The Confraternity of Boatmen in Hasköy, Istanbul

1708

The Istanbul Jewish Boatmen’s Guild, which was part of the Ottoman Greater Istanbul Boatmen’s Guild, was divided according to districts. Among the district guilds was the Hasköy Boatmen’s Guild. Jews began to settle in the Hasköy neighborhood, on the northern bank of the Golden Horn, in the late fifteenth century, and it gradually became a Jewish area. Because Istanbul was a major port on numerous maritime routes, many of its inhabitants made their living at sea, including as fishermen and ferrymen, among them also Jews, as documents from the sixteenth to nineteenth century demonstrate. During this period, all laborers and craftsmen in Istanbul were required to join a guild; failure to do so resulted in social and economic isolation. Guild officials established prices of goods as well as wages and working conditions. A tribunal settled complaints from customers and disputes among members. Likewise, the guild cared for the sick, as well as orphans and widows of members. Guild officials were responsible for implementing the guild’s decisions and code of conduct. 

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

Regulations

Public Access
Text
We, the elders and leaders of the village of Hasköy, have signed below on the advice of our teacher, the rabbi, may he enjoy a long life. Whereas, there are in this village of ours an association of…