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Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe Maarten Prak (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)

Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe By Maarten Prak (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)

Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe by Maarten Prak (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)


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Summary

This is the first European history of apprenticeship before the Industrial Revolution. It reveals how human capital formation - a key explanation for economic development - operated across the continent. A comparative set of cutting-edge local and national case-studies uncovers a European-wide system of skills education.

Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe Summary

Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe by Maarten Prak (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)

This is the first comparative and comprehensive account of occupational training before the Industrial Revolution. Apprenticeship was a critical part of human capital formation, and, because of this, it has a central role to play in understanding economic growth in the past. At the same time, it was a key stage in the lives of many people, whose access to skills and experience of learning were shaped by the guilds that trained them. The local and national studies contained in this volume bring together the latest research into how skills training worked across Europe in an era before the emergence of national school systems. These essays, written to a common agenda and drawing on major new datasets, systematically outline the features of what amounted to a European-wide system of skills education, and provide essential insights into a key institution of economic and social history.

Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe Reviews

'A very interesting work, which will be devoured by all who have an interest in early modern history.' Translated from Aktief

About Maarten Prak (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)

Maarten Prak is Professor of Social and Economic History at Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands. His wide collection of writings includes Citizens without Nations: Urban Citizenship in Europe and the World, c.1000-1789 (Cambridge, 2018). Patrick Wallis is Professor of Economic History at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His many publications include Medicine and the Market in England and Its Colonies, c. 1450-c. 1850 (2007), co-edited with Mark S. R. Jenner, and he currently edits the Economic History Review.

Table of Contents

Introduction: apprenticeship in early modern Europe Maarten Prak and Patrick Wallis; 1. The economics of apprenticeship Joel Mokyr; 2. Apprenticeship in early modern Madrid Victoria Lopez Barahona and Jose Nieto Sanchez; 3. A large 'umbrella': patterns of apprenticeship in eighteenth-century Turin Beatrice Zucca Micheletto; 4. Apprenticeship in early modern Venice Anna Bellavitis, Riccardo Cella and Giovanni Colavizza; 5. Actors and practices of German apprenticeship, fifteenth-nineteenth centuries Georg Stoeger and Reinhold Reith; 6. Rural artisans' apprenticeship practices in early modern Finland (1700-1850) Merja Uotila; 7. Apprenticeships with and without guilds: the Northern Netherlands Ruben Schalk; 8. Apprenticeship in the Southern Netherlands, c.1400-c.1800 Bert De Munck, Raoul De Kerf and Annelies De Bie; 9. Apprenticeship in England Patrick Wallis; 10. Surviving the end of the guilds: apprenticeship in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century France Clare Crowston and Claire Lemercier; Conclusion: European apprenticeship Maarten Prak and Patrick Wallis.

Additional information

NLS9781108739085
9781108739085
1108739083
Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe by Maarten Prak (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2022-09-29
334
N/A
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