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The 108 livery companies are trade associations based in the City of London, almost all of which are known as the "Worshipful Company of" the relevant trade or profession. The livery companies originally developed as guilds and were responsible for the regulation of their trades, controlling, for instance, wages and labour conditions. Some livery companies (for example, the Scriveners) continue to have a regulatory role today, and some (for example, the Longbow Makers) have become inoperative except as charitable foundations. Most livery companies, particularly those formed in recent years, are primarily charitable organizations. The active livery companies also play an important part in social life and networking in the City of London. They have a long history of cultural patronage. After the Fan Makers were established in 1709 (and later granted livery in 1809), no new companies were formed for over 100 years until the Master Mariners in 1926 (livery in 1932). Post-1926 companies are called modern livery companies. Formed in 1999, The Company of Security Professionals became the 108th livery company on 19 February 2008 when the Court of Aldermen of the City of London Corporation approved the Petition for Livery. In recent years, many professions (such as solicitors and chartered accountants) have established new guilds with the aim of being granted livery, the most recent being the Tax Advisers (formed as a guild in 1995 and granted livery in 2005).[citation needed] As of 2008 there are two old bodies which, for historical reasons, are recognized as City Companies Without Livery; while three further guilds (Educators, Public Relations Practitioners and Arts Scholars, Dealers and Collectors) aim to obtain a grant of Livery.
[edit] GovernanceLivery companies are governed by a master (known in some companies as the prime warden), a number of wardens (who may be known as the upper, middle, lower, or renter wardens), and a court of assistants, which elects the master and wardens. The chief operating officer of the company is known as the clerk. Members generally fall into two categories: freemen and liverymen. One may become a freeman, or acquire the "freedom of the company", upon fulfilling the company's criteria: traditionally, one may be admitted by "patrimony", if either parent was a liverymen of the company; by "servitude", if one has served as an apprentice in the trade for the requisite number of years; or by "redemption", if one pays a fee. (The company may also vote to admit individuals as honorary freemen.) Freemen generally advance to becoming liverymen by a vote of the court of the company. Historically, only liverymen could take part in the election of the Lord Mayor of the City of London, the sheriffs, and the other traditional officers of the City . [edit] Livery hallsMany companies still have a hall, where members and their guests can be entertained and company business transacted. Among the earliest companies known to have possessed halls were the Merchant Taylors and Goldsmiths in the 14th century, but neither their nor other companies' original halls remain; the few survivors of the Great Fire, along with many reconstructions, were destroyed during the Blitz. Today, only forty companies have halls in London. Companies that do not have their own hall usually borrow one of the other companies' premises for social occasions. [edit] PrecedenceIn 1515, the Court of Aldermen of the City of London settled an order of precedence for the forty-eight livery companies then in existence, which was based on the companies' economic or political power. The first twelve livery companies are known as the Great Twelve City Livery Companies. There are now one hundred and eight livery companies, some of recent formation, so the Order of Precedence is sometimes reviewed. However, the Merchant Taylors and the Skinners have always disputed their precedence, so once a year (at Easter) they exchange sixth and seventh place. This is one of the theories for the origin of the phrase "at sixes and sevens", as the master of the Merchant Taylors has asserted a number of times, although the first use of the phrase may have been before the Taylors and the Skinners decided to alternate their position.[1] Both companies had been founded before the birth of Chaucer, who was one of the first people to use the phrase, so this may have dated from before him. [edit] List of Livery Companies, in order of precedence
[edit] City Companies Without Grant of LiveryBoth of these are never intending to apply for Livery due to ancient status and custom. A guild which is recognised by the Court of Aldermen as a 'London Guild' applies to the Court to become 'A Company without Livery'. After a term of years the Company applies to the Court for Livery status, at which point it adopts the style 'Worshipful Company of ... '. Many livery companies feature in the City of London boardgame that supports the Lord Mayor's Appeal and Lord Mayor's Show. Players answer questions about the City, gain wards and move up the ranks from Freeman, Councilman, Liveryman, Alderman to Sheriff. Sheriffs then compete to win by reaching the Mansion House to become Lord Mayor of the City of London. For more information see: http://www.lordmayorshow.org [edit] Other guilds aiming to obtain a Grant of Livery[edit] See alsoNeither the 'City Livery Club' and 'The Guild of Freemen of the City of London' are recognised as a 'guild' by the City, they are merely social clubs. [edit] References[edit] External links
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