Seven Incorporated Trades of Aberdeen

Seven Incorporated Trades of Aberdeen is an ancient society of craftsmen in Aberdeen, Scotland. Their home is Trinity Hall on the city's Holburn Street.[1]

Composition

Old Trades Hall, Aberdeen

The society comprises seven trades:

  • Hammermen (1519)
  • Bakers (1398)
  • Wrights and Coopers (1527)
  • Tailors (1511)
  • Shoemakers (1484 and 1520)
  • Weavers (pre 1222)
  • Fleshers (1534)

History

The first Deacon Convenor of the joint seven trades was George Elphinstone, a saddler in the Guild of Hammermen, appointed in June 1587. In an effort to alleviate disputes between the various trades this body was created and created what was known as the Aberdeen Magna Carta, a charter drawn up to agree processes and settlement of disputes ratified in August 1587 and raised to the status of a Royal Charter by King James VI on 16 July 1617.[2]

Notable Patrons

References

  • Bain, Ebenezer (1887). Merchant and Craft Guilds. A History of the Aberdeen Incorporated Trades. Aberdeen: Edmond.

Official website

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