a craftsman or craft worker a more old fashioned word is artisan Many craft titles have the suffix smith such as "blacksmith" or "silversmith" meaning a metalworker The suffix "wright" such as wheelwright or cartwright means a woodworker. In parts of northern England a wright was the same as a carpenter. Many trade names became family names.
"Craftsmen" are workers trained in a specific craft.
"Craftsman" was what a worker trained in a specific craft called in Egypt.
worker trained in a specific craft
A person in a craft who was unpaid is a apprentice.
There are a number of different titles for a worker trained in a specific trade: craftsman, craft worker, tradesman (also used to describe a shopkeeper) or an artisan (old fashioned) he or she might also be described by their actual trade for example a woodworker is known as a carpenter
Craftsman
a craft worker is a person who makes things
Craftman are what workers trained in a specific craft are called.
artisan
Each worker did a specific job on a moving assembly line. The workers stayed in one place and the vehicle came to them. The part they installed was there at the station where they worked. In this manner a worker only had to be trained to do a specific task.
artisan.
Wherever they wanted to live the would go. A craft worker was free, they did not have to stay at one village for their whole life like the serfs. The craft worker often made clothes in the Middle Ages.