- Chapmen
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A chapman (plural chapmen) was an itinerant dealer or hawker in early modern Britain.
Contents
Etymology
Old English céapmann was the regular term for "dealer, seller", cognate to the synonymous Dutch koopman. Old English céap meant "deal, barter, business". The modern adjective cheap is a comparatively recent development from the phrase a good cheap, literally "a good deal" (cf. modern-day Dutch goedkoop = cheap). The word also appears in names such as Cheapside, Eastcheap and Chepstow; all markets or dealing places. By 1600, the word chapman had come to be applied to an itinerant dealer in particular, but it remained in use for "customer, buyer" as well as "merchant" in the 17th and 18th centuries, The habit of calling a young man a chap arose from the use of the abbreviated word to mean a customer, one with whom to bargain.
The word was applied to hawkers of chapbooks, broadside ballads, and similar items. Their stock in trade provides a graphic insight into the methods of political and religious campaigners of the Civil War period, for example.
Chapman is also a common personal name of the class derived from trades.
Examples of use
One famous instance of the use of the term is found in the opening lines of the poem Tam o' Shanter by Robert Burns:
- Whan chapman billies leave the street
- And drouthy neibours neibours meet...
- When young traders retire from the market
- And thirsty neighbours meet together...
References
Oxford English Dictionary.
External links
Categories:- Defunct occupations
- Sales occupations
- Occupation stubs
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