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A journeyman is a tradesman or craftsman who may well have completed an apprenticeship but is not yet able to set up their own workshop as a master. In parts of Europe, as in later medieval Germany, spending time as a journeyman, moving from one town to another to gain experience of different workshops, was an important part of the training of an aspirant master. In later medieval England, however, most journeymen remained as employees throughout their careers, lacking the financial resources to set up their own workshops. The word 'journeyman' comes from the French word 'journée', meaning the period of one day; this refers to his right to charge a fee for each day's work. He would normally be employed by a master craftsman, but would live apart and might have a family of his own. A journeyman could not employ others. In contrast, an apprentice would be bound to a master, usually for a fixed term of seven years, and lived with the master as a member of the household. The grade of journeyman is sometimes subdivided into two: journeyman improver and journeyman proper. The terms jack and knave are sometimes used as informal words for journeyman. See also: guild, apprentice, master. Journeyman (1935) is a novel by Erskine Caldwell about an itinerant preacher who upsets a small rural community. Journeyman is a 1989 album by Eric Clapton. A journeyman in professional sports played for many different teams within a short period of time, compared to players who stay with the same team for longer periods or their entire careers. |
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