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| {{Germany-sidebar}}{{breadcrumb | | {{CountrySidebar |
| | |Country=Germany |
| | |Name=Germany |
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| | |Topic Type=Records |
| | |Records=Business and Occupations |
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| | link1=[[Germany Genealogy|Germany]] | | | link1=[[Germany Genealogy|Germany]] |
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| | link5=[[Germany Occupations|Occupations]] | | | link5=[[Germany Business and Occupations|Business and Occupations]] |
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| ==Guilds== | | ==Guilds== |
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| Contracts between masters and parents of apprentices may also be included. Boys from ages 7 to 18 could be apprenticed for four to seven years in trades such as shoemaking, barrel making, blacksmithing, and tanning. Young girls often became servants or lived with relatives. | | Contracts between masters and parents of apprentices may also be included. Boys from ages 7 to 18 could be apprenticed for four to seven years in trades such as shoemaking, barrel making, blacksmithing, and tanning. Young girls often became servants or lived with relatives. |
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| It was customary for those who had finished their apprenticeships to gain more work experience by becoming journeymen and traveling to various places and work for different masters of their trade. This experience was an important part in preparing for their master's certification. Many of the journeymen married during this travel time and did not return to their original homes. | | It was customary for those who had finished their apprenticeships to gain more work experience by becoming journeymen and traveling to various places and work for different masters of their trade. This experience was an important part in preparing for their master's certification. Many of the journeymen married during this travel time and did not return to their original homes. |
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| Guilds made it difficult for large business establishments. As larger businesses did become established, the guilds were no longer sufficient. A good article regarding guilds can be found in the German Genealogical Digest Winter 1994 page 118. | | Guilds made it difficult for large business establishments. As larger businesses did become established, the guilds were no longer sufficient. A good article regarding guilds can be found in the German Genealogical Digest Winter 1994 page 118. |
| ==Guild Records== | | ==Guild Records== |
| Guild records are usually found in the town archives or in the possession of the modern guilds. The records are extensive, but few have been published or indexed. To use guild records, you need to know your ancestor's place of residence and craft. Since sons often had the same occupation as their fathers, you may find information about several generations of a family. | | Guild records are usually found in the town archives or in the possession of the modern guilds. The records are extensive, but few have been published or indexed. To use guild records, you need to know your ancestor's place of residence and craft. Since sons often had the same occupation as their fathers, you may find information about several generations of a family. |
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| Only part of the male population is included in guild records, although their wives and daughters are sometimes mentioned. Guild records are most useful where they exist before the beginning of church records. Because of their antiquity, such records are often hard to read, even for persons fluent in German. They may require an expert's help. | | Only part of the male population is included in guild records, although their wives and daughters are sometimes mentioned. Guild records are most useful where they exist before the beginning of church records. Because of their antiquity, such records are often hard to read, even for persons fluent in German. They may require an expert's help. |
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| The Family History Library has collected a few German guild records. These records and related items are listed in the Place Search of the catalog under: | | The FamilySearch Library has collected a few German guild records. These records and related items are listed in the Place Search of the catalog under: |
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| GERMANY - OCCUPATIONS | | GERMANY - OCCUPATIONS |
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| GERMANY, [STATE], [TOWN] | | GERMANY, [STATE], [TOWN] |
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| Biographical works often focus on the members of a specific occupation or trade, such as theologians or communications workers. See the “[[German Biography|Biography]]” section. For help in determining the meaning of old occupational terminology, see the Family History Library publication German Genealogical Word List). Also check the “[[Germany Language and Languages|Language and Languages]]” section. For a helpful list of German Occupations with their English equivalents please check this site [https://web.archive.org/web/20171205054440/http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com:80/~romban/misc/germanjobs.html German Occupation list] | | Biographical works often focus on the members of a specific occupation or trade, such as theologians or communications workers. See the “[[German Biography|Biography]]” section. For help in determining the meaning of old occupational terminology, see the FamilySearch Library publication German Genealogical Word List). Also check the “[[Germany Language and Languages|Language and Languages]]” section. For a helpful list of German Occupations with their English equivalents please check this site [http://sites.rootsweb.com/~romban/misc/germanjobs.html German Occupation list] |
| == Totenlade== | | == Totenlade== |
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| ==A Journeymen’s book--Wanderbuch== | | ==A Journeymen’s book--Wanderbuch== |
| A very interesting document for a genealogist is a craftsman’s Wanderbuch, a sort of passport issued to those men who needed to learn and hone their profession. | | A very interesting document for a genealogist is a ''Wanderbuch'', which was used as a passport journeyman craftsmen. |
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| The author, Otto Döhner, whose great grandfather owned a Wanderbuch, offers insights into this document in an essay published in''Archiv für Sippenforschung ''Jahrgang 46, Heft 78 (1980), page 407.<br>The Wanderbuch gives instructions of how to conduct oneself as a journeyman. Foremost, one has to avoid misappropriated itinerancy and begging. Where a candidate does not appropriate any work within 24 hours, he should not remain without official consent. He should receive a statement from the master if he was going to be employed or not or why he could not take the offered position. There was imprisonment imposed if compliance was lacking.
| | The author, Otto Döhner, whose great grandfather owned a Wanderbuch, offers insights into this document in an essay published in ''Archiv für Sippenforschung'' Jahrgang 46, Heft 78 (1980), page 407. The Wanderbuch gives instructions of how to conduct oneself as a journeyman. Foremost, one has to avoid misappropriated itinerancy and begging. Where a candidate does not appropriate any work within 24 hours, he should not remain without official consent. He should receive a statement from the master if he was going to be employed or not or why he could not take the offered position. There was imprisonment imposed if compliance was lacking. |
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| The next portion of the Wanderbuch deals with the detailed description of the person. Stature, eyes, hair, nose, mouth and face, give the genealogist a good idea of what an ancestor looked like. | | The next portion of the Wanderbuch deals with the detailed description of the person. Stature, eyes, hair, nose, mouth and face, give the genealogist a good idea of what an ancestor looked like. Further pages reveal where in the German speaking world an ancestor may have apprenticed. Detailed entries follow of what the purpose of the candidate is, where he came from, where he is going, how he conducted himself, how long he intends to stay. |
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| Further pages reveal where in the German speaking world an ancestor may have apprenticed. Detailed entries follow of what the purpose of the candidate is, where he came from, where he is going, how he conducted himself, how long he intends to stay.
| | More details can be discovered in the above mentioned periodical. |
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| More details can be discovered in the above mentioned periodical. | |
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| ==Additional Resources== | | ==Additional Resources== |
| See [[Understanding Occupations in German Research]] for more information. | | See [[Understanding Occupations in German Research]] for more information. |
| *[http://brigittegastelancestry.com/occupat.htm Old German Professions, Occupations and Illnesses] | | *[http://brigittegastelancestry.com/occupat.htm Old German Professions, Occupations and Illnesses] |
| | *[https://www.jewishgen.org/infofiles/germanoccs.htm German Occupation Definitions - English Translations] |
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| {{Germany|Germany}} | | {{Germany|Germany}} |
| {{H-langs|en=Germany Occupations|fr=Allemagne : Les Métiers}}
| | [[fr:Allemagne : Les Métiers]] |
| [[Category:Germany|Occupations]] | | [[Category:Germany|Occupations]] |