Maria Magdalena Eek
Maria Magdalena Eek (1733–1800), was a Finnish pastry chef. Based in Turku, she had a successful career and was a notable artist within her trade, eventually being granted a Royal warrant of appointment.[1]
Maria Magdalena Eek was the daughter of the city official Henric Eek. She never married. In 1782, she was given permission from the city authorities to manufacture and sell all forms of bread which was not included in the monopoly of the baker's guild, which in fact meant dessert bread such as cakes.[2] She was given the permission granted to all women outside of the guilds: this entitled her to make and sell only what she had made with her own hands and only enough for her to support herself, which meant that she could not employ people in her business.[2] She was also never registered as a baker, which makes the dates of her business difficult to trace. Despite these conditions, Eek managed to circumvent the restrictions: she supported not only herself but her sister and foster daughter, bought a house, had several assistants employed (which she referred to as only domestics) and had her pastries sold by sellers all over town.[2] Her successes caused constant lawsuits from the members of the baker's guild during the 1780s.[2]
References
- Vainio-Korhonen, Kirsi (24 February 2000). "Eek, Maria Magdalena (1733–1800)". Kansallisbiografia (Finlands National Biography) (in Finnish). Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura.
- Biografiskt lexikon för Finland. Vol. I. Svenska tiden. Henrik Knif, Fredrik Hertzberg, Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland. Helsingfors: Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland. 2008–2011. ISBN 978-951-583-166-8. OCLC 262427766.
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