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  2. Guildhall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guildhall

    Guild members often cleaned streets, removed rubbish, maintained a nightwatch and provided food relief to the poor. [8] Some medieval guilds allowed market trading to occur on the ground floor of the guildhall. [9] In the City of London, the guilds are called "livery companies", and their guild halls are called livery halls. [10] [11]

  3. Guildhall, London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guildhall,_London

    Guildhall crypt. During the Roman period, the Guildhall was the site of the London Roman Amphitheatre, rediscovered as recently as 1988.It was the largest in Roman Britain, partial remains of which are on public display in the basement of the Guildhall Art Gallery, and the outline of whose arena is marked with a black circle on the paving of the courtyard in front of the hall.

  4. Guilds of Brussels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guilds_of_Brussels

    Guildhalls on the Grand-Place/Grote Markt in Brussels. The Guilds of Brussels (French: Guildes de Bruxelles; Dutch: Gilden van Brussel), grouped in the Nine Nations of Brussels (French: Neuf Nations de Bruxelles; Dutch: Negen Naties van Brussel), were associations of craft guilds that dominated the economic life of Brussels in the late medieval and early modern periods.

  5. Guild - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guild

    The Screen Actors Guild, Directors Guild of America, Writers Guild of America, East, Writers Guild of America, West and other profession-specific guilds have the ability to exercise strong control in the cinema of the United States as a result of a rigid system of intellectual-property rights and a history of power-brokers also holding guild ...

  6. Merchant Adventurers' Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchant_Adventurers'_Hall

    The majority of the Hall was built in 1357 by a group of influential men and women who came together to form a religious fraternity called the Guild of Our Lord Jesus and the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1371, a hospital was established in the undercroft for the poor people of York [ 3 ] and, in 1430, the fraternity was granted a royal charter by ...

  7. St Mary's Guildhall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Mary's_Guildhall

    The building was built in the medieval style between 1340 and 1342 and much altered and extended in 1460. [1]The guildhall originally served as the headquarters of the merchant guild of St Mary, [2] and subsequently of the united guilds of the Holy Trinity, St Mary, St John the Baptist and St Katherine, [3] which merged in 1392.

  8. Leicester Guildhall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leicester_Guildhall

    The Guildhall was used for banquets, festivals, and as the lodging of a priest who prayed for the souls of deceased Guild members in a chantry chapel in nearby St Martin's Church. The Corporation of Leicester was created in 1589 and came to use the Guildhall as its meeting place and administrative centre. [3]

  9. Tailors' Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tailors'_Hall

    After this, the Dublin Tailors sold most of their moveable property to fund a trust. The trustees were directed to, and did, form a school, the Merchant Tailors' Endowed School, which took up to 50 Protestant pupils, descended from members of the Tailors' Guild, and otherwise from the Merchants' Guild or other Freemen of Dublin. [4]