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Sunday, December 22, 2013

WORSHIPFUL COMPANY OF MERCERS

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Worshipful Company of Mercers
Honor Deo Latin for Honour to God
The Mercers' Company coat of arms
Location: Mercers' Hall, Ironmonger Lane, City of London
Date of formation: 1394; 619 years ago
Company association: General merchants
Order of precedence: 1st
Master of company: Simon Wathen[1]
Motto: Honor Deo Latin for Honour to God
Website: www.mercers.co.uk
 
The Worshipful Company of Mercers is the premier Livery Company of the City of London and ranks first in the order of precedence of the Companies.

It is the first of the so-called 'Great Twelve City Livery Companies'.[2] 

 Although of even older origin, the Company was incorporated under a Royal Charter in 1394, the Company's earliest extant Charter.

The Company's aim was to act as a trade association for general merchants, and especially for exporters of wool and importers of velvet, silk and other luxurious fabrics (mercers).

By the 16th century many members of the Company had lost any connection with the original trade. 

Today, the Company exists primarily as a charitable institution, supporting a variety of causes. 

The Company's motto is Honor Deo, Latin for "Honour to God".




Etymology

The word "mercer" derives from the Latin merx, mercis, "merchandise"[3] from which root also derives the word "merchant".[4]

The word mercero still used in Spanish has a meaning similar to haberdasher, although the medieval mercers would not have recognised any relationship to that trade which was covered by the separate Worshipful Company of Haberdashers.

Mercer foundations

In education, the Company has administered St Paul's School since 1509 (and its prep school), St Paul's Girls' School since 1904, two prep schools in London, The Hall School and Bute House, and retains close links with Collyer's College, Dauntsey's School, Abingdon School, Peter Symonds College and Gresham College, all founded by mercers.[5] In recent times the Company has founded a City Technology College (Thomas Telford School) and two City Academies (Walsall Academy and Sandwell Academy).

There was also a Mercers' School[6] which was granted its first charter in 1447, and closed in 1959 when pupil numbers fell. The school was most recently based in Barnard's Inn in Holborn, now the home of Gresham College.

In 2011, the Mercers co-sponsored a new academy school, Hammersmith Academy, specialising in creative and digital media and information technology, located in Hammersmith.[7] The school was established in a new building, with support from the Mercers[8] and the Worshipful Company of Information Technologists.[9]

Mercers' Hall


Mercers' Hall in Ironmonger Lane.
The Mercers' Company is based at Mercers' Hall in Ironmonger Lane, off Poultry, in the City of London.

From the 14th century onwards the Company held its meetings in the Hospital of St. Thomas of Acon on nearby Cheapside

Between 1517 and 1524 the Company built a small chapel of its own on this land, with the first Mercers' Hall above it, fronting Cheapside. 

The building was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666. 

The second Hall, designed by Edward Jarman and John Oliver, opened in May 1676. 

The Hall was extensively refurbished during the period 1877 to 1881 (the porch of the 1676 building is now incorporated into the facade of Swanage town hall). 

The frontage was remodelled by George Barnes Williams and the interiors were redesigned by John Gregory Crace, the renowned Victorian designer. The Hall was destroyed by fire in 1941 during the Blitz. The third and present Mercers' Hall was opened in May 1958. The architect was E. Noel Clifton of Gunton and Gunton. The Hall incorporates fittings from the old Hall, including some 17th century woodwork and Victorian stained glass. The Mercers' Company is the only City Livery Company to have its own private chapel.

Membership

Children whose father or mother was a member of the Company at the time of their birth have an automatic right to become Mercers by 'patrimony'.

Most other members have a family connection to the Company and obtain their Freedom by Redemption. 

Under this process applicants are recommended for membership after an interview and, if approved, they pay a small sum of money called a 'fine'.

Other people can also become Members by Redemption. Membership is sometimes granted because the Company wishes to honour the individual. 

Notable Members who joined the Company by Redemption are Thomas More and Winston Churchill.
 
One other route to membership is by apprenticeship, but this has not happened recently. 

In the early days this was a very usual route; an apprentice would be 'bound' to a Member for a term of about seven years, and was virtually the Member's slave, but in exchange the member was required to teach the apprentice such that he was worthy of membership by the end of the term, when he became a 'Freeman', for he was no longer bound.

Freemen of a Livery Company are also Freemen of the City of London, which used to carry certain privileges, such as the right to drive a flock of sheep without charge over London Bridge.

Coat of arms

The origin of the Mercers’ Maiden, the heraldic emblem of the Company, is not known. 

Unlike most of the City livery companies the Mercers had no early grant of arms but the 1425 charter granted a common seal. 

A few impressions of the early seal survive showing a greatly simplified version of the present coat of arms. 

The fifteenth century Wardens’ Accounts reveal that, even then, the Company required the device of the Maid’s Head to be displayed on its property. 

In 1530 the Company stated to the College of Heralds that they had no arms but only a Maid’s Head for their common seal and in 1568 the Heralds registered the seal as the Company’s arms.
 
In 1911 the College of Arms confirmed the arms and granted the Company a crest and motto, ‘Honor Deo’ (Honour to God). The grant describes the arms as: “Gules, issuant from a bank of clouds a figure of the Virgin couped at the shoulders proper vested in a crimson robe adorned with gold, the neck encircled by a jeweled necklace crined or and wreathed about the temples with a chaplet of roses alternately argent and of the first, and crowned with a celestial crown, the whole within a bordure of clouds also proper”.

Current activities

Every year the Mercers' Company publishes an annual review of their activities. 

The 2006 accounts show that the Mercers have £454.6 million in assets under management.

£315.6 million of that total was in the form of property and other fixed assets; the property portfolio includes 90 residential flats in Covent Garden.

In the year to August 2005 the Mercers donated £9 million to charity.

As of 2012 the property portfolio is valued above £500 million, based largely on the Covent Garden property. 

In an average year they might give away £7m, about one-sixth of the total charitable contributions for the 109 livery companies.[2]

Mercers


 
Among famous Mercers were:


See also


  • Kilrea, Mercers plantation settlement in Northern Ireland.

Further reading


  • Sutton, Anne F., The Mercery of London: Trade, Goods and People, 1130–1578, Aldershot, 2005

References


  1. Jump up ^ Mercer's webpage The Master is appointed annually and recent Masters are documented here.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Engel, Matthew (December 21, 2012). "British institutions: livery companies". ft.com. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
  3. Jump up ^ Sutton, Anne, op. cit., p.2
  4. Jump up ^ Cassell's Latin Dictionary, Merchant & Charles
  5. Jump up ^ Mercers' Company - Independent Schools
  6. Jump up ^ "Old Mercer's Club".
  7. Jump up ^ "Hammersmith Academy". London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham, UK. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
  8. Jump up ^ "Hammersmith Academy". The Mercers' Company, City of London, UK. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
  9. Jump up ^ "Hammersmith Academy". The Information Technologists' Company, City of London, UK. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
  10. Jump up ^ Girouard, Mark, Thynne, Sir John (1512/13–1580), estate manager and builder of Longleat in Oxford Dictionary of Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  11. Jump up ^ Julian Roberts, ed. (2005). "A John Dee Chronology, 1509–1609". Renaissance Man: The Reconstructed Libraries of European Scholars: 1450–1700 Series One: The Books and Manuscripts of John Dee, 1527–1608. Adam Matthew Publications. Retrieved 27 October 2006.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worshipful_Company_of_Mercers

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