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Post Info TOPIC: Professions


Lord

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Professions (Just some of them... A lot are left out):

Bakers- The baker was very important for the community. His home would likely serve as his shop. It may or may not have included a detached kitchen. Unless he was under the direct employ of the local lord (and he likely was), he would likely be somewhat 'free' and better-off than his neighbors, since he could earn a higher wage-based living by offering his services in exchange for the materials provided to make his bread. This was a highly regulated industry, and one prone to corruption, being so central.

Apothecarist- The 'doctor' of the community. His home would include gardens for growing herbs, when he didn't procure them by gathering or purchasing them from traveling merchants. In smaller communities, this was likely done by a member/employee of the church/local lord. He would likely also be somewhat well-off in comparison to his agriculturally-toiling neighbors.

Blacksmith- I already covered this one in an above post, but this position would be one of the essentials of any community. He made almost anything and everything the community needed out of metal. Sub-categories could include the Armourer (makes armour), the Bowyer (makes bows), the Fletcher (sometimes this is separate from the bowyer, as they made arrows using feathers from birds and arrowheads from the blacksmith), and many others, including architects and engineers that may or may not have been separate from the blacksmith, and dependent upon the necessity by the community and the wealth/power/prestige of the community or employer(s).

Brewers- Also important to the community, highly. Taking barrels made by the coopers, they brewed and stored liquor and (more commonly) beer/ale for the community. Potable water is difficult to obtain near a settlement without contamination risks. Beer could last longer and provide nutrients/calories to flesh out meals. Liquor inside the brewers creations could also help with decontamination of contaminated food, make patients drunk for 'surgery' or emergency medicine, and help peasants forget about how crappy their lives were. Like today, alcohol was an important stress-reliver. Being so important, this practice was often highly taxed and regulated, even down to taxes levied per consumption. Beer was so important that the Battle of Sempach in 1386 saw the halting of the battle for everyone to get some beer during the melee.

Masons/Bricklayers- Stone, except fieldstone (removed from fields during cultivation and reappropriated for structural use), and bricks were the domain of the wealthy. Stone took a long time to shape, required knowledge of mathematics, extensive logisitical support to mine, transport, and construct with. Bricks required access to clay and large arrays of kilns, as well as large, open spaces to dry once shaped. In areas of desert (especially Levantine and Mesopotamian alluvial areas) bricks were more common. However, in Europe, where the ubiquitous procurement of clay was often inhibited by topsoil and more fertile ground (as opposed to open areas of alluvial sediments in Judea and the Tigris-Euphrates valleys), it was more expensive. the making of bricks also took the brickmakers out of circulation in agriculture, making their services more valuable on a wage-basis. Only after the pseudo-emancipation of serfs after the wage increase of post-1350 medieval economy (due to labor being more valuable after the effect of the Black Death) should they become more popular, except where ecclesiatical/noble money could fund them, such as in large cities.

Glassblowers- Glass, until the Venetians made Cristallo, was just not used for homes. That didn't mean that glass was not in use elsewhere. From decorative church art to goblets the practice was quite valuable. First, it required the obtaining of sand. Depending on geographic location, this coudl be expensive. Next, it required years of practice. Glassblowers were not common until the later stages of the medieval age, and even then, weren't in abundance until well into the Renaissance. Where they do exist, they should be rich, have a guild association, and shouldn't be in smaller communities.

Dyers- Dyers were quite common. Contrary to popular belief, the Middle Ages were quite colorful. The ability to make dyes was common, and often used to great effect in trade. For instance, the pairing of English dominance over the wool trade, coupled with the common and popular dutch dying business, ensured the financial success of both during the high middle ages. This profession was done largely by women. The creation of the dyes was a dangerous process sometimes, as the poisonous nature of the berries could easily lead to accidents. However, even in small towns, it was often commonplace to see a facility or facilities devoted to this practice.

Millers- Using water or wind, this highly regulated and vital business (usually owned by a local lord, wealthy famliy, or church) was among the most vital to the survival of any agricultural community. The grain harvested throughout the year had to be milled into flour to make bread for the baker, and so that it could turn stored grain in the winter into food during the lean months. Millers could often make great wealth for themselves, join guilds, and, in concert with grain merchants, procure huge 'neighbor deals' from less-agricultural urban centers to turn a profit. One point I mentioned in another post: The grinding of flour makes the air combustible. The presence of even a single spark could ignite the whole building and bring doom to a whole community. As such, non-sparking stone pieces were often used. The use of metal as part of the mechanism was next-to impossible to find, since the grinding of metal could cause said sparks to create an explosion. Blacksmiths, forges, etc. were not located anywhere near a mill. Most mills wren't even located too terriblly close to otehr buildings. Grain storage silos also had the problem of combustibility, and were not located near mills. The explosion of one or the other could blow both up. Experience had evolved the placement of these buildings to be somewhat distant.

Tanners/Leather-workers/Furriers- Leather was a valuable commodity. The nobility often had exclusive rights to the forests (although this didn't deter the Robin Hoods of the world to make their own living in the black market). The animals, after being used as food, would be recycled into armour and clothing with their skins. The trappers would bring the animals to the tanners/furriers. There, the animals would be skinned, coated in oils, and stretched outside in the sun, left to dry. Afterwards, in giant vats, a mixture of water and animal dung (and other elements dependent upon the local resources) would be created, and the dried skins would be softened in them. In smaller communities, this was often known adn participated in by everyone. Tanning was a well-known profession, although sometimes a tanner could set up his own business, either separate from or part of the leather-workers. After the leather was softened, the laterh-workers used tools form the blacksmith to shape it into clothing, belts, armour, etc. Sometimes, they would be shaped and boiled in oil (cuir boulis) to harden them for added protection. Whle the tanning was common and cometimes a community practice, the skills of the leather worker often necessitated a separate profession, like the blacksmith.

That's just a few of the many professions, from barristers/solicitors, to falconers, coopers, cobblers, weavers, etc.

It's a good idea to pick up a book on medieval life to see what would be necessary in BATting.

Take this for instance:

There are four types of coopers (barrel-makers), and each has a different kind of barrel. The barrels made as props should change to reflect what they carry, dependent on the business.


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Lord

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A fairly exhaustive list of (mostly urban) medieval occupations:

Governmental Occupations

These are the people who run things. They keep society moving smoothly, if they're good at what they do, and can bring society to a crunching halt, if they're not. Rife for corruption, government officials can play a significant role in many campaigns.

  • bailiff - the man who makes arrests and executions. Bailiff was not primarily used for the office of policeman. Etymologically, bailiffs were those in charge of the bailey - in effect, manager of the craftsmen and servants in a castle or manor house.
  • catchpole - literally 'chicken catcher', one who finds and brings in debtors.
  • chancellor - a secretary to a noble or royal
  • constable - the warden of a town or castle
  • diplomat - the person who negotiates with foreign nations
  • emperor - the ruler of an empire
  • exchequer - the man responsible for the king's revenue
  • hayward - an officer in charge of fences and hedges
  • herald - had two responsibilities: a man in charge of making pronouncements and proclamations, and one who is an expert in the field of heraldry (the various insignias used by the rich to identify themselves.) These two responsibilities were one in the same. Medieval Europeans wouldn't have thought it possible to separate them; much less would they have considered them separate roles.
  • jailer - the man responsible for a jail: he keeps the criminals from getting out
  • judge - a man who is responsible for deciding questions brought to court
  • king - ruler of a kingdom
  • knight
  • lady
  • liner - an officer in charge of tracing property boundaries in the city
  • master of the revels - official in charge of court entertainment, and later of the theaters [note: the first Master of the Revels was not appointed until Henry VII in the 15th century]
  • nobleman
  • prince
  • pursuivant - officer of arms, ranks below herald, similar duties
  • reeve - church warden. Note that the word 'reeve' applies to much more than the Church. Reeves usually came out to be combination administrators and business managers of estates, towns and small territories (i.e. shires) - something like a chief bailiff.
  • sherrif
  • summoner - officer of the court who serves subpoenas (see also religious version)
  • watchman
  • woodward - the keeper of a forest

Military Occupations

Who keeps the country safe from encroaching enemies and wild monsters? Why, the military, of course. These brave men - and sometimes women train against the possibility that they'll have to protect their country with their lives.

  • Arbalestier - one who fires an arbalest (a type of metal crossbow)
  • archer - one who shoots arrows
  • bowman
  • camp follower - people following an army, making money off of the soldiers
  • cannoneer
  • crossbowman
  • drummer
  • engineer
  • guardsman
  • halberdier
  • Knifeman - one skilled with a knife; specifically, a soldier trained to disembowel horses
  • mercenary
  • pikeman
  • pioneer - an early term for military engineer
  • sapper - specialist in field fortifications
  • scout
  • siege engineer
  • sergeant
  • sergeant-at-arms
  • spearman
  • spy

Criminal Occupations

Wherever there is society, there are criminals. These occupations include only the so-called "professional criminal": it ignores those people who are corrupt at every level of society who has a legal "front", from kings to beggars.

  • boothaler - marauder, plunderer
  • burglar - one who breaks into, and steals things from, other people's houses. (If you break into and steal stuff from your own house, you're just a nut.)
  • diverfig. a pickpocket
  • fence - one who trades in stolen goods
  • footpad - one who robs pedestrians
  • outlaw - a man wanted by the law
  • pickpocket - one who picks pockets
  • poacher - one who illegally kills animals, usually on somebody else's land
  • silk-snatcher - one who steals bonnets
  • stewsman - probably a brothel keeper - "since the words stew and stewholder both mean a bawd, I'm guessing that a stewsman would be a brothel-keeper as well. Whether bawdry counts as a criminal activity varies at different times and places."
  • thimblerigger - a professional sharper who runs a thimblerig (a game in which a pea is ostensibly hidden under a thimble and players guess which thimble it is under)

Religious Occupations

If Government officials run the affairs of earthly beings, then those occupied with religious pursuits mediate between earth and the gods.

Priests are relatively common in role playing games. These men and women are the people behind the church: not typically "adventuring priests", but vitally important to the church nonetheless.

  • abbess - superior of a convent
  • abbot - superior of a monastery
  • almoner - a distributer of money and food to the poor
  • archbishop
  • beadle - church official -- ushers preserves order at sermons
  • beguine - member of certain Netherland lay sisterhoods
  • bishop
  • canon - a prebend attached to a cathedral (the definition is somewhat wider, but that's the most common usage)
  • cantor - a choir leader in churches, the man who sings hymns and leads the congregation in prayer in a synagogue
  • cardinal
  • chantry priest - a priest employed to say prayers for the dead; often taught on the side (thus so-called chantry schools)
  • chaplain
  • clark - see clerk
  • clerk - a priest
  • curate - priest in charge of a church
  • friar - a wandering monk, especially a Franciscan
  • metropolitan - a bishop in charge of other bishops; an archbishop
  • monk
  • nun
  • ostiary - a church's doorkeeper
  • palmer - a pilgrim who's been to the Holy Land
  • pardoner - seller of indulgences
  • parish priest
  • pilgrim -
  • pope
  • priest
  • primate - head of the Church in a country or region (i.e. the Archbishop of Canterbury was Primate of England)
  • sacristan - a person in charge of the relics and religious items of a church
  • sexton - minor church officer - rings bells, digs graves
  • summoner - officer who brings people to episcopal courts (see also government version)

Merchants

In a society based on trade - either with hard currency or barter, there are always those who spend their lives in the pursuit of selling things to others.

Note that most craftsmen also sell the results of their labor, farmers typically must sell their crops themselves, people in service trades often must hawk their own wares. This section does not include them. It includes only those people who spend their entire lives devoted to selling things, and nothing more.

  • acater - a provisioner (food)
  • alewife - a female alehouse keeper
  • apothecary - a preparer and merchant for drugs and medicines
  • banker
  • beer seller
  • boothman - one who sells grains
  • chapman - travelling merchant
  • collier - one who makes or sells charcoal (later coal) [can also fit under craftsmen]
  • colporteur - seller of religious books
  • costermonger - fruit seller
  • drover - one who drives sheep or cattle to market
  • eggler - an egg-merchant
  • fishmonger
  • fruiterer - a seller of fresh fruit
  • fruitier - fruitseller
  • fueller - one who sells charcoal, wood, or other fuels
  • glass seller
  • greengrocer - seller of vegetables and fruits
  • grocer
  • harberdasher - seller of men's clothing
  • hay merchant
  • hetheleder - one who sells heather as fuel
  • innkeeper
  • ironmonger - one who sells things made of iron
  • lighterman - one who ferries goods from ship to shore on a small boat
  • linen-draper - one who deals in linens, calicos, etc.
  • mercer - a dealer in expensive clothing (silk, etc.)
  • merchant
  • milkmaid - a female servant who milks cows
  • oil merchant
  • old-clothes dealer
  • oynter - an oil-merchant
  • peddler
  • pie seller
  • plumer - a dealer in feathers
  • poulter - seller of poultry
  • shrimper - one who catches shrimp
  • skinner - a dealer in furs and skins (essentially, the same thing as a furrier)
  • spice merchant
  • spicer - grocer or dealer in spices
  • stationer - seller of books, etc.; also, a copyist
  • taverner - innkeeper
  • thresher - one who thrashes grain, separating it from straw
  • unguentary - one who sells unguents
  • waferer - confectioner (a dealer in 'wafers', a kind of cake)
  • waterseller
  • weirkeeper - a keeper of fish traps
  • wine seller
  • wood seller
  • woodmonger - a seller of fuel wood
  • wool stapler - one who buys and sells wool wholesale

Artists/Entertainers

In any society, there is the need for spare time. And what did people do before television? Well, they mostly sang songs, told stories, and danced. From this, some professional entertainers developed.

Also included in this section are artists: those who devote their lives to creating works of beauty and expressiveness. There is enormous overlap between artists and entertainers... I won't get into the argument of whether art should be used to entertain or express the artist's true feelings. That's beyond my scope here, certainly.

  • bard - a Welsh minstrel
  • barker - one who advertises at the entrance to a show
  • bear-ward - the owner of a performing bear
  • fiddler - this is an unfair translation, "geiger" is applied to any player of bowed and stringed instruments
  • fool
  • fresco painter
  • glasspainter
  • harper
  • illuminator
  • jester
  • limner - illuminator of books
  • lutenist - a lute player
  • minnesinger - a German minstrel who specialized in love songs
  • mummer - actor, specifically the predecessors to mimes
  • musician
  • nakerer - a player of the naker a small kettle drum
  • organist
  • painter - portraits and landscapes
  • piper
  • player
  • playwright
  • poet
  • sculptor
  • singer
  • troubadour - most properly a minstrel from the southern part of France (though it can be used of any minstrel who specializes in romances).
  • tumbler
  • writer

Farming and Workers with Flora and Fauna

Ah -- the farmers. Without them, we'd starve. Wresting sustenence from the very earth itself. There's a large number of occupations associated with farming: you need people to watch the animals, work the fields. In fact, probably most people in a medieval society were farmers.

Also included are hunters and gatherers: those who travel into nature and grab things to eat, as well as all those who work with animals.

There's also a good overview of horse history in Europe.

  • ackerman(acreman) - an oxherder
  • falconer - breeds, trains, hunts with falcons
  • farmer
  • fewterer - one who keeps the hunting dogs [put it in whatever category you put falconers and hawkers]
  • fisherman
  • forester - game warden or forest ranger
  • fowler - one who hunts for wildfowl
  • gamekeeper
  • goatherd - one who looks after a herd of goats
  • hawker - breeds, trains, hunts with hawks
  • hayward - a tender of hedges
  • horse trainer
  • hunter
  • huntsman
  • master of hounds
  • molecatcher
  • ostler - cares for horses
  • oyster raker - worker on an oyster fishing boat
  • oysterer - one who catches oysters
  • parker - caretaker of a park
  • plowman
  • rat catcher
  • reaper
  • sheepshearer
  • shepherd - one who looks after a herd of sheep
  • swineherd - one who looks after a herd of swine (sometimes pigherd)
  • thresher
  • tillerman
  • trapper
  • woolcomber
  • woolman - sorts wool into differing grades

Scholars

They may have called it the dark ages for lack of scientific output, but there were still people interested in the world around them, willing to poke and prod it until something broke.

  • alchemist - a medieval chemist
  • astrologer
  • astronomer
  • bearleader - a travelling tutor (a silly name) - related to the figurative use of the word bear to describe a boor.
  • dean
  • librarian
  • mathematician
  • philosopher
  • professor
  • scholar
  • scrivener - scribe
  • tutor
  • theologian - a scholar specializing in the study of God and doctorine

Sailors

The lure of the sea, the crash of the waves: a boat-filled life was the norm for a great many medieval people. Some sailed on rivers, some on the ocean. Exciting and dangerous trade missions with far-off empires, exploring strange new places, and always coming back home to tell exciting stories in the local tavern.

  • bargeman
  • boatman
  • canaller - canal boat worker
  • ferryman
  • hobbler - boat tower on a river or canal
  • lighter man - worker on a flat-bottomed boat
  • mariner
  • navigator
  • pilot
  • sailor
  • sea captain
  • ship's captain
  • shipchandler - ship provisioner
  • waterman - riverboat sailor

Regular Folks

One of the problems with coming up with a list of Medieval Occupations is that lots of people in a feudal economy didn't have occupations at all. They were just tenants of other folks. Also, there are in any society, a large number of homeless and impoverished.

This section deals with people like that.

There's a fun story about a peasant, who had a bit of an adventure, at Stefan's Florilegium.

I've also heard that the book A Medieval Life: Cecilia Penifader of Brigstock, c. 1297-1344, by Judith Bennett, is recommended by some schools. It reconstructs the life of Cecilia Penifader, a medieval peasant, from various legal records. I've never read it, but it seems to get good reviews!

  • begger
  • buffoon - publically amusing person
  • clown - a peasant
  • crofter - tenant of a small piece of land
  • dwarf
  • franklin - a freeholder
  • gardner - one who gardens
  • hermit
  • housewife
  • jew - a class of their own in the Medieval Period
  • landlord
  • palmer - one who had been, or pretended to have been, to the Holy Land
  • peasant
  • pilgrim
  • spinster
  • tenter - an unskilled workman's assistant

Craftsmen

Game worlds typically have armorers and blacksmiths, but then it breaks down, and everything else is available from the marketplace or the "general store". Add a bit of spice to a campaign by having the player's harness become damaged, and have to deal with the local harness maker - who is also the town shoemaker and his loud wife!

Most of the occupations on this list are craftsmen and service occupations. Because of this, I have seperated out the most common craftsmen from the bulk of the list, so that the gentle reader can make sense of it. The list of common occupations was derived from the tax list for Paris in 1292, from the book Life in a Medieval City, by Francis and Joseph Gies. The number indicates how many there in the city.

Common Craftsmen - sorted by frequency

  • 366 - shoemaker - one who makes and repairs shoes
  • 214 - furrier - one who makes and repairs goods made of furs - esp. clothes
  • 197 - tailor - one who makes and repairs clothing
  • 131 - jeweler - maker of jewelry
  • 106 - pastrycook - baker specializing in pastries
  • 104 - mason - bricklayer
  • 95 - carpenter - one who constructs things from wood
  • 86 - weaver - weaver of cloth
  • 71 - chandler - one who makes candles, also grocer. Often associated with ships (see shipchandler)
  • 70 - cooper - one who makes and repairs barrels and tubs
  • 62 - baker - one who makes bread and other baked goods
  • 58 - scabbard maker - maker of scabbards
  • 54 - hatmaker - maker of hats
  • 51 - saddler - maker of saddles
  • 51 - chicken butcher - butcher of chickens
  • 45 - purse maker - maker of purses
  • 42 - meat butcher - butcher of all sorts of meats, esp beef
  • 36 - buckle maker - maker of buckles
  • 34 - blacksmith - one who works with iron to form metal implements: esp farm tools.
  • 28 - roofer - one who makes and repairs roofs
  • 27 - locksmith - one who makes and repairs locks
  • 26 - ropemaker - maker of rope
  • 24 - tanner - preparer of leather
  • 24 - rugmaker - maker of rugs
  • 24 - harness maker - maker of harnesses
  • 23 - bleacher
  • 22 - cutler - one who makes and repairs cutlery
  • 21 - glover - a glovemaker

Less common craftsmen - sorted alphabetically

  • accoutrement maker - makes military accessories
  • alabasterer - worker in alabaster
  • architect - a designer of buildings and other constructions
  • arkwright - a maker of "arks" -- wooden chests or coffers
  • armorer
  • balancemaker
  • basketmaker
  • beekeeper - also known as apiarist
  • beerbrewer
  • bellfounder
  • bellmaker - these are the little bells that go on sleighs and clothing, as opposed to the large civic bells cast by the bellfounder
  • besom maker - one who makes brooms (known as besoms in the middle ages: 'broom' was the name of the plant use to make them)
  • billier - axe-maker
  • blockcutter - for block printing
  • bodger - itinerant wood turners (read more)
  • bonecarver
  • bookbinder
  • bookprinter
  • bottelier - maker of leather bottles
  • bowyer - maker of bows
  • brazier - makes brassware
  • brewer
  • bricker - brick baker, not mason
  • bricker - brick-maker
  • bricklayer
  • broderer - embroiderer
  • bronzefounder
  • broom-dasher - maker of brooms
  • brushbinder
  • builder
  • buttonmaker
  • cabinetmaker
  • campaner - maker of large bells (church-bells, for example)
  • canvasser - canvas-maker
  • carder - one who cards wool (combs out wool in preparation for spinning it)
  • cardmaker
  • cartwright
  • chainmaker
  • charcoalburner
  • cheesemaker
  • clockmaker
  • clothier
  • cobbler - shoe maker
  • coiner
  • combmaker
  • compasssmith
  • confectioner
  • coppersmith, redsmith - a worker in copper and brass
  • cordwainer - worker in fine leather
  • corsetier - maker of corsets and other undergarments
  • currier - one who cures leather
  • delver - ditchdigger
  • diamantaire - diamond-cutter (actually, diamond-cutting wasn't discovered until after the Middle Ages, but once it was diamantaires usually had their own guilds)
  • disher - a potter who makes dishes
  • draper - Originally, drapers were clothiers, though today the British use the word for a dry goods merchant.
  • drycooper
  • drywaller
  • dyer - one who dyes cloth
  • embroiderer - one who decorates fabric with stitched designs
  • engraver - for printing, not to decorate items
  • fabricshearer - trims the nap and makes pleats for customers
  • feltmaker
  • fewtrer - felt-maker
  • fletcher - maker of arrows
  • founder - foundryman
  • fuller - cloth worker who shrinks, beats, presses cloth
  • fuller - someone who cleans and thickens cloth by beating it
  • furniture maker
  • gemcutter
  • gilder - one who gilds (applies gold leaf to something)
  • girdler - leather worker who made girdles and belts, chiefly for the Army
  • girdler - belt-maker
  • glassblower - one who makes glass objects by blowing
  • glazier - maker of stained glass
  • goldbeater - one who makes gold foil
  • goldsmith - a worker in precious metals. In the Middle Ages, all people who worked in precious metals were called goldsmiths; the term silversmith is a much later word.
  • gravedigger
  • grinder - knife sharpener
  • gunsmith
  • gunstocker
  • hacker - hoe-maker
  • hatter - one who makes and repairs hats
  • horner - craftsman who works in horn -- spoons, combs, musical instruments
  • ivorist - an ivory-carver
  • joiner - skilled carpenter
  • knacker - harness-maker
  • knapper - a worker in flint
  • knifesmith
  • lacemaker
  • lampwright - maker of lamps and lanterns
  • lancier - a maker of lances
  • lanternmaker
  • lapidary - worker with precious stones -- usu. other than diamonds
  • latoner - worker in brass and latten (a brass-like alloy)
  • leadworker
  • lensgrinder
  • limner - someone who illuminates manuscripts
  • linen-armorer - one who makes cloth armor [same as a merchant taylor]
  • linener - a shirt maker [also, a linen-draper]
  • linenspinner
  • lorimer - maker of horse gear
  • lutemaker
  • luthier - a maker of stringed instruments (lutes, guitars, etc.)
  • mailer - enameller -- not a maker of armor
  • mailmaker
  • malemaker - a maker of leather trunks
  • mapmaker - also known as cartographer
  • marler - one who digs 'marl', a type of soil used as fertilizer.
  • marleywoman - a maker of marli, a type of fabric (gauze used for embroidery). Note that embroidery on this material is also known as marli.
  • master builder - chief architect
  • merchant taylor - tailors and "linen armourers"; they made the padded tunics soldiers would wear under metal armor
  • milliner - maker of womens' hats and clothing
  • miner
  • miniaturist - painter of miniatures (small paintings usually found on icons or in books)
  • minter, mintmaster, moneyer - one who mints coins
  • mirrorer - one who makes mirrors?
  • nailmaker
  • nedeller - maker of needles
  • netmaker
  • oilmaker
  • papermaker
  • parchmenter
  • parchmenter - a parchment-maker
  • pasteler - a pastry-maker
  • pattenmaker
  • perukier - a wig-maker [I don't know if the word was used in the Middle Ages; the oldest use of the word peruke I can find is 1548]
  • pewterer
  • physician
  • pinmaker
  • plasterer
  • plattner - beat out sheets of metal
  • plumber - worker in lead
  • pointer - lace-maker
  • poleturner - maker of polearms (spears, pikes, halberds, etc.)
  • pot mender
  • potter
  • printer
  • purser - a purse-maker
  • quarryman
  • quilter - a quilt-maker
  • rectifier - one who distilled alcohol
  • reedmaker - a maker of flutes and other wind instruments
  • roper - maker of ropes, nets
  • rugweaver - one who makes rugs
  • sailmaker
  • saltboiler - makes salt by boiling water
  • salter - makes or deals in salt
  • sawyer - saws timbers to boards
  • scythesmith
  • seamstress
  • shingler - wooden roof tiler
  • shipwright - a ship builder
  • siever - a maker of sieves (a picture)
  • silkmaid, silkwoman - a woman who makes items out of silk.
  • silk-dresser, silk-maker, silk-mercer, silk-dyer, silk-carder - various individuals making silk articles.
  • silversmith
  • smelter - refines raw ore into pure metals
  • smith - blacksmith
  • spectaclesmaker
  • spooner - a spoon-maker
  • spurrer - maker of spurs
  • stonecarver
  • stonecutter
  • swordsmith
  • tallowchandler
  • tapestrymaker
  • tapicer - tapestry maker
  • tasseler - one who makes tassels
  • thacker, thatcher - one who covers roofs with thatch
  • thonger - maker of leather straps or laces
  • threadmaker
  • tile-burner - one who forms clay into tiles and bricks
  • tiler, tile-theeker, tyler - one who roofs with tile
  • tile maker - tile-maker
  • tinker
  • tinsmith
  • treen maker - one who makes various small wood items
  • turner - lathe worker (makes turned wooden objects, like chair legs)
  • typefounder
  • upholder - an upholsterer
  • vaginarius - scabbard-maker (pl. vaginarii)
  • vintner - a winemaker
  • waxchandler
  • webber - weaver
  • wheeler - maker of spinning wheels
  • wheelwright - a maker of wheels
  • wiredrawer - maker of gold and silver wire
  • woodcarver
  • woodcutter
  • woodturner

Service Occupations

There are many important positions in society for those who do not produce, but serve their fellow man. When they're done their job for the day, there are no new products, no changes in physical objects, but people are moved, jobs get done, and society keeps moving. These are the service workers.

Service workers can play an enormous role in your campaign. All the time, characters need to get their hair cut, have water fetched, or have something written down.

Unfortunately, since this list is so enormous, I've again taken the liberty of separating out the common occupations, again, as defined by the Geis book. The numbers are the count of the occupation in Paris, in 1292.

Common Service Occupations - Sorted by Frequency

  • 199 - maidservant
  • 151 - barber - one who cuts hair, also performed surgery and pulled teeth.
  • 130 - restaurateur - one who owns or runs a restaurant
  • 58 - water carrier
  • 43 - laundress - also known as lavendar
  • 42 - porter - one who carries burdens, or one who waits at doors. Probably the former
  • 29 - doctor
  • 26 - bather - owner of a bath
  • 24 - copyist - one who copies books and documents -- not all of them can read

Less common service occupations - sorted alphabetically

  • accomptant - an accountant
  • accoucheur - midwife
  • accoucheus - midwife
  • accountant - man who does financial bookkeeping
  • actuary - man who does financial bookkeeping, clerk
  • attendent
  • bagger
  • bailiff - the man who makes arrests and executions. Bailiff was not primarily used for the office of policeman. Etymologically, bailiffs were those in charge of the bailey - in effect, manager of the craftsmen and servants in a castle or manor house.
  • barrister - solicitor or lawyer
  • bath attendent
  • bather - owner of a bath
  • bodyservant
  • butler - one in charge of the buttery (where alcohol was kept)
  • carman - one who drives a vehicle for transporting goods
  • carter - one who drives carts
  • cartier
  • carver - the servant who cut the meat
  • ceiler - one who installs ceilings
  • cellarer - one in charge of the wine cellar
  • chamberlain - a private attendant who waits on his lord in his bedchamber
  • chimney sweep - one who cleans chimneys and smokestacks.
  • chirurgeon - surgeon
  • clouter - one who fixes things, a tinkerer
  • cook - one who cooks, especially food.
  • cowherd - one who looks after a herd of cows. A medieval cowboy, as it were.
  • currier - see tanner
  • dairymaid
  • dapifer - a servant who brings the meat to the table
  • dentist
  • ditcher - one who digs ditches
  • diver - one who dives for a living.
  • dog trainer
  • drayman - cart driver
  • dung carter
  • executioner
  • famulus - "a servant or attendant, esp. of a scholar or a magician" (Random House Dictionary of the English Language)
  • farrier - maker of tack, esp. horeshoes; also a horse-veteranarian
  • groom - one who takes care of the horses
  • harlot - vagabond, beggar, rogue, 14th century male servant, attendant or menial, and 15th century, loose woman
  • horseleech - veterinarian, farrier
  • hurdle maker - made 'wattle fences' for sheep
  • lawyer - a master of the law.
  • link boy - boy who will carry a torch to guide people through the night
  • link man - like a link boy, only older
  • maid - a female household servant. A maid is always female; the word literally means virgin.
  • marshal - a horse tender
  • midwife - humorously known as a babycatcher
  • miller - the person who turns grains into flour.
  • napier - the person who manages royal linens
  • nurse
  • panter - keeper of the pantry
  • paperer - needlemaking industry -- inserted needles into paper to prepare for selling
  • pavior - one who lays pavement
  • pavyler - put up pavilions/tents
  • pissprophet - doctors who would diagnose disease from a patient's urine, specifically from the sight, smell, and taste of the urine.
  • potboy - cleans out chamber pots
  • privycleaner
  • procurator - or proctor, this is a kind of legal agent or representative
  • prostitute - one who sells sex
  • quartermaster
  • ragpicker - sorts through leftover rags, find re-usable ones
  • raker - street sanitation worker
  • riveter - one who rivets (a rivet being a nail designed to secure metal to metal)
  • scullion - the bottom-rung servant in a household
  • seneschal - senior steward
  • solicitor - lawyer
  • sperviter - a keeper of sparrow-hawks
  • stainer - one who stains wood
  • stillroom maid
  • surgeon
  • tapster - one who draws ale, etc. at an inn; innkeeper/bartender/barmaid
  • teamster - one who drives a team of oxen or horses
  • trencherman - carver, trench-digger
  • userer - a moneylender, specifically a Jewish moneylender (the only people allowed to hold such a job in the Middle Ages)
  • wagoner - wagon or cart driver
  • waller - one who builds walls
  • wattler - made 'wattle fences' for sheep
  • weeper
  • wetnurse



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