The economic and political dimensions of guilds in medieval Flanders, especially medieval Ghent, have been well studied for generations. It is often noted that guilds were more than work organizations, and that their religious and social activities made them very like confraternities, but exploring the cultural and ideological side of guilds can be hampered by less surviving evidence. The present article attempts to address this lacuna by using poems written by/for the masons' guild in fifteenth-century Ghent, taking an interdisciplinary perspective to examine ideals of community, hierarchy and the sacralization of labour from an urban perspective.
CITATION STYLE
Crombie, L. (2018, August 1). Craft guild ideology and urban literature: The Four Crowned Martyrs and the Lives of Saints Nazarius and Celsus as told by the masons’ guild of fifteenth-century Ghent. Urban History. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926817000578
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