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Market towns and cities had regular market days. These markets were sometimes held outdoors, but might also be held in large buildings set aside for the purpose. In these buildings the stalls and wagons of the outdoor market became semi-permanent booths, or even lock up shops, making a sort of medieval shopping mall.

In addition most merchant would have a permanent shop as well, in some cases connected to or in the same building as the merchant's home.

Some types of goods, such as textiles, were traded long distances, and merchants might make long journeys with pack animals to attend fairs in major towns and cities to buy and sell.

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11y ago
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9y ago

The merchants sold their goods while they traveled. Sometimes they visited shops to offer their products while other times they sold their products directly to individuals.

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10y ago

at their local docks

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Q: Where did merchants sell their goods in middle ages?
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What do Merchenats in the middle ages do?

Merchants sell things then and now.


How did people get around on water in the middle ages?

Most commonly people in the middle ages walked to get where they were going. The wealthy may have used a horse. Long distance travel was uncommon. Most people lived in small villages, and rarely if ever traveled any further than the nearest market town to sell their surplus and buy a few manufactured goods. Some professions, such as merchants and soldiers, might regularly travel, but roads were generally poor and long distance travel was difficult. Religious pilgrimage was also a cause for long distance travel.


What is an annual trade gathering called in medieval times?

A variety of goods that were not produced locally would be available. Merchants would travel long distances to attend trade fairs in different towns. At the trade fairs, merchants would sell goods such as spices and silk that were not locally produced.


What was the weaver to the church in medieval times?

A weaver was a craftsman who used a loom to weave thread into cloth. In the early middle ages weaving was more commonly a home craft, but during the later part of the middle ages weaving became a regular profession organized into guilds. Textile production was a major industry in medieval Europe. It was a complex, multi-stage process that involved many different crafts. Merchants served as the organizers and intermediaries of the process, moving goods from craftsman to craftsman. Raw wool or flax was purchased from farmers, and distributed to workers to spin into thread. The thread would then go to a dyer to be colored, and from there to a weaver. The weavers would weave the thread into cloth, and the cloth would then go to a craftsman called a fuller for a cleaning and finishing process. The merchants would then buy the finished cloth back from the fullers, and sell the finished goods to the public.


Why did some farmers and merchants not sell goods during the war?

Because the British soldiers were patroling everything. They had taxed goods sent from Britain to the American colonies. If the merchants didn't have the soldiers tax their merchandise, then that would be against the law. (Most farmers and merchants did not have their merchandise taxed, therefore they were considered patriots.) If you were caught then you would be put in jail or hanged depending on how bad the crime was.