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Stamp of the guild of blacksmiths

Part of the collection: History of the city and the region

Popularization note

The guild seal was used to authenticate all of its documents. Each guild kept records of masters, journeymen and apprentices, organised examinations, issued certificates of graduation and master's diplomas, as well as ran other clerical activities. Seals, like guilds – symbolic objects used for convening meetings – had the attributes of particular profession next to the name of the guild or association. In the case of the seal of the Łańcut Blacksmiths' Guild, dating back to the 20th century, one can see a hammer and a horseshoe cut out in a piece of rubber. The blacksmith's guild itself had a long-running history in Łańcut, dating back to the Middle Ages, when it was one of the key guilds due to the Hungarian mining law, which was in force in the city. In 1350, King Casimir the Great issued a privilege, granting the landowners the right to run mining operations on their own land. As a result, the forests north of Łańcut were used as a source of bog iron ore, which was melted in furnaces and forges, creating raw material suitable for use by blacksmiths and other craftsmen. Joanna Kluz

Information about the object

Information about this object

Other names

unknown

Author / creator

unknown

Dimensions

height: 6.6 cm

Object type

History of the city and the region

Technique

embossing, cutting

Material

wood, natural rubber

Creation time / dating

20th century

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Poland (Europe)

Owner

Castle Museum in Łańcut

Identification number

MZŁ-DRM-222

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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