Szadek as a cloth manufacture centre in XV-XII century Cover Image

Szadek jako ośrodek sukienniczy w XV-XVII wieku
Szadek as a cloth manufacture centre in XV-XII century

Author(s): Tadeusz Marszał
Subject(s): History
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: Szadek; cloth manufacture centre; Sieradz and Łęczyca district

Summary/Abstract: In XV and XVI centuries, Szadek, like many other Polish towns, was undergoing a period of intensive growth and prosperity. Many craftsmen, also from abroad, came and settled in Szadek in XV century. The town became an important wool cloth manufacturing centre on the economic map of Poland, surpassed only by Brzeziny in the Sieradz and Łęczyca district and a few other towns. The growth of wool cloth manufacturing spurred the development of other crafts, such as brewing, tailoring, shoemaking, furriery, carpentry and flour-milling, and trade. The economic position of Szadek was reflected in its administrative, judicial, cultural, political and social functions. In XV-XVI centuries the town was as important as such major urban centres of that time as Sieradz or Wieluń. The beginning of XVII century was a period of Szadek’s degradation and decline of its cloth production, which had two main causes. The first one was a series of misfortunes that afflicted this town in turbulent XVII century: fires, epidemics and passages of troops connected with wars. The second reason was the structure of wool manufacturing in Szadek, oriented to meeting local demand and mass production of cheap, inferior kind of coarse cloth, mainly bought by peasants. Impoverished rural population in XVII century bought less and less woollen cloth made in towns. Decreased demand was also caused by development of cloth manufacture in rural areas of southern and eastern Greater Poland. The shrinking demand on internal market for cloth manufactured in Szadek led to the decline of this town’s two-centuries long period of prosperity.

  • Issue Year: 2014
  • Issue No: 14
  • Page Range: 39-58
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: Polish