Musée du
Compagnonnage
de Tours

  • FR
  • EN
  • Home
  • The guilds
    • History
    • The masterly hand
    • The reigning spirit
  • Practical museum
    • Opening and admission
    • Groups
    • Library
    • Agenda
    • Actualités
    • Photo gallery
  • Young visitors
    • Families
    • Schoolchildren
  • Genealogy
  • FR
  • EN
  1. Home
  2. Node
PrintShare on...
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Genealogy

WARNING : The nominal basis of compagnons which you are about to consult is the result of diverse sources (archives of the retirement fund of “Le Ralliement des compagnons du Devoir”, lists of weavers and saddlers, compagnons who died in 1914-1918 War, compagnonnique press…). In principle, you will not find compagnons who are still alive. This database does not include every compagnon which ever existed. The records are often incomplete, for lack of sources. Nonetheless, this database is regularly updated. You can help us completing the records by sharing your own family information, and you can even illustrate them with portrait photos. Thank you for your support.

Contactez-nous

Find a companion

Fill one of fields below:

Advanced search...

Corporations Masters and companions

“Yes,” you may say, “but I’ve found such-and-such a notarised document in such-and-such a parish register certifying that my ancestor was a qualified ‘Master Carpenter’.” You’re on the wrong track! This means that he was a self-employed carpenter, his own boss. In his youth, he may well have done his Tour and been a member of a guild society, but he may just as easily have not.

The mention of “Companion Carpenter” is even more deceptive and should in no way be regarded as a reason for hope. The designation simply means that he was a wage-earning carpenter, a worker in carpentry. The term “companion” was in common use and did not automatically imply a “Companion of Duty”. Used during the Ancien Régime, together with the term “garcon”, it signified that the person was no longer an apprentice but was not self-employed. In the framework of the corporation, it was an intermediate state between apprentice and master. At the same, it was quite possible for a “corporation companion” also to be a “Companion of the Tour de France”.

Compagnons des corporations
Companions of corporations

PrintShare on...
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Go to top
  • Contact / Map
  • Photo gallery
NEWSLETTER
Musée du
Compagnonnage
de Tours

8 rue Nationale
37000 Tours
Tél. 02 47 21 62 20

  • Home
  • The guilds
    • History
    • The masterly hand
    • The reigning spirit
  • Practical museum
    • Opening and admission
    • Groups
    • Library
    • Agenda
    • Actualités
    • Photo gallery
  • Young visitors
    • Families
    • Schoolchildren
  • Genealogy
© 2018 Musée du Compagnonnage de Tours
  • Useful links
  • Terms and conditions
  • CGV