Master: Difference between revisions

From Cunnan
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
m (Reverted edits by 207.163.116.20 (Talk); changed back to last version by User 144)
Line 1: Line 1:
darpas
From the [[13th century]] the term '''master''' had come to mean one who had progressed in skill so far in their [[trade]] that the master of his [[guild]] had accepted his work as being of very high quality as to exceed that of a [[journeyman]]. He was permitted to take [[apprentice]]s of his own and train them to be [[journeyman]] in turn.
From the [[13th century]] the term '''master''' had come to mean one who had progressed in skill so far in their [[trade]] that the master of his [[guild]] had accepted his work as being of very high quality as to exceed that of a [[journeyman]]. He was permitted to take [[apprentice]]s of his own and train them to be [[journeyman]] in turn.



Revision as of 00:57, 5 November 2007

From the 13th century the term master had come to mean one who had progressed in skill so far in their trade that the master of his guild had accepted his work as being of very high quality as to exceed that of a journeyman. He was permitted to take apprentices of his own and train them to be journeyman in turn.

Masters in the SCA

Master is the title (actually an honorific) given in the SCA to those who are members of the Order of the Pelican and/or Order of the Laurel. Women who hold the title may use the title Mistress.

A member of the Order of Chivalry who has declined to swear fealty is also a master.

It is also the term used for some SCA ministers or officers, e.g. Kingdom Lists Officers are sometimes referred to as Masters of the Lists.