The Lost Fort

My Travel and History Blog, Focussing mostly on Roman and Mediaeval Times


1 May 2008
  York Guild Hall

Or, The Ancient Guild Hall of Merchant Adventurers of the City of York.

I like the merchant adventurers; it evokes images of stout cogs with red and white sails ploughing the green waters of the Baltic Sea, camel caravans trudging through yellow sand, mail clad mercenaries with their hands close to the swordhilt, and white eyed moors gesticulating with slant eyed men from Cathai in front of the pillared facades of a Venetian house, or a caftan clad citizen of Novgorod drinking beer with a golden haired Nordman while admiring the wonders of St.Mary Church in Lübeck, anxious to return ere the Gotland pirates gather another fleet. And maybe his comrade of chance is a pirate himself, and the moor in Venice an escaped galley slave who fought as mercenary all the way up into marrying the doge's daughter.

Though the explanation is less romantic: a merchant adventurer was someone who risked - adventured - his money in overseas trade.

Outside view of the York Guild Hall

I didn't have the Guild Hall on my list of places to see, but when I visted the Roman baths, I got a ticket for several small museums, including the charming one about Richard III (which wasn't on my list either thanks to crappy UK travel guidebook - next time I'll spend the money on a Baedecker) and the Guild Hall, so I sneaked it in between breakfast and catching a train to Newcastle on my last day. The place is surely worth a visit. The York Guild Hall is the oldest that survived with its business rooms, hospital and chapel intact, and it's the largest townhouse of the time, only churches and castles were bigger.

In 1357, a group of influential men and women founded a religious fraternity and built the hall. Which proves, again, that not all women in the Middle Ages were suppressed to the level of inisgnificance except for popping out as many children as possible; women held considerable influence in the guilds.

Less than a hundred years later most members were merchants, and they set up a trading association, a guild, alongside the religious fraternity. The hall was quite the multifunctional place, the members conducted trade business, said prayers, cared for the poor, and met socially.

The Guild (today called Company) still exists though no longer as trading association. They still are involved in charity and use the chapel for services, and they own the Guild Hall as trustee for visitors.

The Great Hall

The Great Hall was built as double nave because there were no timbers large enough to span the full width - English oaks grow big, but not that big.

The lower part of the hall, the undercroft, is constructed of bricks; the earliest to be made in York since the Romans left. The upper part is a half-timbered construction . The process used was interesting because each section was first put together lying on the ground, the timbers marked, and then it was dismantled and reassembled in an upright position on the building.

The windows are one of the 16th century additions, the original ones were smaller.

The Undercroft

The Undercroft was used as hospital from 1373 to 1900. Guilds were the first to build hospitals in several towns, for example in Lübeck as well, and there, as in York, the hospital was in use into the 19th century. The name hospital may be somewhat misleading, because the inmates were poor and infirm people rather than acutely sick ones.

A great fireplace was inserted in the 16th century; before the room had been heated by braziers. Some of the beams still show scorch marks of torches. The place must have been rather dark and cold, especially in winter, but probably a paradise for people who else might have been left to sleep on the streets.

Charity is one reason to have a hospital, but another was order. People who had nowhere to go, no connection with the organised life in a town, were considered a potential danger and a disgrace in the eyes of God. By giving them a place to live, they were reintruduced - or kept - within society.

On the undercroft level is also the chapel which was used by the guild members as well as the people in the hospital. It is consecrated to the Holy Trinity which also protected the activities of the guild.

Old furniture in the First Anteroom

An annex was added in the 16th century, it holds the Governor's Parlour and several anterooms. It is a three gabled structure that fits well with the two large gables of the double nave roof. The rooms inside today display a nice arrangement of old furniture, paintings, and some silver.

The company held a number of responsibilites like the control of weights and measures, and they also trained apprentices and helped young men to start their own business. Some of this was conducted past the Middle Ages (there's a 17th century document about a loan, fe.). Until today, the company also keeps the archives.

Source: The guidebook provided by the Company
 
Comments:
I have a similar attraction to the idea of merchant venturers :-)

Didn't the Romans have kit-built timber forts as well? (A sort of giant Ikea flat-pack) Maybe the bricks weren't the only technology to be revived.

Hospital is from the same root as hospitality, which is still with us in more or less the original meaning. I wonder when 'hospital' acquired its association exclusively with sickness?
 
Interesting post, Gabriele. I love the photos of the interior. I also enjoyed your opening para about the images you imagined.
 
Gabriele

Great pictures and a very nice description.


The furniture in the undercroft is new?
 
A wonderful opening para, Gabriele, and wonderful photos.
 
Lol Carla, an Ikea set 'Roman Army Camp' would be fun. The army did indeed carry material to fortify the camp every night, like piles for palisades.
Yes, the root is the same - in German, the old word is Hospiz, while a modern hospital is a Krankenhaus (house of the sick).

Thank you, Shelley.

Hank, the furniture in the undercroft and great hall is modern because both rooms are still used. The old funiture is in the anteroom, the Governor's Parlour and such.

Thank you, Bernita.
 
Aha...I now see how to build my great hall! A double nave! Wonderful!

Actually, I built MY first great hall the same way....with great huge beams salvaged from a local barn, on the ground and actually upside down....then dis assembled it, and shipped it 8 hours down the road to where it stood for ten years. It now sits in a sea-land container on my property, and I was wondering how to utilize it...it is really not very big withall, only fifteen feet by thirty feet, barely big enough to swing a sword. A double, or even a triple nave would work perfectly!

Actually, the whole story of how I built MY mead hall is here on my web site....http://www.southtower.on.ca, go to the Library, and then to "Yusef's Post and Beam Experience". Its a pretty neat story!
 
What a beautiful building, thanks for the photos and tour!!
 
That's an interesting story, Stag.

Thanks, Sam.
 
That's very pretty. I'll have to see if I can find something like that in Amsterdam :)

Am I the only one who wants to climb onto those beams? *feels like a child*
 
Oh, those beams!! Gorgeous!! And that the building is still in use is just wonderful... (here in America, once something gets to be more than a couple hundred years old, they slap an admission fee on it and don't let you touch anything inside...).

And I want to climb the beams too, though sadly I've gotten old enough that the idea didn't occur to me until I read celede's comment. :(
 
Celede, growing up is overrated. I still climb castle ruins, esp. if there's a Don't Walk on the Walls-sign. ;)

Bethanie, they charge an admission fee here as well which is used for the upkeep of the building, and the silver is behind glass, but historical places are often still alive in some way. You can rent the Guild Hall for meetings, Hanstein Caslte in Germany holds concerts in summer and the Hardenberg a Mediaeval festival complete with a siege of the castle.
 
a Mediaeval festival complete with a siege of the castle.

Oh, THAT I must see! Someday...

:)
 
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The Lost Fort is a travel and history blog based on my journeys in Germany, the UK, Scandinavia, the Baltic Countries, and central Europe. It includes virtual town and castle tours with a focus on history, museum visits, hiking tours, and essays on Roman and Mediaeval history, illustrated with my own photos.


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Location: Goettingen, Germany

I'm a blogger from Germany with a MA in Literature and History, interested in everything Roman and Mediaeval, avid reader and sometimes writer, opera enthusiast, traveller with a liking for foreign languages and odd rocks, photographer, and tea aficionado. And an old-fashioned blogger who still hasn't got an Instagram account.
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Medieval History

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The Choir Screen in the Cathedral of Mainz
The Gospels of Heinrich the Lion
The Hunting Frieze in Königslutter Cathedral
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The History of the Hanseatic League
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King Heinrich IV

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Emperor Otto IV

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Alv Erlingsson of Tønsberg


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Troublesome Cousins - Jogaila and Vytautas

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The Siege of Vilnius 1390

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The Northern Crusades

The Conquest of Pomerania and Prussia
The Conquest of Danzig


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King Sigismund and the Hussite Wars


Luxembourg

House Luxembourg
King Sigismund


Roman History

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The German Limes
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Limes Fort Osterburken
Limes Fort Saalburg

The Hadrian's Wall
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The Fort at Segedunum / Wallsend

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Cavalry Barracks

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Maps
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The Pre-Varus Invasion in Germania
Roman Camp Hedemünden
New Finds in 2008

The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest
Museum Park at Kalkriese

The Battle at the Harzhorn
Introduction

The Batavian Rebellion
A Short Introduction

Roman Militaria

Armour
Early Imperial Helmets
Late Roman Helmets
The Negau B Helmet

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Weapon Finds at Hedemünden
The pilum
Daggers
Swords

Other Equipment
Roman Saddles


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Religion
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Isis Worship
Memorial Stones
The Mithras Cult

Public Life
Roman Transport: Barges
Roman Transport: Amphorae and Barrels
Roman Water Supply

Architecture
Roman Public Baths

Domestic Life

Roman villae
Villa Urbana Longuich
Villa Rustica Wachenheim

Everyday Life
Bathing Habits
Children's Toys
Face Pots


Other Times

Neolithicum to Iron Age

Germany

Development of Civilisation
European Bread Museum, Ebergötzen
The Hutewald Project in the Solling
Open Air Museum Oerlinghausen

Neolithic Remains
Stone Burials of the Funnelbeaker Culture
The Necropolis of Oldendorf

Bronze Age / Iron Age
The Nydam Ship

Scotland

Neolithic Orkney
The Neolithic Landscape of Orkney
Ring of Brodgar
Skara Brae
Life in Skara Brae

Bronze Age / Iron Age
Clava Cairns
The Brochs of Gurness and Midhowe - Their Function in Iron Age Society

Scandinavia

Bronze / Iron Age
The Ship Setting of Gnisvärd / Gotland


Post-Medieval History

Explorers and Discoveries

Explorers
Fram Expedition to the North Pole
Fram Expedition to the South Pole

Discoveries
Otto von Guericke and the Magdeburg Hemispheres
Raising a Wreck, Now and Then (Vasa Museum in Stockholm)

History and Literature

The Weimar Classicism
Introduction


Geology

Geological Landscapes

Germany

Baltic Sea Coast
Chalk Cliffs on Rugia
Flint Fields on Rugia

Harz Mountains
Bode Valley and Rosstrappe Cliffs
Daneil's Cave
Devil's Wall
Hübichenstein Rock
Klus Rock
Lonau Falls
Rhume Springs
Southern Harz Karst

Meissner / Kaufunger Wald
'Blue Dome' near Eschwege
Diabase and Basalt Formations
Hoher Meissner Karst
Salt Springs at the Werra

Solling-Vogler
Raised Bog Mecklenbruch
Hannover Cliffs

Great Britain

The Shores of Scotland
Staffa

Baltic Sea

Lithuania
Geology of the Curonian Spit


Fossils and Rocks

Fossilized Ammonites
Loket Meteorite (Czechia)



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