Сеоско професионално занатство Кнежевине Србије (1834-1866)
Professional rural handicrafts were present back in the period of the first rule of Prince MilošObrenović, although both villages with established handicraft production and craftsmen in them were low in numbers. In the course of the next three decades the total number of craftsmen increased, but cra...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Istorijski časopis 2013 (62), p.309-329 |
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Sprache: | srp |
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Zusammenfassung: | Professional rural handicrafts were present back in the period of the
first rule of Prince MilošObrenović, although both villages with established
handicraft production and craftsmen in them were low in numbers. In the
course of the next three decades the total number of craftsmen increased, but
crafts they were involved in remained almost the same in numbers. These were
the Oriental crafts which were present in the urban environment as well, and
that was the situation causing jealousy between urban and rural craftsmen.
Notwithstanding that rural artisanship mostly met the needs of rural population
and that the rural handicraft market was limited mostly to surrounding villages,
their access to the respective nearby town markets resulted in the long standing
effort, made by both urban craftsmen and their guilds, aimed at getting rural
craftsmen incorporated into guilds or moved to towns.
Rural craftsmen played a marginal role in economic life of Serbia, both
in numbers and regarding their economic power measured by its share in the
economic system of the country. In the economy of local communities, however,
they were principal promoters of endeavors aimed at getting the status of towns
granted to villages with more notable numbers of craftsmen, and therefore aimed
at giving them a chance to develop faster. These endeavors were distinct until the
middle of 19th century, when rural artisanship became fully professional, being
already developed enough to make rural craftsmen able to support themselves
almost entirely by handicraft production. In the course of thirty years or so (from
1834 to 1866) the structure of rural handicrafts remained unchanged – the majority
of craftsmen were involved in the Oriental crafts, working in service industry
without ancillary labor engaged, as they used to in the times of Prince Miloš. Total
number of craftsmen, however, increased, and they gradually concentrated into
little craftsmanship centers, set up mostly within municipality centers or inside
settlements that had already been towns back in the times of full Ottoman rule in
the Belgrade Pashalic. |
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ISSN: | 0350-0802 |