Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg
Mercers of London

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Mercer Coat of Arms
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  1. Mercers
  2. Livery Company Buildings: 1638
  3. Apprentice 16th century
  4. Fishmonger Waterman: Doggett Coat
  5. Brewers Hall: 1831
  6. Map: Norfolk Mercer Hundreds
  7. Map: Norfolk Mercers
  8. Map: Tumbling (dancing) Bear: Mercer's London Meeting Place
  9. Mercers Hall Doorway (Portcullis)
  10. Spinsters with Distaff: 14th Century
  11. Spinster with Distaff
  12. Spinster in husbands shop: 1457-1521
  13. Spinsters at Work
  14. Princess making a Chaplet: 1460
  15. Woman making braids on a small box loom
  16. Industrious 'prentice: Mayoral Office in London
  17. Mercers Maiden: 1880-1881
  18. Nine Famous Mercer Merchant's marks
  19. Mercer's Royal charter: 1394
  20. Old Coopers Hall
  21. Old Leathersellers Hall

Glossary

The footnote notation x:y means footnote reference "x", page "y".

Number Term Meaning
1 attacheurs 7:26 fastenings
2 aulnager 7:36 An officer (England) whose duty it was to inspect and attest the measure (ells) and quality of woolen cloth and fix a seal upon it.
3 aumonière 7:5 purse or pouch
4 baudrairie 7:25 embroidery
5 botonier 7:51 button-maker
6 boursiers 7:27 purse-makers
7 Caller 7:48 maker of headwear
8 [le] Callere 7:48 maker of cauls, caps, hats
9 Callmaker 7:48 maker of headwear
10 Capiere 7:48 maker of headwear
11 Capiestere 7:48 maker of headwear
12 Capman 7:48 maker of headwear
13 Capper 7:48 maker of headwear
14 Cauls 7:48 maker of headwear
15 chalons 7:60 maker of bed-covers
16 chapeax 7:23 garlands
17 chapeler 7:48 maker of headwear
18 Chauces 7:48 hosiery
19 Cheapside 7:44 a market place to purchase "cheap" goods (old meaning: good bargain, not goods of poor quality)
20 coiffières 7:27 headwear
21 coifs 7:48 maker of headwear
22 coquillières 7:27 headwear
23 corroyeurs 7:25 girdlers
24 courroyeurs 7:26 girdlers
25 coutiaus d'yvuire 7:26 knives with ivory handles
26 coutouères 7:51 flat braids of great complexity made from high-quality silk
27 coyfer 7:48 maker of headwear
28 crépières 7:27 headwear
29 crespes 7:26 finely pleated (crisped) linen headwear
30 cuevrechiefz 7:26 coverchiefs or kerchief
31 épingles 7:51 pins
32 forces 7:23 scissors
33 fresiaus, galons 7:26 bands (embroidered, or trimmings)
34 frripperers 7:91 unregulated traders, especially in old or used clothes
35 gage d'amour 7:5 purse or pouch
36 guimples, orel, touaille 7:26 gimples, coif (headress of linen or silk)
37 hattere 7:48 maker of headwear
38 hurer, hures 7:48 maker of headwear (hoods)
39 kallemakestere 7:48 maker of headwear
40 [La] Kanevacerye 7:36 market for cheap linen and hemp cloth (canvas)
41 keller 7:48 maker of headwear
42 [le] Lacer 7:48 makers of laces
43 laresta 7:4 fish-bone woven silk
44 l'or empaillolé et l'argent 7:26 silver and gold metal spangles sewed onto silk
45 lingères 7:28 'shepster': Parisien women that sewed garments of linen and hemp-cloth, (menues fripperies)
46 melequin 7:26 type of silk or linen headwear
47 menues fripperies 7:28 garments of linen and hemp-cloth made by Parisien mercery workers
48 opus anglicanum 7:13 silk braids
49 orphreys 7:5 elaborately embroidered bands
50 pailes ouvrez, riches et fins 7:26 silk cloths, worked richly and finely
51 queton 7:23 rouge
52 shepster 7:203 a seamstress of linen
53 spinster a woman that spins or twists woolen fibers into yarn
54 tableter 7:48, 7:53 those that sold paper writing-tablets
55 tablier or tableter 7:48, 7:53 Pedlar's tray (strap around neck, attached to left and right of tray), or those that sold paper tablets
56 toailles 7:23 coverchiefs
57 toile-linge 7:23 small linen goods
58 throwster 3:328 a woman that spins or twists silk fibers into yarn. These throwsterers later became guild women and if married remained "couvert de baron" (their husbands were responsible for their debts). 3:328 Women that worked alone, answerable for her contracts were called "feme sole" 3:328. "Strands from several cocoons were gathered by the reeler into one thread producing raw silk. 3:329. Silkwomen could be Throwsters, weavers, or make items such as cauls, tassels, or corses-weavers ("Tissus soie" or fine silk)3:332.

Mercery means merchandise (merx, mercis: Latin). Mercery focused upon silk, linen, and fustian (flax and cotton), mostly through overseas trade, except for linen, and wool also. Silk via the Silk Trade route (Golden Horde, northern Caspian Sea littoral), as well as from Genoese, from the Genoese colony at Keffe (Crimea) 7:37, from the Trebizond Imperium, Byzantium, Persia and Syria, and the Genoese colony at the southern littoral of the Caspian Sea (Hyrcanian Ocean) 7:37, and Venice. Raw silk and silk thread for laces and braid for embroidery also was imported into London from Italy and Spain as laresta ("fish-bone" weave or aresta). Mercery was weighed on a tron (weighing beam) of twenty-two cloves (swing points). Spices and raw silk were weighed on a small beam tron.

Other names for mercers: mercerius, mercenarius, merciarius, mercerer, mercherel, merciers (French). The mercer's wife , or craftswoman of the mercery trade, or "silkwoman" were important too.

Silk dress accessories included laces, loops, tassels, girdles, braids, elaborately embroidered bands (orphreys), headwear (coifs [both sexes], wimples [both sexes], kerchiefs, chaplet {both sexes, over coif or veil or alone], nets and cauls. Purses or pouches: aumonière, or gage d'amour. Small merceries such as pins, needles, bells, knives, etc. Silkwomen also sold opus anglicanum (embroidery). The mercer's fardel (bundle) might contain little girdles, gloves for young ladies (single or doubly lined with fur), buckles for girdles, metal chains to attach to little girdles, saffron-dyed wimples, leather purses fastened by knots or buttons; fur trimmings of otter, ermine, sealskin, polain; long laces of silk, linen or leather; buckles for shoes; pewter fastenings for children; laces for felt hats; silver and brass pins; fine coverchiefs; beautifully laced coifs of silk to be worn with garlands (chapeax) embroidered on the front (d'orfrois par devant) [in linen for esquires]; coifs of hemp for peasants; Bruges stockings; fastenings of gilded brass and silvered laton; braids for large buttons of gold and silk, sold at fairs (que ge vent mout bien a cez foires); coverchiefs (toailles); fish-hooks; awls (for cobblers); combs, Paris soap; incense; razor; scissors (forces); mirrors; rouge (queton); toys; spices; etc.

Mercers began as itinerant pedlars (mercerii) carrying goods on their backs or in trays about their necks (tabletiers), by horse or wagon trains to fairs or between towns and cities like London or Paris. Often lowly mercers were viewed as userers or theives that bought cheap, sold dear. Eventually, covered shops were created (selds in London, Halles in Paris, identified by decorative signs). As time progressed, some mercers didn't travel. Some mercers no longer worked at crafts, but bought and sold goods more like merchants or brokers (and while itinerant mercers had names that identified their craft, maybe even had an apprentice), the wealthy merchants changed their names to make their humble origins obscure, to gain the social prestige befitting someone lower than an aristocrat, yet higher than a beggar. The lowly mercer focused upon profit, while the aristocrat is above profit, by birth (of course). Thus there were mercers with names like "Serlo le Mercer"; "Adam le Mercer"; "Thomas de Colchester, linen draper"; "Elias le Callere"; "Alice la Coifer"; "Henry le Botoner", "Robert de Worstead"; "Robert le Hatter"; "John le Chapeler"; "Geoffrey le Tableter"; "Henry le Wimpler", "Hamo Godcheps", "Katherine Shepster", "William de Laufare, chaloner", etc.

Thus "mercer" had three meanings:
  1. A range of goods
  2. People that traded in goods
  3. A market area where traders and their range of goods could be found
Craft guilds now existed: (mestier, métier, ministerium, or mistery, with an alderman and échevins [wardens]).

The mercery in Paris used different words of course: "la Courrerie" (Girdler Street); La Petite Bouderie (Buckle-makers); La Baudrairie (embroidery center); market of the Innocents on Champeaux (rues Saint-Denis and du Louvre): poor lingères; toile-linge (small linen goods); covered halle of Champeaux included merciers, and corroyeurs (girdlers); attacheurs (fastenings); headwear (coquillières; crépières; coiffières;) ribbon-makers, lacers, braids, pinners, button-makers, spinsters (Parisien female silk workers), twisters, throwsters of raw silk (ouvrières de soie); silk coverchiefs, glovers, cappers, chapelers (chapeliers or garland-makers), paternoster makers (rosaries) in bone, horn, coral, amber; makers of small writing tablets (tabletiers). Thus a range of highly specific crafts with their specific names, as the crafts became differentiated into specialties. It cannot fail to be noticed that mercery specialities were dominated by women, especially in the linen trade due to the development of the treadle loom during the eleventh century. Women in Paris dealt independently from male domination in the linen industry as the Parisien lingères ('shepster') sewing garments of linen and hemp-cloth, called (menues fripperies).

Most cappers in London came from a Norfolk "hundred". A "hundred" was a subdivision of a county or shire having is own court 7:48. Thus some hundreds included the hundred of "Worsted" or the hundred of "Turnstead". See the two maps, above the glossary.

Lacing (related to knot-making) included braids, cords, gimps, ribbons, coutouères (flat braids). Botoniers created buttons, often made from brass, copper, laton (copper/tin alloy), pins (épingles) 7:51.

The London Puy (podium) was a society of guilds (a confraternity), associated with religious (Catholic) saints, for the patronisation of music and song (chant royal) and poetry, through competitions. The better educated mercers (communitas de merceria) took part in the Puy at Guildhall (for all guilds). Fines collected by the mercers for violations of freedom were paid to the Guildhall chapel of the Puy not for the mercers, but for ALL the guilds (these were now "gentle" men, or the well-born or privileged, and the the armigerous princes, the "prince of the Puy") 7:67, 7:69. One might recall that different guilds had different coats of arms. Thus the Guildhall chapel of the Puy represented English merchants in overseas or international trade, called "adventuring" 7:121 (with France, the Low Countries, the Germanies (Hanseatic League, Cologners and the Spław, River Trade in Poland, Lithuania, Latvia in the 18th Century 7:133, see estherlederberg%202018/EImages/Extracurricular/Dickens%20Universe/International/Russian%20Art/Polish%20Estate%20Jews.html#SPLAW%20SPLAW, and the Italians [Lombards]) 7:70. In fact, all classes of textile women sang chansons de toile (linen songs) 7:71, thus the Puy represented social harmony united with musical harmony.

As the mercers moved up in society, away from lowly pedlars to international traders and wholesalers, other groups of people started to compete with the mercers. Haberdashers (Icelandic hapertask, or pedlar's sack, especially of headwear) began to compete with the work that the itinerant mercers or small retail mercers did 7:118.

Just as the haberdashers started to compete with the itinerant mercers, the drapers started to compete with the tailors 7:119. Mercers worked with linen (toile, tela, linge), while drapers (draperie), worked with woollen cloth. Thus the ambiguous "linen-draper"?

Mercers moved gradually from silk into wool, worsted, woollen cloth and linen 7:129, and light cothes (sayetteries)7:142, related to worsteds.

The "staple" meant the primary center for the trade and taxation of raw wool (thus Stapleton, Stapleford), thus Dodrecht was the staple in 1338, Bruges in 1343 (Note: Black Plague, 1347), Calais is the staple port after 1363, merchants called merchants of the staple and wool staplers or staplers.

References

  1. Blackham, Robert J. "The Soul of the City: London's Livery Companies, Their Storied Past, Their Living Present"
  2. Boffey, Julia; King, Pamela; (Eds.) "London and Europe in the Later Middle Ages", Paper #7: "The Tumbling Bear and Its Patrons: A Venue for the London Puy and Mercery", by Anne Sutton
  3. Dale, Marian K.; "The Economic History Review", Vol. a4 (3), pp. 324-335, Oct. 1933, "The London Silkwomen of the Fifteenth Century"
  4. Hazlitt, W. Carew; "The Livery Companies of the City of London: Their Origin, Character, Development, and Social and Political Importance"
  5. Postan, M. M; (Ed.) "Medieval Women"
  6. Sutton, Anne F.; "I Siing of a Maiden: The Story of the Maiden of the Mercer's Company"
  7. Sutton, Anne F.; "The Mercery of London: Trade, Goods and People, 1130-1578"
  8. Sutton, Anne F.; "Wives and Widows of Medieval London"

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