People, property and charity: the Clothworkers' Company 1500-1750
Beginning in October 2010, the ‘People, Property and Charity: the Clothworkers’ Company 1500-1750’ project, will provide the first detailed history of the benefactors, property acquisitions and other bequests of the Clothworkers’ Company in the City of London during the late medieval and early modern periods. Focusing specifically on the properties that came to the company through the bequests of several benefactors, the project aims to trace the company’s management of these properties and associated charities using the Company’s court orders, account books, bequest records, lease records, and benefactor wills.
Clothworkers' Hall, The Treswell Survey, 1622Specific
research questions relate to the company’s acquisition of the properties; their
continual surveys and viewings of their lands; reparations undertaken by the
company on these properties; their lease agreements relating to the properties;
their financial transactions; and the charitable giving by the company from the
rental incomes of these properties. Research outputs from the project will
engage with wider academic debates relating to benefaction, acquisition and the
management of properties and charities in the early modern period. The project
will have three distinct web outputs, including biographies of c.33 benefactors, short property
histories and a gazetteer (database) of information relating to the individual
properties; as well as a number of published articles.
Project details
Clothworkers' Company Fellow: Annaleigh Margey B.A., Ph.D
Director: Matthew Davies M.A., D.Phil., FRHistS
Funded by: The Clothworkers' Company (1 October 2010-30 September 2011)

