Before it meant hobbies, the Old English word cræft meant strength and power.
The Old English word cræft meant strength, power, and might.1 It described a capacity that was physical and mental at once, the ability to make or do something requiring skill. In Germanic languages, the cognates carried similar weight: Old Norse kraft meant strength, Old High German chraft meant power.
By the medieval period, craft had narrowed to describe skilled manual work, particularly the occupations organized into guild systems across European cities. A craftsman was someone who had mastered a body of knowledge through years of apprenticeship.2
The medieval guild system enforced quality standards, regulated training, and controlled who could practice a craft in a given city. The master-journeyman-apprentice hierarchy ensured knowledge transfer across generations. Industrial manufacturing dismantled these structures by separating design from execution.
William Morris led the Arts and Crafts movement in late-nineteenth-century England, arguing that the separation of art from labor was destroying both the quality of objects and the dignity of the workers who made them.3
Richard Sennett's The Craftsman (2008) traced how modern economies systematically devalue the knowledge embedded in skilled manual work, arguing that craftsmanship represents a fundamental human impulse to do a job well for its own sake.4