Wealthy Household

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Wealthy households have dozens of servants to keep things running smoothly. As a mapper, the following might help you populate your mansion maps.

Types of Servants

Grooms are generic household serving men; grooms of the stable, chamber, etc. Females of the same order are called maids or serving maids: of the kitchen, chamber, still room, etc.

Most of the servants in any household are men.

Personal attendant is a descriptive term, not a job title. In general, it separates everyone else's personal servants (of all ranks) from household grooms and maids.

Servants take money from anyone. They will accept a tip for any service rendered. ("Here's a penny to drink my health.") Or a douceur (sweetener) for favors requested. They expect to be tipped for delivering a gift or message. Their masters are aware of this, and do it themselves to other people's servants.

The most powerful servant of a household is the Steward.

The Steward and His Office

The management skills required to coordinate a great house and its staff are extraordinary. This list of duties is drawn from the Book of Rules and Orders prepared and enforced by Anthony Maria Brown, Viscount Montague, 1595. According to this rule, only the Clerke of the Kitchen and the Gentleman Usher come close to having this much responsibility.

In matters foreign and without the house:

Make sure provisions are ordered and acquired. This includes beef, mutton, grain, livery, badges, wood, coals, wild fowl, wines, salt, hops (for brewing), spices, fruits of all sorts.

Make sure repairs are carried out as needed in any of his lordship's houses, both inside and outside, including maintenance of fences hedges, marshes, walls, ponds, etc.

Distribute wages quarterly to household servants and other manor employees, and provide whatever each one is due in cash or in kind.

Deliver money as appropriate to the:

Clerke of the Kitchen for purchasing fresh supplies of anything not supplied by the manor

Purveyors of beef and mutton

Gentleman or Yeoman of the Horse for buying feed, equipment, and other necessaries for the stable.

Granator for buying wheat or malt, as needed

Collect bills and expense receipts from all these under-officers, review and enter them in his book of accounts (livery book).

Ride out into the parks, pastures, marshes, and other grounds to see that they be not abused or disordered, either by his own bailiffs or anyone else.

Support the Bailiff of Husbandry in his efforts to carry out his lordship's orders.

Arrange to sell the hides, skins, horns, wool, etc of any sheep or oxen slaughtered for the table.

Arrange to dispose of the tallow from such sales, keeping part to make candles and rush lights, part for use in the kitchen, and the rest to sell.

Get a receipt from anyone to whom money is paid out, all to be filed against the annual audit.

Sign off the livery book for all monies received from his lordship to pay household expenses, each entry to be dated with name of the person paid, location, and nature of the expense.

Once a month report to his lordship with the livery book for review, and once a year to the Auditor.