The word meant a room where things were built by hand for four centuries before it meant a meeting.
The Oxford English Dictionary records the earliest known use of workshop in 1556, in a translation by Nicholas Grimald.1 The compound is straightforward: the Old English weorc, meaning labor or effort, joined to shoppe, a booth or shed where trade was conducted.2 The result described something specific, a room or outbuilding where skilled hands produced physical objects.
For centuries, the meaning held firm. A workshop was defined by its tools, its raw materials, and the labor performed inside it. Across medieval Europe, Guild workshops served simultaneously as production sites and training grounds, where masters took on apprentices and taught a single craft over years of supervised practice.3
The guild system gave the workshop its social architecture. In most European cities by the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, membership in a craft guild was compulsory for anyone practicing a trade. A master craftsman ran the workshop, employed journeymen, and trained apprentices who might spend years learning one skill before they could work independently.
Florence had 21 recognized guilds by the mid-fourteenth century.4 Painters belonged to the Arte dei Medici e Speziali, the guild of physicians and apothecaries, because apothecaries supplied their pigments. In the Italian Bottega, young artists entered a master's studio and began with menial tasks, grinding colors and preparing surfaces, before they were trusted with any independent work.5
The Industrial Revolution separated the workshop from the factory. Factories concentrated hundreds of workers under one roof, organized around machines rather than masters. The workshop survived in smaller trades, but its cultural authority diminished as mass production displaced craft production.
By 1914, American English had begun adapting the word. Records from that year show the compound shop class appearing in school curricula to describe rooms where students learned vocational skills with their hands.6
The shift accelerated in the decades after the Second World War. Universities, corporations, and professional associations adopted workshop for short, intensive group sessions built around discussion and participation rather than physical production.
Major dictionaries now list both definitions side by side: a room or building in which goods are manufactured or repaired, and a meeting at which a group engages in intensive discussion on a particular subject.7