is by making sure the quality of goods stayed high, provided social services for members(hospitals), regulated hours of work and prices of goods, and ensured a supply of new artisan by training the young people,called apprentices, in their crafts
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
Guilds
They were used to protect and increase their prifits
Everyone was Catholic in the middle ages. --- We can probably safely assume most guild members were Catholic. Guild charters would have been likely to exclude Jews, and there were not enough Muslims in European areas with guilds to be likely to be guild members. That said, we can be sure that a number of guilds in various towns and cities were dominated by members of sects the Catholic Church regarded as heretical. This is probably particularly true of Hussites and Lollards, who were numerous in the Late Middle Ages when the guilds were operating.
They would protect and give food to the families and this is only if a guild member died
They would protect and give food to the families and this is only if a guild member died
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
Guilds
Guilds also used the money to take care of members and their families who were sick and unable to work
they protected families of members after they died
Guilds were associations of craftsmen or merchants. They were established primarily to protect the interests of their members. As they protected members from competition, they also protected the customers from poor quality work by people who were not skilled, established standards for members and the work they produced, and provided a united approach to economic policies and politics. The earliest medieval guilds may actually have been established during the time of the ancient Roman Empire. Guilds also developed in other places, and Anglo-Saxon guilds probably arose from a separate tradition. As the Middle Ages went on, more guilds were established, and they became more involved in politics. There were a number of towns and cities run by guilds, especially in Italy and parts of Germany. The political power of guilds probably increased the attractiveness of starting new guilds. Combinations of guilds, such as the Hanseatic League, eventually had a great deal of strength, with military and diplomatic power independent of any country. The earliest universities in Western Europe appear to have been established as guilds of educators.
To their members and their families.
They were used to protect and increase their prifits