormrod, Lambert, and Mackman, Immigrant England, 195–98.
175 Prak, Citizens without Nations, 97–100; De Meester, “Migrant Workers and Illicit Labour,” 26–27.
176 Esser, “They Obey All Magistrates.”
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