Bandwin

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Hugh Cameron (1835–1918), The Harvest, shows a bandwin at work

A bandwin was a team of agricultural workers in the Scottish Lowlands before the agricultural revolution, who carried out the harvest.

The term was first recorded in 1642. The bandwin was characteristically made up of two teams of two women and a man who acted as reapers and a bandster who gathered and bound the sheaves. The work of women in the bandwin was unusually almost as valued as that of the men.

The organisation of reapers in a bandwin from The Farmer's Guide to Scientific and Practical Agriculture (1851)

The term was first recorded in 1642 in the Sheriffs records for Aberdeenshire.[1] It may be derived from the bands of stalks used to tie the sheaves of grain,[2] or because it made up a band or group.[3]

Organisation

Wages

Notes

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